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Francis North, 4th Earl of Guilford (25 December 1761–1817) Lady Anne North (8 January 1764 – 18 January 1832), who married the 1st Earl of Sheffield on 20 January 1798 and had two children; Frederick North, 5th Earl of Guilford (7 February 1766–1827) Lady Charlotte North (December 1770–25 October 1849), who married Lt. Col.
William A. V. Cecil was the younger son of Cornelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt (1900–1976) and English-born aristocrat John Francis Amherst Cecil (1890–1954). He was the grandson of George Washington Vanderbilt II and Lord William Cecil, the great-grandson of William Henry Vanderbilt and William Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Exeter.
Coat of arms of David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowdon & Serena Armstrong-Jones, Countess of Snowdon. On 8 October 1993, she married David Armstrong-Jones (then known as Viscount Linley), [6] – the only son of Princess Margaret, a nephew of Queen Elizabeth II, and first cousin of King Charles III – at St Margaret's Church, Westminster.
A portrait of Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford. Despite the first two creations, the title of Earl of Guilford is chiefly associated with one branch of the North family, which descends from the Hon. Sir Francis North, second son of Dudley North, 4th Baron North (see the Baron North for earlier history of the family), a lawyer and politician.
Mary Lily's marriage to Henry Flagler helped make her entire family extremely wealthy. William R. Kenan Jr. and her sisters Jessie Kenan Wise and Sarah Graham Kenan and niece Louise Wise, were all recipients of her will's largess. So was the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
George John Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer, portrait in oil by Joshua Reynolds, 1774 - 1776. Lord Spencer was born at Wimbledon Park House, London, the son of John Spencer, 1st Earl Spencer, and his wife Margaret Georgiana Poyntz, daughter of Stephen Poyntz, and was baptised there on 16 October 1758.
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John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester became infatuated with Elizabeth Malet and asked for her hand in marriage. She refused to marry the earl, and on 26 May 1665 he attempted to abduct her. In his diaries, Samuel Pepys describes Elizabeth Malet as the "great beauty and fortune of the North" and notes the scandal of her kidnapping by Rochester: