Kennedy Family Line (of Cassilis)
________________________________________________________________________________
Grandy's 7x Great-Grandmother:
My 9x Great-Grandmother:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 10x Great-Grandmother:
Priscilla Christian Kennedy (1650 - 1700)
Priscilla Christian Dixon
Also known as: "Priscilla Christian Dixson", "Priscilla Dickson". "Priscilla Kennedy"
Birthdate: ca. 1647-1650
Birthplace: County Tyrone, Ulster, Ireland
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Date of Marriage: 1670
Place of Marriage: County Tyrone, Ulster, Ireland
Death: 1700 in County Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
Parents:
Rev. Hugh Thomas Kennedy
1616-1685
Mary Sophia Upton
1609-1687
Family
Spouse:
Robert Dixon
Robert Dickson, Sr.
Also known as: "Robert David Dixson"
Birthdate: bet. 1630-1635
Birthplace: Irvine, North Ayrshire, Scotland
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Military Service: Battle of Rullion Green in the Pentland Hills, November 28, 1666
Death: 1700 in Country Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
Immediate Family:
Son Rev. David Dixon and Christian Margaret Robertson
See: Dixon Family Line
Children:
1. David Dickson 1673–
2. Robert Dixson, Jr. 1675–1766
3. Margaret Dixon 1677–1729
4. Archibald Dickson 1677–
5. John Dixon 1678–1759
6. Joseph Dixon 1680–1741
About Priscilla Christian Kennedy
Priscilla Kennedy was born 1634, and died 1700. Robert Dickson and Pricilla Kennedy were immigrants to Ireland where they died; some of their children immigrated to America.
Biography
Fayette County, Pennsylvania, Genealogical and Personal History Page 210 GoogleBooks
Robert Dickson , son of Rev. David Dickson , was born at Irvine , about 1630 , became identified with the Covenanters, settled in Ulster, Ireland , and died there before 1700 . He married Priscilla Kennedy , daughter of Hugh . They had at least four children--David , Robert , Archibald and John .
From "The Harvey book : giving the genealogies of certain branches of the American families of Harvey, Nesbitt, Dixon, and Jameson, a… " by Oscar Jewell Harvey, page, Wilkes-Barre, Pa, 1899 on ancestry.com written in 1899. The Dixon's history starts on scroll page 410. From p. 387, image 419
“Robert Dickson 3 (David 2, John 1). He was born at Irvine about 1630, the youngest son of the Rev. David and Margaret (Roberton) Dickson. In early manhood he identified himself with the Presbyterian party of Scotland, and soon showed in many ways not .. he was married in Ireland to Priscilla, daughter of Hugh Kennedy, according to family tradition. Prior to 1700 Robert died, and was survived by several children, the names of only four of whom, however, have been preserved... and they are given in this history.
“Robert Dickson, who fled from Ayrshire in December, 1666, as previously noted, settled in the province of Ulster. In neither the records nor the traditions of the family has the name of the county or of the town in which he located been preserved, but it is believed that Antrim was the county. About 1670 he was married in Ireland to Priscilla, daughter of Hugh Kennedy, according to family tradition. Prior to 1700 Robert died, and was survived by several children, the names of only four of whom, however, have been preserved....
Family
“Robert Dickson, or Dixson 3 (David 2, John 1), who, as previously noted, was born in Irvine, Ayrshire, about 1630, the son of the Rev. David and Margaret (Roberton) Dickson, and who died in the province of Ulster, Ireland, before 1700 (see pages 387 and 389), had:
4. i. David, b. about 1673; d._____
5. ii. Robert, b. about 1675; d. _____
6. iii. Archibald, b. about 1677; d. _____
7. iv. John , b. 1679; d. 6 May, 1759
“Early in 1719, in company with a number of their friends and neighbors, the brothers Robert, Archibald and John named above emigrated with their families from the North of Ireland, and a few weeks later landed at Boston, Mass.
Disputed Origins
Seen as the daughter of Hugh Kennedy, of Ballycultra, Dr. of Physick & Mary Peacock without supporting evidence. No daughters were named in his 1685 will (ref: The Scottish antiquary, or, Northern notes & queries. Volume 11, page 44-45 Archive.Org)
Comments
From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-9029
”I've seen lots of dates for both Priscilla and Hugh. None with any references. I suggest we leave it until we have something firm. Wife and parents of Hugh are also questionable.”
References
http://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:L6G7-P6V
https://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=remme1007&id=I242804
References:
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/L6G7-P6V
https://www.geni.com/people/Priscilla-Dickson/6000000013308699217
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-805
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/L6G7-P6V/priscilla-christian-kennedy-1634-1700
https://gw.geneanet.org/mefleury?lang=en&n=kennedy&oc=0&p=priscilla
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/swartz-rand-family-tree/I88891031.php
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[questionable]
Grandy's 8x Great-Grandfather:
My 10x Great-Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 11x Great-Grandfather:
Rev. Hugh Thomas Kennedy (1616 - 1685)
Hugh Kennedy
Also known as: "Reverend Hugh Thomas Kennedy", "Hugh T. Kennedy", "Sir Hugh Of Girvanmains"
Birthdate: ca. 1616-1620
Birthplace: Dunure, Ayrshire, Scotland
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Death: June 26, 1685 in County Tyrone, Ireland (or, Derry, Londonderry, Ireland)
Burial: Ireland
Parents:
Colonel Gilbert Kennedy
1593-1627
Isabel Campbell
1592-1663
Family
Spouse:
Mary Sophia Upton
1609-1687
Mary Sophia Kennedy
Birthdate: November 1609
Birthplace: Newtown, Exeter, Devonshire, England (or, County Down, Ireland)
Denomination: (possibly) Anglican / Presbyterian
Date of Marriage: 1640
Place of Marriage Ayr, Scotland
Death: October 18, 1687 in Ringwould, Dover, Kent, England
Immediate Family:
Daughter of William Upton, Sr. and Amye Emma Loves
Children:
1. Priscilla Christian Kennedy 1650–1700
2. Ella Margery Kennedy 1640–1712
4. David Kennedy 1650–
5. Arthur Kennedy 1652–
6. William Kennedy 1657–1727
7. John Kennedy 1683–1761
About Rev. Hugh Thomas Kennedy
Fayette County, Pennsylvania, Genealogical and Personal History Page 210 GoogleBooks
Robert Dickson , son of Rev. David Dickson , was born at Irvine , about 1630 , became identified with the Covenanters, settled in Ulster, Ireland , and died there before 1700 . He married Priscilla Kennedy , daughter of Hugh. They had at least four children--David , Robert , Archibald and John .
Notes
From https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/dixon/442/
Robert married Priscilla Kennedy in c.1670 in Ireland.Priscilla was the daughter of Hugh Kennedy of County Tyrone. Her mother is unknown.
Comments
From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-9029
”I've seen lots of dates for both Priscilla and Hugh. None with any references. I suggest we leave it until we have something firm. Wife and parents of Hugh are also questionable.”
