Lord Belmont in Northern Ireland

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Tuesday, 19 October 2021 The Emerson-Tennent BaronetcyThe family of EMERSON came originally from Foxton, County Durham.
GEORGE EMERSON, of Ardmore, County Armagh, was father of

WILLIAM EMERSON, a merchant of Belfast, who married Sarah, youngest daughter of William Arbuthnot, of Rockville, County Down, and had issue,
JAMES, his heir;
George;
Arbuthnot;
Eliza.
Mr Emerson was succeeded by his eldest son,

JAMES EMERSON JP DL (1804-69), MP for Belfast, 1832-45, who wedded, in 1831, Letitia, only daughter of William Tennent, of Belfast, and had issue,
WILLIAM, his successor;
Eleanor Edith Sarah.
Mr Emerson assumed, upon his marriage, the additional surname of TENNENT.

Sir James Emerson-Tennent, 1st Baronet (Image: Belfast City Hall)
He received the honour of Knighthood in 1845.

Sir James was created a baronet in 1867, designatedof Tempo Manor, County Fermanagh.

He was succeeded by his son,

SIR WILLIAM EMERSON-TENNENT, 2nd Baronet(1835-76), who married and had issue, two daughters,
ETHEL SARAH;
Edith Letitia Anna (1876-1953).
The elder daughter,

MISS ETHEL SARAH EMERSON-TENNENT (1871-1951), of TEMPO MANOR, married, in 1893, Sir Herbert Charles Arthur Langham, 13th Baronet, and had issue,

SIR JOHN CHARLES PATRICK LANGHAM, 14th Baronet (1894-1972), JP DL, who wedded, in 1930, Rosamond Christabel, daughter of Arthur Rashleigh, and had issue,

SIR JAMES MICHAEL LANGHAM, 15th Baronet (1932-2002), TD, of Tempo Manor, who married, in 1959, Marion Ellen Audrey, daughter of Oswald Horner Barratt, and had issue,
JOHN STEPHEN, his successor;
Rupert William;
Lucinda Jane.
Sir James was succeeded by his elder son,

SIR JOHN STEPHEN LANGHAM, 16th Baronet (1960-), of Tempo Manor, who wedded, in 1991, Sarah Jane, daughter of John Denis Greene, and has issue,
TYRONE DENIS JAMES, b 1994;
Phoebe Tara, b 1999;
Isabella Hay, b 2000.
*****
THE family of TENNENT, originally Danand or Tenand, was of respectability in Scotland, and the principal branch resided at Glasgow.

William Tennent (Image: Ulster Museum)
WILLIAM TENNENT (1760-1832), of Tempo House, County Fermanagh, formerly a banker in Belfast, died leaving an only daughter and heiress,
LETITIA TENNENT, who espoused the aforesaidSIR JAMES EMERSON-TENNENT.

The Emerson Tennent Papers are held at the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland.

Former seats ~ Francfort, County Sligo; Tempo Manor, County Fermanagh.

Former London residence ~ 25 Duke Street, Westminster.

First published in October, 2010. 0comments Monday, 18 October 2021 Robin Bryans, 1928-2005Some time ago I recommended an anecdotal travel book to readers by an author called Robin Bryans.
The book is entitled Ulster: A Journey Through The Six Counties.

Merely by chance, a regular reader has drawn my attention to the fact that Mr Bryanshas a website dedicated to him.

Robin Bryans was born in 1928, just off the Newtownards Road in east Belfast, his family moving shortly afterwards to Donegall Avenue in the city.

Before becoming a professional writer, he had a variety of jobs including shipyard worker and cabin boy on a dredger.

He was later to study at Barry Religious College in Wales and went to Canada as a missionary.

Later, in Canada, he lived as a trapper.

The common realities of his childhood among the Protestant working class in the 1930s grinding poverty, mission halls, theatres, music, the Bog Meadows along with the desperate accident to his father which changed the life of the small family, became the subject matter of his most powerful writing,
We walked as though through a forest whose trees were made of steel, harshly etched against the morning sky. Instead of leaf-laden branches stretched out to catch the suns rays, I saw a multitude of cranes, swinging poles and a phalanx of gantries.
During the 1960s and early 1970s, his output was prolific.
Published by Faber and Faber and acclaimed by critics worldwide, he embarked on a series of travel books celebrating Iceland (1960), Denmark (1961), Brazil (1962), the Azores (1963), Malta (1966) and Trinidad Tobago (1967).

