My attempts to discover the origins of this portrait caused me to look closely into the genealogy of Sheridan's Heath ancestors in England. One of her key ancestors was a wealthy shipping merchant, Miles Heath [1710-1777], who built a town house in the Strand, London, named Three Cocks Court. Sheridan has a plate bearing her ancestor's arms.
At the top, above a plate-armor helmet, a stubby round tower has erupted in flames. Inside the shield, there are three cocks. This ancient coat of arms originated in the context of a 16th-century Kentish ancestor named Henry Crow.When carrying out genealogical research concerning a common name such as Heath, one encounters individuals who, at first sight, appear to lie outside the researcher's domain.
One such person was a baronet, Sir James Heath [1852-1942], of whom I know little. His bookplate [an image on paper, to be glued in books] appears to contain a few of the same elements as in the earlier coat of arms [except for the flames]. This makes me wonder whether James Heath might be a descendant, like Sheridan, of Miles Heath. In any case, this is a line of research I intend to pursue.If such a link were to be established, this would make Sheridan a distant relative, through marriage, of a celebrated British dynasty that I've heard about ever since I was child: the Fitzroy family, whose chiefs have been for centuries the dukes of Grafton. Indeed, it was Sir Charles Fitzroy [1796-1858], governor of New South Wales, who in 1851 gave the name of his late grandfather, Augustus Henry Fitzroy [1735-1811], the 3rd Duke of Grafton and a former British prime minister, to the country town in New South Wales in which I would be born, nearly a century later.
In 1918, Hylda Madeleine Heath, the daughter of Sir James Heath, married Major Cecil Robert Bates [builder of the Cunard and White Star shipping lines], and their son, Sir Geoffrey Voltelin Bates, in 1957, married into the Fitzroy clan.
Whenever I phone up Sheridan to tell her such stuff, akin to family gossip, I get the impression that I bring a little sunshine into her life.
I am related to Sir James Heath and Madeleine, his daughter and to the Bates. What more can you tell me about Sheriden Heath? There is a clan of Heaths originating in the Kent area. I have their DNA.They are linked to Sir Robert Heath, Solicitor General for Charles 1st. Sir James Heath was a coal and iron master in Biddulph area in the early 20th century. I have his DNA too. Cecil Bates was a minor player in the Cunard Shipping business having been a career officer before joining the shipping company in about 1919.
ReplyDeleteHeath genealogy is an interesting domain, but I am not linked personally to such research. I only got involved in this field because Sheridan Henty, who used to be my neighbor in the village of Pont-en-Royans, once showed me a mysterious ceramic portrait of the young Queen Victoria, and I set about trying to determine the origin of this object. I soon discovered that there was a celebrated dynasty of British painters named Heath, and I immediately imagined that Sheridan's Heath ancestors might be linked to this dynasty. I now have some interesting data in this domain.
ReplyDeletePlease tell me more about your precise links to James Heath [1852-1942], as well as what you know concerning the genealogy of Sir James. As I said in my post, the tower and three cocks in the bookplate of James Heath evoke Sheridan's ancestors, the Kentish Crow family. My archives concerning Sheridan's background [available in the form of a gedcom file, which I can send you] indicate explicitly her descent from the Lord Chief Justice Robert Heath [1575-1649], who abandoned England after the execution of Charles I and founded North Carolina.
I haven't found an active researcher who would be interested in pursuing my work. I'll send you a private email with Sheridan's address. Unfortunately Sheridan herself is not sufficiently experienced in the complexities of computer-assisted genealogical research to tackle the fascinating domain of her ancestors. Maybe you might be able to suggest contacts in this field.
I have found all your work on the Heaths fascinating. I am researching the Heath family for my husband who is a descendant of Sheridan's grandmother's brother and would love to know if you are still spending time researching this family. I have a letter dated 1886 that confirms some of what you have written.
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