References
The Harvey book : giving the genealogies of certain branches of the American families of Harvey, Page 389
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/569273-redirection
References:
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/L852-R6J
https://www.geni.com/people/Hugh-Kennedy/6000000102082062821
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-9029
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/L852-R6J/reverend-hugh-thomas-kennedy-1626-1685
https://gw.geneanet.org/mefleury?lang=en&iz=0&p=hugh&n=kennedy
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/swartz-rand-family-tree/I88891798.php
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Grandy's 9x Great-Grandfather:
My 11x Great-Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 12x Great-Grandfather:
Colonel Gilbert Kennedy (1593 - 1627)
Gilbert Kennedy, of Ardmillan
Gilbert Kennedy, IV
Also Known As: "Gilbert Kennedy"
Birthdate: 1593
Birthplace: Dunure Castle, Ayrshire, Scotland
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Death: August 30, 1627 in Pow Prestick, Ayrshire, Scotland
Parents:
Gilbert Kennedy
1569-1601
Janet Stuart
1566-1627
Family
Spouse:
Isabel Campbell
1592-1663
Isabel Kennedy
Birthdate: 1603
Birthplace: Ardchattan, Oban, Argyll and Bute, Scotland (or, Glamis Castle, Angus, Scotland)
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Date of Marriage: November 4, 1620
Place of Marriage: Ayr Ayrshire Scotland
Death: 1663 in Dunure, South Ayrshire, Scotland
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Prior Alexander Campbell of Ardchattan and Mary MacArthur (or, Archibald Campbell and Lady Elizabeth Stewart)
Children:
1. Thomas Kennedy 1603–
2. Gilbert Kennedy 1620–1687
3. Margaret Kennedy 1624–1689
4. Rev. Hugh Thomas Kennedy 1616–1685
5. Jean Kennedy 1627–1700
6. Jane Kennedy 1628–1689
7. Katherine Kennedy 1630–
About Colonel Gilbert Kennedy
Ardchattan Priory was a Valliscaulian monastic community in Ardchattan, Argyll, Scotland
Not the same as Hon. Gilbert Kennedy
Family
Married Isabel Campbell, daughter of Alexander Campbell and Mary MacArthur.
Their children:
Thomas Kennedy, b. 1618, Dunure, Ayrshire, Scotland
Gilbert Kennedy, b. 1620
Comments
Updated August 2019
Colonel Gilbert Kennedy & Thomas Kennedy, of Dunure have been attributed children who were actually the children of Oliver Kennedy, 1st of Breakath:
Margaret Hamilton, John Kennedy, apothecary in Edinburgh, David Kennedy, Esq., of Ballycultra, Jane Ramsey, Katherine Hamilton, Mary Hamilton and Hugh Kennedy, of Ballycultra, Dr. of Physick were not their children.
Disputed Descendants
From https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/soc.genealogy.medieval/OO9DrRO7bxA posted by Kelsey Jackson Williams 20 August 2017
I commented briefly on the questionable nature of the Dowling pedigree back when it was first brought up in 2013. Looking at it more closely, though (http://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=fr&pz=timothy+michael&...) it's clear that it's an absolute farrago of fantasy and wishful thinking. To take an example, one of the alleged children of the Gilbert Kennedy and Isabel Campbell you mention is supposed to be a certain Hugh Kennedy who married Mary Upton. This was Dr. Hugh Kennedy of Ballycultra, co. Down (see _Scottish Antiquary_ 11 [1897]: 44) but he neither had a son William nor a father Gilbert - his actual father being Oliver Kennedy, 1st of Breakath, a younger son of the Balmaclanachan family.
Note: This affects Hugh Kennedy, of Ballycultra, Dr. of Physick and also his brothers (named in each other’s wills) David Kennedy, Esq., of Ballycultra & John Kennedy, apothecary in Edinburgh
From http://www.arborealis.ca/blog/19thC-genealogy-kennedy/
The next image extracts that portion of the family tree, above, beginning with the first Earl of Cassillis through the seventh, and shows where McConnell, in the Fasti, and Dr. Kennedy-Bailie provide additional information. Note that McConnell (Fasti) states that the Revds. Thomas and Gilbert Kennedy were sons of Colonel Gilbert Kennedy, while Dr. Kennedy-Bailie concluded that they were the sons of Thomas who inherited Ardmillan in 1609.
http://www.arborealis.ca/_Media/kennedy_cassillis_burke_fas.jpeg
Disputed Origins
Not a known son of Gilbert Kennedy of Bargany. Disconnected July 2015
From "Colonel Gilbert Kennedy of Ardmillan" By Iain Kennedy Copyright © 2007
In this article I will examine the case for the existence of a historical link from the family of the Earls of Cassillis in Ayrshire to a family of ministers in Ulster, and hence to Bucks Co. Pennsylvania. The key individual in this study has been described in sources such as the 'Irish Fasti' [S1] as Colonel Gilbert Kennedy of Ardmillan, brother to John Kennedy, 6th Earl of Cassillis. I will examine each element of this title, whether or not this gentleman fought at Marston Moor as claimed, and also discuss his parentage since this is in doubt too. ...
