Clan Sliochd Rob Dhuibh Mhoir
in Strathgartney, Callander, Perthshire, ScotlandIn Wester Ardchullarie, Ardcheanochdan, Letter, and Brenachoille
And their descendants in Strathgartney, Prince Edward Island, CanadaCadet Branch III of the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran
Discuss this family with fellow researchers at:
-- Capt. James Stewart, author of Stewarts of the
South,
describing Duncan Stewart, tacksman of Letter and Breanachoille.
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This page is part of the Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Group Web Site jointly hosted by myself, Ryk Brown, and my research partner, Chuck Speed. The research presented on this page is not ours alone. It is the product of all the Fellow Researchers of the Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Group. We are indebted to them for their generous contributions. This page is intended as a place for researchers to freely and cooperatively share our research with each other. The first-time reader is advised to begin with the introduction found on the Principal Families Page before proceeding on with this page.
The Stewarts of Sliochd Rob Duibh Mhoir were a cadet branch of the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran. Please refer to the Gartnafuaran page for a full introduction.
This article is still under construction.
Thanks to Belinda Dettman for the lion's share of research on this family. This family is being discussed here: http://www.hostmybb.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=866&mforum=stewart#866
The third branch of descendants from the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran were known as Sliochd Rob Duibh Mhoir or "Descendants of Big Black Rob". Their primary residences were initially Wester Ardchullarie in Strathyre, and later one-fourth of Ardcheanochdan on Loch Venacher in Lower Strathgartney and the properties of Breanachoille and Letter on the northeast shore of Loch Katrine in Upper Strathgartney. This family is described in Stewarts of the South as follows:
Or what is called "Sliochd Rob Dhuibh mhoir" ("Children of Big Black Rob"), who was a son of Gartnafuara, [and a] tenant of Wester Ardchubry [sic, s/b Ardchulary] [in] Balquhidder parish in Strathyre[,] district of Auchlessy.
[Big Black Rob's] descendant was Rob McDonachie ("Robert, son of Duncan"), lately one of the four tenants of Ardcheanacnocan who left four sons, [namely]
- Duncan, [a] tacksman of Letter & Brainchoill [on] Loch Catherineside [in] Callendar parish who has three sons:
- Robert, a clerk in London
- James, a student of Divinity and
- a young boy [who is] under age
This Duncan Stewart is possessed of some unprincipled abilities; he is tacksman of Brainchoill where there was once a hospitable reception for persons of every description with every mark of kindly hospitality by the late worthy family of Glenbuckie and where there is now neither house nor hall.
[The Stewarts of the South Appendix has the following reference, brought forward here for reference.]
I mentioned in one of the preceding pages, concerning one Duncan Stewart, [a] tacksman of Brainchoil & Letter of the family of Gartnafuaran, which you will notice in the proper place, that he was a dangerous character which truly happened shortly after. I mentioned likewise in its proper place that Glenfinglas was 800 guineas - 100 guineas to each of the eight tenants there. This low fellow that raised himself from the dung hill by forwardness and villainy, offered 1200 Guineas for the Glen altogether with 100 guineas in the Earl of Moray's will. Now bad as he is, the coiff, the Earl would not accept of this, and only advanced the rent of �60. By this [the Earl] refused fully 400 guineas. But this present Earl, is acting by the injunctions of his father who directed him not to harass these tenants. For he is not in himself really bad, if Lady Moray and other bad councillors would not influence him. This Duncan Stewart, it cannot be denied, is a clever fellow, were he to make good use of his abilities. It was not out of mere spite and malice [that] he did this to his neighbours, who were tenants [at] the time [that] he was a cottar. His offers, however, rejected here with disdain and so might every one of his kind.
- David Stewart, his brother [is] a land-surveyor and factor in England. [He] has one son, a character, who is proof against all disappointments and adversities.
- Robert, his brother, is a steady [and] respectable man and a clerk in the bank of England and has no family
- James, his brother, [a] tacksman of Ard-chean-cnocan, has one son. This man has an opportunity to gain friends and money, but I am afraid he is too much addicted to his cups.
This finishes the account of "Sliochd Rob Dhuibh-mhoir". Ard-chean-cnocan, belongs to Burrel Drummond and pay of rent 100 guineas. Brainchoill and Letter pay 200 guineas. Duncan Stewart has also another farm in Glen-elg which pays �500.
