Calverley-Blackett baronets

The Calverley, later Calverley-Blackett Baronetcy, of Calverley in the County of York, was a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain. It was created on 11 November 1711 for Walter Calverley. He was succeeded by his son Walter, the second Baronet. In 1729 he married Elizabeth Orde, illegitimate daughter of Sir William Blackett, 2nd Baronet who on his death in 1728 had bequeathed his estate to Calverley, his nephew, on the condition that he marry Elizabeth and assume the additional surname of Blackett. He and Elizabeth had no children and the baronetcy became extinct on Calverley-Blackett's death in 1777.[1]

Calverley, later Calverley-Blackett baronets, of Calverley (1711)

gollark: We should replace C(++) mostly with Rust or maybe Zig or high-level languages.
gollark: Consider a random CLI tool. That probably does *not* need access to C libraries specifically. Or a random desktop application.
gollark: That's mostly a bad reason because a lot of the time they *don't* really, or there are already libraries binding to C stuff.
gollark: Consider supreme overlord Rust. That has C bindings for loads. Consider Python and JS, less supreme and/or overlording. Those also have C bindings for many things.
gollark: Somewhat plausible, but you can bind to C from other languages fine.

See also

References

  1. Cokayne, George Edward (1906) Complete Baronetage. Volume V. Exeter: W. Pollard & Co. LCCN 06-23564. p. 13

Further reading

  • Kirtley, Allan; Longbottom, Patricia; Blackett, Martin (2013). A History of the Blacketts. The Blacketts. ISBN 978-0-9575675-0-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

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