His Ulster: A Journey Through the Six Counties (1962) has long been regarded as a perceptive introduction at a critical moment in the history of Northern Ireland and a classic of the genre.

In the same period came the books on which his reputation as a writer rests, the four remarkable volumes of autobiography: No Surrender (1960), Song of Erne (1960) a vivid and moving account of childhood excursions to Fermanagh.

Up Spake the Cabin Boy (1961) and The Protégé (1963) and two volumes of short stories, Tattoo Lily (1961) and The Far World (1962), also from Faber.

No Surrender was hailed as the first book by an Ulster Protestant writer from the working class published by an international publishing house to receive national renown.

The Times described his autobiographical writing as
on all planes at once; humorous, detailed and objective as a Breugel village scene; quietly indignant over injustices practised by the toffs; puzzled, exploratory, expectant as a growing boy He writes as one with a true sense of poetry.
The volumes of autobiography have rarely been out of print since their first publication and are currently available from Blackstaff Press.

Selected Stories was published in 1996 by Lagan Press in Belfast, which occasioned a memorable reading in the Old Museum arts centre in his native city.

In his later life, Harbinson was dramatically involved in sensational and sometimes scandalous events among the political aristocracy.

A riveting account of these and of their parallels among Ulsters political class from the 1940s until the 1960s can be read in his last three books The Dust Has Never Settled (1992), Let the Petals Fall(1993) and Checkmate, all from Honeyford Press under his own name of Robin Bryans.

A courteous, witty and gentle man, Robin Bryans last years were spent in London where, in addition to writing, he was involved in a school of music set up particularly to encourage the work of young composers.

He died at his home in London on Saturday, June 11, 2005.

First published in April, 2012. 1 commentsGarron TowerLORD HERBERT LIONEL HENRY VANE-TEMPEST WAS A MAJOR LANDOWNER IN COUNTY ANTRIM, WITH 13,781 ACRES

GARRON TOWER is a romantic, austere, cliff-top Victorian castle of black basalt, built as a summer retreat by Frances, 3rd Marchioness of Londonderry, daughter and heiress ofSir Henry Vane-Tempest, 2nd Baronet.

Lady Londonderry's mother was Anne, 2nd Countess of Antrim suo jure.

Her daughter, the Lady Frances Anne Emily (Fanny) Vane, married the 7th Duke of Marlborough and their son, Lord Randolph, was later to become the father of Winston Churchill.

The estate lies midway between Cushendall and Carnlough on the County Antrim coast.

The problems of the Antrim estates were compounded by the failure of the 6th Earl of Antrim to produce a male heir.

Although he was granted a new patent for the earldom, which allowed his daughters to inherit and transmit the title to their children, the inheritance of the estate itself proved much more problematical.

The 6th Earl bequeathed his estates in his will to his three daughters and the resulting litigation lasted more than twenty years.

The Antrim estate itself was eventually divided: Lady Antrim's daughter, Lady Frances, who married the 3rd Marquess of Londonderry, received one sixth; and the remainder passed to Lady Charlotte, afterwards 3rd Countess of Antrim suo jure (Lady Mark Kerr) and her descendants.

Frances, Lady Londonderry, eventually bequeathed her portion of the estate to her younger son, who had no love for Garron Tower and neglected it.

After his death in 1884, the estate passed to her grandson, Lord Herbert Vane-Tempest KCVO VD JP (1862-1921), who was tragically killed in a train accident in Wales.

After his death the estate, including the property which is now the Londonderry Arms Hotel in Carnlough, passed to his second cousin, Sir Winston Churchill, who owned it until after the 2nd World War.

Being the Prime Minister, Sir Winston had no time for Garron Tower so it was donated to the British Tourist Industry which transformed it into a hotel.

Garron Tower was subsequently devastated by fire and was later turned into a school which it remains today.

The main portion of the estate remained in the hands of the Earls of Antrim.

