Gibbs Family Tree

Doreen Albinia de Burgh Gibbs

Female 1913 - 2008  (94 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Doreen Albinia de Burgh Gibbs was born on 17 Sep 1913 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset (daughter of The Right Hon. George Abraham Gibbs, 1st Baron Wraxall and Victoria Florence de Burgh Long); died on 25 Jan 2008 in St. Helier, Jersey, Channel Islands.

    Notes:

    Born 17 September 1913. Baptised privately at Tyntesfield and received into the Church 29 November 1913 at Wraxall.

    Portraits: min. in diamond locket (1916), min. by M. R. (1917), water colour drawing aged 4, portrait by W. R. Symonds (1917), min. by Miss E. C. Brisley full length (1925); were all five in possn. of Lord Wraxall in 1930.

    Last address: Villa Villetri, Vallee des Vaux, St. Helier, Jersey, C.I.

    Doreen married Charles Bathurst Norman on 12 Nov 1937 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset. Charles (son of Harry Bathurst Norman, Rev.) was born on 14 Jan 1904; died on 13 Jan 1979 in St John's, Jersey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. George Alfred Bathurst Norman
    2. Victoria Mary Bathurst Norman

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  The Right Hon. George Abraham Gibbs, 1st Baron Wraxall was born on 6 Jul 1873 in Wraxall, Somerset (son of Antony Gibbs, of Tyntesfield and Janet Louisa Merivale); died on 28 Oct 1931 in London; was buried on 31 Oct 1931 in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 3 Aug 1873, Wraxall, Somerset
    • Residence: 1881, Wraxall, Somerset
    • Residence: 1891, Wraxall, Somerset
    • Residence: 14 Oct 1892, Oxford, Oxfordshire
    • Residence: 1901, London
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Wraxall, Somerset

    Notes:

    George Abraham Gibbs, 1st Baron Wraxall, PC DL (6 July 1873 – 28 October 1931), was a British Conservative politician. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Gibbs,_1st_Baron_Wraxall



    Birth:
    Charlton on the Tyntesfield Estate

    George married Victoria Florence de Burgh Long on 26 Nov 1901 in All Saints, Ennismore Gardens, Westminster, London. Victoria (daughter of Viscount Walter Hume Long and Dorothy Blanche Boyle) was born on 10 Aug 1880 in 1 Grafton Street, Westminster, London; died on 29 Mar 1920 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Victoria Florence de Burgh Long was born on 10 Aug 1880 in 1 Grafton Street, Westminster, London (daughter of Viscount Walter Hume Long and Dorothy Blanche Boyle); died on 29 Mar 1920 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1881, London
    • Residence: 1891, Croughton, Northamptonshire
    • Residence: 1901, Westminster, London
    • Residence: 2 Apr 1911, Wraxall, Somerset

    Notes:

    1st daughter of the Right Hon. Walter Hume Long, PC of Rood Ashton, Wiltshire, who was created 1921 Viscount Long of Wraxall (Wraxall, Wiltshire), by Lady Dorothy Blanche, 4th daughter of Richard E. St. L. Boyle, 9th Earl of Cork and Orrery. Baptised at St. James's, Piccadilly, in London. Died at Tyntesfield 29 March, and was buried 1 April 1920 at Wraxall, Somerset. Memorial Inscription in the church (Charlton chapel) and churchyard, and in Tyntesfield chapel. Died of Spanish Flu epidemic.

    In the Great War she directed the Bristol Soldiers' and Sailors' Help Society. She was chairman of the Ladies' House and Social Committee of the Bristol branch of the Royal Colonial Institute, and was an active member of the Bristol Women's Unionist Association. A Commander of the Order of the British Empire 1918.

    She is commemorated in Bristol by the "Victoria Gibbs Babies' Home" at Kingsdown.

    Her life by Madeleine Alston (Via Gibbs, a Memoir) was published in 1921.

    Portraits: Min. in emeralds (1903), 2 by Alb. H. Collings (1908); all 3 last in possession of Lord Wraxall in 1930.

    Children:
    1. George Antony Gibbs was born on 5 Sep 1911 in Long Ashton, Somerset; died on 5 Sep 1911 in Long Ashton, Somerset.
    2. 1. Doreen Albinia de Burgh Gibbs was born on 17 Sep 1913 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 25 Jan 2008 in St. Helier, Jersey, Channel Islands.
    3. Antony Eustace Long Gibbs was born on 24 Sep 1916 in London; died on 29 Nov 1916 in London.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Antony Gibbs, of TyntesfieldAntony Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 10 Dec 1841 in London (son of William Gibbs, of Tyntesfield and Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey); died on 24 Apr 1907 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 29 Apr 1907 in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: High Sheriff, county Somerset
    • Baptism: 11 Jan 1842, St Johns, Paddington, London
    • Residence: 1901, Paddington, London

    Notes:

    1st son of Tyntesfield. Baptised 11 January 1842 at St. John's, Paddington. Educated at Radley College 1855-7; matric. at Oxford (Exeter College) 2 May 1862; BA 1867; MA 1869; entered at the Inner Temple as a student 1865. Died at Tyntesfield 24 and was buried 29 April 1907 at Wraxall, Somerset. Memorial Inscription in churchyard there and in the chapel (Charlton chapel), in Tyntesfield chapel and Keble College chapel; Memorial window in Clyst St. George chapel. Will dated 23 March 1905, proved 12 July 1907.

    After marriage, Charlton (see entry for William Gibbs of Tyntesfield) was his country residence till his mother died; thereafter Tyntesfield. He succeeded to his father's properties in Somerset and Devon. He bought Barrow Court in Barrow Gurney, Somerset, adjoining Flax Bourton, from John Henry Blagrave in 1881 and sold it (with most of its land) to his brother Martin in 1884 and he augmented the living of Barrow Gurney. He bought, about 1874, Barton Place in the parish of St. David, Exeter, the ancestral home of his wife's family. He was patron of the livings of Clyst St. George, Exwick, Stowe-nine-churches, St. Michael's in Paddington, North Newton and Otterbourne which were all in his father's gift, also of Alphington, Devon, and of Flax Barton (in which part of the Tyntesfield Estate lies) both of which he bought.

    A member of the Council of Radley College 1890-7. He and his brother, Martin, gave to Keble College, Oxford, in their father's memory, the side of the main quadrangle of the College embracing the hall, library, common rooms and kitchen. The foundation stone was laid in 1876, on the same day that the Chapel given by their father to the College was opened (see also entry for William Gibbs of Tyntesfield), and the opening took place in 1878, when the two brothers, whose names had so far been withheld, were disclosed as the donors (the deed of gift hangs in the Senior Common Room of the College).

    Wraxall church was restored (1893) at his chief cost (Sir Arthur Blomfield, architect), and he introduced the stained glass windows by Kemp, and screened off the Charlton chapel, adding to it the reredos by Kemp.

    He joined the North Somerset Yeomanry Cavalry as Cornet, 3 January, 1871; Captain October, 1881; Hon. Major, 1881; Major, 1886; retired 1893.

    Justice of the Peace for Somerset from about 1867 to 1907. On the Highway Board and Board of Guardians. High Sheriff of Somerset for 1888 and Deputy Lieutenant 1889-1907. An Alderman of the Somerset County Council to 1898. President of the North Somerset Conservative Association for a great number of years. A Life Governor of Bristol General Hospital. On Bristol Diocesan committees for the promotion of Church matters. (In Sidney Lee's 'Life of King Edward VII (1923-7) it is related that the King when Prince of Wales twice in 1881 pressed on Gladstone the bestowal of a Baronetcy on Antony Gibbs. His son Lord Wraxall told John Arthur Gibbs - fourth editor of the Gibbs Pedigree - that this story was inaccurate and he asked Lee to omit it from any later edition, the facts being that the Liberal Whip Marjoribanks (later Lord Tweedmouth invited Antony to an interview, at which he said that gladstone desired to suggest him to the Queen for a Peerage, making reference to his and his father's philanthropic works, but that Antony having then mentioned that he was a Conservative he heard no more of the matter

    Portraits: as a child by John Phillip, miniature with his father and sister Dorothea by Sir Wm. Ross, oil by J. H. Lorimer; all last in possession of Lord Wraxall in 1930 (11). The portrait in the Hall of Keble College is a copy by F. George Swaish of the Lorimer.

