Thomas Gale
GGGGGGGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
James Gale seated at Thimcroft near Scruton -1523
GGGGGGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
Oliver Gale of Thimcroft married Ellen Marshall of Richmondshire
GGGGGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
George Gale of York, Goldsmith, master of the mint, Sheriff of
that City 1530 and Lord Mayor in 1534 and 1546 d. 1557 – he
married Mary, daughter of Robert Lord, of Kendall
GGGGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
Robert Francis Gale Esq. of Akenam Grange Co. York Treasurer of
the Royal Mint (died 1590) married Anne, daughter of William Clapham
Esq. of Beamsley and widow of John Thwaite of Marston. She married
thirdly to John Ingleby, Esq. brother of Sir William Ingleby of
Ripley
GGGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
John Gale of Scruton, Esq. married Jane eldest daughter of John
Frank, of Pontefract, Esq. (d. 1624)
GGGGGGGGGrandfather.....
Christopher Gale, Esq. born 1597 married Frances, daughter of
Conyers of Holtby (d.1656)
GGGGGGGGrandfather .....
Rev. Thomas Gale, D.D. (only surviving child), a divine critic.......antiquary
of distinguished erudition. He was born at Scruton York in 1636
and received his education at Westminster School and at Trinity
College, Cambridge, of which he was fellow taking the degree of
B.A. in 1658 and that of M.A. in 1662. In 1672 he was appointed
Greek Professor in that university, and in 1671 published a collection
of the ancient Mythological writers entitled “Optsc... Mythologica
Ethica et Physica, Graece et Latine,”8vo. In the next year
he obtained the mastership of St. Paul’s School, London, “the
which situations,” says Dr. Whitaker, “he was employed
to write the inscriptions now remaining” on the monument of
the great fire,” which, by no fault of the write, “like
the tall bully, lifts its head and lies,’ in imputing that
great calamity to a party, whom all reasonable men now acknowledge
to have had no participation . In the fact that in 1675 “he
accumulated the degrees of B.D. and D.D. at Cambridge, and in the
following year was made a prebendary of the Metropolitan Cathedral.
In 1677 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, which at that
period, comprehended men of virtue of every description; and in
1695, deservedly removed to the deanery of York, a dignity he enjoyed
not quite five years. He died 7 April 1702, and was buried in York
Minster, 15th MI.
Rev. Thomas Gale was married to Barbara – daughter of Thomas
Pepys, Esq. of Impington, Cambridge died 1689
GGGGGGGrandfather.....
Roger Gale, of Scruton, Esq., born there in 1672, fellow of Trinity
College, Cambridge, 1697, M.A. 1698, the well known author of the
“Registrum Honoris de Richmond.” This eminent person
represented the borough of Northallerton in three parliaments (1706/13)
(one of which was the first British parliament), and at the termination
of the last was appointed a commissioner of excise. He was the first
vice-president of the Society of Antiquaries and treasurer to the
Royal Society. He was married at York Minster 11th August 1702,
died 25th June 1744 at Scruton aged 72.
He was married to Henrietta, daughter of Henry Raper, of Cowling
Hall, co. York, She died 29th September 1720 aged 43.
GGGGGGrandfather.....
Roger Henry Gale of Scruton, Esq. only son and heir, Fellow Commoner
of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, born in 1710 married in 1740
died in 1768. Married ggggggrandmother Catherine Crowe of Kiplin
Co. York Esq. ob 1782 in Newman Street, London
GGGGGrandfather.....
Henry Gale of Scruton born in 1744, married at St. Andrew’s
Holborn, 3rd April 1779, died 1821 - only daughter and heiress of
Francis Dalton, Hawkswell, Esq. and Mary Tasker.
REMEMBERING HARRIET GALE AND THE GALE FAMILY .....
Harriet Gale –daughter of Henry Gale(GGGGGRANDFATHER)G of
Scruton Hall b.1744 d. 1821 and Mary, only daughter and heiress
of Francis Dalton Esq. of Hawkeswell(or Manxwell?)