Mitchell's Monumental Inscriptions records the following entries from Kilmahog Cemetery which pertain to this family:
47 (next to 48) James STEWART, late tacksman and landlord of the inn of Ardceanachrochan, 22 FEB 1827, age 55, by wife.
48a (next to 47) Robert STEWART, farmer (at) Wester Ardcheanacrochdan., wife Janet BLACK, son David born here 1 JUN 1769 went to England at an early age in partnership with his brother as land surveyor and land agent for many years in Great Russel Street Bloomsbury, London, died 26 MAY 1852, age 82, at (the) home of his nephew at Aucharacle near Strontian, Argyll. (Mitchell notes: see Allan, Emigrants to Canada (The Scottish Genealogist xvii 3 (1970) p. 89-90 � the brothers, Robert and David, were active in the colonization of Prince Edward Island, Canada, and their letter dated 1834 to William Buchanan, Trossachs, is quoted [in the article.])
48b pelican plucking its breast, in her nest (crest of the STEWART family).
The following two references pertain to this family. They are believed to have come from Stewart Clan Magazine, but the original source reference has unfortunately been lost. If any reader is aware of the correct source, please inform us here: http://www.hostmybb.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=875&mforum=stewart#875
David practised as a lawyer in London.
From a hand?written note seen in a file of tourist material in a local library.[on Prince Edward Island, Canada]??: Anyone interested in the local history of P.E.I. would enjoy reading a book titled After Strathgartney. It throws some light on the 'Land Question' by describing conditions under the Landlords.... David Stewart, born at Ardcheanochrochan, Perthshire, Scotland, was the owner of 70,000 acres, comprising Lots 30, 7, 10, 12, and parts of 47 and 27, which he visited from June to August, 1831. He never returned to the Island. His son Robert Bruce Stewart came in 1846, and took possession of the vast property, he built a large house on Lot 30 which he name Strathgartney. Among many privileges he enjoyed as proprietor of a great estate was a private mail bag. In 1875 the Land Purchase Act required him to sell all but 500 acres. His great?grandson, Alan Stewart, has his diary.
(dated 1967, unsigned).In 1846, Robert Bruce Stewart, David's son, sailed for P.E.I. and settled there as resident landlord. He built a fine house named Strathgartney, apparently after an ancestral home on the shore of Loch Katrine. Descendants of Robert Bruce Stewart occupied Strathgartney until about 1950. The house has now been restored to its original period and is operated as a museum by a private company.
From a brochure circulated by Strathgartney Enterprises Ltd., Charlottetown, P.E.I., 1968. ". . . Strathgartney Homestead was built in 1846 ? 47 by Robert Bruce Stewart, son of David Stewart of Perthshire, Scotland, who received grants of land, totalling over 70,000 acres in P.E.I. David Stewart visited his property in 1831, and in 1846 his son settled as Landlord at Strathgartney.... In 1875, when the Land Purchase Act was passed, Robert Bruce Stewart retained the 500 acres which is today Strathgartney Homestead. . . . the Stewart family continued to live here until 1955, when the Hon. W.F. Allen Stewart, a long?time member of the P.E.I. Legislative Assembly, died....
Rob Duibh Mhor Stewart, patriarch of this branch, is described in Stewarts of the South as being "a son of Gartnafuaran." That is, he was the son of one of the lairds of Gartnafuaran. Rob Duibh Mhor Stewart is recorded as having a "descendant" named Robert McDonachie Stewart (Robert, son of Duncan Stewart). Robert McDonachie Stewart has been identified below in Callander parish records as having married in 1766 in Callander to Janet Black. As the average age of males to marry in this era was about 30 years of age, then Robert McDonachie was probably born about 1735. Since Robert McDonachie is described as the "descendant" of Rob Duibh Mhor then we must presume a gap of at least two generations between them. Otherwise the author would more likely have described Robert McDonachie as Rob Duibh Mhor's "son" or "grandson", rather than "descendant". If Robert McDonachie was probably born about 1735, this his father was probably born about 1705, his grandfather about 1675, and his great-grandfather about 1645 with an increasing margin of error with each increasing generation. Thus we are looking for a laird of Gartnafuaran who was probably born no later than about 1675 +/-20 years. Alexander Stewart, 8th of Gartnafuaran, was having children too late to be the father of Rob Duibh Mhor. Walter Stewart, 7th of Gartnafuaran, had a son named Robert who has already been accounted for elsewhere and could not be identical with Rob Duibh Mhor Stewart. Thus, we are looking at Andrew Stewart, 6th of Gartnafuaran as the earliest possible candidate to be the father of Rob Duibh Mhor. However we have no record of Andrew having a son named Robert. That doesn't mean he didn't have a son, Robert; just that we have no record of any such son. However, if we go back one more generation we do find that Alexander Stewart, 5th of Gartnafuaran did have a son named Robert. Thus we suggest that Alexander Stewart, 5th of Gartnafuaran, is the most likely candidate to be the father of Rob Duibh Mhor Stewart.
