Musgrave family

The Musgrave family was a prominent Anglo-Scottish Border family with many descendants in the United States of America, Australia and the United Kingdom a so-called Riding or Reiver clan of Cumberland and Westmorland. The earliest record of the Musgraves is Gamel, Lord of Musgrave, noted as being "of the county of Westmorland and divers manors in county Cumberland, living in the time of King Edward the Confessor (1042-1065) predating the Norman Conquest." The Musgraves though often Wardens of the West March during the times of the Reivers and among the thirteen most notorious of the reiving clans were known locally as de’ils (devils) dozen and consisted of the following families: Armstrong, Bell, Carleton, Dacre, Elliot, Graham, Johnstone, Kerr, Maxwell, Musgrave, Nixon, Storey and Scott.

Whether the family origin is Anglo-Saxon, Norman, or Strathclyde Briton is unclear. Y haplogroup DNA samples taken from Musgrave's in Britain the United States and Ulster, are predominantly (86 percent) R1b the so-called Atlantic modal. This suggests a Strath Clyde Briton origin rather than a Norman one given the high rate of R1b in Border family but is not conclusive.1 The family name may be derived from several etymological possibility's. The name is presumed to have been derived from Musgrave or Mewsgrave,or Musgreave "the keeper of the king's hawks, or the king's equerry." ref Possibly Hareleain Society. another possibility is Anglo Saxon Mus for mouse and Grav for mossy plain. The historian William Camden said that they gained their name from the village of Great Musgrave, where they settled, but Arthur Collins suggested that the name was a variation of the title margrave, meaning march-warden.[1] The name is presumed to have been derived from Musgrave or Mewsgrave, "the keeper of the king's hawks, or the king's equerry." ref Possibly Hareleain Society.Yet another possibility is the Anglo Saxon Mus for mouse and Grav for mossy plain.

The Coat of Arms granted to Sir Thomas Musgrave in the reign of Edward 111 (1327 - 1377) depicts six gold annulets, three, two and one, on a red shield. The first recorded spelling of the family name is believed to be that of Alan de Musegrave, which was dated 1228, in the "Curia Rolls of Northumberland", A branch of the family lived in the mansion of Edenhall mythology probably on Tennyson's Poem the Luck of Eden Hall based on whose fortune was assured by a lucky glass beaker which has survived from the 14th century — the Luck of Edenhall.[2][3] T

Gamel de Musgrave

Born about 1030. According to Plantagenet Harrison, the earliest record of him is "Gamel, Lord of Musgrave, of the county of Westmorland and divers manors in county Cumberland, living in the time of King Edward the Confessor (1042-1065)".[4][5]

Several lines of Musgrave emigrated early to America John Musgrave a Quaker from Belleniskfrannel, Segoe Parish, County Armagh, Ireland settled in Lancaster, Pennsylvania he and a Joe Musgrave having been listed as arriving in 1635 in Virginia. A Cuthbert Musgrave, the first of his family to emigrate to the colonies settled in Charles County, Maryland in the 1660s.

Wascelinus de Musgrave

Lord of Musgrave, co. Westmorland, and divers manors, co. Cumberland, living in the time of William the Conqueror and King Henry I, 1066-1135.[5]

Stephen de Musgrave

Stephen fil. Wascelini, lord of Musgrave in Westmorland, seised of lands in the county of Cumberland temp. Hen. I and King Stephen; *owed the King three marks in silver for a plea, 4 Hen. II (1157).[5]

John de Musgrave

John de Musgrave, lord of Great and Little Musgrave, in the county of Westmorland, in the time of King Henry II; married Matilda, dau. and coheir of Adam de Carevile, lord of Carevile, co. Cumberland. Two sons: Adam and Walter. A fine was levied, 9 John, touching the division of the manor of Carevile, co. Cumberland, by which it was settled that he and Matilda his wife should have that half of the lands of the said manor towards the north, to hold to them and the heirs of said Matilda; and that the half of the lands of the said manor towards the south, should belong to William the son of Ivette, sister of the said Matilda, to hold to him and his heirs.[5]

Adam de Musgrave

Adam de Musgrave, lord of Great and Little Musgrave, co. Westmorland, in right of his father's inheritance, and lord of half the manor of Carevile, co. Cumberland, in right of his mother, in the time of King John and Henry III.[5]

Walter de Musgrave

Living in the time of Henry II. One son, Peter, in suit with Nicholas de Musgrave and Isabella, his wife, by Walter de Morton for trespass at Morton, 53 Hen. III.[5]

Thomas de Musgrave

Thomas de Musgrave, lord of Great and Little Musgrave, and first-born son of Adam de Musgrave. Was surety for Hugh Paynel in a plea of land, 27 Hen. Ill; sheriff of Westmorland, 36 Hen. Ill; defendant in a plea, at the suit of Master William de Goldington, touching the grinding of corn at the plaintiff's mill at Saundeford, co. Westmorland, 37 Hen. Ill against whom, and Robert fil. Adam de Musgrave his brother, Robert de Askeby claimed lands in Askeby, 40 Hen. Ill; entailed the manor of Musgrave upon his heir male, I Edw. I; claimed against Michael fil. Nicholas de Musgrave, and Robert, William, and Richard, brothers of the said Michael, for cutting down trees at Musgrave, 5 Edw. I; levied a fine to confirm the lease of the third part of the manor and divers lands of Overton, which he had previously given to Richard de Musgrave, and died soon afterwards.[6]

Sir Richard de Musgrave

Sir Richard de Musgrave, chivaler, to whom his uncle, Thomas de Musgrave, gave lands and the third part of the manor of Overton, by deed dated on Monday next after the feast of St. Mark the Evangelist, 49 Hen. III;

Sir Richard de Musgrave

Sir Richard de Musgrave, chivaler, son and heir;

Sir Robert de Musgrave

Sir Robert de Musgrave, knt., lord of Musgrave, son and heir;

See also

References

  1. Arthur Collins (1741), The English Baronetage, Thomas Wotton, pp. 74–85
  2. The Luck of Edenhall in the Victoria and Albert Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum, 2012-05-08
  3. The Luck of Edenhall (Eden Hall), Pitt.edu, 2010-07-14
  4. Marshall General Plantagenet Harrison, The History of Richmondshire 1, pp. 180–181
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Percy Musgrave (1911), Collectanea Musgraviana, Notes on the Ancient Family of Musgrave, Westmorland, appendix I, J. Whitehead and Son, pp. 286–287
  6. P.H. MS. Cal. xi, p. 1151

Further reading

The Steel Bonnets: The Story of the Anglo-Scottish Border Reivers by George MacDonald Fraser

External links

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~gallgaedhil/dna_by_surname.html <--broken link Apr 2015.

http://books.google.com/books/about/A_History_of_the_Quaker_Branch_of_the_Mu.html?id=7Ac5AAAAMAAJ

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~gallgaedhil/border_reiver_deep_ancestry.htm#max_celtic

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