History and genealogy of the Stackpole family . ot, Earl of Shrewsbury, and had a son, Richard Stackpole, who married Isabell, daughter of Laundry, and had a daughter, Isabell Stackpole, who was the second wife of Rice apGriffith. Their daughter and sole heir, Joan, married Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon, in theCounty of Derby, Kt., and died 41 Edward III. 1376. Theirson. Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon, Treasurer of Calais,married Bennet, daughter and heir of William Ludlow. From this Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon descendedthe present Baron Vernon of Kinderton, and from a Femaleof the same Family i


History and genealogy of the Stackpole family . ot, Earl of Shrewsbury, and had a son, Richard Stackpole, who married Isabell, daughter of Laundry, and had a daughter, Isabell Stackpole, who was the second wife of Rice apGriffith. Their daughter and sole heir, Joan, married Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon, in theCounty of Derby, Kt., and died 41 Edward III. 1376. Theirson. Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon, Treasurer of Calais,married Bennet, daughter and heir of William Ludlow. From this Sir Richard Vernon of Haddon descendedthe present Baron Vernon of Kinderton, and from a Femaleof the same Family is descended also the present Duke ofRutland, both which Families Quarter ye Arms of Stack-pole.* Some of the statements here made are based upon his- *References, Ancient Records of Wales, Dr. Powells History ofWales, Dugdales College of Arms, Vincents Wales College of Arms,p. 779, Edmondsons Peerage. The above-named engravings and Genealogical Table are men-tioned in Grangers Biographical History of England, Vol. IV, p. 359,published in SIR RICHARD DE STAKEPOL. ORIGIN 17 torical documents, but imagination and pride supplied therest. In the year 1902 Henry Owen, , High Sheriffof Pembrokeshire, who belongs to a very old family ofWelsh antiquarians, published a book entitled Old PembrokeFamilies, in which is a chapter on the Lords of is based on printed and manuscript records of Englandand Wales. His account is as follows:— The earliest lords of Stackpole of whom we find anymention came of a Norman family who had styled them-selves de Stackpole, but the records are so scanty that itis not possible to say with any certainty what relationshipthey bore to each other. The first of whom we hear isElidor de Stackpole, who had for his seneschal, accordingto Gerald, an evil spirit who spent his nights in the poolat Stackpole mill. Elidor founded the church of Stackpole-Elidor or Cheriton (so called to distinguish it from Stack-pole Bosher or Bosherton), and, l


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Keywords: ., bookauthorstackpol, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1920