[469] living - details excluded
[838]
[S41]
Imported GEDCOM file
_Joseph FOURTYE _____+
| (1680 - 1758) m 1706
_Joseph FORTY _______|_Anne GRAINGER ______
| (1712 - 1785) m 1743
_Joseph FORTY _______|
| (1744 - 1825) m 1776|
| | _____________________
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| |_Mary ??? ___________|_____________________
| (.... - 1785) m 1743
_William FORTY ______|
| (1783 - ....) m 1806|
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| |_Elizabeth COOPER ___|
| (.... - 1792) m 1776|
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|--Mary Hannah FORTY
| (1813 - ....)
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|_Anne PUGH __________|
m 1806 |
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_Albert William HANSARD _+
| (1821 - 1865) m 1850
_Arthur Charles HANSARD _|_Jane JENNINGS __________
| (1855 - 1914) (.... - 1857)
_Hallett Neville HANSARD _|
| (1894 - ....) |
| | _________________________
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| |_Henrietta DALEY ________|_________________________
| (1866 - 1928)
_Arthur Hallet HANSARD _|
| (1927 - 1975) m 1950 |
| | _________________________
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| |_Petra DIAZ ______________|
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|--Arthur Kirby HANSARD
| (1952 - ....)
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|_Erica LYNEN ___________|
m 1950 |
| _________________________
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_John JOHNSTONE _____|
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_William Sibbald JOHNSTONE _|
| m 1828 |
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| |_Jean RITCHIE _______|
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|--Elspeth JOHNSTONE
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| _Thomas RENWICK _____|
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|_Elizabeth RENWICK _________|
m 1828 |
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|_Jean KENNEDY _______|
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[599] Johanna Florence Matheson was a witness at their wedding
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_John MATHESON ______|
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|--William MATHESON
| (1805 - ....)
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|_Anne MCKENZIE ______|
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[147]
Duncan Cameron - Family History Notes.
The following is extracted from "The Story of Macdonald and Muir, Distillers, Blenders and Bottlers of Fine Scottish Whiskies" Ch4
The second Glen Morangie distillery further North at Tain on the shores of the Dornock Firth. This had also been converted from a brewery but was much older than the distillery at Glen Moray. The brewery itself dated back to the early eighteenth century but the tenancy of the Morangie farm on which it was situated was taken over by William Matheson in the early 1840s. He had been a partner in the Balblair distillery at Edderton since the 1820s and now wished to set up his own. He applied for a license to distill whisky on the brewery site in 1843 but his farming activities meant that it was not untill November 1849 that whiskey was first produced at Glen Morangie.
For nearly 40 years Matheson somehow managed to continue distilling whisky in the primitive conditions of the converted brewery. When Alfred Barnard visited the distillery in 1887 he described it as the most acient and primitive we have seen, and almost in ruins. Barnard reported that ever since the distillery had been established in 1843, it has had to be renewed and repaired to keep it together.
Nevertheless Glen Morangie produced some 20,000 gallons of malt whiskey annually and by the 1880s, according to Barnard, was "well-known in the Scotch and English markets". It even had a reputation further afield. The Inverness Advertiser & Ross-shire Chronicle reported in October 1880 that "We observed the other day, en route for Rome, a cask of Whisky from the Glen-Morangie Distillery, likewise sever casks destined for San Francisco." The paper mischievously enquired whether the Pope himself had requested supplies of "the Mountain Dew of Easter Ross", as the paper charmingly termed Glenmorangie.
Plans for the complete renewal of the distillery were eventually drawn up in 1887. The vigerous recovery and bright prospects of the Scotch Whiskey industry at the time attracted the necessary capital for these plans which had never been available in the past. The Glenmorangie Distillery Co Ltd was formed on the 3rd October 1887 and took over the distillery and the stocks of whiskey in bond from Duncan Cameron, William Matheson's son-in-law and the local bank agent. The price for the distillery was £1,876 while the sum of £2,170 was paid for the wiskey stocks, which were all no less than five years old and largely destined to keep existing customers supplied during the reconstruction of the distillery.
The authorised capital of the new company was £25,000 but only one-third of that sum was issued in the first place, with subsequent issues being made over the years as further developments took place at the distillery. Most of the shareholders were locals, including William Matheson and his family, Duncan Cameron, his son-in-law, and Andrew and James Maitland, the local architectws who drew up the plans. But the issue also attracted capital from outside the area and one of the largest shareholders was Edward Taylor, a distiller based in Chelsea. He and Duncan Cameron became the first directors of the company. There were a handful of other outside investors, and in 1897 the well known Edinbrugh firm of distillers and blenders Low Robertson, became major sharholders.
[148] His date of birth is calculated from the age shown on his death certificate. ref 082/49 Duncan McIntosh gave it as 1810.
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_Daniel Gorwood MOODY _|
| (1815 - ....) |
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|_Anne LIMBYRD _________|
(1815 - 1874) |
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_Richard WOOLLIAMS __+
| (1731 - ....)
_Robert WOOLLIAMS ___|_Elizabeth COLLET ___
| (1729 - ....)
_Daniel WOOLLIAMS ___|
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| | _____________________
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| |_Susanna WATERMAN ___|_____________________
| (1764 - ....)
_Robert WOOLLIAMS ___|
| (1835 - ....) |
| | _____________________
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| | _William SPARROW ____|_____________________
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| |_Harriet SPARROW ____|
| (1810 - ....) |
| | _____________________
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| |_Hannah SPARROW _____|_____________________
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|--William WOOLLIAMS
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| _____________________
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| _____________________|_____________________
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|_Sarah LARDNER ______|
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|_____________________|
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