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Louisa Elizabeth <I>Poignand</I> Aspinwall

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Louisa Elizabeth Poignand Aspinwall

Birth
Lancaster, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
1879 (aged 89–90)
Burial
Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 10, Lot 509, Spruce Avenue
Memorial ID
View Source
LOUISA ELIZABETH POIGNAND ASPINWALL
Colonel Thomas Aspinwall, U.S. consul to London


Louisa Elizabeth Poignand was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts. She was a daughter of David Poignand and Delicia Amiraux. Her parents Mr. and Mrs. David Poignand were born in Isle of Jersey. They came to America and settled in Massachusetts.

David Poignand and Delicia Amiraux
History of the First Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, 1630-1904
by Walter Eliot Thwing
Published by W. A. Butterfield, Boston, 1908.
https://archive.org/details/historyoffirstch00thwi/page/293/mode/1up?view=theater

Col. Thomas Aspinwall was a son of Dr. William and Susannah Gardner Aspinwall of Brookline, Massachusetts. The Aspinwall family were descendants of Peter Aspinwall and his wife Remember Palfrey. The Gardner family were descendants of Thomas Gardner of Roxbury, by his son Thomas Gardner and wife Lucy Smith, and by their son Thomas Gardner III and his Mary Bowles of Brookline, Massachusetts. They were descendants of Hon. Thomas Danforth by his granddaughter Abial Phipps and her husband Captain Caleb Gardner, a son of Thomas III and Mary Bowles. Col. Thomas Aspinwall, U.S. consul to London was a grandson of Johanna Gardner and Lt. Thomas Aspinwall, and great-grandson of Captain Caleb Gardner and his wife Abial Phipps.

Louisa Elizabeth Poignand and Col. Aspinwall had several children. Children who survived to adulthood were Hon. William Aspinwall, who married Arixene Southgate Porter; Eliza King Aspinwall, who married William Henry Domville of London, England, son of Sir William Domville of the St. Alban's Domville baronets.

Grandmother of William Henry Aspinwall, Harvard College

Memoir of Col. Thomas Aspinwall, A.M.
By Charles C. Smith
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25079728?seq=1

History of the Origin of the Town of Clinton, Massachusetts, 1653-1865
By Andrew Elmer Ford
Press of W. J. Coulter, Courant Office, 1896 - Clinton (Mass.) - 696 pages
https://books.google.com/books?id=jUUVAAAAYAAJ&q=Louisa+Poignand+Aspinwall#v=snippet&q=Louisa%20Poignand%20Aspinwall&f=false

Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Volume 1
By William Thomas Davis
Boston History Company, 1895 - Lawyers
https://books.google.com/books?id=b5osAAAAIAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

History of the Harvard Law School and of Early Legal Conditions in America, Volume 3
By Charles Warren
Lewis Publishing Company, 1908 - Law
https://books.google.com/books?id=6UwaAAAAYAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

Professional and Industrial History of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume 1
By William Thomas Davis
Boston History Company, 1894 - Boston (Mass.) - 225 pages
https://books.google.com/books?id=DfVCAQAAMAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

November Meeting, 1891. Letter of Samuel Winthrop; Dartmoor Prison; Three Dutch Medals; Site of the Wessagusset Settlement; Memoirs Communicated; Memoir of Col. Thomas Aspinwall; Memoir of Francis Winthrop Palfrey; Memoir of Charles Deane; Memoir of Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter; Memoir of Charles Devens
R. C. Winthrop, Jr., Justin Winsor, Samuel A. Green, Charles Francis Adams, Henry W. Haynes, Charles C. Smith, John C. Ropes and John E. Sanford
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Second Series, Vol. 7, [Vol. 27 of continuous numbering] (1891 - 1892), pp. 11-117 (112 pages)
Published by: Massachusetts Historical Society
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25079728?seq=1

The Aspinwall Papers
Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul
Brookline Historical Society
(NOT Aspinwall Notorial Records)
Papers belonging to or contributed by Thomas Aspinwall (War of 1812, consul to London, historian, literary agent).
Published: 1871
Publisher: Massachusetts Historical Society
Original from: Columbia University
Digitized: October 14, 2009
Language: English
Editor: Thomas Aspinwall
https://www.google.com/books/edition/Aspinwall_Papers/OVpIAAAAYAAJ?hl=en

