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Paternal Family Tree: Stewart
Maternal Family Tree: Elizabeth Sheppard 1617
Around 20th August 1736 [her father] John Stuart 3rd Earl Bute and [her mother] Mary Wortley-Montagu Countess Bute were married. He the son of [her grandfather] James Stuart 2nd Earl Bute and [her grandmother] Anne Campbell Countess Bute.
Around 1741 Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale was born to John Stuart 3rd Earl Bute and Mary Wortley-Montagu Countess Bute.
On 7th September 1761 James Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale and Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale were married. She the daughter of John Stuart 3rd Earl Bute and Mary Wortley-Montagu Countess Bute.
On 8th April 1765 Harry Powlett 6th Duke Bolton and [her sister-in-law] Katherine Lowther Duchess of Bolton were married. He the son of Harry Powlett 4th Duke Bolton and Catherine Parry.
On 5th July 1765 Charles Powlett 5th Duke Bolton committed suicide at Grosvenor Square, Belgravia shooting himself in the head with a pistol. Harry Powlett 6th Duke Bolton succeeded 6th Duke Bolton, 11th Marquess Winchester, 11th Earl Wiltshire, 11th Baron St John. [her sister-in-law] Katherine Lowther Duchess of Bolton by marriage Duchess Bolton.
On 24th May 1784 [her husband] James Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale was created 1st Earl Lonsdale. Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale by marriage Countess Lonsdale.
On 24th May 1784 [her husband] James Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale was created 1st Baron Lowther. Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale by marriage Baroness Lowther.
On 10th March 1792 [her father] John Stuart 3rd Earl Bute died. [her brother] John Stuart 1st Marquis of the Isle of Bute succeeded 4th Earl Bute. Charlotte Jane Windsor Marchioness Bute by marriage Countess Bute.
On 6th November 1794 [her mother] Mary Wortley-Montagu Countess Bute died.
On 26th October 1797 [her husband] James Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale was created 1st Viscount Lowther. Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale by marriage Viscountess Lowther.
On 10th September 1800 [her sister-in-law] Margaret Lowther Countess Darlington died. She has a monument sculpted by Richard Cooke at St Mary's Church, Staindrop commissioned by her son William Henry Vane 1st Duke Cleveland.
Margaret Lowther Countess Darlington: In 1728 she was born to Robert Lowther and Katherine Pennington. On 19th March 1757 Henry Vane 2nd Earl Darlington and she were married at London. He the son of Henry Vane 1st Earl Darlington and Grace Fitzroy Countess Darlington. On 6th March 1758 Henry Vane 1st Earl Darlington died. Henry Vane 2nd Earl Darlington succeeded 2nd Earl Darlington, 2nd Viscount Barnard, 4th Baron Barnard. She by marriage Countess Darlington.
On 24th May 1802 [her husband] James Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale died. William Lowther 1st Earl Lonsdale succeeded 2nd Viscount Lowther, 2nd Baron Lowther. Augusta Fane Countess Lonsdale by marriage Viscountess Lowther.
On 5th April 1824 Mary Stuart Countess Lonsdale died.
Cumbria and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. I propose to give you his results, with the aid of a map traced from the Ordnance Survey, (see Plate I). On that map is a farm house, called Brackenbyr, about 100 yards south of the railway station, and nearly opposite the Greyhound Inn, at Shap, which is on the east side of the high road, while the farm is on the west. Here Dr. Simpson thinks he could, in 1859, from tradition and from various indications, make out that there once was a stone circle, 400 feet in diameter, with a large stone in the centre. There is a legend of a huge stone which once stood here, and was cut up into seven pairs of "yat-stoops" (gate posts).1 From this circle at Brackenbyr, an avenue or double row of stones ran to the south and terminated in a stone circle, of which some five stones2, as well as three forming part of the avenue, are still to be seen on the west side of the L. and N. W. Railway, which, most unluckily, on its formation in 1844, passed over and destroyed the remains of the avenue, leaving only the eight stones just mentioned. The diameter of the circle was 30 yards3, and it is at a place called Shapsey, about half a mile to the south of Brackenbyr. With this paper is given, (Plate II) a reproduction of a drawing, made in 1775, by Lady Lowther, wife of Sir James Lowther, afterwards Earl of Lonsdale. This shows the avenue, and is taken from the Shapsey, or south end of it, looking north. Returning again to the Brackenbyr circle, Dr. Simpson makes out a single row of large stones (the huge pyramidal stones) running from that circle in a north-westerly direction, of which four stones remain at Karl Lofts4, about 200 yards north of the Greyhound Inn at Shap. Seven or eight others, including the Guggleby, are yet to be found, and tradition says they extended as far as Moor Divock. Dr. Simpson's restoration of the Shap Stones is reproduced here as Plate III, which gives a ground plan, while Plate IV gives his idea of the appearance presented by the single row of large stones (the huge pyramidal stones) running from the Brackenbyr circle in a north-westerly direction. We are inclined to think he shows far too many stones. Canon Greenwell appears to approve of Dr. Simpson's restoration: at any rate, he writes:—
The large series of standing stones at Shap, however, once consisting of at least a circle and an avenue, is now almost entirely destroyed; but from such parts of it as are left, and from old accounts and the traditional knowledge of the place, the Rev. Dr. Simpson, LL.D., has been enabled to reconstruct it.5
Note 1. The O.S. (six inch scale) shows one stone at Brackenbyr: this would be part of Dr. Simpson's large circle.
Note 2. The five stones, part of the destroyed circle, are shown on the O. S, (six inch scale), and are marked ' Druidical Circle ' in old English letters. The O. S. also shows a single stone at Force Bridge, (close to the east side of the high road, and just south of the water), and three stones about half way between Force Bridge and Brackenbyr; those would from part of the avenue. An isolated stone to the end of the railway is not éonformable.
Note 3. See Dr. Simpson's Paper, ut ante p. 28.
Note 4. Dr. Simpson uses the words 'Karl Lofts' in a two-fold sense, which is rather puzzling. Here he means the four stones north of the Greyhound Inn, at Shap, but in a passage which we have quoted from him at the beginning of this paper, he means the district south to Shap down to Shapsey.
Note 5. British Barrows,: Greenwell and Rolleston, pp. 381-2.
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