1. Gilbertus Kennedy Comitis Cassilissae frater unicus'This settles this issue immediately since in 1617 John Kennedy was 6th Earl of Cassillis, and the above tells us that he had an only brother Gilbert (at that time). The section his entry appears in is for matriculations; I am now advised by the Glasgow University archivist (4th October 2007) that he is most likely to have been between 12 and 14 years of age when matriculating.
In summary, so far we have:
No mention of Gilbert at Marston Moor One account of him at Alford in a leading role, not confirmed by other writers and questionable as to identification Accounts of Kennedy of Knokdaw commanding at Aberdeen, Alford and Kilsyth Did Gilbert Kennedy own or live at Ardmillan Castle?
I have so far found no primary source reference to a Gilbert Kennedy of Ardmillan. During the mid 1650s when the Ardmillan estates were changing hands, mostly to the Crawfords, there were Hew Kennedy of Ardmillan (spouse Margaret Crawford); Thomas Kennedy younger of Ardmillan ('his eldest son and lawful heir'); Hew Kennedy 'son of Ardmillan' or 'third son of Hugh Kennedy of Ardmillan'; These three men are recorded several times in charters etc in [P8] and [P9]. Although the name of the middle son is missing, I am advised by the Crawfords that his name was David. Nor do the Crawford private papers studied so far mention a Gilbert Kennedy.
Still we have another tricky problem to deal with - what would the Earl's brother be doing at Ardmillan? Put another way, what was the connection between the houses of Ardmillan and Cassillis? Working these relationships out with original documents is a long hard task which is in progress. In the meantime we can refer to what respected Kennedy historians have made of the question in the past.
Paterson [S15] says in his first edition 'we have not been fortunate enough to trace the origin of the Kennedies of Ardmillan upon documentary evidence but there is reason to believe they are of the house of Bargany'. However in an Appendix now appearing as pp248a-j he describes a land title dated 1476 from Bargany to his 'weil belovyt brother' John Kennedy in Ardmillane.
McDowall [S9] is clearer in his thoughts, namely that Ardmillan was a junior branch of the house of Bargany. According to his genealogical chart, the first Kennedy of Ardmillan was John, son of the first Kennedy of Bargany, and he achieved his title as early as 1476. The source reference for this title is not given but is presumably the one of that date that the earlier Paterson referred to.
If the two historians are confirmed as correct, a descendant of this line would be a somewhat distant cousin of whoever was Earl of Cassillis at the time - and only a half-cousin at that since Bargany and Cassillis descend from different matriarchs. Since we have already established above that the Ardmillan Kennedies still held their lands in the 1650s, some time after the Rev. Thomas and Gilbert Kennedy graduated from Glasgow University, and since no Gilbert Kennedy has ever been recorded at the house of Ardmillan, it seems highly unlikely that the brother of the Earl could have been 'of Ardmillan'. Moreover, this should have been apparent to anyone writing a biography of the Reverends, if they did a small amount of research into the Scottish Kennedys. Therefore I find the designation 'Gilbert Kennedy of Ardmillan, brother to the Earl of Cassillis' as not just suspect in itself, but indicative of poor research and knowledge of the Kennedys. What were the authors of the Irish Fasti thinking of? Was Gilbert Kennedy the father of Rev. Gilbert Kennedy of Girvan, later Dundonald, Co. Antrim? I have found no information on this at all so far but will be turning to this next as most of the other points are settled.