    Birth:
    13 Hyde Park Gardens

    Antony married Janet Louisa Merivale on 22 Jun 1872 in St. Michael's, Star Street, Paddington. Janet (daughter of John Louis Merivale and Mary Anne Webster) was born on 15 Dec 1850 in Kilburn, Middlesex; died on 10 Dec 1909 in London; was buried on 14 Dec 1909 in Wraxall, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Janet Louisa MerivaleJanet Louisa Merivale was born on 15 Dec 1850 in Kilburn, Middlesex (daughter of John Louis Merivale and Mary Anne Webster); died on 10 Dec 1909 in London; was buried on 14 Dec 1909 in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 25 Jan 1851, Hampstead, London
    • Residence: 1861, Exeter St David, Exeter, Devon
    • Residence: 1881, Wraxall, Somerset

    Notes:

    1st daughter of John Louis Merrivale (died 1886) by his 1st wife Mary Anne, daughter of Joseph Webster. Baptised 25 January 1851 at the parish church of Hampstead, Middlesex. Died at 104 Eaton Square, Westminster, 10th and was buried 14 December 1909 at Wraxall, Somerset. Memorial Inscription in same places as her husband's except Keble College. Will dated 17 August 1908, proved 20 January 1910.

    After her husband died she resided at Charlton aforesaid, and for her London house took 104 Eaton Sq., Westminster, in place of 16 Hyde Park Gds. aforesaid. the lease of which she sold. One of her brothers, George Montagu Merivale (1855-1931) was a partner in Gibbs, Bright & Co., Sydney, Australia, till 1924. Her father was Senior Registrar in Chancery and brother of Herman Merivale, C.B., and of Charles, Dean of Ely, whose lives are in Dictionary National Biography.

    Her father's 2nd wife was his cousin, Frances Rose, sister of Baron John Benjamin Heath (born 1879), who was son of John Heath of the firm Heath and Co., Genoa. For the Merivale family and their relatives of the Heath, Drury, Malet and Frere families, and for printed books which refer to them see the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs. The friendship between the Gibbs and Merivale families began in 1803 when Antony Gibbs (born 1756) went to live at Cowley near Barton Place.

    Portrait by Archer (1875) with her son George
    (Lord Wraxall) was last in possession of the latter, 1930.

    Children:
    1. 2. The Right Hon. George Abraham Gibbs, 1st Baron Wraxall was born on 6 Jul 1873 in Wraxall, Somerset; died on 28 Oct 1931 in London; was buried on 31 Oct 1931 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    2. Antony Hubert Gibbs, JP was born on 18 Sep 1874 in Wraxall, Somerset; died on 28 Jul 1957 in Pytte, Clyst St George, Devon; was buried in Clyst St George, Devon.
    3. Albinia Rose Gibbs was born on 31 Mar 1876 in Paddington, London; died on 3 Oct 1941 in Thornbury, Gloucestershire.
    4. Lieut. Colonel William Gibbs, CVO was born on 20 Nov 1877 in Paddington, London; died on 25 Jan 1963 in Hatherop, Gloucestershire.
    5. Colonel John Evelyn Gibbs, MC was born on 22 Dec 1879 in London; died on 11 Oct 1932 in Tetbury, Gloucestershire; was buried in Shipton Moyne, Gloucestershire.
    6. Anstice Katherine Gibbs was born on 12 Sep 1881 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 8 Jan 1963 in Chelsea, London.
    7. Louis Merivale Gibbs was born on 24 Apr 1883 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 1 May 1884 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.
    8. Captain Eustace Lyle Gibbs was born on 10 Mar 1885 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 11 Feb 1915 in Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium; was buried in Ypres, West Flanders, Belgium.
    9. Janet Blanche Gibbs was born on 15 Apr 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; died on 4 Jun 1974 in Chippenham, Wiltshire.
    10. Lancelot Merivale Gibbs, Brid. CVO DSO MC was born on 23 Dec 1889 in Wraxall, Somerset; died on 8 Dec 1966 in Gloucestershire; was buried in Dec 1966 in Shipton Moyne, Gloucestershire.

