102 HEREDITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF NAVAL OFFICERS. 



II 1 (F F F), Edmund Hornby. II 2 (F F M), Margaret Winckley. II 3 (F M F), James, 

 Lord Stanley (1616-1671). II 4, Lucy Smith. II 5 (M F F), John Burgoyne, a captain in the 

 army; ended his days on the King's Bench. II 6 (M F M), Maria Burnestone. 



Ill 1 (F F), Geoffrey Hornby was a colonel in the army; afterwards he was rector of Win- 

 wick church. Ill 2 (F M), Lucy Stanley. Ill 3, Edward Stanley, twelfth Earl of Derby (1752- 

 1834). His first marriage was unhappy; he became enamoured of a celebrated actress, whom 

 he married six weeks after his first wife's death. He undertook the maintenance of the Bur- 

 goyne children. Ill 4, Charlotte Derby. Ill 5, John ("Saratoga") Burgoyne (1722-1792), 

 entered the army early, made a runaway marriage, and had to sell his commission to pay his 

 debts. He afterwards served in the Seven Years' War as brigadier general in Portugal, where 

 he won distinction, and at the beginning of the American War of Independence he was given a 

 command. For his defeat at Saratoga he was deprived of his regiment. Later he was appointed 

 commander in chief in Ireland. Ill 6, Susan Caulfield, an opera singer. 



Fraternity of Father: IV 1, Edmund Hornby (1773-1857). IV 2, James John Hornby 

 (1777-1855), rector of Winwick. IV 3, Geoffrey Hornby (1780-1850), rector of Bury. IV 4, 

 Edward Hornby (born 1782), in holy orders. IV 5, George Hornby (1790-1872), in holy orders. 

 IV 6, Charles Hornby (1791-1867), lieutenant colonel in the army. IV 7, Lucy Hornby. IV 8, 

 Rev. H. Champneys. IV 8, Charlotte Hornby. IV 10, Edward, thirteenth Earl of Derby. 

 IV 12 (F), Sir Phipps Hornby (1785-1867), entered the navy; was mate on the Victory under 

 Nelson. March 1811 he commanded a 22-gun ship off Lissa and was awarded a gold medal. IV 



13 (M), Maria Sophia Burgoyne, of lovely character. Fraternity of Mother: IV 15, Parker. 



IV 16, John Fox Burgoyne (1782-1871), obtained his commission in the army in 1798. He won 

 his brevets of major and lieutenant-colonel in 1812 for his skillful performance of engineer duties 

 and after the war was made C. B. He finally rose to the rank of field marshal. IV 18 (con- 

 sort's F), Rev. J. J. Coles. 



Fraternity of Propositus: V 1, Phipps John Hornby (1820-1848), a captain of the Royal 

 Engineers. V 2, James John Hornby (1826-1909), provost of Eton College. V 3, Maria Eliza- 

 beth Hornby. V 4, Caroline Lucy Hornby. V 5, Major General Sir William Denison. V 6, 

 Susan Hornby. V 7, William Hornby. V 8, Lucy Hornby. V 9, Rear Admiral Robert Stop- 

 ford. V 10, Elizabeth Hornby. V 11, Rev. John Cross. V 12 (Propositus), SIR GEOFFREY 

 PHIPPS HOKNBY. V 13 (consort), Emily Frances Coles. 



Children of Propositus: VI 2, Hornby, author of biography of her father. VI 3, 



Egerton. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



BURKE, J. 1914. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great 

 Britain and Ireland. London: Harrison and Sons. 2102 pp. 



BURKE, SIR B. and A. 1909. A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Bar- 

 onetage. London: Harrison and Sons. 2570 pp. 



DE FONBLANQUE, E. 1876. Political and Military Episodes in the Latter Half of the Eighteenth 

 Century, Derived from the Life and Correspondence of the Right Hon. John Burgoyne. 

 London: Macmillan & Co. xiii + 500 pp. 



EGERTON, MRS. F. 1896. Admiral of the Fleet Sir Geoffrey Phipps Hornby. Edinburg and 

 London: W. Blackwood & Sons, xi + 404 pp. 



WROTTEBLEY, G. 1873. Life and Correspondence of Field Marshal Sir John Burgoyne. 2 vole. 

 London: R. Bentley & Sons. 



