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William Johnstone held many important state offices including President of the Privy Council and Secretary of State. [3] James Johnstone, 2nd Marquess of Annandale, died in Naples in 1730. [3] He had enjoyed the family estate and dignities for only nine years. [3]
The claim to the earldom of Annandale and Hartfell passed to his eldest daughter Lady Anne, who married William Johnstone Hope. His daughter Lady Elizabeth (b. 16 Oct 1768, d. 17 Sept 1801) married Rev John Kemp of Edinburgh 29 Aug 1799 [ 3 ] [Rev Kemp's 1st wife had been Lady Mary Anne Carnegie [1764-d.10 Aug 1798] a sister of Lady Elizabeth ...
The title therefore descended through the female line in the person of Lady Henrietta Johnstone (who married Charles the First Earl of Hopetoun) to Patrick Hope-Johnstone. The current earl holds the subsidiary title of Lord Johnstone (1662), in the peerage of Scotland. The family seat is Raehills, near Lockerbie, Dumfriesshire.
He was the son of George Johnstone, who died in 1787, and his wife Charlotte Dee. [1] His mother married again, in 1790, to Charles Edmund Nugent. [2]Johnstone was brought up in the expectation of inheriting from his paternal uncle, the wealthy Sir William Pulteney, 5th Baronet, a property developer who died in 1805, and who had changed his surname from Johnstone.
Sir James was the son of Sir James Johnstone, 3rd Baronet and his wife Barbara, daughter of Alexander Murray, 4th Lord Elibank.In about 1759 he married Louisa Maria Elizabeth Colclough, the widow of Rev. John Meyrick, vicar of Edwinstowe, East Retford, Nottinghamshire.
Johnstone found the time, obviously, during 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic put a temporary halt to Elton’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour — and the result is Deeper Than My Roots, a family ...
Over the past year, rumors have swirled about 7 Little Johnstons star Anna Johnston's reported rift with her family. And recently, her sister, Liz, issued a direct response to the online chatter. ...
The Johnstones had two daughters, Frances Ann and Helen Scrymgeour Johnstone, and two sons, Samuel and Noah Thompson Johnstone. Both sons died in 1840, the year the family moved to Mannsdale. [1] The first Johnstone home on the Annandale plantation was a large log house.