From http://www.arborealis.ca/blog/19thC-genealogy-kennedy/
What happens when such a family claims an ancestral connection to a Baron or an Earl? and the family history was not recorded, for example, in a "received" genealogy such as Burke's? [2] or documents to support the claim either cannot be found or were never recorded? Well, then and in that case (to coin a phrase often encountered in Irish deeds), 'tis time to sink the genealogical wimble and burrow for research evidence once again.
The genealogical outline of the Kennedys of Carland, [3] as penned by J. Carmichael-Ferrall who, in turn, drew upon a manuscript by the Rev. Dr. James Kennedy-Bailie, D.D., F.T.C.D. (1793-1864), [4] is one such example. The great great grandson of Thomas Kennedy's brother, the Rev. Gilbert Kennedy (1627-1688), Dr. Kennedy-Bailie composed his genealogical notes about 150 years after the death of his forebear. He even went so far as to engage an agent to ferret out court records in Scotland—plus ça change.
As useful as this article proves to the construction of a goodly sized Kennedy family tree, it makes two ancestral claims which have yet to be substantiated, that is, corroborated to other sources, viz.—:
firstly, that the father-in-law of the Rev. Thomas Kennedy, Major William O'Brien of the Bawn,[5] was "nearly related to the Lords Inchiquin and Ibrican."—The phrase, nearly related, means closely related but not in the direct line of primogeniture (male inheritance). The phrase is also used to denote a degree of relationship somewhat removed from the hereditary line—cousins of the first, second, and even further degree. While several printed genealogies exist for the Earls of Inchiquin, unfortunately I have yet to find which one shows a William O'Brien whose daughter married the Rev. Thomas Kennedy. Major O'Brien may well have been a cousin-german to the main line of that noble house (or not), and his name and father simply not recorded. secondly, that the Rev. Thomas Kennedy and his brother, Gilbert (also a Presbyterian minister), descended from the Earls of Cassilis of Ardmillan in Ayrshire, Scotland. Specifically, Dr. Kennedy-Bailie asserted the following, based on court documents which his agent in Scotland discovered: Gilbert second Earl of Cassilis, had, as appears from the Charter of the mains of Cassilis and other lands, several sons, of whom Gilbert, the eldest, inherited the honors, etc., and Thomas, the second, had a charter of the lands of Ardmillan, or Ardmilland, in Ayrshire. He was succeeded by his eldest son Thomas, who died in November, 1586, and was succeeded by Thomas, his eldest son, as appears from his retour* of heirship, dated 9th May, 1609. This last Thomas Kennedy had three sons——Thomas, Hugh, and Gilbert, as appears from the College of Glasgow, where the first and last studied, and the records of the Court of Chancery, where the retour of the second son as heir was discovered by Dr. Kennedy’s agent which retour took place in 1640. The records of their matriculation bear date, respectively, 1637 and 1642.[3]
According to Merriam-Webster, the word, retour, is chiefly Scottish,
meaning “the return made to the court of chancery on a brieve of inquest with the jury’s verdict thereon.” Source: merriam-webster.com (accessed 2016-07-06).
Whether these retours have survived is not known. A scan of the catalogue entries under PRONI ref. D2315, the Gaussen, Kennedy, Bailie, and Magill papers, shows a sub-fond at ref. D2315/9 entitled, Printed material and miscellaneous family papers, which would need to be checked for the existence of these documents. If the documents survive, they may have been deposited in another archive.
