Freedom of Speech

70 maps that explain America – Vox

POW Hamiltonian Scottish Royalist, were indentured slaves to the Cromwellian Puritans, that is why the West Indies is not Presbyterian, but (Alexander) Hamiltonian Anglican Royalists. The Armstrong an Elliott of Co. Maguire (Co. Fermangh), married into the Irish, then the Africans of the West Indies. The surname Crozier has Anglican – Catholic influence, which are my in-laws. Rev. Parris, of a Puritan Barbados Plantation family. His Caribbean Indian slaves  left testimony in the Salem Witch Trials. Daniel Elliott was most likely half Natick Praying Indian of Rev. John Eliot, Eliot Hall, Harvard, married to the Cloyse-Littlefield line of Wells, Maine. Son, Daniel at time of testimony March 30, 1692 Daniel and Hannah (Anna Elliott), son Daniel would be a quarter Natick.

The Armstrong and Elliott of Co. Fermangh (Maguire) have tribal tendencies. The Elliot’s 29th chief is Margaret of Redheugh, Scotland just south in Copeshaw-Holme (Newcastleton) of the Hermitage Castle. The Puritan Cromwellian sold us as slaves because we would inter marry and spread around the world.  When Maxwell sided with England the Graham, the Armstrong, and Elliot and others sided with the Johnstone. Like to see what will happen to the EDF and Muirhall if they side with England, and Family Tree DNA if they side with the Union-Jack, trying to preserve my family’s history around the Hermitage Castle. and  for both sides of the border to be of one entity. If both sides can not be European Union, then they need to be the Irish of Saint Patrick which chased those Tory snakes out of Ireland, like my ancestors chased them out of America. No border in Ireland dividing the Maguire, Johnston, Armstrong, McManus, or Elliott. There are enough things which break-up families we certainly do not need a border in Ireland.

Sincerely, Mark Stephen Elliott

边界会导致家庭争斗。

Mapping of Ulster-Scots (ulsterscotsacademy.com)

FTDNA Greenspan – Elwald

Daniel Elliot (1637–1704) • FamilySearch

 

 

Shadrack Kiptoo Biwott – Wikipedia

Chronicles of the Armstrongs; : Armstrong, James Lewis : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

google.com – search: GENEALOGY GARAGE Scottish Prisoners of War

Dunbar Castle & Mary, Queen of Scots (marie-stuart.co.uk)

 

 

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the … – Robert Bruce Armstrong – Google Books

Robert Bruce Armstrong — the Irish and the Highland Harps (wirestrungharp.com)

Chronicles of the Armstrongs; : Armstrong, James Lewis : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

 

 

Re: Elliotts of County Donegal – Genealogy.com

 

 

 

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the … – Robert Bruce Armstrong – Google Books

Robert Bruce Armstrong  the Irish and the Highland Harps (wirestrungharp.com)

 

 

 

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the … – Robert Bruce Armstrong – Google Books

 

YSEQ 4069 FTDNA 101829 Mark Stephen Elliott images.

FTDNA-101829-autosomal-Y-DNA-mtDNA.jpg (1226×944) (elwald.com)

 

Eliot Surname Origin, Meaning & Last Name History (forebears.io)

Discover the Eliot family with Your Family History (your-family-history.com)

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the … – Robert Bruce Armstrong – Google Books

Acts of Scottish Parliament 1587 (Clan Thompson) pdf

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the … – Robert Bruce Armstrong – Google Books

Chronicles of the Armstrongs; : Armstrong, James Lewis : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

Border Reivers to Ulster genealogy.

 

Johnnie Armstrong (Roud 76; Child 169) (mainlynorfolk.info)

In the Ulster Muster Rolls of 1630;   Tullykelter, Co Fermanagh, Ulster, names are Armstrong, Armestrong, Armestrang, Curruthers, Ellot, Rutledge, Johnston, Scot.  Fought for Charles II, of Charleston, SC, Charlestown, MA, Charlestown, Nevis Island, West Indies, where Alexander Hamilton was born and today has a concentration of Elliott We married those Maguire, McManus, and McGovern, as we married the Grame-Graeme-Græme-Graham-Greene, though they do not want to admit it sometimes.  Alexander Bell took Graham as a middle-name, granddad Mark Elliott denied Hammer as a middle name. Mark and Hammer where surnames of both his grandmothers. If my name was to follow suit it after my grandmothers it would have been, Spencer Ryan Elliott, but I was named after my grandfathers instead as Mark Stephen Elliott, dad Loren Spencer Elliott did accept his mother’s maiden name as a middle name. MSE 3-22-2024

