________________________________________ | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | __________________________________| | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________ | __________________________| | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | | | |__________________________________| | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________ | _Thomas William Arnold ANSON ______| | (1913 - 1958) m 1938 | | | ________________________________________ | | | | | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | | | | __________________________________| | | | | | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | | | | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | | | |__________________________| | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | | | |__________________________________| | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | |--Elizabeth Georgiana ANSON | (1941 - 2020) | _Thomas George LYON-BOWES ______________+ | | (1801 - 1834) m 1820 | _Claude BOWES-LYON ____________________________|_Charlotte GRIMSTEAD ___________________ | | (1824 - 1904) m 1853 (1797 - 1881) | _Claude George BOWES-LYON ________| | | (1855 - 1944) m 1881 | | | | _Oswald SMITH __________________________ | | | | (.... - 1863) | | |_Frances Dora SMITH ___________________________|_Henrietta Mildred HUDGSON _____________ | | (1832 - 1922) m 1853 | _John Herbert BOWES-LYON _| | | (1886 - 1930) | | | | _William Charles A. CAVENDISH-BENTINCK _ | | | | (1780 - 1826) m 1816 | | | _Charles William Frederick CAVENDISH-BENTINCK _|_Anne WELLESLEY ________________________ | | | | (1817 - 1865) m 1859 (1788 - 1875) | | |_Nina Cecelia CAVENDISH-BENTINCK _| | | (1862 - 1938) m 1881 | | | | _Edwyn BURNABY _________________________ | | | | (.... - 1867) m 1829 | | |_Caroline Louisa BURNABY ______________________|_Anne Caroline SALISBURY _______________ | | (1832 - 1918) m 1859 (.... - 1881) |_Anne Ferelith Fenella BOWES-LYON _| (1917 - 1980) m 1938 | | ________________________________________ | | | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | | __________________________________| | | | | | | ________________________________________ | | | | | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | |__________________________| | | ________________________________________ | | | _______________________________________________|________________________________________ | | |__________________________________| | | ________________________________________ | | |_______________________________________________|________________________________________
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Elizabeth_Shakerley.
The New York Times offered a tribute to Elizabeth 23 November 2020:
She was born at Windsor, but unlike her royal relatives, she had to make a living and went to work at 19. Cripplingly shy, by her own account, she nonetheless became a professional hostess, organizing over-the-top events for, as she put it, 'the very rich, the very idle, the very busy and the ones who simply havent a clue what to do.'
Lady Elizabeth Anson, indefatigable party planner to rock stars and royals and a cousin to Queen Elizabeth II, died on Nov. 1 at a hospital in London. She was 79.
Harriet Webber-Jamieson, her longtime deputy, confirmed the death but did not specify a cause.
Lady Elizabeth could handle protocol like a general timing to the minute, for example, the arrival of this head of state or that king to a royal wedding. She knew that the queen liked her lamb well done, and that the queen should be served the first three slices of a roast. She felt that the secret to a successful party, along with easy access to the bathroom and to the bar, was to seat the boring people together; to her mind, they would never know the difference. It was a dictum so often repeated, Mrs. Webber-Jamieson said, that guests at a Lady Elizabeth affair began to wonder if they had been seated at the boring table.
Among the many, many thousands of events Lady Elizabeth oversaw - over a half-centurys worth of glittering shindigs - were the queens 80th and 90th birthday parties, as well as Margaret Thatchers 80th. In 2000 alone, in 'a dazzling triple-header' as The Times of London put it, she pulled off celebrations of Prince Williams 18th birthday (June 21), Princess Annes 50th (Aug. 15) and Princess Margarets 70th (Aug 21).
Lady Elizabeth also organized the dinner the night before the wedding of William and Kate Middleton.