Writings of John Quincy Adams
Volume 6
By John Quincy Adams · 1916
Correspondence with Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul
https://books.google.com/books?id=j_IsAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gb_mobile_entity&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&hl=en&focus=searchwithinvolume#v=onepage&q=Thomas%20Aspinwall%20&f=false

Correspondence from John Quincy Adams to Col Thomas Aspinwall, US consul to London. Handwritten letter from Adams, John Quincy on 9 June 1817. Adams makes arrangements to ship his property from London...
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-1790458

Edward Everett, in London at the same time as Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul.
https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2013/11/vita-edward-everett

Grandmother of William Henry Aspinwall
Harvard College
https://books.google.com/books?id=RJEBAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gb_mobile_entity&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&hl=en&focus=searchwithinvolume#v=onepage&q=William%20Henry%20Aspinwall%20&f=false

Dr. William Aspinwall
https://www.masshist.org/publications/adams-papers/index.php/view/ADMS-06-03-02-0128-0001

Dr. William Aspinwall
http://drbenjaminchurchjr.blogspot.com/2015_10_11_archive.html?m=1

Tappan (family of Louisa's sister-in-law Susanna Aspinwall Tappan)
https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2013/11/vita-edward-everett

Abraham Lincoln was employed by Lewis Tappan, before Lincoln became President of the United States of America.
Massachusetts:
Tappan, the Man Who Hired Abe Lincoln to Spy on Sinners
"Through his abolitionist crusade, Lewis Tappan had met anti-slavery activists throughout the country. He tapped into that network to create records of timely credit information about people. Among his correspondents: a young Illinois lawyer named Abraham Lincoln and a storekeeper named Ulysses S. Grant."
— Published by New England Historical Society
https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/lewis-tappan-the-man-who-hired-abe-lincoln-to-spy-on-sinners/

Lewis Tappan's ancestor Mary (Franklin) Homes was Benjamin Franklin's sister.
Mary Franklin
Robert Homes
|
William Homes
Rebecca Dawes
|
Sarah Homes
Benjamin Tappan
|
Lewis Tappan married Susanna Aspinwall, sister of Col. Thomas Aspinwall consul. Susanna and Col. Thomas were the niece and nephew of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall, Dr. William Aspinwall's brother - and also their uncle's wife Lucy Sparhawk Aspinwall was their grandmother Mary Sparhawk Gardner's sister - Dr. William Aspinwall married the niece of his sister-in-law Lucy.

Dr. Joseph Warren Historical Era lectures
https://youtube.com/channel/UCryD_o49ly7HwEP4OR4nLPA

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Catalogue_of_a_Loan_Collection_of_Ancien/a3uVaFSWXokC?hl=en

Col Thomas Aspinwall consul also served as literary agent to Washington Irving and others. Irving & Lord Byron both dealt with English publisher John Murray II.
LETTERS: Washington Irving and John Murray II
https://brianjayjones.com/washington-irving/letters-and-journals/letters-washington-irving-and-john-murray-ii/

Lucy (Sparhawk) Aspinwall (wife of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall) was a daughter of Thomas Sparhawk and his wife Mary (Oliver) Sparhawk. Mary (Sparhawk) Gardner, wife of Isaac Gardner Jr., was a daughter of Thomas Sparhawk and Mary (Oliver) Sparhawk. Mary (Sparhawk) Gardner was the sister of Lucy (Sparhawk) Aspinwall - and Mary's daughter Susannah (Gardner) Aspinwall was Lucy's niece, and the daughter/niece Susannah Gardner married Dr. William Aspinwall (the brother of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall who was Lucy's husband). Lucy and Mary had a sister Sybil Sparhawk who was first wife of Samuel Aspinwall, brother of Dr. William and Lt. Col. Thomas. Sybil died early, and Samuel Aspinwall her husband married Mary Holbrook. Samuel (the brother of Dr. William and Lt. Col. Thomas) did not live to experience the American Revolution.

Mary (Sparhawk) and Isaac Gardner, Jr.'s daughter, Susanna Gardner, married Dr. William Aspinwall.