 

The Annals of a Border Club (the Jedforest): And Biographical Notices of the … – George Tancred – Google Books

There is ane, callit Clement’s Hob,
Fa ilk puir wife reivis her wob,
And all the lave,
Whatever they have:
The devil resave therefor his gob!
One does not get to choose their ancestors. You, are born with them. At least there are genealogical records on my family. Mark Stephen Elliott 1/19/2024

Discover the Green family with Your Family History (your-family-history.com)

Discover the Greene family with Your Family History (your-family-history.com)

Daniel Elliot (1637–1704) • FamilySearch

RUSH99LSE

477.Emma Ona [RUSH] ELLIOTT) [9] [261. Aaron 8, Benjamin 7, James 6,
Benjamin II 5, Wm. IV 4, Wm. III 3, Wm. II 2, Wm. I 1] born 17 Nov 1867 in
Rice Twp, Ringgold Co, IA, and died in Mt Ayr, IA, 1 Aug 1963. She married 10
Jul 1887 in the Methodist parsonage in Mt Ayr to Alamando Wilcox ELLIOTT
born 11 May 1865 in Avon, Fulton Co, IL. His parents were Rev. Sherburn
Alamando and Louisa Marie [Mark] ELLIOTT. `Al’ came to Iowa at the age of
three. His father was a pioneer Methodist circuit rider in southeast Iowa and
family moved frequently until moving to Rice Twp in 1871 to farm. His
grandfather, Rev. William F. Mark, was also a pioneer Methodist circuit rider
also serving in Illinois and Iowa with his last charge in Redding, Ringgold Co, IA.
After marriage, Emma and `Al’ settled on farm purchased in 1890 from his
father in Rice Twp where they lived until they moved to Mt Ayr in 1915. They
purchased in 1907 an additional 40 acres on the west side of this initial 80 acre
farm. This farm was rented to their oldest son, Mark, in 1915 and they retired
to Mt Ayr. They sold this farm in 1934 to this son. Their home in Mt. Ayr was
located at the present site if the Clearview Care Home for senior citizens.
Emma was the first resident of this fine center. They were active members of
the Methodist Church, having joined at Eureka east of Delphos, IA. `Al’ at five
feet eleven inches towered over his five-foot three-inch father. He detested the
name `Alamando’ and much preferred his friends to call him `Al’ or `A.W.’ He is
remembered for his fine sense of humor and cheerful disposition, always seeing
the bright side of everything. He enjoyed quoting poetry – generally ending by
giving credit to an author that may or may not have existed. He chewed
tobacco, always ‘saucered’ his coffee, and said `grace’ before every meal. The
`carom board’ was always readily available when the grandchildren arrived for
overnight stays. Alice, felt she gave these for nothing. The railroad
bordered the north edge of their lots with a trestle bridge crossing the street
bordering them on the east. They owned one automobile purchased new – a
1928 Whippet. Emma did the driving as `Al’s eyesight was very poor, having
lost an eye at the age of nine when a boyhood friend accidentally struck him
with an axe while watching him chop wood. Their house had a well located in
the east porch and a cave just east between house and garage. East of the
garage was the commonly referred to `two holer’ with that adjacent to a low
ceiling hen house with both covered with grape vines. They kept about a dozen
Rhode Island Red hens that produced very few eggs. She always had a jar full
of thick sugar cookies that really weren’t very good but she was a tremendous
grandma! They both enjoyed gardening and had many peach trees. Children of
Emma and `Al’;
800. i. Florence Modessa Elliott b. 9 Apr 1888 d. 9 Sep 1984
801. ii. Avis L. Elliott b. 5 Oct 1889 d. 30 Oct 1890
802. iii. Mark (nmn)3 Elliott b. 13 Mar 1891 d 30 Nov 1976
803. iv. Rees Wells Elliott b. 3 Feb 1893 d. 13 Mar 1919
804. v. Ethel L. Elliott b. 12 Aug 1894 d. 21 Jan 1899

3Mark was given the surnames of his two grandmothers – Mark & Hammer. He detested this combination and had
his name legally changed to “Mark” with no middle name. Suspect he was teased about his name as a kid. LSE.