  3. 6.  Viscount Walter Hume Long was born on 13 Jul 1854 in Bath, Somerset (son of Richard Penruddocks Long and Charlotte Anna Hume Dick); died on 26 Sep 1924 in Westbury, Wiltshire; was buried on 1 Oct 1924 in West Ashton, Wiltshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1861, Kerry, Montgomeryshire, Wales

    Notes:

    Walter Hume Long, 1st Viscount Long, PC, JP, FRS (13 July 1854 – 26 September 1924), was a British Unionist politician. In a political career spanning over 40 years, he held office as President of the Board of Agriculture, President of the Local Government Board, Chief Secretary for Ireland, Secretary of State for the Colonies and First Lord of the Admiralty. He is also remembered for his links with Irish Unionism, and served as Leader of the Irish Unionist Party in the House of Commons from 1906 to 1910. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Long,_1st_Viscount_Long

    Walter married Dorothy Blanche Boyle on 1 Aug 1878 in St George Hanover Square, London. Dorothy (daughter of Richard Edmund St Lawrence Boyle, 9th Earl Of Cork and Emily Charlotte De Burgh) was born on 18 Nov 1858 in London; died on 7 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire; was buried on 10 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Dorothy Blanche Boyle was born on 18 Nov 1858 in London (daughter of Richard Edmund St Lawrence Boyle, 9th Earl Of Cork and Emily Charlotte De Burgh); died on 7 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire; was buried on 10 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire.
    Children:
    1. Brigadier-General Walter Long was born on 26 Jul 1879 in Charles St W, London; died on 27 Jan 1917 in Hébuterne, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France; was buried in Couin British Cemetery, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.
    2. 3. Victoria Florence de Burgh Long was born on 10 Aug 1880 in 1 Grafton Street, Westminster, London; died on 29 Mar 1920 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.
    3. Lettice Margaret Long was born on 1 Nov 1885 in Tronbridge West Ashton, Wiltshire; died on 1 Sep 1950 in East Tytherton, Wiltshire.
    4. Richard Eric Onslow Long, 3rd Viscount Long was born on 22 Aug 1892 in Tronbridge West Ashton, Wiltshire; died on 12 Jan 1967 in Bath, Somerset.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  William Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 22 May 1790 in Calle de Cantarranas, Madrid, Spain (son of Antony Gibbs and Dorothea Barnetta Hucks); died on 3 Apr 1875 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried in Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Head of Antony Gibbs & Sons
    • Baptism: 21 Jul 1790, British Embassy, Madrid, Spain
    • Residence: 1861, Paddington, London; Relationship: Head
    • Residence: 1871, Wraxall, Somerset; Relation to Head of House: Head

    Notes:

    His baptism in Madrid is recorded in the Register of St. Mary Major, Exeter, see Additions of 1927 in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p.XVI (4).

    He was employed in Cadiz, Lisbon and England in his father's business 1802-5; in his uncle George's (George Gibbs of Redland) business (Gibbs Richards and Gibbs) in Bristol, 1806-8; in London under his father in the Portuguese Commission 1808-9; in London in Antony Gibbs and Son 1809-12. Partner in Antony Gibbs & Sons 1813-75; resident in Cadiz in charge of their House there 1813-22: head of A. Gibbs & Sons 1843-75 and sole partner 1843-7. During his headship the South American business prospered exceedingly. Member of Lloyds 1812-75.