We are able to fill in at least one more generation with certainty and one or two more with decreasing probability. We know that Rob McDonachie was the son of a Duncan Stewart. McDonachie is an Anglicization of the Gaelic mac Donnachaidh, which simply means "son of Duncan." Thus we can conclude with reasonable certainty that Robert's father was named Duncan Stewart. This Duncan Stewart was probably born around 1700. If Rob Duibh Mhor was probably born about 1605 then we can posit about two generations in-between. We also know that Robert McDonachie was the eldest surviving male descendant, otherwise Stewarts of the South would have mentioned another heir. If we presume for now, the simplest possible arrangement then onomastics would suggest that the intervening generations would be Duncan Stewart born about 1640 and another Robert Stewart born about 1670. We have no documentary evidence to support the naming of these intervening generations.
There is a small problem with the reference in Stewarts of the South where it says that Rob Duibh Mhor was a "tenant of Wester Ardchubry [in] Balquhidder parish in Strathyre[,] district of Auchlessy." There is no known property in Strathyre, nor anywhere in Balquhidder parish, named Ardchubry. However, there is a property in Strathyre called Ardchullarie which could easily have been written in 1815 as Archulary and incorrectly transcribed as Ardchubry. The reference to "of Auchlessy" is likely a reference to the family of Buchanan of Auchlessie who were probably the landlords of Ardchullarie.
![]() www.multimap.com |
![]() Aerial view of Ardchullarie Mor c/o www.multimap.com |
![]() Farmhouse at Ardchullarie Mor (Ardnandave Hill on the opposite shore at right) � Copyright Kevin Rae and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. |
![]() Ardchullarie viewed from across the lake at Ardnandave � Copyright Euan Nelson and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. |
Robert Dubh Mor STEWART , in Wester Ardchullarie, b. ABT 1605 in Gartnafuaran, Balquhidder, Perthshire, Scotland, as the son of Alexander STEWART, 5th of Gartnafuaran, as shown above. It is suggested that this Robert is likely the patriarch of Gartnafuaran III Branch in Stewarts of the South, known as Sliochd Rob Duibh Mhoir, "Descendants of Big Black Rob"
The sons of Rob Duibh Mhoir are not recorded in Stewarts of the South. As his father's name was Alexander then we can suggest his eldest son was probably named Alexander. Working backwards onomastically from his descendant Rob McDonachie we can suggest that Rob Duibh Mhoir probably had a younger son, named Duncan, whose line became the senior line.
Rob's wife is unknown. He is suggested as the father of:
Possible marriages
1724, Duncan STUART in this paroch and Christ: MCGREGOR in the paroch of
Balquhidder listed themselves to be proclaimed in order to marriage Nov
14th and after orderly proclamation were married Dec 7th. (No children
recorded for this marriage. Fits onomastically with children shown here.)
1725, Duncan and Ann STUARTS both in this paroch listed themselves to be proclaimed in order to marriage Jan 15th and after orderly proclamation were married 26th Jan. (No children shown for this marriage.)
Duncan's wife is unknown. Duncan was the father of:
Ardcheanaochdan
c/o www.multimap.com
Robert McDonachie STEWART , in Wester Ardcheanochdan b: ABT 1725 in
Strathyre or Strathgartney, Callander, Perthshire, Scotland as the son of Duncan
Stewart, shown above. Robert Stewart is described in Stewarts of the
South as: "[Big Black Rob's] descendant was Rob McDonachie ("Robert, son of
Duncan"), lately one of the four tenants of Ardcheanacnocan who left four sons."