805. vi. Hazel Bernice Elliott b. 22 Jul 1897 d. 14 Sep 1985
806. vii. Gladys Marie Elliott b. 30 Nov 1901 d. 15 Nov 1978
807. viii. Alice Marguerite Elliott b. 7 Nov 1907 d. 7 Jun 1984

https://www.elwald.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Loren-S-Elliott-Rush-Family-Research-documents.pdf

https://www.elwald.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/misc-Rush-family_1-30.pdf

https://www.elwald.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Rush-Virginia-Kentucky-Iowa.pdf

https://www.elwald.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/misc-Rush-family_31-60.pdf

https://www.elwald.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Rush-Family.jpg

John Elwald of St. Andrews pdf

John & Robert Elwald of York Hexam pdf

https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/elliott/links

and https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_Elliot

For the Elliot and my father Loren Spencer Elliott: instead of;
https://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/dtog/elliot2.html  could you please use;
https://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/dtog/elliot.html

Thank you

Mark Stephen Elliott

1/26/2024

Lidalia vel Lidisdalia regio, Lidisdail / Auct. Timotheo Pont. – Blaeu Atlas of Scotland, 1654 (nls.uk)

 

Scottish Poetry Selection – Wha Daur Meddle Wi’ Me?

Chasing-my-Y-DNA-part-28

 

 

 

 

The County Histories of Scotland, Vol2 pg330 Kinmont Wille
W. Blackwood and Sons, 1899

Armstrong, Scott, Elliott (Gorrenberry and Copshaw, not Stobs), Bell, and Graham were in on the rescue of Kinmont Willie Armstrong from Carlisle Castle.

The Grahams of the 16-17th century Anglo-Scottish Border and their descendants in Rossadown, Co. Laois, Ireland Lloyd D. Graham

‘Sheep stealers from the north of England’: the Riding Clans in Ulster by Robert Bell

Ballads of the Border Reivers. youtube

HISTORY-HUNTERS-Kinmont-Willie-Armstrong

Kinmont-Willie-grave-site-Morton-Church-near-Tower-of-Sark

What’s in a Name? Allegiance, for Border Reivers By GRAHAM HEATHCOTE FEB. 11, 1996 12 AM ASSOCIATED PRESS CARLISLE, England —

Ever suspected that your ancestors were robbers who terrorized the border between England and Scotland? Armstrong, Elliot, Graham, Irvine, Johnstone, Kerr, Maxwell, Nixon and Scott were among the families who rode, feuded, fought and plundered over the border area for 350 years. All the family names of the Border Reivers, whose first allegiance was to their family’s surname, are on a list kept in Carlisle, on the English side of the border.

From the 14th to the 17th centuries, the border was a turbulent place. Raiders stole cattle and women, burned homes and farms and killed rivals without mercy. From surviving documents such as court and property records and tenure agreements, researchers have identified 74 family names from that region in the 16th and 17th centuries.

Some names have changed over the years: Johnstone becoming Johnson, for example. Reive, meaning to plunder or rob, comes from the dialect of the Scottish Lowlands and borders. “The folk memory of the Reivers has passed away, but their stories survive in the border ballads,” said David Clarke, senior curator of Tullie House Museum. “We have music about them and [the novelist Sir Walter] Scott collected a lot about them and put them into his novels.” The museum has made an audio-visual show about Reivers the centerpiece of a $7.5-million restoration.

The bell that rang to warn Carlisle townspeople of raids is in the museum. Images of galloping horse riders, lookouts, panic-stricken settlers and torched homes and forts are projected on a 30-foot screen. Voices intone the fear of women waiting for raids: “The Reivers are riding to take what we stole from them that had been ours before.” The border with Scotland is nine miles north of Carlisle, but in Reiver times it wasn’t so definite. “North of Carlisle were the debatable lands, territory which was declared to belong to neither Scotland nor England,” Clarke said. “The Reivers operated on both sides of the border. “It was peat moss and bog country, a huge tract of wet and desolate moorland at the head of the Solway Firth,” he said. “You had to know your way around it or you would have got lost and died. Nowadays it’s mostly quarried for peat or drained for farming. “Carlisle is a border city and changed hands between the English and Scots several times in the Middle Ages, so the museum took up the Reivers as a very interesting episode,” he said. “It’s become one of our main attractions.”