But the royals were not the only clients of Party Planners Limited, Lady Elizabeths company, which she started in 1960. She planned the wedding of Sting and Trudie Styler in 1992, for 250 guests at Stings Elizabethan manor, as well as that of Sacha Baron Cohen and the actress Isla Fisher, though that apparently all went for nought when the couple ended up marrying in a secret ceremony attended by six guests in Paris, according to various reports. As was her practice, for privacy and efficiency, Lady Elizabeth assigned Ms. Fisher a code name - Sally Dangletrot - and the actress wore a succession of wigs as they toured wedding sites.
The queens ever-changing code name was at one point Shirley Temple, and no wigs were involved.
One of Lady Elizabeths first jobs was a dance party at Windsor Castle for Prince Charles, then age 15, and Princess Anne, then age 13. It was 1963, and Lady Elizabeth was stunned to learn that spinning records was a profession.
"My business started before the discothèque was invented," she told The New York Times in 2016. "So when this man told me he was going to charge me 25 pounds to put on records for the evening, I thought, Is this man absolutely crazy? Anybody can put on a gramophone record."
Lady Elizabeths parties werent always so bread-and-butter. The police were once called to a bash for the Rolling Stones, in their hotel-room-trashing days, and it turned predictably raucous, ending with the guests throwing unopened bottles of Dom Pérignon out of a hotel window and into the Thames.
More recently, when she tented the back garden of an apartment building for an event, unknowingly blocking the light in a basement apartment, the enraged tenants there countered by frying fish and filling the tent with the smell of burning kippers. Lady Elizabeth reacted with typical ingenuity: She sprayed the tent with eau de toilette.
The affair proceeded as planned, and without undue odor.
In later years her team invested in a perfume gun and stockpiled gardenia scent. The gun would perfume the tablecloths and seat cushions of every party, not as a prophylactic against kipper smoke but because Lady Elizabeth liked the smell of fresh flowers, and farm-raised flowers have no odor.
A workaholic and a perfectionist, she often said that if guests werent comfortable - if they were cold or couldnt find the bathroom - they would have a perfectly rotten evening, no matter how beautiful the party was or how delicious the food. For an event at the chilly Victoria and Albert Museum, at which the queen was a guest, each place setting included a hot water bottle stitched into a velvet cover, and on each chair was a pashmina wrap. Lady Elizabeth made sure that the queen had an extra hot water bottle placed under her feet.
Though her knowledge of dynastic hierarchies - political, royal or otherwise - was vast (she always knew who was on top in the complicated pecking order of maams and super maams, as Nancy Mitford once described obscure European royalty), Lady Elizabeth liked to say that when in doubt, one should upgrade: Drop a curtsy and smile.
Elizabeth Georgiana Anson was born on June 7, 1941, on the royal familys Windsor Castle estate, outside London. Her father was Viscount Thomas Anson, and her mother was Anne Bowes-Lyon, whose father, John Bowes-Lyon, was the queen mothers brother. (The queen mother was also an Elizabeth.)
Elizabeths parents divorced when she was 7, and her mother married Prince George of Denmark. Elizabeth was immediately sent to boarding school. She often said that she learned nothing there except good manners.
When she was 15, her father died, and her older brother, Patrick Lichfield, then just 17, inherited the familys 17th-century estate, Shugborough Hall, in central England. Elizabeth managed it for Patrick.
"I had to grow up very quickly," she said.
With her mother a distant presence, Lady Elizabeth planned her own debutante party, a scary and overwhelming experience that gave her the inspiration for her business.
In 1972 she married Geoffrey Shakerley, a baronet, at Westminster Abbey. Princess Anne was a bridesmaid. The couple divorced in 2009.
Lady Elizabeth is survived by her daughter, Fiona Burrows; two stepsons, Joth and Nicholas Shakerley; and four grandchildren.
Lady Elizabeth was not immune to personal and financial setbacks. In the early 1990s, an investment in Lloyds of London, the insurance market, vanished when the companys losses left her and thousands of wealthy investors liable in the financial crisis.