Robert is recorded in Mitchell's Monumental Inscriptions for Kilmahog Cemetery: 48a (next to 47) Robert STEWART, farmer (at) Wester Ardcheanacrochdan., wife Janet BLACK, son David born here 1 JUN 1769 went to England at an early age in partnership with his brother as land surveyor and land agent for many years in Great Russel Street Bloomsbury, London, died 26 MAY 1852, age 82, at (the) home of his nephew at Aucharacle near Strontian, Argyll. (Mitchell notes: see Allan, Emigrants to Canada (The Scottish Genealogist xvii 3 (1970) p. 89-90 � the brothers, Robert and David, were active in the colonization of Prince Edward Island, Canada, and their letter dated 1834 to William Buchanan, Trossachs, is quoted [in the article.])
Robert's date of death is not recorded in the preceding entry. All we can say is that he is buried in Kilmahog Cemetery in Callander parish. Robert married on 28 NOV 1766 in Callander, Perthshire, Scotland to Janet BLACK b: ABT 1740 in Scotland. They had the following children:
James is recorded in Mitchell's Monumental Inscriptions for Kilmahog Cemetery: "47 (next to 48) James STEWART, late tacksman and landlord of the inn of Ardceanachrochan, 22 FEB 1827, age 55, by wife."
There is only one birth in Callander for a Robert, son of James Stewart in the right date range and that is the birth shown here in Offrans. Robert is the only child shown for this couple. It is not certain that Robert is the son of James, but he is a perfect fit with the information given above.
Robert married on 13 AND 24 JAN 1798 in Aberfoyle and Callander, Perthshire, Scotland to Janet STEWART b: ABT 1775 in Aberfoyle, Perthshire, Scotland. They are believed to have had the following child:
![]() Strathgartney, PEI, Canada c/o www.maps.google.com |
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The Stewart family of London, England, and Prince Edward Island was one of the largest land-owning families in the history of land proprietorship on PEI. |
David STEWART b: 1 JUN 1769 in Wester Ardcheanochdan, Callander,
Perthshire, Scotland, shown above as a son of Robert McDonachie Stewart.
David Stewart was born in Ardcheanochdan, Lower Strathgartney, Callander, Perthshire, Scotland, and later moved to London, England where he and his brother Robert were employed as land surveyors. David may also have been a lawyer. David was an active land speculator and purchased (possibly with his brother Robert) an enormous quantity of land (either 67,000 or over 70,000 acres depending on which account one follows) on Prince Edward Island, Canada, in contravention of Canada's strict land-ownership laws. These laws were introduced to encourage immigration and discourage absentee landlord ownership. The laws required that any land owner must occupy and begin to develop their lands within one year of purchase or forfeit their lands to the Crown. Duncan never lived in PEI and only visited there once in 1831; he lived in London, England the entire time he was purchasing land in PEI. David was the classic absentee landlord that these laws were enacted to prevent. However the aristocratic legislators in Prince Edward Island were lax in enforcing these laws, so David was allowed to indulge his greed. It was not until a generation later in 1875 that disgruntled and impoverished tenants on PEI rose up in protest and civil disobedience that the provincial legislaters were moved to pass the Land Purchase Act which enabled them to reclaim these large lands from their greedy landlords and redistribute them to resident landlords, and David's son, Robert Bruce Stewart, was forced to sell to the government all but 500 acres of his family's property.
David Stewart is described in Stewarts of the South as: "David Stewart, his [Duncan's] brother [is] a land-surveyor and factor in England. [He] has one son, a character, who is proof against all disappointments and adversities."
David is listed in Mitchell's Monumental Inscriptions for Kilmahog Cemetery: "48a (next to 47) Robert STEWART, farmer (at) Wester Ardcheanacrochdan., wife Janet BLACK, son David born here 1 JUN 1769 went to England at an early age in partnership with his brother as land surveyor and land agent for many years in Great Russel Street Bloomsbury, London, died 26 MAY 1852, age 82, at (the) home of his nephew at Aucharacle near Strontian, Argyll. (Mitchell notes: see Allan, Emigrants to Canada (The Scottish Genealogist xvii 3 (1970) p. 89-90 � the brothers, Robert and David, were active in the colonization of Prince Edward Island, Canada, and their letter dated 1834 to William Buchanan, Trossachs, is quoted [in the article.])