Descendants lived here (link):
...home of Richard Cowell Dixey and his wife, Ellen Sturgis (Tappan) Dixey, whose daughter, Rosamond Sturgis Dixey, was born there in June of 1887. Richard Dixey was a retired music teacher and pianist. The Dixeys also later maintained a home in Lenox, Tanglewood, the former property of Ellen Dixey's family, which she and her unmarried sister, Mary Aspinwall Tappan, inherited. In 1937, Mary Aspinwall Tappan and Rosamond Sturgis (Dixey) Brooks (who married Gorham Brooks in June of 1913) donated Tanglewood to the Boston Symphony.
https://backbayhouses.org/179-commonwealth/

See also: Thomas Gardner III's sister Mary Gardner married Thomas Boylston.
https://famouskin.com/famous-kin-chart.php?name=3927+mary+gardner&kin=96430+leverett+saltonstall

Grandmother of Louisa Elizabeth Domville
LOUISA ELIZABETH DOMVILLE Residence in 1920, Regent Palace Hotel, Picadilly Circus, W.1. Daughter of William Henry Domville and Eliza King Aspinwall. Her father knew Charles Darwin and others in the Sunday Lecture Society – her father William Henry Domville was the Hon. Treasurer of this organization.

Granddaughter of SIR WILLIAM DOMVILLE, 2nd Baronet
SIR WILLIAM, 2nd Baronet, born 22 March 1774 ; died 21 May, 1860, having married 15 September 1807, Maria, daughter of Isaac Solly, Esq. of Walthamstow; she died 27 January 1863, having had 2 sons and 4 daughters. (1) Sir James Graham, 3rd and present Baronet. (2) William Henry, born 9 Nov. 1819; married 14 December 1853, Eliza King, daughter of Col. Aspinwall, of Brookline, U.S. and has a daughter Louisa Elizabeth.
https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:The_Peerage,_Baronetage_and_Knightage_of_the_British_Empire_Part_2.djvu/220

Great-granddaughter of SIR WILLIAM DOMVILLE
Sir William Domville, 1st Baronet.
Lord Mayor of London 1813–1814. Born in St Albans, he was the son of Charles Domville of London. He was a descendant of William Domville, elder brother of Gilbert Domvile, ancestor of the Domville baronets of Templeogue. He set up in business as a bookseller in London before returning to live in St Albans. He was Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, a Sheriff of London for 1804–1805, and Lord Mayor of London. In 1805 he was elected an Alderman of Queenhithe Ward. Sir William Domville was made a baronet in 1814. He died February 8, 1833 and was buried in St Albans Abbey. He had married Sally, the daughter of Archibald Finney. They had two sons and five daughters.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_William_Domville,_1st_Baronet

DOMVILLE BARONETS
The Domville Baronetcy, of St Alban's in the County of Hertford, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 28 July 1814 for William Domville, Lord Mayor of London from 1813 to 1814. He was a descendant of William Domville, elder brother of Gilbert Domvile, ancestor of the Domvile baronets of Tempoleogue. The title became extinct on the death of the seventh Baronet in 1981.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domville_baronets

MISS LOUISA ELIZABETH DOMVILLE
Louisa Elizabeth Domville was the daughter of William Henry Domville and Eliza King Aspinwall. She was their only child. Louisa Elizabeth Domville did not marry. She lived in London, England. Her mother and father lived at 221 Gloucester Crescent in London as their main residence. The Domville family was based in St. Albans, Herts. In 1920, Miss Domville's address was Regent Palace Hotel, Picadilly Circus, London. Miss Domville lived a relatively long life, dying at the age of about 72 years old. Louisa Elizabeth Domville died on April 9, 1927, probably in London. Information taken from Debrett's Peerage, published 1920.
— Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage, and Companionage, Part 1 (1920 edition). Published by Kelly's Directories, 1920.

Title: Assent to devise freehold hereditaments
Description:
1. Eliza King Domville, widow and Louisa Elizabeth Domville, spinster of 221 Gloucester Crescent, London and Charles Ponsonby Wilmer of 11 New Court, London, gentleman
2. Sir William Cecil Henry Domville of The Chantry, Ipswich, Suffolk, baronet
(1) executors of W H Domville devise to (2) all lands in Bucks
Date: 2 Nov 1898
Held by: Buckinghamshire Archives, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Administrative / biographical background:[W H Domville died 8 Jan 1898 leaving a widow and daughter. Sir W.C.H. Domville 4th baronet (1849-1904) was his nephew]
https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/b7418c1f-a1bd-4c99-a458-630c8d6b20ba

Cemetery Photo Credit: Marian
Find A Grave user ID 47010498
LOUISA ELIZABETH POIGNAND ASPINWALL
Colonel Thomas Aspinwall, U.S. consul to London


Louisa Elizabeth Poignand was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts. She was a daughter of David Poignand and Delicia Amiraux. Her parents Mr. and Mrs. David Poignand were born in Isle of Jersey. They came to America and settled in Massachusetts.

