McDonald and Potts family tree » William Singleton (1752-1835)

Données personnelles William Singleton 

Les sources 1, 2, 3, 4

Famille de William Singleton

(1) Il est marié avec Hannah Ann Parkinson.

Ils se sont mariés le 8 février 1778 à Manchester Cathedral, Manchester, Greater Manchester, United Kingdom, il avait 25 ans.

Spouse: Hannah Ann Singleton (born Parkinson)

Enfant(s):

  1. Elizabeth Singleton  1782-< 1792
  2. Sarah Ann Singleton  1786-± 1790
  3. Benjamin Singleton  1788-1853 
  4. Joseph Singleton  1790-1841
  5. Ann Maria Singleton  1793-1862
  6. Susanna Singleton  1798-1835 
  7. Colina Campbell  1798-1836 
  8. Margaret Campbell  1799-1871
  9. John Campbell  1801-1877
  10. William Singleton  1805-1883 
  11. Elizabeth Singleton  1806-1859
  12. Eve Singleton  ± 1808-????
  13. Dalmahoy Campbell  1808-1867 
  14. Moore Neil Campbell  1811-1854 


(2) Il est marié avec .? Campbell.

Ils se sont mariés

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Barre chronologique William Singleton

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Les sources

  1. WikiTree
    Col John Lochard Campbell<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: 1770 - Perthshire, Scotland<br>Marriage: Dec 22 1797 - Lismore, Argyll, Scotland<br>Death: Oct 12 1827 - Bungarribee, Doonside, New South Wales, Australia<br>Father: John Campbell, of Ardeona<br>Mother: Margaret Campbell (born Fogo)<br>Wife: Annabella Campbell, of Melfort<br>Children: Patrick Frederick CampbellGeorgianna Lorn Lorn Morshead Innes (born Campbell)
    www.wikitree.com
  2. Little-Glenton Family Website, Stafford Little, John Campbell, 25 novembre 2020
    Added via a Smart Match

    MyHeritage family tree

    Family site: Little-Glenton Family Website

    Family tree: 355321702-4
  3. FamilySearch Family Tree
    Col. John Campbell<br>Birth name: John Campbell<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: July 23 1770 - Kippen, Stirlingshire, Scotland<br>Marriage: Spouse: Annabella Campbell - Dec 22 1797 - Lismore, Argyll, Scotland<br>Immigration: Arrival in Australia - Nov 30 1821 - Sydney, New South Wales, Australia<br>Death: Oct 10 1827 - Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia<br>Burial: Oct 12 1827 - St. John's Cemetery, Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia<br>Parents: John Campbell of Ardeonaig and Lochend, Margaret Campbell (born Fogo)<br>Spouses: Annabella Campbell, .? Campbell<br>Children: <a>Colina MacLeod (born Campbell), Margaret Campbell, John Campbell, Archibald Alexander Campbell, Lieut. William Campbell, Isabella Barbara Campbell Ogilvie, Georgina Lorn Morsehead Innes (born Campbell), Patrick Frederick Campbell, Charles James Fox Campbell, Dalmahoy Campbell, Moore Neil Campbell, Arthur Wellesley Wellington Campbell, Annabella Johanna Cameron Rankin (born Campbell)<br>Siblings: Barbara Campbell, Alice Campbell, Mary Brown (born Campbell), Margaret Maxwell Campbell, Christian Bruce Campbell, William Campbell, Ann Moore Campbell<br>  Additional information:

    LifeSketch: John and Annabella Campbell were married 22 December 1797, in Appin, Argyll, Scotland, and lived at Kinlochlaich House in Skye for the first few years of their marriage. However, as John was the eldest of his family, he inherited the family estate of Lochend near Appin when his father died about 1816. Annabella Campbell was the daughter of John Campbell of Melfort in Argyllshire, who was a solider of distinction and was Governer of Fort George for several years.ia. They were probably encouraged to emigrate by the Governor of Australia who was at the time was Governor Lachlan Macquarie. Macquarie was indirectly related to John Campbell. His wife was a cousin of John Campbell and Macquarie referred to John Campbell as s kinsman. r voyage. The Campbell party which came to Australia included the eldest daughter, Colina, Mrs Macleod, her husband Archibald and three children, three grown daughters and a little girl, and four sons under fourteen. Three older sons were soldiers in India, and one little boy was left in Scotland. The eldest son became General Sir John Campbell, C.B. ch and boat trip to Glasgow and then to Edinburgh by the canal. From Edinburgh the family travelled to London by a small coastal vessel. The family boarded the 'Lusitania' in London for departure to Australia on 6 July 1821 and arrived in Hobart on 29 October 1821. His wife and family stayed at Reston near Hobart for four months, while he continued on to Sydney on the 18th November, arriving on 30 November. The family joined John in Sydney in April 1822 arriving on board the "Castle Forbes". November 1821. "The Lusitania, Captain Langdon, made the Derwent River on the 29 ult. also with merchandize. She left England just prior to the Malabar and brings passengers as follows:-John Campbell, Esq., Lady and family ... " Altogether there were thirty-seven passengers onboard and the vessel had made good time from England; it arrived almost a month ahead of the Malabar, which was carrying171 male convicts. The Lusitania left Hobart Town on 18 November 1821 and cleared Sydney Heads on the last day of the month. John Campbell, 50 years old at the time, his wife, Annabella, and their thirteen children, made a large and conspicuous addition to the colony. Military blood ran thick in both Campbell and his wife.o a colonel in 1823), and the soldiering tradition would be followed by his elder sons: one became Major-General Sir John Campbell, G. B., K. G.,S. I., while another was killed in the First Burmese war in 1824. Annabella Campbell was the daughter of another John Campbell, a colonel in the British Army and one time governor of Fort George in the Caribbean. A brother of Annabella was Lieutenant-General Sir Colin Campbell, who joined the 78thHighlanders in 1802, served under Wellington at Waterloo and was governor of Nova Scotia in 1833-39 and later governor and commander-in-chief of Ceylon. Campbell was soon made to feel at home in Sydney. By the middle of the year following his arrival he had been made a committee member of the Agricultural Society of New South Wales, and was a judge at the early agriculture and stock showings. In 1824 he became a Justice of the Peace in the company of other leading citizens such as D'Arcy Wentworth, Captain John Piper, and his neighbour at Bungarribee, William Lawson.ut obtaining land. The area to the west of Sydney, around the Prospect district, was suitable for his plans and in March 1822 Campbell, together with a Robert Crawford, advertised in the Sydney Gazette that they had taken the Armady and Milton farms on the Eastern Creek and requested those who had cattle grazing there to move them immediately.July 1824 in the Sydney Gazette Campbell announced: The Governor of this Territory having been pleased to give me a Right to occupy the Land, situate on the Westside of the Nepean River, between the Grose and Emu Plains, known by the name of the Grose Run (except the Grant to Ikin). I hereby give Notice, to all Trespassers thereon, to remove themselves and their Cattle forthwith. Campbell called his Eastern Creek estate Bungarribee, said to mean the burial place of an Aboriginal "king".hilip Gidley King. Most of the Rooty Hill-Prospect region had been reserved by the colonial authorities, but with the arrival of Macquarie, and the subsequent sale of a large number of Crown holdings, the area began to develop under private owners. It is probable that there was already a building on the site, for from a nucleus of two rooms, one wattle-and-daub and the other ironbark slab, Campbell began to build his home. He set about clearing the land and obtained a large number of convicts to facilitate this task.serted their work parties. Campbell attempted to establish the property on a sound commercial basis, although to do this he was forced to borrow heavily from a number of Sydney's prominent merchants. By March 1824 he was being summonsed by Solomon Levey. In September a debt amounting to over £400, on the purchase of cattle, was due to the firm of Raine and Ramsey, ship owners and agents, general merchants and wool brokers. The partnership of Thomas Raine, captain of the Surrey, and David Ramsey, the ship's surgeon, created a company that would possibly have rivalled those of Simeon Lord and of Cooper and Levey, had not the partnership dissolved in 1828. A descendant of Raine founded the real estate business of Raine and Horne. On 15 September 1824 Campbell wrote to John Macarthur of his crisis and appealed for help. Macarthur's reply must not have pleased Campbell for on 20 September he fired off another plea, saying that he had three days to settle the claim or "run the risk of being destroyed".;I have been trying to persuade Mr Marsden to let me have a few lambs this season two or three score as a beginning could you favour me so far as to let me have a few from you (say an equal amount) I would consider myself in the way of having a flock of that valuable animal soon". Had Campbell's credit or his relations with Macarthur been a little better, and had he obtained sufficient quantities of Captain Waterhouse's fine Cape of Good Hope merino bloodstock, there might have been another founder of the Australian wool industry to consider. Campbell's financial difficulties eased a little, however, when Macarthur, acting for Thomas Potter Macqueen, advanced a mortgage of £800, to be repaid at 8 per cent per annum. Bungarribee, as it took shape during the short years of Campbell's occupation, was a long, low building with a wide, stone-flagged veranda. The drawing room at the end of the building was circular and above it was a round tower and a series of small rooms. In much the same style as the interior doors in the foyer of Verge's The Vineyard, the doors in the two round rooms were curved. French doors from the drawing room led on to the terrace and, in time, the carefully planted gardens presented a thoroughly English character. Some sources contend that the bricks used in Bungarribee's construction were baked on the spot, others that they were ships' ballast.tte had the unfortunate task of announcing the death of Annabella Campbell: "At Boongarabee, the seat of John Campbell, Esq., J. P. and Commissioner of Crown Lands, Mrs Campbell, after a severe indisposition. This amiable lady leaves a large and respectable family and very extensive circle of friends to deplore her lamented loss." Campbell remained at Bungarribee until his own death on the evening of Wednesday, 10 October 1827.uot;. He was buried on the following Friday, beside his wife, in the grounds of St John's Church, Parramatta. In the Sydney Gazette of 18 February 1828, Mr Pritchett, the auctioneer, announced the clearing of John Campbell's estate. The. first auction was held on 15 March at "Bungarabbee on the great Western Road". The stock comprised brood mares, saddle horses and draughthorses, bullocks "well broken in", cows, heifers and steers, sheep, pigs and a large number of farming implements. On the same day the contents of the house were auctioned. On 5 March the executors advertised for persons having claims against the estate to forward them to Pritchett, who conducted the auction of Bungarribee itself exactly six months later.
    The FamilySearch Family Tree is published by MyHeritage under license from FamilySearch International, the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon Church).
  4. Geni World Family Tree
    William Singleton<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: July 1 1752 - Cheshire, England, United Kingdom<br>Occupation: Bricklayer<br>Marriage: Spouse: Hannah Ann Singleton (born Parkinson) - Feb 8 1778 - Manchester Cathedral, Manchester, Greater Manchester, United Kingdom<br>Death: May 25 1835 - Singleton, New South Wales, Australia<br>Burial: May 28 1835 - Patricks Plain, Singleton, Singleton Shire Council, NSW, Australia<br>Father: Joseph Henry Singleton<br>Mother: Ann Singleton (born Berry)<br>Wife: Hannah Ann Singleton (born Parkinson)<br>Children: James Singleton, Susannah Hibbert (born Singleton), William Singleton, infant, Elizabeth (born Singleton), infant, Sarah Ann Singleton, Infant, Benjamin Singleton, Joseph Singleton, Ann Maria Clark (born Singleton), Sarah Maria Sibrey - Reynolds (born Singleton), Hannah Maria Bellamy (born Singleton), William Singleton, Elizabeth Singleton, Eve (born Singleton)
    The Geni World Family Tree is found on http://www.geni.com" target="_blank">www.Geni.com. Geni is owned and operated by MyHeritage.