David is described in the following article, believed to have come from Stewart Clan Magazine, however the original reference has since been lost: "David practised as a lawyer in London. From a hand?written note seen in a file of tourist material in a local library.[on Prince Edward Island, Canada]??: Anyone interested in the local history of P.E.I. would enjoy reading a book titled After Strathgartney. It throws some light on the 'Land Question' by describing conditions under the Landlords.... David Stewart, born at Ardcheanochrochan, Perthshire, Scotland, was the owner of 70,000 acres, comprising Lots 30, 7, 10, 12, and parts of 47 and 27, which he visited from June to August, 1831. He never returned to the Island. His son Robert Bruce Stewart came in 1846, and took possession of the vast property, he built a large house on Lot 30 which he name Strathgartney. Among many privileges he enjoyed as proprietor of a great estate was a private mail bag. In 1875 the Land Purchase Act required him to sell all but 500 acres. His great?grandson, Alan Stewart, has his diary. (dated 1967, unsigned)."
David and his descendants are described in the following article from http://www.archives.pe.ca/peiain/fondsdetail.asp?fonds=Acc2316
"The Stewart family of London, England, and Prince Edward Island was one of the largest land-owning families in the history of land proprietorship on PEI. The patriarch, David Stewart, was born in 1769 in Loch Katrine, Scotland. He was trained as a land surveyor and became a successful land agent. He married Martha Mann Hill and had one child, Robert Bruce Stewart, born in London in 1813. As early as 1808, David Stewart began purchasing land in Prince Edward Island and by the 1830's, the Stewarts had purchased Lots 7, 10, 12, and 30 as well as parts of Lots 27, 46, and 47. The Stewart family shared their Great Russell Street home in London with Robert Stewart, David's brother and partner. Robert died in January 1846.
"David's son Robert Bruce received much of his education in the Arts and Sciences independently but was trained as a land agent and surveyor by his father. In London on 27 June 1838, Robert Bruce married Helen Birnie, daughter of the Prince Edward Island merchant, George Birnie. Robert Bruce, along with his wife and their five children left Britain on 29 August 1846 to settle in Charlottetown, PEI. In 1863, Robert Bruce moved his family, now including nine children, to a country estate called Strathgartney on the Stewart property in Lot 30.
"Upon his father's death in 1852, Robert Bruce Stewart became the largest resident proprietor on PEI, owning more than 67,000 acres . He was one of the key players in the Land Question on PEI, fighting long and hard against the Land Purchase Act by which the government would purchase all large land holdings from the proprietors which were to be sold to tenants. In February 1876, Robert Bruce was forced to sell all but 500 acres of his vast estate to the PEI government. Thereafter, Robert Bruce left his Strathgartney home and retired to Charlottetown where he lived with his second wife, Harriet Amelia Mayne, whom he married 7 December 1876. Robert Bruce Stewart died in Charlottetown 9 May 1884."
In 1841 David was residing with his brother, Robert, in St. George Bloomsbury parish in the Holborn Division of the Ossulstone Hundred in the registration district of St. Giles in the Fields, in Greater London, Middlesex, England and both were employed as surveyors. David's wife was not with him and is presumed to have died before 1841.
David Stewart married to Martha MANN b: ABT 1785 in England? although no record of their marriage has been found.
Robert Bruce Stewart is described in Stewarts of the South as "a character, who is proof against all disappointments and adversities."
Robert is described in an article which is believed to have come from Stewart Clan Magazine although the original reference has been lost: "In 1846, Robert Bruce Stewart, David's son, sailed for P.E.I. and settled there as resident landlord. He built a fine house named Strathgartney, apparently after an ancestral home on the shore of Loch Katrine. Descendants of Robert Bruce Stewart occupied Strathgartney until about 1950. The house has now been restored to its original period and is operated as a museum by a private company.