David Poignand and Delicia Amiraux
History of the First Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, 1630-1904
by Walter Eliot Thwing
Published by W. A. Butterfield, Boston, 1908.
https://archive.org/details/historyoffirstch00thwi/page/293/mode/1up?view=theater

Col. Thomas Aspinwall was a son of Dr. William and Susannah Gardner Aspinwall of Brookline, Massachusetts. The Aspinwall family were descendants of Peter Aspinwall and his wife Remember Palfrey. The Gardner family were descendants of Thomas Gardner of Roxbury, by his son Thomas Gardner and wife Lucy Smith, and by their son Thomas Gardner III and his Mary Bowles of Brookline, Massachusetts. They were descendants of Hon. Thomas Danforth by his granddaughter Abial Phipps and her husband Captain Caleb Gardner, a son of Thomas III and Mary Bowles. Col. Thomas Aspinwall, U.S. consul to London was a grandson of Johanna Gardner and Lt. Thomas Aspinwall, and great-grandson of Captain Caleb Gardner and his wife Abial Phipps.

Louisa Elizabeth Poignand and Col. Aspinwall had several children. Children who survived to adulthood were Hon. William Aspinwall, who married Arixene Southgate Porter; Eliza King Aspinwall, who married William Henry Domville of London, England, son of Sir William Domville of the St. Alban's Domville baronets.

Grandmother of William Henry Aspinwall, Harvard College

Memoir of Col. Thomas Aspinwall, A.M.
By Charles C. Smith
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25079728?seq=1

History of the Origin of the Town of Clinton, Massachusetts, 1653-1865
By Andrew Elmer Ford
Press of W. J. Coulter, Courant Office, 1896 - Clinton (Mass.) - 696 pages
https://books.google.com/books?id=jUUVAAAAYAAJ&q=Louisa+Poignand+Aspinwall#v=snippet&q=Louisa%20Poignand%20Aspinwall&f=false

Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Volume 1
By William Thomas Davis
Boston History Company, 1895 - Lawyers
https://books.google.com/books?id=b5osAAAAIAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

History of the Harvard Law School and of Early Legal Conditions in America, Volume 3
By Charles Warren
Lewis Publishing Company, 1908 - Law
https://books.google.com/books?id=6UwaAAAAYAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

Professional and Industrial History of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Volume 1
By William Thomas Davis
Boston History Company, 1894 - Boston (Mass.) - 225 pages
https://books.google.com/books?id=DfVCAQAAMAAJ&q=Poignand#v=snippet&q=Poignand&f=false

November Meeting, 1891. Letter of Samuel Winthrop; Dartmoor Prison; Three Dutch Medals; Site of the Wessagusset Settlement; Memoirs Communicated; Memoir of Col. Thomas Aspinwall; Memoir of Francis Winthrop Palfrey; Memoir of Charles Deane; Memoir of Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter; Memoir of Charles Devens
R. C. Winthrop, Jr., Justin Winsor, Samuel A. Green, Charles Francis Adams, Henry W. Haynes, Charles C. Smith, John C. Ropes and John E. Sanford
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Second Series, Vol. 7, [Vol. 27 of continuous numbering] (1891 - 1892), pp. 11-117 (112 pages)
Published by: Massachusetts Historical Society
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25079728?seq=1

The Aspinwall Papers
Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul
Brookline Historical Society
(NOT Aspinwall Notorial Records)
Papers belonging to or contributed by Thomas Aspinwall (War of 1812, consul to London, historian, literary agent).
Published: 1871
Publisher: Massachusetts Historical Society
Original from: Columbia University
Digitized: October 14, 2009
Language: English
Editor: Thomas Aspinwall
https://www.google.com/books/edition/Aspinwall_Papers/OVpIAAAAYAAJ?hl=en

Writings of John Quincy Adams
Volume 6
By John Quincy Adams · 1916
Correspondence with Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul
https://books.google.com/books?id=j_IsAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gb_mobile_entity&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&hl=en&focus=searchwithinvolume#v=onepage&q=Thomas%20Aspinwall%20&f=false

