
- 1839
-
Name |
James Duff |
Prefix |
Gen. Sir |
Suffix |
MP |
Birth |
Keith, Aberdeenshire, Scotland |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
5 Dec 1839 |
Funtington House, near Chichester, Sussex, England |
Burial |
Funtington parish churchyard |
Person ID |
I190926 |
My Genealogy |
Last Modified |
29 Jun 2022 |
Family |
Basilia Dawes, b. 12 Mar 1765 d. 1849 (Age 83 years) |
Marriage |
12 Aug 1785 |
- The entry of the marriage of James Duff and Basilia Dawes in the registers of St. Marylebone Parish Church is witnessed by Dr. and Mrs. Fotheringliam, previously well Unown in Banff
|
Children |
|
Family ID |
F78504 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
29 Jun 2022 |
-
Notes |
- General Sir James Duff (1752– 1839) was a British army officer, who fought in the Napoleonic wars and Member of Parliament (1784– 1789).
Born Keith, Aberdeenshire. Eldest illegitimate son of James Duff, second Earl Fife (1729– 1809), and Margaret Adam, of Keith. His mother, 'of humble status', had 3 children with Fife. They were put with William Rose, Fife's factor. "Fife paid for James's education, army promotions, and for his small Aberdeenshire estate of Kinstair, and made him his constant companion."
Commissioned into the army, April 1769. Rose to become General (1809). The most notable, arguably notorious, moment of his army career was his role in crushing the Irish Rebellion of 1798.
Knighted April 1779.
In 1785, Duff married Basilia Dawes, the heiress to the fortune of James Dawes, who had made his fortune in the West Indies. Along with the marriage came the sugar plantation – the Grange Sugar Estate in Rockwell, Jamaica – and the hundreds of African slaves who were forced to work on it.
|