Following the death of her mother in 1834, Frances Lady Londonderry inherited a portion of the Antrim Estate, almost 10,000 acres lying mostly between Glenarm and Glenariff.

Following much debate she decided to build a summer residence and in 1848 the foundation stone was laid for Garron Tower.

The principal guest at the opening of the Tower was the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Clarendon.

Coinciding with the end of the Famine in 1849, the four Coastguard cottages at 91 Garron Road were built as part of that estate.

Lady Londonderry showed a considerable interest in the day to day administration of her estate, demanding detailed reports from her agents.

She was a relentlessly improving landowner, encouraging agricultural improvement and endowing schools, clothing societies, etc.

The link with Lady Antrim's ancestral seat, Glenarm Castle, a few miles to the south is such that it was suspected Lady Londonderry's intention had been to upstage Glenarm Castle with the erection of Garron Tower.

GARRON TOWER, near Carnlough, County Antrim, was built in stages from 1848-56, initially to the designs of Charles Campbell, architect, of Newtownards, who had selected the site in 1847.

The house was ready for occupation by 1850.

A new hall, with a projecting rectangular bay facing eastwards, was added to the north of the polygonal tower in 1852, attributed to Lewis Valliamy of London.

A front porch was added in 1854.

The oak doors, which still survive inside, were carved by Austrian craftsmen.

Garron Tower with Gun Terrace and Tennis Court (Image: Robert John Welch)

After Lady Londonderry's death in 1865, it remained in the private hands of the family until rented by Henry McNeill of Larne in 1889 and opened as a hotel.

Garron Tower was leased from 1898.

Many of the original contents were sold by public auction in 1911.

The house was badly damaged by accidental fire in 1914; then it was bought by McNeill's firm in 1915.

It was burnt maliciously in 1922; and closed as a hotel in 1939.

From 1941-46, it was occupied by evacuated residents from the Belfast Charitable Society home at Clifton House, Belfast.

The Tower was converted for use as a school for the Catholic diocese of Down and Connor in 1951 to the design of Padraic Gregory, a Belfast architect, whose firm also designed various school buildings, added to the rear from time to time.

The battlemented retaining wall to the terrace walk in the garden, terminating in a circular magazine, was built in 1848 to the design of Campbell.

The cannon on the terrace were reputedly used at the Battle of Waterloo, and originally stood here on their original wheeled carriers.

The gate lodge was built in 1854; the stable block added in 1860 to the design of Lanyon and Lynn; and the new chapel built in 1956 to the design of Mr Gregory.

The main gateway originally comprised two openwork iron piers with a pair of gates, all cast at the Londonderry foundry in Seaham, County Durham.

Garron has a dominant tower at one end of a lengthy building, polygonal with a square turret.

At the opposite end of the front a short wing projects forwards, ending in a rectangular tower and turret.

With the exception of somewhat prosaic machicolations and crenellations, the walls are quite featureless.

The mansion was enlarged in 1852 with the addition of a hall.

The main front used to be flanked by a terrace with a battery of cannon. Is this still the case today?

Motor Cars at Garron Tower Hotel (Image: Robert John Welch)
The position of Garron Tower is spectacular, on a plateau above the County Antrim coast.

There is some natural shelter on the west side from steeply rising ground and this has been clothed with trees.
Formerly the ornamental and productive gardens were to the west, somewhat protected from sea breezes by the castle, which stood facing south amid severe lawns decorated with urns.

Trees cover the area below the plateau, which drops sharply to the sea.

The grounds are adapted for school use and cultivated areas have disappeared.

There are notable specimens of Eucalyptus Globulus, planted in 1857.

Garron Tower is now a school, St Killian's College.

First published in April, 2010. Londonderry arms courtesy of European Heraldry. 9comments Sunday, 17 October 2021 Wodehouse Gems: IIStiff Upper Lip Jeeves by Sir P G Wodehouse, KBE, published in 1963

Bertie Wooster's arch-adversary, Roderick Spode, Earl of Sidcup, features heavily in this book.

Spode, as Bertie calls him, is a character we all love to hate.

