William McCulloch of Clauchreid1640–
- Name
- William McCulloch of Clauchreid
- Given names
- William
- Surname
- McCulloch
- Name suffix
- of Clauchreid
Birth | about 1640 35 30 |
Death of a paternal grandfather | Thomas McCulloch 1642 (Age 2 years) |
Death of a father | Major John McCulloch I 7 December 1666 (Age 26 years) |
Burial of a father | Major John McCulloch I 7 December 1666 (Age 26 years) |
Birth of a son #1 | John McCulloch III of Barholm about 1669 (Age 29 years) |
Marriage of a child | John McCulloch III of Barholm — Jean Gordon — View this family 1689 (Age 49 years) |
Death of a brother | Henry McCulloch of Barholm 1691 (Age 51 years) |
Death of a son | John McCulloch III of Barholm 28 April 1747 (Age 107 years) |
Family with parents |
father |
Major John McCulloch I Birth: about 1605 26 Death: condemned to death and hanged at the Mercat Cross of Edinburgh — 7 December 1666 — Mercat Cross, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland |
mother |
Margaret … Birth: about 1610 |
Marriage: about 1630 — |
|
6 years elder brother |
Henry McCulloch of Barholm Birth: about 1635 30 25 — Barholm, Wigtownshire, Scotland Death: 1691 |
6 years himself |
William McCulloch of Clauchreid Birth: about 1640 35 30 — Scotland |
Family with Isabel McDowell |
himself |
William McCulloch of Clauchreid Birth: about 1640 35 30 — Scotland |
wife |
Isabel McDowell Birth: about 1645 — Scotland |
son |
John McCulloch III of Barholm Birth: about 1669 29 24 — Barholm, Wigtownshire, Scotland Death: 28 April 1747 |
Note | The Revolution Settlement had reinstated the McCullochs in Barholm but they no longer lived in that old tower. In keeping with the times, they took up residence at Balhassie. The ancestral estate must have been much increased by the McDowell marriage, and was to be further augmented by another successful matrimonial alliance. Of the birth and early days of John McCulloch of Barholm nothing is known: no record survives of any brothers or sisters. He married in 1689 Jean Gordon only daughter and eventual heiress of William Gordon of Culvennan, to whom she had acted as executor and to whose two sons, James and William, both of whom died young and unmarried, he had acted as curator. Though the estate of Culvennan had been embarrassed by forfeiture, it was still a handsome addition to the McCulloch estates. |