However, another problem exists, in that the outline above varies not only with the genealogy printed in Burke's, but also that given in McConnell's Fasti. [1] To illustrate, the first image below depicts extracts of the genealogy given for the Earls of Cassillis in Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary (1878) supplemented by Burke's Landed Gentry (2001) [2]:
http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I101672&tree=CC shows him as son of Gilbert Kennedy, 4th Earl of Cassillis & Margaret Lyon
https://books.google.com/books?id=UOBHn0vi2oUC&pg=PA40&lpg=PA40&dq=Reverend+William+Kennedy+1695&source=bl&ots=N2mn6p2HWk&sig=ACfU3U1e2BSeI70eEgDsV6oUq47W7qTyPw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjD1PbXsInoAhUelXIEHSLLCn84ChDoATABegQIBxAB#v=onepage&q=Reverend%20William%20Kennedy%201695&f=false
"Biographical Annals of Franklin County, Pennsylvania: Containing ..." edited by George Oberkirsh Seilhamer
See esp. p 40. Mentions a son Rev. Anthony Kennedy, ordained at Temple-patrick Oct. 30, 1646 where he remained until his death Dec. 11, 1697 in his 83rd year of age. (So born in 1614.)
References:
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GQXS-JWY
https://www.geni.com/people/Colonel-Gilbert-Kennedy/6000000021772039333
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-740
https://gw.geneanet.org/mefleury?lang=en&iz=0&p=gilbert&n=kennedy&oc=6
https://familypedia.wikia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Kennedy_(1593-1627)
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/swartz-rand-family-tree/I88892789.php
http://www.thevalleyfamily.org/getperson.php?personID=I17558563963&tree=fitzvalley
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Grandy's 10x Great-Grandfather:
My 12x Great-Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 13x Great-Grandfather:
Gilbert Kennedy (1569 - 1601)
Gilbert Kennedy, 7th Lord Kennedy
Gilbert Kennedy, 5th Earl of Cassilis
Birthdate: 1569
Birthplace: Glamis Castle, Angus, Scotland (or, Cassilis House, Cassillis, Ayrshire; some sources give: Bargany Castle, Dailly, Ayr, Scotland)
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Death: December 12, 1601 in Ayrshire, Scotland (or, Staudach-Egerndach, Traunstein, Oberbayern, Bayern, Deutschland)
Parents:
Thomas Kennedy, 6th of Bargany
1534-1597
Agnes Montgomerie
1541-
Family
Spouse:
Janet Stuart
1566-1627
Janet Stewart, Lady Bargany
Birthdate: ca. 1569
Birthplace: Ochiltree, Ayshire, Scotland
Denomination: (probably) Presbyterian
Date of Marriage: ca. 1580
Place of Marriage: Ochiltree, Ayrshire, Scotland
Death: 1605 on Road between Scotland and England (Pulmonary consumption )
Place of Burial: Kennedy Tomb, Girvan, South Ayrshire, Scotland
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Andrew Stewart, Master of Ochiltree and Margaret Stewart of Methven
Children:
1. Mary Kennedy 1586–
2. John Kennedy 1588–1668
3. Isabelle Kennedy 1590–
4. Colonel Gilbert Kennedy 1593–1627
5. Margaret Kennedy 1595–
6. Thomas I Kennedy 1595–
7. John Kennedy 1602–
About Gilbert Kennedy
The Life Summary of Gilbert
When Gilbert Kennedy was born in 1569, in Glamis Castle, Forfarshire, Scotland, his father, Thomas Kennedy 6th of Bargany, was 35 and his mother, Agnes Montgomerie, was 28. He married Janet Stuart about 0158, in Ochiltree, Ayrshire, Scotland, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 5 daughters. He died on 11 December 1601, in Ayrshire, Scotland, at the age of 32.
Gilbert Kennedy was born 1569, and died 12 Dec 1601. He was the son of Gilbert Kennedy and Margaret Lyon.
Family
From https://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=remme1007&id=I226702
He married Janet Stewart. She was born 1566, and died 1605. [NO - she was married to Gilbert Kennedy, 7th of Bergany: http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I17966&tree=CC
He married Margaret MacDowall, daughter of Uchtred MacDowall.
Children
? Gilbert Kennedy was born 1593. He married Isabell Campbell. She was born 1603.