Here is one of my favourite passages that always makes me laugh:-

'...Spode pivoted round and gave me a penetrating look. He had grown a bit, I noticed, since I had last seen him, being now about nine foot seven. ...I had compared him to a gorilla, and what I had had in mind had been the ordinary run-of-the-mill gorilla, not the large economy size'.

...'To ease the strain, I asked him if he would have a cucumber sandwich, but with an impassioned gesture he indicated that he was not in the market for cucumber sandwiches..."a muffin?"


No, not a muffin, either. He seemed to be on a diet.

"Wooster", he said, his jaw muscles moving freely, "I can't make up my mind whether to break your neck or not."
And so on. Wodehouse's command of the English language was supreme. Brilliant.
Wodehouse's character, Spode, is believed to be modelled on the war-time fascist leader, Sir Oswald Mosley Bt.

The Mosleys had a connection with Staffordshire, the county where Spode pottery is made; hence the name.

First published in March, 2009.2commentsCork PalaceTHE foundation of the bishopric of Cork is placed in the 7th century; that of Ross is unknown: they were united by ELIZABETH I in 1583.
The diocese of Cork has been ascribed to St Barr or Finbarr.
Both sees are contained in County Cork, and are partly intermixed.

The diocese of Cork is 74 miles long from east to west, and about 16 broad.

The length of the principal part of Ross is 32 miles from east to west; and the breadth 8.


THE PALACE, CORK, is a compact three-storey block over a basement with a fanlighted doorway.

It was built ca 1782 by the Right Rev Isaac Mann, Lord Bishop of Cork and Ross, 1772-88, on the site of an earlier palace.


The palace remains the official residence of the Lord Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross.

The present Bishop is the Right Rev Dr Paul Colton.

First published in October, 2015.0comments Saturday, 16 October 2021 1st Duke of ChandosDUKEDOM OF CHANDOS1719-89
The very ancient house of BRYDGES deduces its descent from
SIR SIMON DE BRUGGE, of Herefordshire, who flourished in the reign of HENRY III, and who seems to have been a branch of the old Counts de Rethel, in the province of Champagne, France, princes of the first distinction in that kingdom, sprung by various alliances from the House of Charlemagne, and afterwards memorable in the crusades.
In the time of HENRY IV,
THOMAS BRUGGE married Alice, daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Berkeley, of Coberley, Gloucestershire, by Margaret, sister and heir of Sir John Chandos (a family of nobles who had held baronial rank since the Conquest), and from this Thomas descended
JOHN BRYDGES (1492-1557), whose name was sometimes spelled Brugge of Bruges, who was elevated to the peerage, in 1554, in the dignity ofBaron Chandos, of Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
EDMUND, 2nd Baron (c1522-73); from whom descended, in succession, five more Barons; and, at the demise of
WILLIAM, 7th Baron, without issue, in 1676, the barony passed to his cousin,
SIR JAMES BRYDGES, Baronet (1642-1714), as 8th Baron Chandos, of Wilton, as heir of Charles, second son of the 1st Baron.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
JAMES, 9th Baron (1673-1744), who was created, in 1714, Viscount Wilton and Earl of Carnarvon.
His lordship was further advanced to the dignities of a marquessate and dukedom, in 1719, as Marquess of Carnarvon and DUKE OF CHANDOS.
1st Duke of Chandos. Michael Dahl ~ Berger Collection
His Grace married firstly, in 1695, Mary, daughter of Sir Thomas Lake, and had issue,
John (1703-27);
HENRY, his successor.
He wedded secondly, 1713, Cassandra, daughter of Francis Willoughby; and thirdly, in 1736, Lydia Catherine, daughter of John Van Hatten.
His Grace was succeeded by his younger son,
HENRY, 2nd Duke, KB (1708-71), who wedded, in 1728, Mary, daughter of Charles, 4th Earl of Elgin, and had issue,
JAMES, his successor;
Caroline.
His Grace married secondly, 1744, Anne Wells; and thirdly, in 1767, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Major Bt.
The 2nd Duke was succeeded by his son,
JAMES, 3rd Duke (1731-89), who wedded firstly, in 1753, Margaret, daughter of John Nicol; and secondly, in 1777, Anne Eliza, daughter of John Gamon, and had issue,
THE LADY ANNE ELIZABETH BRYDGES, who married Richard, 1st Duke of Buckingham Chandos.
Following the decease of the 3rd Duke, without male issue, the dukedom expired.
Former seat~ Stowe House, Buckinghamshire.
Former London Residence ~ Chandos House, London.