    After marriage his successive residences in London were 13 Hyde Park Street (number since changed) 1840-8, Gloucester Square 1849, Sussex Square 1850, 16 Hyde Park Gardens 1851-75, all in Paddington. He bought the estate and house of Tyntesfield, Wraxall, north Somerset in April 1844 from Reverend George Turner Seymour, at various times (notably 1862-4) greatly altered the house (John Norton one of the architects) and at the end of his life built the beautiful chapel to it (Sir A. W. Blomfield, architect). He added to his property in 1865 the adjoining estate and house called Charlton (in Wraxall parish) buying it from the Kingston family, and in 1870 he reunited Belmont and Tyntesfield, buying Belmont from his nephew George L. M. Gibbs. In Devon he bought back Pytte the ancient home of our family in Clyst St. George from the executors of General Doveton, in 1859, made other purchases in that parish, rebuilt cottages, and amongst other benefactions to the village and church gave a memorial window (1860) to his grandfather (George Abraham Gibbs of Pytte). He also bought from Lord Devon in 1873 an estate in Alphington, nr. Exeter (which extended into Whitestone). At Littlemore, Oxon, he bought in 1872 the house of his cousin and former partner Charles Crawley.

    The village school and school-master's house at Clifton Hampden, Oxon, in 1847, and the Church at Flaxley, in Gloucestershire, in 1856 were both built at his cost (the architect being G. Gilbert Scott): so also in 1861 were St. Michael and All Angels Church in Star Street, Paddington, and its vicarage (architect Rhode Hawkins). In Devon, he built in 1868 the Chapel-of-Ease of St. Antony at Cowley in memory of his parents and of his own life there, and at the same time and with the same architect (R. Hawkins) the Church of St. Michael and All Angels and its vicarage in the parish of St. David, Exeter; and in 1872 he enlarged the church at Exwick and in 1874 built its vicarage on the site of the grounds of his father's one time residence Exwick House. Moreover, he contributed largely to the restoration of Exeter and Bristol Cathedrals. The endowments of the livings of Exwick, St. Michael's Exeter, and St. Michael's Paddington, were also gifts from him. He acquired the advowsons of Clyst St. George (1857), Exwick, St. Michael's in Paddington, Stowe-nine-churches, North Newton in Somerset, and Otterbourne in Hampshire (the latter because of its connection with Rev. John Keble). He founded in 1859 at Brixham, Devon, a Mission to Seamen of ships sheltering in Torbay, and in 1860 there the British Seamen's Orphan Boys' Home for the Western Counties, his interest in that parish being due to his temporary tenancy of Berryhead House there, the home of Rev. John Hogg.

    Of all his gifts the most famous was the chapel of Keble College Oxford. He offered it to the College in 1872 (on the suggestion of his friend Sir John Taylor Coleridge), and himself laid the foundation stone on St. Mark's Day (25 April) 1873. He died in 1875, and his son Antony formally presented it at the opening service on St. Mark's Day 1876, conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The same day Lord Salisbury (Chancellor of the University) laid the foundation stone of the block of buildings given to the College by William's sons Antony and Martin. W. Butterfield was architect both of chapel and block, as of the rest of the College.

    William was an original (1832) member of the City of London Club and a member of the Athenaeum Club. Memorial Inscription in Wraxall church and churchyard at Tyntesfield chapel, Barrow Court chapel, Flaxley church, St. Michael's Paddington (rose window erected by the parish in his memory), St. Michael's Exeter, Keble College Chapel, Cowley chapel, Exwick chapel and St. Martin's Brighton.

    For his life in detail up to 1824 and for some particulars as to his later years see book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J. A. Gibbs. See also a booklet 'In memory of William Gibbs' (privileged printing Rivingtons, 1875) containing (inter alia) an article on his life and character by E.M.Goulburn, Dean of Norwich, reprinted from The Guardian newspaper.