"From a brochure circulated by Strathgartney Enterprises Ltd., Charlottetown, P.E.I., 1968. ". . . Strathgartney Homestead was built in 1846 ? 47 by Robert Bruce Stewart, son of David Stewart of Perthshire, Scotland, who received grants of land, totalling over 70,000 acres in P.E.I. David Stewart visited his property in 1831, and in 1846 his son settled as Landlord at Strathgartney.... In 1875, when the Land Purchase Act was passed, Robert Bruce Stewart retained the 500 acres which is today Strathgartney Homestead. . . . the Stewart family continued to live here until 1955, when the Hon. W.F. Allen Stewart, a long?time member of the P.E.I. Legislative Assembly, died.... "
Robert Stewart's obituary: "Mr. Stewart has, for many years, occupied a place among the prominent gentlemen of our province. Since his large estates were purchased by the Government, his name has not figured so extensively in public documents as formerly; but on account of the high family to which he belonged, his means and his scholarly attainments, his decease leaves a blank in our community which cannot be easily filled." (Charlottetown Daily Patriot).
Robert Bruce Stewart married firstly on 27 JUN 1838 in London, Middlesex, England to Helen Stewart BIRNIE b: 20 APR 1815 in London, Middlesex, England, and secondly on 7 DEC 1876 in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada to Harriet Amelia MAYNE. By his first wife, Robert Bruce Stewart had the following children:
These children had numerous descendants who are beyond the scope of this research project.
c/o www.multimap.com
Boat Pier near Brenachoile
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Colin
Smith and licensed for reuse under this
Creative Commons Licence.
Duncan STEWART , in Breanachachoille and Letter b: 6 JUN 1771 in
Ardcheanochdan, Callander, Perthshire, Scotland, shown above as a son of Robert
McDonachie Stewart. Duncan Stewart is described in highly unflattering
terms in Stewarts of the South, as follows: "Duncan, [a] tacksman of Letter &
Brainchoill [on] Loch Catherineside [in] Callendar parish who has three sons:
Robert, a clerk in London, James, a student of Divinity and a young boy [who is]
under age. This Duncan Stewart is possessed of some unprincipled
abilities; he is tacksman of Brainchoill where there was once a hospitable
reception for persons of every description with every mark of kindly hospitality
by the late worthy family of Glenbuckie and where there is now neither house nor
hall." And from the Appendix: "I mentioned in one of the preceding pages,
concerning one Duncan Stewart, [a] tacksman of Brainchoil & Letter of the family
of Gartnafuaran, which you will notice in the proper place, that he was a
dangerous character which truly happened shortly after. I mentioned likewise in
its proper place that Glenfinglas was 800 guineas - 100 guineas to each of the
eight tenants there. This low fellow that raised himself from the dung hill by
forwardness and villainy, offered 1200 Guineas for the Glen altogether with 100
guineas in the Earl of Moray's will. Now bad as he is, the coiff, the Earl would
not accept of this, and only advanced the rent of �60. By this [the Earl]
refused fully 400 guineas. But this present Earl, is acting by the injunctions
of his father who directed him not to harass these tenants. For he is not in
himself really bad, if Lady Moray and other bad councillors would not influence
him. This Duncan Stewart, it cannot be denied, is a clever fellow, were he to
make good use of his abilities. It was not out of mere spite and malice [that]
he did this to his neighbours, who were tenants [at] the time [that] he was a
cottar. His offers, however, rejected here with disdain and so might every one
of his kind."
The later children shown for Duncan are not verified. They are found residing at Letter in various census records from 1841 onwards. There are almost no baptismal records in Callander parish for Strathgartney families after 1803 so it's almost impossible to confirm these relationships. However the son, David, shown here, is found in 1841 residing with a Mary Stewart, born 1771 who is a perfect match for Duncan's widow.
Duncan married on 30 DEC 1797 AND 10 JAN 1798 in Aberfoyle and Callander, Perthshire, Scotland to Mary STEWART b: ABT 1770 in Aberfoyle, Perthshire, Scotland. They are believed to have had the following children:
Alexander STEWART and Janet FERGUSON had a daughter, Agnes, born "in fornication" 20/30 DEC 1717 in Brenachil, Callander.
Robert STEWART and Elizabeth MCFARLAN, son George, b/b 4/7 MAY 1764 in Breanachoile
Alexander STEWART and Affie MCNAB had a daughter Margaret, b/b 20/25 JUN 1766 in Branchylle
David STEWART, born about 1819 in Scotland, residing in 1841 in in St. Giles in the Fields parish, in the Holborn Division of the Ossulstone Hundred, in Greater London, Middlesex, England, employed as a "J (Journeyman?) Baker (Broker? Birkin? Banker?) -- nearby to David and Robert Stewart, surveyors. Not found in 1851.
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