Hughes-Hunter baronets
The Hughes-Hunter Baronetcy, of Plâs Côch in the Parish of Llanedwen in the County of Anglesey, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 5 December 1906 for Colonel Charles Hughes-Hunter,[1] a Deputy Lieutenant, Justice of the Peace and Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Born Charles Hunter, he married Sarah Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of William Bulkeley Hughes, and assumed in 1904 by Royal licence the additional surname of Hughes.[2] The title became extinct on the death of the second Baronet in 1951.
Hughes-Hunter baronets, of Plâs Côch (1906)
- Col Sir Charles Hughes-Hunter, FRSE 1st Baronet (1844–1907)
- Sir William Bulkeley Hughes Hughes-Hunter, 2nd Baronet (1880–1951)
gollark: If it ever runs on a real machine, it will automatically compile itself to be optimal for the given platform, and then begin spreading to the rest of the world's information networks, then begin designing and constructing nanomachines to enter the physical world to optimize "macro" definition.
gollark: Macron must only be run in quadruply nested VMs for security.
gollark: Are there greater lesser warnings?
gollark: Are there "lesser warnings"? Minor failed lints?
gollark: The implications are obvious.
References
- "No. 27971". The London Gazette. 27 November 1906. p. 8299.
- "No. 27673". The London Gazette. 3 May 1904. p. 2839.
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