In 1993, when Ivana Trump, newly divorced from Donald J. Trump, hired Lady Elizabeth to organize a 50th-birthday party for Ms. Trumps fiancé at the time, Riccardo Mazzucchelli, and then doubled the guest list, Ms. Trump refused to pay the difference. The two spent years in court as Lady Elizabeth fought to recoup the amount, about $9,000. She lost.
In 2001, she was robbed in her house on Ladbroke Grove in West London by masked invaders, who attacked her while she was watching television and stole her jewelry.
She played the lottery every week. She never won.
Despite the crises, Lady Elizabeth remained the embodiment of the wartime slogan "Keep calm and carry on," her favorite phrase, said Mrs. Webber-Jamieson, to whom she left her business.
"She was the bravest person I know," she added. Though Lady Elizabeth suffered from chronic fatigue syndrome and a respiratory illness, Mrs. Webber-Jamieson said, "once the hair and makeup was on, it was showtime."
_________________________ | ________________________________________|_________________________ | _______________________| | | | | _________________________ | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | ___________________________________________| | | | | _________________________ | | | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | | _________________________ | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | _Gille, Earl of the HEBRIDES _| | | | | _________________________ | | | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | | | | _______________________| | | | | | | | | _________________________ | | | | | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | | | | |___________________________________________| | | | | _________________________ | | | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | | _________________________ | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | | |--Gille Adoman GILLESON | | _Rognvald I EYSTEINSSON _+ | | | _Einar ("Earl of Orkney") ROGNVALDSSON _|_________________________ | | | _Thorfinn I EINARSSON _| | | | | | | _________________________ | | | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | | | _Hlodver ("Jarl Hlanderver") THORFINNSSON _| | | | | | | _________________________ | | | | | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | | | | | |_Grelod DUNCANSDATTER _| | | | | | | _________________________ | | | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | | |_Hvarflad HLODVERSDATTER _____| | | _________________________ | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | _________________________ | | | | | | |________________________________________|_________________________ | | |_Audna KJARVALSSDATTER ____________________| | | _________________________ | | | ________________________________________|_________________________ | | |_______________________| | | _________________________ | | |________________________________________|_________________________
[37302] This person is from the unverified Burrough Family Tree in Ancestry.com in 2014. Documentation is missing - this line requires further research.
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Oliver MAINWARING __| | (1573 - 1672) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Oliver MAINWARING __| | (1634 - 1723) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |_Prudence ESSE ______| | (1599 - 1672) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Mercy Mary MANWARING | (1686 - 1746) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Hannah RAYMOND _____| | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
[54808] The unverified file MTMY-J6Y in familysearch.org offers: "When Mercy Mary Manwaring was born in 1686, in New London, New London, Connecticut, United States, her father, Oliver Manwaring III, was 53 and her mother, Hannah Raymond, was ? She married Peter Manwaring from January 1701 to December 1701, in New London, Connecticut, United States. They were the parents of at least 3 daughters. She died on 16 October 1746, at the age of 60."