First published in August, 2017.0comments Friday, 15 October 2021 New County Londonderry DLAPPOINTMENT OF DEPUTY LIEUTENANT

Mrs Alison Millar, Lord-Lieutenant of County Londonderry, has been pleased to appoint:-

Mrs Leona Mary Kane
LimavadyCounty Londonderry

To be a Deputy Lieutenant of the County, her Commission bearing date, the 11th day of October, 2021.


Signed:

Lord Lieutenant of the County

11th October 20210comments Older PostsHomeSubscribe to:Posts ( Atom ) Lord Belmont in Northern Ireland

Established in 2007 by Timothy William Ferres: writing about a variety of topics including the Monarchy, Nobility, Gentry, Heraldry, Pageantry, Heritage of the British Isles, Country Houses, Conservation, Travel.


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( 51 ) January ( 57 ) 2020 ( 601 ) December ( 52 ) November ( 51 ) October ( 52 ) September ( 51 ) August ( 51 ) July ( 49 ) June ( 53 ) May ( 55 ) April ( 52 ) March ( 48 ) February ( 37 ) January ( 50 ) 2019 ( 309 ) December ( 45 ) November ( 42 ) October ( 34 ) September ( 20 ) August ( 16 ) July ( 22 ) June ( 26 ) May ( 20 ) April ( 23 ) March ( 10 ) February ( 24 ) January ( 27 ) 2018 ( 98 ) December ( 9 ) November ( 11 ) October ( 7 ) September ( 8 ) August ( 6 ) July ( 5 ) June ( 7 ) May ( 6 ) April ( 8 ) March ( 11 ) February ( 10 ) January ( 10 ) 2017 ( 64 ) December ( 2 ) November ( 5 ) October ( 6 ) September ( 7 ) August ( 11 ) July ( 7 ) May ( 7 ) April ( 11 ) March ( 3 ) February ( 1 ) January ( 4 ) 2016 ( 108 ) December ( 1 ) November ( 4 ) October ( 3 ) September ( 9 ) August ( 4 ) July ( 9 ) June ( 10 ) May ( 16 ) April ( 24 ) March ( 6 ) February ( 13 ) January ( 9 ) 2015 ( 137 ) December ( 11 ) November ( 17 ) October ( 11 ) September ( 12 ) August ( 10 ) July ( 8 ) 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510 ) December ( 42 ) November ( 38 ) October ( 36 ) September ( 43 ) August ( 49 ) July ( 50 ) June ( 50 ) May ( 47 ) April ( 40 ) March ( 32 ) February ( 43 ) January ( 40 ) 2008 ( 443 ) December ( 43 ) November ( 41 ) October ( 35 ) September ( 25 ) August ( 47 ) July ( 45 ) June ( 37 ) May ( 27 ) April ( 33 ) March ( 37 ) February ( 31 ) January ( 42 ) 2007 ( 29 ) December ( 29 ) ARCHIVES1974 Series ( 6 ) 5BX ( 1 ) Aberdeenshire Landowners ( 1 ) Anecdotes ( 2 ) Anglesey Landowners ( 2 ) Angus Landowners ( 1 ) Archiepiscopal Arms ( 2 ) Argory (The) ( 1 ) Argyllshire Landowners ( 1 ) Armagh ( 3 ) At Home ( 1161 ) Ayrshire Landowners ( 2 ) Ballydugan ( 2 ) Banffshire Landowners ( 1 ) Barcelona ( 1 ) Belfast Bars Restaurants ( 1 ) Belfast Buildings ( 67 ) Belfast Heritage ( 88 ) Belfast Lunches ( 1 ) Belle Isle ( 9 ) Belmont Food ( 35 ) Beresfords (The) ( 2 ) Berwickshire Landowners ( 1 ) Best Of Series ( 14 ) Birds ( 50 ) Birds And Wildlife ( 33 ) Blakiston-Houston Memoirs ( 9 ) boats ( 2 ) Books ( 29 ) Brackenber House ( 49 ) Brecknockshire Landowners ( 1 ) British Generals in the American War of Independence ( 4 ) Bute Landowners ( 1 ) By Appointment To The Right Honourable The Earl Of Belmont ( 18 ) Cairns Family ( 3 ) Caithness Landowners ( 1 ) Canada ( 2 ) Capper Series ( 3 ) Cardiganshire Landowners ( 1 ) Carmarthenshire Landowners ( 1 ) Carnarvonshire Landowners ( 1 ) Cataracts ( 1 ) Charities ( 1 ) Charley Family ( 9 ) Christmas ( 3 ) Churchill Pronouncements ( 1 ) Cinema ( 15 ) Clackmannanshire Landowners ( 1 ) Classic Churchill Ripostes ( 1 ) Cleggan ( 2 ) Concerts ( 46 ) Cootehill ( 4 ) Copeland Islands ( 6 ) Coronation Robes ( 14 ) Coronets ( 8 ) Corralejo ( 11 ) Country Houses ( 216 ) County Antrim Landowners ( 66 ) County Armagh Landowners ( 29 ) County Carlow Landowners ( 10 ) County Cavan Landowners ( 13 ) County Clare Landowners ( 13 ) County Cork Landowners ( 14 ) County Donegal Landowners ( 13 ) County Down Landowners ( 89 ) County Dublin Landowners ( 16 ) County Fermanagh Landowners ( 31 ) County Galway Landowners ( 18 ) County Kerry Landowners ( 17 ) County Kildare Landowners ( 11 ) County Kilkenny Landowners ( 14 ) County Laois Landowners ( 12 ) County Leitrim Landowners ( 11 ) County Limerick Landowners ( 10 ) County Londonderry Landowners ( 44 ) County Longford Landowners ( 7 ) County Louth Landowners ( 10 ) County Mayo Landowners ( 11 ) County Meath Landowners ( 15 ) County Monaghan Landowners ( 12 ) County Offaly Landowners ( 11 ) County Roscommon Landowners ( 10 ) County Sligo Landowners ( 9 ) County Tipperary Landowners ( 13 ) County Tyrone Landowners ( 56 ) County Waterford Landowners ( 9 ) County Westmeath Landowners ( 12 ) County Wexford Landowners ( 15 ) County Wicklow Landowners ( 11 ) Dartrey ( 4 ) Day Trip ( 1 ) Denbighshire Landowners ( 1 ) Diamond Jubilee ( 1 ) Donard Park ( 2 ) Downhill ( 1 ) Dumfriesshire Landowners ( 1 ) Dunbartonshire Landowners ( 1 ) Dundonald ( 2 ) Dyson ( 1 ) Earl of Blessington ( 1 ) Ebay ( 3 ) Ecclesiastical Monuments ( 5 ) El Cotillo ( 19 ) Episcopal Appointments ( 1 ) Episcopal Monuments ( 3 ) Episcopal Palaces ( 19 ) Extinct Baronetcies ( 56 ) Extinct Baronies ( 1 ) Extinct Dukedoms ( 19 ) Extinct Earldoms ( 3 ) Favourite Paintings ( 11 ) Fife Landowners ( 1 ) Finance ( 2 ) Finnebrogue ( 2 ) Fisherwick Hall ( 1 ) Fishmongers ( 1 ) Fittleworth ( 1 ) Flag Days ( 2 ) Flintshire Landowners ( 1 ) Florida Manor ( 5 ) food ( 28 ) Food And Drink ( 362 ) Food Heroes ( 56 ) Franklin Maxims ( 11 ) Funerals ( 1 ) Giants Causeway ( 3 ) Glamorganshire Landowners ( 1 ) Graves ( 1 ) Gunpowder Plot ( 2 ) Haddingtonshire ( 1 ) Hamilton Baronetcies ( 5 ) Henderson of Norwood Tower ( 8 ) Heraldry ( 8 ) Heritage ( 321 ) High Sheriffs ( 6 ) Hill Family ( 2 ) Hillsborough Castle ( 5 ) Hillsborough Fort Guard ( 1 ) Historic Belfast Bars ( 3 ) Hol ( 1 ) Holidays ( 244 ) Hollymount ( 3 ) Honorary Freemen of Belfast ( 15 ) Honours ( 56 ) hotels ( 6 ) House of Cecil ( 2 ) House of Keppel ( 2 ) Humour ( 146 ) Illustrious Families ( 100 ) In Memoriam ( 3 ) INDEX OF NORTHERN IRELAND PEERS ( 1 ) Inverness-shire Landowners ( 1 ) Irish Hereditary Knights ( 3 ) Isle OValla ( 1 ) Jewels ( 1 ) Jonathan Swift ( 1 ) Judicial ( 3 ) Killinchy ( 1 ) Kincardineshire Landowners ( 1 ) Kinlough ( 1 ) Kinross-shire Landowners ( 1 ) Lagan Canal ( 2 ) Lanarkshire Landowners ( 1 ) Life Peers ( 1 ) Linlithgowshire Landowners ( 1 ) Lord Belmonts Birthday ( 1 ) Lord Belmonts Wardrobe ( 18 ) Lord-lieutenancies ( 88 ) Lost Caravaggio ( 2 ) Lough Neagh ( 1 ) Mary Peters ( 1 ) Merionethshire Landowners ( 1 ) Midlothian Landowners ( 1 ) Military ( 1 ) Monmouthshire Landowners ( 1 ) Montgomeryshire Landowners ( 1 ) Moray Landowners ( 1 ) Motoring ( 91 ) Mount Stewart ( 45 ) Mournes ( 1 ) Nairnshire Landowners ( 1 ) National Trust ( 45 ) Neale Engravings ( 3 ) Northern Ireland Counties ( 6 ) NT Acquisitions ( 25 ) Obituaries ( 36 ) Odes ( 1 ) Old Campbellians ( 2 ) Opera ( 22 ) Order of St Patrick ( 9 ) Orders of Chivalry ( 3 ) Parliamentary Gazetteer Extracts ( 24 ) Peeblesshire Landowners ( 1 ) Pembrokeshire Landowners ( 1 ) Personal ( 2 ) Perthshire Landowners ( 2 ) Plants Shrubs ( 1 ) Poems ( 1 ) Politics ( 5 ) Pompous Old Fart ( 16 ) Portballintrae ( 1 ) Radnorshire Landowners ( 1 ) Rams Island ( 1 ) Rants And Gripes ( 178 ) Rathgael ( 2 ) Rathlin Island ( 1 ) Reactionary ( 14 ) Renfrewshire Landowners ( 1 ) Reviews ( 1 ) Revised Repeat ( 1 ) River Conns Water ( 13 ) Rolls-Royce Phantom VI ( 5 ) Ross Memoirs ( 4 ) Ross-shire Landowners ( 1 ) Roxburghshire Landowners ( 1 ) Royal Victorian Order ( 8 ) Royalty ( 276 ) Selkirkshire Landowners ( 1 ) Sheriffs ( 1 ) Shopping ( 118 ) Show of the Week ( 10 ) Sir James ( 1 ) Society ( 66 ) St Patricks Day ( 1 ) State Visits ( 7 ) Stirlingshire Landowners ( 1 ) Strangford Lough ( 2 ) Sutherland Landowners ( 1 ) swimming ( 4 ) Talks ( 1 ) Television ( 80 ) Territorial Army in Northern Ireland ( 10 ) The Belmont Pronouncements ( 148 ) The Dixons ( 9 ) The Dowager ( 1 ) The Dukes of the UK ( 3 ) The Londonderrys ( 13 ) The National Trust ( 290 ) The Peerage ( 27 ) Toothpaste ( 1 ) Topographical Dictionary Extracts ( 10 ) Travel ( 25 ) Ulster Gentry ( 49 ) Ulster Museum ( 1 ) Ulster Nobility: An Occasional Series ( 92 ) Ulster Reform Club ( 1 ) Ulster VCs ( 16 ) Walks ( 20 ) Wayfarer ( 1 ) Wigtownshire Landowners ( 1 ) Windbreaker ( 1 ) Wise Sayings ( 3 ) Wodehouse Gems ( 12 ) Wooster Gems ( 3 ) Yachting ( 1 ) Followers

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