Clarke said the Reiver story is still little known despite George MacDonald Fraser’s novel, “The Steel Bonnets.” Fraser was astonished by the Reiver connections he saw in a photograph of Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon and evangelist Billy Graham together at Nixon’s inauguration. Johnson’s visage and figure were straight from Dumfriesshire, where everyone was familiar with such lined and leathery faces, large heads and rangy, rather loose-jointed frames, Fraser said. The Graham features were less common but still familiar, while Nixon was the perfect example of the Anglo-Scottish frontier: blunt, heavy features, dark complexion, burly body and an air of dour hardness. Fraser said all three heads would fit perfectly under a steel bonnet. “The Reivers were thieves, but warriors as well, and without allegiance to anyone outside their clan.

Any English or Scottish king going to war here needed the Reivers on his side,” said Chris Dobson, a Carlisle city official. He said the Reivers were eventually repressed, deported, killed or compelled to emigrate under threat of imprisonment and that many ended up in Ireland. Haydn Charlsworth specializes in researching family histories around Carlisle and has traced Reiver connections for American clients. “Once you get back to the 16th century, it’s pretty difficult to make strong links, but the Armstrongs are well documented, and the Johnstones,” Charlsworth said.

 

The History of Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewesdale, Wauchopedale and the Debateable Land: By Robert Bruce Armstrong, Volume 1

Chronicles of the Armstrongs;by Armstrong, James Lewis

Clan Johnston(e) mp4

Co Fermanagh, Ulster surname 1. Maguire, 2. Johnston, 3. Armstrong, 4. McManus, 5. Elliott, map.

https://named.publicprofiler.org/

Armstrong and Maguire marrying of Ulster Plantation, County Fermanagh, Ireland. I Remain Unvanquished! (Armstrong marrying Maguire): The Incredible 1,000-year History of the Armstrong Family by William Stephenson publisher; Great Northern Pulp & Paper Group Limited, 1989 – Canada – 183 pages

“Men who carried arms were liable to be called up by the sheriff so there are records of them.” Visitors can get a “Reivers Car Trail” leaflet in Carlisle to guide them through 80 miles of Reiver country. It describes one of the most unspoiled and splendid parts of Britain as it was in 1590, just after the defeat of the Spanish Armada. Towers, churches and castles are still there, though often only as ruins, and so are banks and ditches, remnants of Roman forts built more than 1,200 years before when nearby Hadrian’s Wall was the northernmost frontier of the Roman Empire.

 

Reivers by Name The 74 family names in surviving documents about the Border Reivers: Archbold, Armstrong, Beattie, Bell, Burns, Carleton, Carlisle, Carnaby, Carrs, Carruthers, Chamberlain, Charlton, Charleton, Collingwood, Crisp, Croser, Crozier, Cuthbert, Dacre, Davison, Dixon, Dodd, Douglas, Dunne, Elliot, Fenwick, Forster, Graham, Gray, Hall, Hedley, Henderson, Heron, Hetherington, Hume, Irvine, Irving, Johnstone (Johnson), Kerr,Laidlaw, Little, Lowther, Maxwell, Milburn, Musgrove, Nixon, Noble,Ogle, Oliver,Potts, Pringle,Radcliffe, Reade, Ridley, Robson, Routledge, Rutherford,Salkeld, Scott, Selby, Shaftoe, Simpson, Storey, Tailor, Tait, Taylor, Trotter, Turnbull, Wake, Watson, Wilson, Woodrington, Yarrow, Young

Associated Press https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-02-11-mn-34692-story.html 

Since, may family were exiled from both kingdoms in 1607, the fought for Charles II, on the side of the Maguire, McManus, Armstrong, as Scottish Royalists. SELLING-SCOTS-AS-SLAVES-IS-FUNNY-TO-THE-TORIES ‘Transported as slaves to The Colonies’, by Cromwell. Border genocide, and the making of the Union Jack; Border Pacification of Armstrong BBC The Union Jack, is symbolic to me as the Swastika flag of Germany must be to the Jews. We strung up Torys around 1776; The Tory’s day of judgment Created ‘freedom of speech’, without censorship.

10/20/2019 MSE

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