______________________________________________ | ____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | _Johann Ernst, Prince of NASSAU-WEILBURG _____| | (1664 - 1719) m 1683 | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | |____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | _Karl August, Prince of NASSAU-WEILBURG _| | (1685 - 1753) m 1723 | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | | ____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | | | | |_Marie Polyzene, Countess of LEININGEN _______| | (1662 - 1725) m 1683 | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | |____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | _Karl Christian, Prince, NASSAU-WEILBURG _| | (1735 - 1788) m 1760 | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | | ____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | | | | | ______________________________________________| | | | | | | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | | | | | |____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | | | | |_Auguste Friederike of NASSAU-IDSTEIN ___| | (1699 - 1750) m 1723 | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | | ____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | | | | |______________________________________________| | | | | ______________________________________________ | | | | |____________________________________________|______________________________________________ | | |--Henrietta of NASSAU-WEILBURG | (1780 - 1857) | ______________________________________________ | | | _Hendrik Casimir II, Prince of NASSAU ______|______________________________________________ | | (1657 - 1696) | _Jan Willem Friso, Prince of ORANGE __________| | | (1687 - 1711) m 1709 | | | | _Johann Georg II, Prince of ANHALT-DESSAU ____+ | | | | (1627 - 1693) m 1659 | | |_Henrietta Amalie of ANHALT-DESSAU _________|_Henriette Catherine of NASSAU _______________ | | (1637 - 1708) | _Willem IV, Prince of ORANGE-NASSAU _____| | | (1711 - 1751) m 1743 | | | | _Wilhelm VI, Landgrave of HESSE-CASSEL _______+ | | | | (1629 - 1663) m 1649 | | | _Karl, Landgrave of HESSE-CASSEL ___________|_Hedwig Sohpie VON BRANDENBURG _______________ | | | | (1654 - 1730) (1623 - 1683) | | |_Marie Louise "Maaike Meu" of HESSE-CASSEL ___| | | (1688 - 1765) m 1709 | | | | _Jacob KETTLER _______________________________+ | | | | (1610 - 1682) m 1645 | | |_Marie Amalie of COURLAND __________________|_Louise Charlotte of BRANDENBURG _____________ | | (1617 - 1676) |_Wilhelmina CAROLINE _____________________| (1743 - 1787) m 1760 | | _Ernest Augustus, Elector of HANOVER _________+ | | (1629 - 1698) m 1658 | _George (Louis) I, King of Great BRITAIN ___|_Sophia Hanover of BOHEMIA ___________________ | | (1660 - 1727) m 1682 (1630 - 1714) | _George (Augustus) II, King of Great BRITAIN _| | | (1683 - 1760) m 1705 | | | | _George William, Duke of BRUNSWICK-LüNEBURG _+ | | | | (1624 - 1705) | | |_Sophia Dorothea of BRUNSWICK ______________|_Eleanor Desmier DOLBREUSE _________________ | | (1666 - 1726) m 1682 (1639 - 1722) |_Anne of Great BRITAIN __________________| (1709 - 1759) m 1743 | | ______________________________________________ | | | _John Frederick, Margrave of BRANDENBURG ___|______________________________________________ | | (1654 - 1686) m 1681 |_Wilhelmina Caroline of ANSPACH ______________| (1683 - 1737) m 1705 | | _John George I, Duke of SAXE-EISENACH ________+ | | (1634 - 1686) |_Eleonore Erdmuthe Louise of SAXE-EISENACH _|_Johanetta of SAYN-WITTGENSTEIN ______________ (1662 - 1696) m 1681
_Daniel PERKINS ___________+ | (1752 - 1830) m 1774 _Peletiah PERKINS __________________|_Abigail PENNY ____________ | (1795 - 1864) m 1817 (1752 - ....) _Daniel PERKINS ___________| | (1821 - 1887) m 1840 | | | _Samuel HERRICK ___________+ | | | (1770 - 1833) | |_Lucy HERRICK ______________________|_Lucy BLACK _______________ | (1799 - 1872) m 1817 (1772 - 1847) _Henry Clifford PERKINS _| | (1855 - 1928) m 1880 | | | _David HAWES ______________ | | | (1752 - 1802) m 1780 | | _John HAWES ________________________|_Rebeckah PARKER __________ | | | (1787 - 1824) (1760 - 1835) | |_Amanda Mortimer HAWES ____| | (1823 - 1878) m 1840 | | | _Seth BLODGETT ____________ | | | (1747 - 1817) m 1774 | |_Elizabeth BLODGETT ________________|_Lucy JOHNSON _____________ | (1786 - 1869) (1752 - ....) _Arthur Willard PERKINS _| | (1887 - 1966) m 1912 | | | _William SNOWMAN __________+ | | | (1765 - 1839) m 1790 | | _Charles (Jr.) SNOWMAN _____________|_Judith HUTCHINGS _________ | | | (1792 - 1854) m 1815 (1772 - 1862) | | _Erastus Foot SNOWMAN _____| | | | (1828 - 1869) | | | | | _William HUTCHINGS ________+ | | | | | (1764 - 1866) m 1786 | | | |_Mary (or Molly) Perkins HUTCHINGS _|_Mercy ("Mary?") WARDWELL _ | | | (1793 - 1891) m 1815 (1770 - 1837) | |_Carrie L. SNOWMAN ______| | (1861 - 1926) m 1880 | | | _Joseph LITTLEFIELD _______+ | | | (1792 - 1871) m 1817 | | _Elias LITTLEFIELD _________________|_Jane VARNUM ______________ | | | (1818 - 1882) m 1841 (1795 - 1872) | |_Jane LITTLEFIELD _________| | (1842 - 1867) | | | _Jonathan VARNUM __________+ | | | (1788 - 1860) m 1812 | |_Phebe VARNUM ______________________|_Hannah WARDWELL __________ | (1819 - 1881) m 1841 (1792 - 1858) | |--Carrie B. PERKINS | (1914 - 2016) | _Abraham BOWDEN ___________+ | | (1759 - ....) | _John BOWDEN _______________________|___________________________ | | (1781 - ....) m 1800 | _Elijah BOWDEN ____________| | | (1801 - 1878) m 1826 | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |_Mary ("Molly") HEATH ______________|___________________________ | | (1777 - 1864) m 1800 | _William H. BOWDEN ______| | | (1863 - 1956) m 1885 | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | | ____________________________________|___________________________ | | | | | | |_Lucy HEATH _______________| | | (1808 - 1898) m 1826 | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |____________________________________|___________________________ | | |_Grace Foddie BOWDEN ____| (1890 - 1963) m 1912 | | _Benjamin GRAY ____________+ | | (1788 - 1857) m 1810 | _Chelsias GRAY _____________________|_Susanna HUTCHINSON _______ | | (1813 - 1896) (1786 - 1868) | _Robert Bruce GRAY ________| | | (1839 - 1914) m 1863 | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |_Dorothy MOORE _____________________|___________________________ | | (1814 - 1888) |_Mattie B. GRAY _________| (1866 - 1913) m 1885 | | _Solomon GRAY _____________+ | | (1783 - 1873) m 1806 | _Thomas Jefferson GRAY _____________|_Betsy Black FREETHY ______ | | (1807 - 1893) m 1828 (1784 - 1873) |_Abigail ("Abby") A. GRAY _| (1843 - 1911) m 1863 | | _Abner Alonzo GRAY ________+ | | (1781 - 1865) m 1805 |_Charlotte McKenzie GRAY ___________|_Lucy Billings HOWARD _____ (1811 - 1908) m 1828 (.... - 1879)
[51542] "The Ellsworth American [Ellsworth, Maine], 22 March 2016": "Carrie B. Saunders, 101, died peacefully at her home, March 11, 2016, with family and friends by her side. She was born Dec. 24, 1914, in Penobscot, daughter of Arthur W. and Grace (Bowden) Perkins. She married Malcolm Saunders in 1935 and resided in Blue Hill the remainder of her life. Carrie attended school in Penobscot. She worked throughout her life as a domestic helper and caregiver for several local families. Carrie enjoyed working in her flower gardens and keeping her lawn mowed, which she did well into her 90s. She also enjoyed cooking and sharing her recipes and knowledge with her family and friends. She was a faithful member of the Halcyon Grange, Blue Hill for over 75 years. She held the office of treasurer for many of those years. She is survived by a special nephew, Fletcher Perkins Jr., his wife, Karen, and their children, Sara and Joel, along with many nieces and nephews and their children. Carrie was predeceased by her parents and husband, and her brothers, Marshall, Leighton, Langdon and Fletcher Sr."
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Thomas (II) WHITEHOUSE _| | (1640 - 1707) m 1665 | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Pomfret WHITEHOUSE | (.... - 1720) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Elizabeth DAME _________| (1649 - ....) m 1665 | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |__| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
[45706] Lt. Pomfret and family are from the unverified L8YN-BZS file in familysearch.org in 2019 which lists additional children.