Correspondence from John Quincy Adams to Col Thomas Aspinwall, US consul to London. Handwritten letter from Adams, John Quincy on 9 June 1817. Adams makes arrangements to ship his property from London...
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-1790458

Edward Everett, in London at the same time as Col. Thomas Aspinwall, consul.
https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2013/11/vita-edward-everett

Grandmother of William Henry Aspinwall
Harvard College
https://books.google.com/books?id=RJEBAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gb_mobile_entity&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&hl=en&focus=searchwithinvolume#v=onepage&q=William%20Henry%20Aspinwall%20&f=false

Dr. William Aspinwall
https://www.masshist.org/publications/adams-papers/index.php/view/ADMS-06-03-02-0128-0001

Dr. William Aspinwall
http://drbenjaminchurchjr.blogspot.com/2015_10_11_archive.html?m=1

Tappan (family of Louisa's sister-in-law Susanna Aspinwall Tappan)
https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2013/11/vita-edward-everett

Abraham Lincoln was employed by Lewis Tappan, before Lincoln became President of the United States of America.
Massachusetts:
Tappan, the Man Who Hired Abe Lincoln to Spy on Sinners
"Through his abolitionist crusade, Lewis Tappan had met anti-slavery activists throughout the country. He tapped into that network to create records of timely credit information about people. Among his correspondents: a young Illinois lawyer named Abraham Lincoln and a storekeeper named Ulysses S. Grant."
— Published by New England Historical Society
https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/lewis-tappan-the-man-who-hired-abe-lincoln-to-spy-on-sinners/

Lewis Tappan's ancestor Mary (Franklin) Homes was Benjamin Franklin's sister.
Mary Franklin
Robert Homes
|
William Homes
Rebecca Dawes
|
Sarah Homes
Benjamin Tappan
|
Lewis Tappan married Susanna Aspinwall, sister of Col. Thomas Aspinwall consul. Susanna and Col. Thomas were the niece and nephew of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall, Dr. William Aspinwall's brother - and also their uncle's wife Lucy Sparhawk Aspinwall was their grandmother Mary Sparhawk Gardner's sister - Dr. William Aspinwall married the niece of his sister-in-law Lucy.

Dr. Joseph Warren Historical Era lectures
https://youtube.com/channel/UCryD_o49ly7HwEP4OR4nLPA

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Catalogue_of_a_Loan_Collection_of_Ancien/a3uVaFSWXokC?hl=en

Col Thomas Aspinwall consul also served as literary agent to Washington Irving and others. Irving & Lord Byron both dealt with English publisher John Murray II.
LETTERS: Washington Irving and John Murray II
https://brianjayjones.com/washington-irving/letters-and-journals/letters-washington-irving-and-john-murray-ii/

Lucy (Sparhawk) Aspinwall (wife of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall) was a daughter of Thomas Sparhawk and his wife Mary (Oliver) Sparhawk. Mary (Sparhawk) Gardner, wife of Isaac Gardner Jr., was a daughter of Thomas Sparhawk and Mary (Oliver) Sparhawk. Mary (Sparhawk) Gardner was the sister of Lucy (Sparhawk) Aspinwall - and Mary's daughter Susannah (Gardner) Aspinwall was Lucy's niece, and the daughter/niece Susannah Gardner married Dr. William Aspinwall (the brother of Lt. Col. Thomas Aspinwall who was Lucy's husband). Lucy and Mary had a sister Sybil Sparhawk who was first wife of Samuel Aspinwall, brother of Dr. William and Lt. Col. Thomas. Sybil died early, and Samuel Aspinwall her husband married Mary Holbrook. Samuel (the brother of Dr. William and Lt. Col. Thomas) did not live to experience the American Revolution.

Mary (Sparhawk) and Isaac Gardner, Jr.'s daughter, Susanna Gardner, married Dr. William Aspinwall.

Descendants lived here (link):
...home of Richard Cowell Dixey and his wife, Ellen Sturgis (Tappan) Dixey, whose daughter, Rosamond Sturgis Dixey, was born there in June of 1887. Richard Dixey was a retired music teacher and pianist. The Dixeys also later maintained a home in Lenox, Tanglewood, the former property of Ellen Dixey's family, which she and her unmarried sister, Mary Aspinwall Tappan, inherited. In 1937, Mary Aspinwall Tappan and Rosamond Sturgis (Dixey) Brooks (who married Gorham Brooks in June of 1913) donated Tanglewood to the Boston Symphony.
https://backbayhouses.org/179-commonwealth/

See also: Thomas Gardner III's sister Mary Gardner married Thomas Boylston.
https://famouskin.com/famous-kin-chart.php?name=3927+mary+gardner&kin=96430+leverett+saltonstall

Grandmother of Louisa Elizabeth Domville
LOUISA ELIZABETH DOMVILLE Residence in 1920, Regent Palace Hotel, Picadilly Circus, W.1. Daughter of William Henry Domville and Eliza King Aspinwall. Her father knew Charles Darwin and others in the Sunday Lecture Society – her father William Henry Domville was the Hon. Treasurer of this organization.

Granddaughter of SIR WILLIAM DOMVILLE, 2nd Baronet
SIR WILLIAM, 2nd Baronet, born 22 March 1774 ; died 21 May, 1860, having married 15 September 1807, Maria, daughter of Isaac Solly, Esq. of Walthamstow; she died 27 January 1863, having had 2 sons and 4 daughters. (1) Sir James Graham, 3rd and present Baronet. (2) William Henry, born 9 Nov. 1819; married 14 December 1853, Eliza King, daughter of Col. Aspinwall, of Brookline, U.S. and has a daughter Louisa Elizabeth.
https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:The_Peerage,_Baronetage_and_Knightage_of_the_British_Empire_Part_2.djvu/220

Great-granddaughter of SIR WILLIAM DOMVILLE
Sir William Domville, 1st Baronet.
Lord Mayor of London 1813–1814. Born in St Albans, he was the son of Charles Domville of London. He was a descendant of William Domville, elder brother of Gilbert Domvile, ancestor of the Domville baronets of Templeogue. He set up in business as a bookseller in London before returning to live in St Albans. He was Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, a Sheriff of London for 1804–1805, and Lord Mayor of London. In 1805 he was elected an Alderman of Queenhithe Ward. Sir William Domville was made a baronet in 1814. He died February 8, 1833 and was buried in St Albans Abbey. He had married Sally, the daughter of Archibald Finney. They had two sons and five daughters.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_William_Domville,_1st_Baronet

DOMVILLE BARONETS
The Domville Baronetcy, of St Alban's in the County of Hertford, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 28 July 1814 for William Domville, Lord Mayor of London from 1813 to 1814. He was a descendant of William Domville, elder brother of Gilbert Domvile, ancestor of the Domvile baronets of Tempoleogue. The title became extinct on the death of the seventh Baronet in 1981.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domville_baronets

MISS LOUISA ELIZABETH DOMVILLE
Louisa Elizabeth Domville was the daughter of William Henry Domville and Eliza King Aspinwall. She was their only child. Louisa Elizabeth Domville did not marry. She lived in London, England. Her mother and father lived at 221 Gloucester Crescent in London as their main residence. The Domville family was based in St. Albans, Herts. In 1920, Miss Domville's address was Regent Palace Hotel, Picadilly Circus, London. Miss Domville lived a relatively long life, dying at the age of about 72 years old. Louisa Elizabeth Domville died on April 9, 1927, probably in London. Information taken from Debrett's Peerage, published 1920.
— Debrett's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage, and Companionage, Part 1 (1920 edition). Published by Kelly's Directories, 1920.

Title: Assent to devise freehold hereditaments
Description:
1. Eliza King Domville, widow and Louisa Elizabeth Domville, spinster of 221 Gloucester Crescent, London and Charles Ponsonby Wilmer of 11 New Court, London, gentleman
2. Sir William Cecil Henry Domville of The Chantry, Ipswich, Suffolk, baronet
(1) executors of W H Domville devise to (2) all lands in Bucks
Date: 2 Nov 1898
Held by: Buckinghamshire Archives, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Administrative / biographical background:[W H Domville died 8 Jan 1898 leaving a widow and daughter. Sir W.C.H. Domville 4th baronet (1849-1904) was his nephew]
https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/b7418c1f-a1bd-4c99-a458-630c8d6b20ba

Cemetery Photo Credit: Marian
Find A Grave user ID 47010498

Gravesite Details

Photo Credit: Marian
Find A Grave user ID 47010498



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