References
http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I101670&tree=CC
References:
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GQXB-L9S
https://www.geni.com/people/Gilbert-Kennedy-7th-Lord-Kennedy/6000000052617229821
https://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I101670&tree=CC
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/GQXB-L9S/gilbert-kennedy-1569-1601
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kennedy-739
http://www.thevalleyfamily.org/getperson.php?personID=I17558563965&tree=fitzvalley
https://gw.geneanet.org/mefleury?lang=en&iz=0&p=gilbert&n=kennedy&oc=5
https://familypedia.wikia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Kennedy,_5th_Earl_of_Cassilis_(1569-1601)
https://familypedia.wikia.org/wiki/Janet_Stewart_(1566-1627)
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/swartz-rand-family-tree/I88894500.php
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Clan Kennedy
Clan Tartans: Modern & Ancient
Clan Badge: Dolphin.
The Kennedy Motto
The motto was originally a war cry or slogan. Mottoes first began to be shown with arms in the 14th and 15th centuries, but were not in general use until the 17th century. Thus the oldest coats of arms generally do not include a motto. Mottoes seldom form part of the grant of arms: Under most heraldic authorities, a motto is an optional component of the coat of arms, and can be added to or changed at will; many families have chosen not to display a motto.
Motto: Avise la fin
Motto Translation: "Consider The End"
Kennedy Clan History:
This family originated from Ulster and are descended from Duncan of Carrick who lived in the 12th century. The first mention of the name is that of Gilbert Mac Kennedi who witnessed a Charter from the lands of Carric in the reign of William the Lion.
John Kennedy of Dunure was in situ at Cassilis in 1360 and his son, Sir Gilbert, was a hostage for the release of David II from English custody three years earlier. Gilbert's son James married Princess Mary Stewart, daughter of Robert III, and their son, another Robert, was created Lord Kennedy in 1452. His brother James (1408-65) was Bishop of Dunkeld and Archbishop of St Andrews.
David, 3rd Lord Kennedy, was created Earl of Cassilis in 1502 and died at the Battle of Flodden eleven years later. The 2nd Earl was murdered by Sir Hugh Campbell of Loudon, Sheriff of Ayr, from whom he had unsuccessfully attempted to rescue James V. The 3rd Earl was poisoned in France on his return from the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to the Dauphin in 1558.
The 6th Earl of Cassilis became Lord Justice General of Scotland and sat in Oliver Cromwell's House of Lords. Following the death of the 8th Earl without an heir, the Cassilis title and Kennedy Chiefship passed to Sir Thomas Kennedy of Culzean. He was succeeded by his brother David in 1775, and it was he who commissioned the architect Robert Adam to build the castle at Culzean.
When the 10th Earl died, the title and estates passed to his kinsman Captain Archibald Kennedy who had acquired estates in New Jersey and become a substantial landowner in New York. Unfortunately, the American War of Independence led to half of his properties being confiscated. The 12th Earl was created Marquess of Ailsa on the Coronation of William IV. In 1945, the 5th Marquess presented Culzean Castle to the National Trust for Scotland.
Branches of the Kennedy Family were also active in the north of Scotland. The Kennedys of Kermuck were Constables of Aberdeen in the 15th and 16th centuries. The Clan Ulric found in Lochaber are traditionally said to be descended from a Kennedy who fled to the Highlands following a warrant for his arrest.
Kate Kennedy, a niece of Bishop Kennedy of St Andrews is said to be the inspiration behind the student procession held annually at St Andrews University. Lt General Sir Clark Kennedy of Knockgray served in the Peninsular War and fought at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. William Kennedy (1859-1918) became a distinguished military painter.
Places of Interest:
Castle Kennedy, Wigtown, Galloway. Built by the earls of Cassilis in 1607, but passed to the earls of Stair. Destroyed in 1716; replaced 1867 by Lochinch Castle which remains the seat of the Earl of Stair.