Harriet Gale (b. 1789 heiress of Scruton Hall) married Foster
Lechmere Coore of Firby Hall on February 22 1816. She died December
15 1839
GGGGrandparents.....
Foster Lechmere Coore of Firby Hall was born December 26 1780.
BA Cantab. 1802
A.D.C. to Sir G. Provost in Canada. Lt. Co XV Hussars married
Feb. 22 1816 Harriet Gale.
Harriet and Foster had 3 sons and five daughters including
GGGrandparents.....
Henry Foster Coore – Born 18th January 1820 who married
Augusta Caroline, 1841 daughter of Mark Milbank of Thorpe Perrow,
Esq., and Lady Augusta Henrietta Vane 3rd daughter of the Duke of
Cleveland. Henry F. Coore died 1890. Henry and Augusta had 4 children
of whom George Barnard Milbank was the fourth son.
GGrandparents.....
George Barnard Milbank Coore was born on December 28 1865 married
Augusta von Schmelling daughter of General Burckhardt Heinrich von
Schmelling and Araminta Mary
daughter of Sir Charles Price 1st Bart., of Spring Grove, Richmond
Surrey. They had four children of whom Gertrude Mary was the fourth.
George Barnard Milbank Coore and Augusta von Schmelling were married
in Wiesbaden, Germany on August 29th 1891/
Gertrude Mary Coore was born on February 4, 1899. She married
Errol Aubrey Galbraith Knox on 4th September, 1919. Gertrude (Bunny)
Knox died 27th June 1971.
She had three children. Patricia (Steele) Peter Edmund Knox was
2nd child., Pamela Ann (O’Connor)
We are the children Edmund, Jane, Paul etc. of Peter Edmund Knox
GALE, ROGER (1672-1744), antiquary, eldest son of Thomas Gale,
dean of York [q. v.], by his wife Barbara, daughter of Thomas Pepys,
esq., was born in 1672, and was educated at St. Paul’s School,
London, where his father was at the time high-master. He proceeded,
with a Campden exhibition from the school, to Trinity College, Cambridge,
in 1691, obtaining a scholarship there in 1693 and a fellowship
in 1697. He graduated B.A. in 1694, and M.A. in 1698. The family
estate of Scruton, Yorkshire, came into his possession on his father’s
death in 1702. Mrs. Alice Rogers bequeathed him the manor of Cottenham,
Cambridgshire, and Gale erected a monument in the church to the
memory of his benefactress, but he soon sold the estate and chiefly
divided his time between London and Scruton. He represented Northallerton
in the parliaments of 1705, 1707, 1708, and 1710. He became a commissioner
of stamp duties 20 Dec. 1714, and was reappointed 4 May 1715. From
24 Dec. 1715 he was a commissioner of excised, and was displaced
in 1735 by Sir Robert Walpole, who wanted the post for one of his
friends. Indignant letters on the subject from Gale to his friend
Dr. Stukeley appear in Stukeley’s ‘Memoirs,” i.
281, 321-4.
Gale was an enthusiastic antiquary. From his father he inherited
a valuable collection of printed books and manuscripts, to which
he made many additions. British archaeology was his chief study,
but he was also a skilled numismatist. He was liberal in assisting
fellow-antiquaries. Browne Willis, a lifelong acquaintance, received
from him a manuscript history of Northallerton, intended for, but
never included in, Willis’s ‘Notitia Parliamentaria.’
The manuscript passed to William Cole, and its substance was given
by Gale in his work on Richmond. He helped Frances Drake in his
‘History of York,’ and prepared a discourse on the four
Roman ways from his father’s notes fro Hearne’s edition
of Leland’s ‘Itinerary,’ vol. vi. (HEARNE, Coll.,
Oxford Hist. Soc., iii. 220). Hearne, writing to Rawlinson on 8
Oct. 1712, describes Gale as ‘my good and kind friend’
(ib. p. 457). In August 1738 he presented some manuscripts to Trinity
College, Cambridge. Dr. Stukeley was a friend as early as 1707 (STUKELEY,
Memoirs, i. 33), and from 1717 onwards they were constantly in each
other’s society. In 1725 they made an antiquarian tour together.
