Drummond-Stewart baronets

The title of Baronet of Blair and Balcaskie in the county of Fife, was created on 2 June 1683 in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia for Thomas Stewart of Balcaskie, a Lord of Session. He was son of Henry Stewart and grandson of Sir William Stewart, 11th of Grantully and Murthly, both in Perthshire. 1st of Grantully was Sir John Stewart, Lord of Lorne, great-great-grandson of Alexander Stewart, 4th High Steward of Scotland. Murthly had been acquired by the family in 1615.[1]

Baronets, of Blair and Balcaskie (1683)

  • Sir Thomas Stewart, 1st Baronet (died by 1717)
  • Sir George Stewart, 2nd Baronet (1686–1759)
    • He inherited Grantully following the death of his cousin John Stewart, 13th of Grantully, but died unmarried.[1][3]
  • Sir John Stewart, 3rd Baronet (1687–1764)
  • Sir John Stewart, 4th Baronet (c. 1726 - 1797)
    • He was married in 1749 to Clementina Stewart, daughter of Charles Stewart of Ballechin, and was father of the 5th Baronet.[3]
  • Sir George Stewart, 5th Baronet (1750–1827)
    • He was married in 1792 to Catherine Drummond, daughter of John Drummond of Logiealmond and sister of Sir William Drummond of Logiealmond, by whom he was the father of the sixth, seventh and eighth baronets, two other sons, and two daughters. They all were given the middle name Drummond after their mother's family.[1]
  • Sir John Archibald Drummond Stewart, 6th Baronet (1794–1838)
  • Sir William Drummond Stewart, 7th Baronet (1795–1871)
    • He served with the 6th Dragoon Guards in the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign, and was awarded the Portuguese Order of Christ. In 1830 he married Christina Mary Stewart.[1] He transferred to the 15th Hussars, and later travelled in America with the mountain men.[8] On succeeding to the baronetcy he introduced buffalo to Murthly and restored the Roman Catholic chapel there.[9] His son William George Drummond Stewart served with the 93rd Highlanders in the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny, where he was awarded the Victoria Cross, but predeceased his father.
  • Sir Archibald Douglas Drummond Stewart, 8th Baronet (1807–1890)
    • He married Hester Mary Fraser in 1875, but had no children, and on his death the baronetcy became extinct. Grantully was inherited by the Fothringham family, descended from Marjory, daughter of Thomas Stewart, 12th of Grantully.[3]
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See also

References

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