Culzean Castle, Ayrshire. A magnificent cliff-top mansion designed by Robert Adam for the 10th Earl of Cassilis on the site of an ancient Kennedy castle. It has been the seat of the Chief of the Kennedys since the 15th century and is now owned by the National Trust for Scotland.
Dunure Castle, near Culzean, Ayrshire. The 4th Earl of Cassilis is said to have roasted the Lay-Abbot of Crossraguel on a spit here in an attempt to make him surrender abbey lands in 1507. Today it is a ruin.
Maybole Castle, Maybole, Ayrshire. Chapel founded by John Kennedy of Dunure in 1371.
Surname distribution in Scotland: The Kennedy name is widespread throughout Scotland with particularly high concentrations of the name in Glasgow City, Dunbartonshire, Renfrewshire, Argyll and Bute, Ayrshire, Perth and Kinross (Perthshire and Kinross-shire), Lanarkshire and the Outer Hebrides (the main population centers being Lewis and Harris, North Uist, South Uist, Benbecula and Barra).
Associated family names (Septs): Carrick, Cassels, Cassilis, MacWalrick.
Kennedy History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
The saga of the name Kennedy begins with a Strathclyde-Briton family in the ancient Scottish/English Borderlands. It is a name for a dour or serious person. Further research revealed that the name is derived from the Gaelic nickname Cinneididh, which translates as grim-headed.
It is doubtful that there is any ancient relationship between the Irish Kennedys and the Scottish Clan. The Irish Kennedy's history dates back to about 900 AD, and there did not appear to be any direct relationship between the two families. However, in the 16th century, a sept of the Scottish Kennedy Clan did develop in Ulster, but they are undoubtedly migrants from Scotland, and had no previous link to the southern Irish Kennedys.
Early Origins of the Kennedy Family
The surname Kennedy was first found in Ayrshire (Gaelic: Siorrachd Inbhir Àir), formerly a county in the southwestern Strathclyde region of Scotland, that today makes up the Council Areas of South, East, and North Ayrshire, where the earliest record of them dates from 1185, during the reign of King William the Lion, when a Henry Kennedy was reported to have been involved in a rebellion in Galloway but died in battle.
The Kennedys derived from a branch of Celtic Earls of Galloway (not to be confused with Gallway, which is in Ireland). Their power and influence in that region was great. In fact, there is a rhyme handed down through clansmen and bards from the year 1300 which runs as follows: 'Twixt Wigtown and the town of Ayr, Portpatrick and the Cruives of Cree. No man need think to bide there, unless he court with Kennedy.'
Kennedy Spelling Variations
Spelling and translation were hardly exact sciences in Medieval Scotland. Sound, rather than any set of rules, was the basis for spellings, so one name was often spelled different ways even within a single document. Spelling variations are thus an extremely common occurrence in Medieval Scottish names. Kennedy has been spelled Kennedy, Kannady, Kenardy, Kennaday, Kenneday, Kenneyday, Kennediem, MacKennedy, MacUalraig (Gaelic), Canaday (England) and many more.
Early Notables of the Kennedy Family (pre 1700)
Notable amongst the family at this time was Gilbert Kennedy, 1st Lord Kennedy (c. 1406-c. 1480); John Kennedy, 2nd Lord Kennedy (1451-1508); David Kennedy, 3rd Lord Kennedy (d. 1513) (created Earl of Cassilis in 1509); David Kennedy, 1st Earl of Cassilis (d. 1513); Gilbert Kennedy, 2nd Earl of Cassilis, and many more...
Kennedy Settlers in United States in the 17th Century
Catherine Kennedy, who arrived in Maryland in 1678
David Kennedy, who landed in New Jersey in 1685
Kennedy Settlers in United States in the 18th Century
Margaret Kennedy, who landed in Virginia in 1716
David Kennedy, who arrived in Boston in 1737
Janette Kennedy, who landed in Connecticut in 1741
Darby Kennedy, who arrived in America in 1742
Matthew Kennedy, who landed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1747