In 1739 Gale’s sister Elizabeth became Dr. Stukeley’s
second wife. Sir John Clerk of Pennicuik [q. v.] was another intimate
friend and fellow-student. Gale was the first vice-president of
the Society of Antiquaries, and was treasurer of the Royal Society.
He was a member of the Spalding and Brazennose Societies.
Gale published, with notes of his own, his father’s edition
of ‘Antonini Iter Britanniarum,’ London, 1709, and in
the preface distinguishes between his own and his father’s
contributions. Gough had a copy of the book, with manuscript annotations
by Gale and others. Hearne notes (30 May 1709) that the inscriptions
‘are very faultily printed, and that the book is full of errors’
(HEARNE, Coll., Oxf. Hist. Soc., ii. 203). In 1697 Gale translated
for anonymous publications, from the French of F. Jobert, ‘The
Knowledge of Medals: of Instructions for those who apply themselves
to the study of Medals both Antient and Modern.’ A second
edition appeared in 1715. In 1722 he issued by subscription, under
the auspices of the Society of Antiquaries, ‘Registrum Honoris
de Richmond,’ with valuable appendices. Gale contributed several
papers to the ‘Philosophical Transactions,’ one, in
1744, being a letter to Peter Collinson [q. v.] on a fossil skeleton
of a man found near Bakewell, Derbyshire. A paper on a Roman altar
found at Castle Steeds, Cumberland, is in the ‘Gentleman’s
Magazine,’ 1742, p. 135, and another on a Roman inscription
at Chichester is in Horsley’s ‘Britannia Romania,’
pp. 332 et seq. The ‘Bibliotheca Topographica Britannica’
for 1781 (ii.) contains, besides many letters to antiquarian friends
and papers by his brother Samuel, Gale’s accounts of Northallerton,
of Scruton, of the Rollerich Stones, Warwickshire, of the Earls
of Richmond, and a tour in Scotland. These papers, entitled ‘Reliquiae
Galeanae,’ were edited by George Allan of Darlington, to whom
they had been presented by Gale’s grandson. Pennant, William
Norris, and other fellows of the Society of Antiquaries took a keen
interest in the publication, the expense of which was borne by Nichols
(NICHOLS, Lit. Anecd. vi. 126, &c. viii, passim).
Gale married Henrietta, daughter of Henry Roper, esq., of Cowling,
Kent. She died in 1720 and by her Gale had one son, Roger Henry.
The antiquary died at Scruton on 25 June 1744, aged 72, and was
buried there. He had some foreboding of his death, and a fortnight
before selected oak planks to be employed in making his grave. He
left direction that a flat stone should be placed above the vault
containing the coffin, and should be so covered with earth ‘that
no one should know where the grave was’ (STUKELEY, ii. 352,
356).
Gale gave many of his manuscripts to Trinity College,
Cambridge, and his collection of coins to the Cambridge University
Library, together with a catalogue prepared by himself. The chief
papers remaining at Scruton appear in the ‘Reliquiae Galeanae.’
His library was purchased by Osborn the bookseller and dispersed
in 1756 and 1758. A portrait by Vanderbanck, painted in 1722, was
at Scruton.
[Nichols’s Lit. Anecd. iv. 543-50 (for life), and passim
for various references to his intercourse with antiquaries of the
time; Hearne’s Collections (Oxf. Hist. Soc.), vols. ii. and
iii.; Dr. Stukeley’s Memoirs (Surtees Soc.); Gough’s
British Topography; Reliquiae Galeanae in Bibl. Top. Brit. Vol.
ii.]
Gale Family Tree...
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