Il est marié avec Mary Graham (Stewart).
Ils se sont mariés
Enfant(s):
John Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith is your 20th great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith (Lee)
his mother ·Üí William "Will" M Lee
her father ·Üí Martha Lee (Collier)
his mother ·Üí Stephen T Collier
her father ·Üí Catherine Collier (Roberts)
his mother ·Üí Sarah Katherine Roberts (Turner)
her mother ·Üí John Turner, Sr.
her father ·Üí Thomas Turner of Frederick County
his father ·Üí Anne Turner (Greer)
his mother ·Üí Sir James Greer of Lag, of Capenoch
her father ·Üí Sir William Grierson, 9th of Lag
his father ·Üí Helena Douglas
his mother ·Üí Christian Montgomerie
her mother ·Üí John Montgomerie, Master of Eglington
her father ·Üí Lady Helen Campbell, of Argyll
his mother ·Üí Isabel Stewart of Lorn, Countess of Argyll
her mother ·Üí John Stewart, 2nd Lord of Lorn
her father ·Üí Joan Stewart
his mother ·Üí Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith
her mother ·Üí John Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith
her father
https://www.geni.com/people/John-Graham-9th-Earl-of-Menteith/6000000000517578915
John de Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1300
Strathblane, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Death:
February 28, 1347 (46-47)
Hanged, Drawn & Quartered in London, Middlesex, England
Immediate Family:
Husband of Mary II, Countess of Menteith
Father of Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith
https://www.geni.com/people/John-Graham-9th-Earl-of-Menteith/6000000000517578915
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Graham,_Earl_of_Menteith
John was a son of John de Graham and Marjory Halliday.
Sir John Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith became Earl of Menteith by courtesy of his wife. He accompanied David II in his invasion of England in 1346. He was present at the battle of Neville's Cross and, when the archers were almost within bowshot, earnestly urged the King to send a body of cavalry to charge them in flank. His advice was unhappily disregarded and when the archers were about to direct their deadly volleys on the serried ranks of the Scottish spearmen, the Earl exclaimed, 'Give me but a hundred horse and I engage to disperse them all; so shall we be able to fight more securely.' His appeal was, however, unheeded and hastily leaping upon his horse, and followed only by his own retainers, he rushed upon the advancing bowmen but his gallant attack was not supported. His horse was killed under him and after bravely, but vainly, striving to arrest the advance of the enemy, he was compelled to retire to the main body of the Scottish army.
After a stout battle, which lasted for three hours, the Earl was taken prisoner, along with his sovereign, and was imprisoned in the Tower of London.
By the direct orders of Edward I, he was tried and condemned as a traitor, on the plea that he had at one time sworn fealty to the English King, and was drawn, hanged, beheaded and quartered.
Lady Mary Stewart, only daughter of Earl Alan, who appears to have been under age at the time of her father·Äôs death, now became Countess of Menteith. She married Sir John Graham, who is supposed to have been the younger son of Sir Patrick Graham of Kincardine, ancestor of the Montrose family, and became Earl of Menteith apparently by courtesy through his wife. He accompanied David II. in his invasion of England in 1346. He was present at the battle of Durham, and, when the archers were almost within bowshot, earnestly urged the King to send a body of cavalry to charge them in flank. His advice was unhappily disregarded, and when the archers were about to direct their deadly volleys on the serried ranks of the Scottish spearmen, the Earl exclaimed, ·ÄòGive me but a hundred horse and I engage to disperse them all; so shall we be able to fight more securely.·Äô His appeal was, however, unheeded, and hastily leaping upon his horse, and followed only by his own retainers, he rushed upon the advancing bowmen. But his gallant attack was not supported. His horse was killed under him, and after bravely, but vainly, striving to arrest the advance of the enemy, he was compelled to retire to the main body of the Scottish army. After a stout battle, which lasted for three hours, the Earl was taken prisoner, along with his sovereign, and was imprisoned in the Tower of London. By the direct orders of King Edward, he was tried and condemned as a traitor, on the plea that he had at one time sworn fealty to the English King, and was drawn, hanged, beheaded, and quartered.
http://www.electricscotland.com/WEBCLANS/families/menteith.htm
Burkes Peerage 1934 merely identifies this son as Sir John, living in 1317. The Scots Peerage (identifying him as a younger son of Sir Patrick by Annabella of Strathearn) reports a suggestion that he was the Sir John who became Earl of Menteith through his marriage.
Wyntoun, whose "Metrical Chronicle" was written in 1418, says:
"Schyre Jhon of Menteith in tha days
Tuk in Glasgow William Walays;
And sent hym until Ingland sune,
There was he quartayrd and undone."
The English chronicler Piers Langtoft states that Menteith discovered the retreat of Wallace through the treacherous information of Jack Short, his servant, and that he came under cover of night and seized him in bed. A passage in the Scala Chronica, quoted by John Leland, notes, "William Walleys was taken of the Counte of Menteith, about Glasgow, and sent to King Edward, and after was hanged, drawn, and quartered at London."
Note: John; living 1317. [Burke's Peerage] 1 1
Sources
Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: 1976
Links
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=rlord335&...
http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getper...
Sir John Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith became Earl of Menteith by courtesy of his wife. He accompanied David II in his invasion of England in 1346. He was present at the battle of Neville's Cross and, when the archers were almost within bowshot, earnestly urged the King to send a body of cavalry to charge them in flank. His advice was unhappily disregarded and when the archers were about to direct their deadly volleys on the serried ranks of the Scottish spearmen, the Earl exclaimed, 'Give me but a hundred horse and I engage to disperse them all; so shall we be able to fight more securely.' His appeal was, however, unheeded and hastily leaping upon his horse, and followed only by his own retainers, he rushed upon the advancing bowmen but his gallant attack was not supported. His horse was killed under him and after bravely, but vainly, striving to arrest the advance of the enemy, he was compelled to retire to the main body of the Scottish army.
After a stout battle, which lasted for three hours, the Earl was taken prisoner, along with his sovereign, and was imprisoned in the Tower of London.
By the direct orders of Edward I, he was tried and condemned as a traitor, on the plea that he had at one time sworn fealty to the English King, and was drawn, hanged, beheaded and quartered.
Lady Mary Stewart, only daughter of Earl Alan, who appears to have been under age at the time of her father·Äôs death, now became Countess of Menteith. She married Sir John Graham, who is supposed to have been the younger son of Sir Patrick Graham of Kincardine, ancestor of the Montrose family, and became Earl of Menteith apparently by courtesy through his wife. He accompanied David II. in his invasion of England in 1346. He was present at the battle of Durham, and, when the archers were almost within bowshot, earnestly urged the King to send a body of cavalry to charge them in flank. His advice was unhappily disregarded, and when the archers were about to direct their deadly volleys on the serried ranks of the Scottish spearmen, the Earl exclaimed, ·ÄòGive me but a hundred horse and I engage to disperse them all; so shall we be able to fight more securely.·Äô His appeal was, however, unheeded, and hastily leaping upon his horse, and followed only by his own retainers, he rushed upon the advancing bowmen. But his gallant attack was not supported. His horse was killed under him, and after bravely, but vainly, striving to arrest the advance of the enemy, he was compelled to retire to the main body of the Scottish army. After a stout battle, which lasted for three hours, the Earl was taken prisoner, along with his sovereign, and was imprisoned in the Tower of London. By the direct orders of King Edward, he was tried and condemned as a traitor, on the plea that he had at one time sworn fealty to the English King, and was drawn, hanged, beheaded, and quartered.
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John de Graham | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Graham (Stewart) |
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