    For portraits and scultpures of him see Gibbs Pedigree (1904) p.16 and list in 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p.435. In the latter G. Richmond as artist of the posthumous portrait at Keble College is an error for Sir William B. Richmond, R.A. This portrait is wrongly stated to be after Boxall in 'Catalogue of Portraits in Oxford Colleges' by Mrs. Poole, Vol. III, part II, 1925. The portrait in the list in the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs by 'artist unkown' in possession of John A. Gibbs was by E. Gill and has since been destroyed. Portraits not in the lists are, one by Edward Opie, which was in possession of Lord Wraxall, and a copy in A. Gibbs and Sons' possession of the one of the Portraits by Boxall which is engraved by Cousins.



    More information available at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibbs_(businessman)

    Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - William Gibbs https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/89656

    William married Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey on 1 Aug 1839 in Flaxley, Gloucestershire. Matilda (daughter of Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of Flaxley and Mary Albinia Page) was born on 17 Dec 1817 in Eastgate street, Gloucester; died on 22 Sep 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Matilda Blanche Crawley-Boevey was born on 17 Dec 1817 in Eastgate street, Gloucester (daughter of Sir Thomas Crawley-Boevey, 3rd Bart. of Flaxley and Mary Albinia Page); died on 22 Sep 1887 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 16 Jan 1818, St Michael, Gloucester, Gloucestershire
    • Residence: 1881, Paddington, London

    Notes:

    During her widowhood Tyntesfield and 16 Hyde Park Gardens continued to be her residences. She built (1876-8) and endowed St. Michael's Home for Consumptives in the parish of Cheddar, Somerset in memory of her husband, redecorated the chancel of St. Michael's, Exeter, which he built, and improved Exwick church. She endowed Keble College, Oxford (1881) with a fund of an annual value of £800 for Scholarships and for other grants to students. She built and maintained (as also did her son Antony after her) a Cottage Convalescent Home ("St. John's Lodge") at Wraxall afsd. and also built there in 1885 the large village club and in 1887 seven almshouses ("The Jubilee Cottages"): also the Battle Axes Inn, establishing it in her own name and on the principle of temperance as opposed to teetotalism. She gave the site (the site was left to her by her husband, she left money to the Home in her will) for the Convalescent and Incurable Home at Woking, Surrey, founded in connection with the Sisterhood of St. Peter's Kilburn, which manages St. Michael's Home afsd. A ward in Weston-super-Mare Convalescent Home, where she undertook the cost of 33 beds, bore her name.

    Memorial Inscription in Wraxall churchyard and church; Tyntesfield chapel; Barrow Gurney chapel (to which she game some windows); Flaxley church (organ remade in her memory); the chapel of Keble College; and M. windows in Barrow Court chapel.

    Refer to the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, especially pp. 33-5, 439 and 445-6 for her relations, ancestry, and 'Royal Descent', and for notes of printed books which refer to them; see also entry for her father Rev. Charles Crawley. A good memoir of her by "C.M.Y." (her friend and cousin Charlotte M. Yonge, the authoress) appeared in The Guardian newspaper at her death. For lists of Portraits and Sculpture see Gibbs Pedigree (1904) and the book 'Antony & Dorothea Gibbs' by J.A. Gibbs, p. 435, and add to them a drawing (1873) by C.W.S (was in possession of Martin A Gibbs).