Événements historiques

  • La température le 1 juillet 1752 était d'environ 15,0 °C. Il y avait 418 mm de précipitationLe vent venait principalement de l'/du ouest-sud-ouest. Caractérisation du temps: regen geheel betrokken. Source: KNMI
  • En l'an 1752: Source: Wikipedia
    • 7 février » première interdiction de l'Encyclopédie.
    • 29 février » Alaungpaya accède au trône de Birmanie, fondant la dynastie Konbaung.
    • 31 juillet » Antoine Louis Rouillé, comte de Jouy, secrétaire d'État de la Marine, institue par un règlement l'Académie royale de marine de Brest, institutionnalisant l'initiative d'un groupe d'officiers de marine brestois, animé par le capitaine de vaisseau Sébastien-François Bigot de Morogues.
  • La température le 23 juillet 1770 était d'environ 19,0 °C. Le vent venait principalement de l'/du nord-nord-ouest. Caractérisation du temps: donker omtrent helder. Source: KNMI
  • En l'an 1770: Source: Wikipedia
    • 12 avril » tremblement de terre en Haïti.
    • 19 avril » Louis XVI épouse Marie-Antoinette d'Autriche, dans un mariage par procuration.
    • 20 avril » |le roi Héraclius II de Géorgie remporte une victoire considérable sur l'armée turque à la bataille d'Aspindza. Ce sera la dernière bataille remportée par la Géorgie jusqu'à nos jours.
    • 29 avril » James Cook, à bord de l’Endeavour, débarque sur le continent australien, en accostant à Botany Bay.
    • 16 mai » célébration du mariage du futur Louis XVI avec Marie-Antoinette d'Autriche.
    • 14 novembre » James Bruce découvre le lac Tana comme source du Nil bleu.
  • La température le 8 février 1778 était d'environ 1,0 °C. Le vent venait principalement de l'/du sud-sud-est. Caractérisation du temps: helder. Source: KNMI
  • En l'an 1778: Source: Wikipedia
    • 18 janvier » James Cook découvre l'archipel de Hawaï.
    • 14 février » la Bannière étoilée, sur le vaisseau Ranger, reçoit son premier salut par Toussaint-Guillaume Picquet de La Motte.
    • 17 mars » en signant un traité d'amitié et de commerce avec les jeunes États-Unis, la France reconnaît le nouvel État.
    • 3 juillet » victoire britannique à la bataille de la Wyoming Valley, pendant la guerre d'indépendance des États-Unis.
    • 10 juillet » la France déclare la guerre à l'Angleterre.
    • 15 décembre » bataille de Sainte-Lucie, deux jours après la sainte Lucie, pendant la guerre d'indépendance des États-Unis.


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille Singleton


Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Dr Wilton McDonald- black Hebrew, "McDonald and Potts family tree", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/mcdonald-and-potts-family-tree/I528937.php : consultée 21 juin 2024), "William Singleton (1752-1835)".