    Children:
    1. Dorothea Harriett Gibbs was born on 12 Jun 1840 in 13 Hyde Park Street, Paddington, London; died on 20 Sep 1914 in 77 Crystal Palace Park, Sydenham, London; was buried on 24 Sep 1914 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset .
    2. 4. Antony Gibbs, of Tyntesfield was born on 10 Dec 1841 in London; died on 24 Apr 1907 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 29 Apr 1907 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    3. Alice Blanche Gibbs was born on 27 Oct 1843 in Paddington, London; died on 12 Mar 1871 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 17 Mar 1871 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    4. William Gibbs was born on 14 Jan 1846 in Paddington, London; died on 11 Jun 1869 in Tyntesfield, Wraxall, Somerset; was buried on 16 Jun 1869 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    5. George Abraham Gibbs was born on 25 Mar 1848 in Paddington, London; died on 23 Feb 1870 in Kingston, Jamaica; was buried on 22 Jul 1870 in Wraxall, Somerset.
    6. Henry Martin Gibbs, High Sheriff, Somerset was born on 30 May 1850 in Paddington, London; died on 22 Apr 1928 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset; was buried on 25 Apr 1928 in Barrow Gurney, Somerset.
    7. Albinia Ann Gibbs was born on 7 Jun 1853 in Paddington, London; died on 17 Apr 1874 in Paddington, London; was buried on 25 Apr 1874 in Wraxall, Somerset.

  3. 10.  John Louis Merivale was born on 12 Nov 1815 in Bloomsbury, London (son of John Herman Merivale and Louisa Heath Drury); died on 14 Dec 1886 in Dawlioh, Devon.

    John married Mary Anne Webster on 14 Mar 1849 in Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire. Mary was born in 1829 in Penns, Warwickshire; died on 5 Oct 1857 in Exeter, Devon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary Anne Webster was born in 1829 in Penns, Warwickshire; died on 5 Oct 1857 in Exeter, Devon.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Christening: 22 Mar 1829, Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire

    Children:
    1. 5. Janet Louisa Merivale was born on 15 Dec 1850 in Kilburn, Middlesex; died on 10 Dec 1909 in London; was buried on 14 Dec 1909 in Wraxall, Somerset.

  5. 12.  Richard Penruddocks Long was born on 19 Dec 1825 in Compton Park, Compton Chamberlayne, Wiltshire; died on 16 Feb 1875 in Cannes, Alpes-Maritimes, France; was buried on 3 Mar 1875 in Rood Ashton, Wiltshire.

    Richard married Charlotte Anna Hume Dick on 4 Oct 1853 in St. George's Church, Hanover Square, London. Charlotte was born in 1830; died on 18 Dec 1899 in St Thomas, Devon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Charlotte Anna Hume Dick was born in 1830; died on 18 Dec 1899 in St Thomas, Devon.
    Children:
    1. 6. Viscount Walter Hume Long was born on 13 Jul 1854 in Bath, Somerset; died on 26 Sep 1924 in Westbury, Wiltshire; was buried on 1 Oct 1924 in West Ashton, Wiltshire.

  7. 14.  Richard Edmund St Lawrence Boyle, 9th Earl Of Cork was born on 19 Apr 1829 in Dublin, Ireland; died on 22 Jun 1904 in London; was buried on 27 Jun 1904 in Marston House, Frome, Somerset.

    Notes:

    Richard Edmund St Lawrence Boyle, 9th Earl of Cork and Orrery KP, PC (19 April 1829 – 22 June 1904), styled Viscount Dungarvan between 1834 and 1856, was a British courtier and Liberal politician. In a ministerial career spanning between 1866 and 1895, he served three times as Master of the Buckhounds and twice as Master of the Horse. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Boyle,_9th_Earl_of_Cork

    Richard married Emily Charlotte De Burgh on 20 Jul 1853 in St. George's Church, Hanover Square, London. Emily was born on 19 Oct 1828 in Louth, Ulster, Ireland; died on 10 Oct 1912 in 40 Charles Street, Berkeley Square, London. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Emily Charlotte De Burgh was born on 19 Oct 1828 in Louth, Ulster, Ireland; died on 10 Oct 1912 in 40 Charles Street, Berkeley Square, London.
    Children:
    1. 7. Dorothy Blanche Boyle was born on 18 Nov 1858 in London; died on 7 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire; was buried on 10 Jun 1938 in Steeple Ashton, Trowbridge, Wiltshire.