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Longe family

Longe (/ˈlɒŋ/; Old Norman: le Longe or le Long) is a surname of Anglo-Norman origin. The name Longe derives from the Anglo-Norman French ‘Lung’ or ‘Lang’ for tall or high.[1] The family descend from the noble family of de Préaux who were barons in Préaux, Roumois and Darnétal, Normandy. Variants of the name include: le Long, de Long, Le Lung, Longe, Long and Longue.[2] The family are believed to have arrived in England following the Norman Conquest and during the early 13th century divided into two branches, the Wiltshire branch and the Norfolk branch. In the Hundred Rolls of 1273, early variations have been found including, Henry le Longe in Buckinghamshire, John le Longe in Huntingdonshire; and Walter le Longe in Shropshire.[3]

Sable semée of cross-crosslets, a lion rampant argent

Longs of Wiltshire, England edit

The Wiltshire branch settled in the county prior to 1200. The founder, Robert I le Long, is descended from the de Préaux family who were barons in Préaux, Roumois and Darnétal, Normandy.

Lineage

 
South Wraxall Manor, the house where the first tobacco was smoked in England, by Sir Walter Long and his friend Sir Walter Raleigh

1. Robert I le Long (1325–c.1370)
2. Robert II le Long (1350–1385) married N. de Berkeley of Beverston Castle, Gloucestershire.
3. Roger le Long (1370–1448) married Isabel Saint Maur, daughter of Roger de St. Maur of Penhow Castle, Monmouthshire.
4. Robert Longe (died 1447), a lawyer who bought the estates of Draycot Cerne and South Wraxall
5. John Long (1419–1478)
6. Sir Thomas Long (c.1451–1508)
7. Sir Henry Long (1489–1556)
8. Sir Robert Long (1517–1581)
9. Sir Walter Long (1560–1610)
10. Sir Robert Long, 1st Baronet (1600–1673)
11. Sir Walter Long (1594–1637)
12. Sir James Long, 2nd Baronet (1617–1692)
13. James Long (1652–1690)
14. Sir Robert Long, 3rd Baronet (1673–1692)
15. Sir Giles Long, 4th Baronet (1675–1698)
16. Sir James Long, 5th Baronet (1682–1729)
17. Sir Robert Long, 6th Baronet (1705–1767)
18. Sir James Tylney-Long, 7th Baronet (1736–1794)
19. Sir James Tylney-Long, 8th Baronet (1794–1805)

 
Rood Ashton House, Wiltshire, home of the Viscounts Long until 1930

High Sheriffs of Wiltshire

Lord Lieutenants of Wiltshire

Deputy Lieutenants of Wiltshire

Notable descendants

Longes of Norfolk, England edit

The Norfolk branch settled in the county prior to 1299 with reference being made to both Robert le Longe and John le Longe who were traders of saltpetre in Norwich and the City of London. The family is descended from a Baron de Préaux in Normandy. Another branch settled in Suffolk in the 1300s with Walterus le Longe and Rogerus le Longe both mentioned as bailiffs in Dunwich, Suffolk in 1332 and 1333. In 1619, the Longe family purchased estates of Reymerston Hall and later Spixworth Hall in 1685 and Dunston Hall in 1859. In 1903, the Suffolk branch purchased Abbot's Hall in Stowmarket, Suffolk which is now the Museum of East Anglian Life. In 2011, the will of Thomas Longe of Ashwellthorpe was discovered, giving historians the first positive identification of a common soldier fighting for the House of York during the Battle of Bosworth.[4]

 
Arms of Longe of Spixworth Hall, Norfolk[5]

High Sheriffs of Norfolk:

  • 1641: Robert Longe (1588–1656), of Reymerston Hall.
  • 1644: Robert Longe (1619–1688), of Foulden, Norfolk.
  • 1752: Francis Longe (1726–1776), of Spixworth Hall.
  • 1757: Israel Longe, of Dunston Hall.
  • 1786: Francis Longe (1748–1812), of Spixworth Hall.
  • 1975: Major Desmond Longe (1914–1990), of Woodton Grange, Norfolk.

High Sheriffs of Suffolk:

  • 1984: Nicholas Longe of Grange Farm, Hasketon, Woodbridge.

Notable members:

Long baronets, of Whaddon (1661–1710) edit

The Long Baronetcy, of Whaddon in the County of Wiltshire, was created in the Baronetage of England on 26 March 1661 for the politician Walter Long. He was succeeded by his son, the second Baronet. He was unmarried and the title became extinct on his death in 1710.[6]

Tylney-Long baronets, of Westminster (1662–1794) edit

 
Sir Robert Long, 1st Baronet

The Long, later Tylney-Long Baronetcy, of Westminster in the County of London, was a title in the Baronetage of England.[7] It was created in 1662 for Robert Long, with remainder in default of male issue of his own to his nephew James Long and the heirs male of his body. He was the son of Sir Walter Long. Long never married and was succeeded according to the special remainder by his nephew, James, the second Baronet. He was the son of Sir Walter Long. Three of Sir James's grandsons, the third, fourth and fifth Baronets, all succeeded in the title. The latter represented several constituencies in the House of Commons. He married Lady Emma, daughter of Richard Tylney, 1st Earl Tylney (see Earl Tylney). Their son, the sixth Baronet, succeeded to the substantial Tylney estates, including Wanstead Manor, on the death of his maternal uncle in 1784 and assumed the additional surname of Tylney. His only son, the eighth Baronet, died young in 1805 and the baronetcy became extinct.

Catherine Tylney-Long, daughter of the seventh Baronet and sister of the eighth and last Baronet, inherited the family estates. She married William Pole-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington, who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long. See Earl of Mornington for further history of this title.

Earls of Mornington (1760; reverted) edit

 
William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington

Catherine Tylney-Long, daughter of the seventh Baronet (see Tylney-Long baronets) and sister of the eighth and last Baronet, inherited the family estates. She married William Pole-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington, who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long.

The 4th Earl of Mornington's wife was known in fashionable London society as "The Wiltshire Heiress",[8] as she was believed to be the richest commoner in England. Her estates in Essex, Hampshire and Wiltshire were said to be worth £40,000 per year in rents (£3,500,000 in 2016). She also had financial investments in hand worth £300,000 (£28,000,000 in 2016) and had been sought in marriage by the Duke of Clarence, later King William IV. See Earl of Mornington for further history of this title.

Barons Farnborough; first creation (1826–1838) edit

 
The Right Honourable The Lord Farnborough

In 1820 King George IV appointed Charles Longe Knight of the Order of the Bath[9] and on his retirement from political life in 1826 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Farnborough, of Bromley-Hill-Place, in the county of Kent.[10] Long was elected FRS in 1792, FSA in 1812, and was given an honorary LLD by Cambridge University in 1833 where he had studied at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, matriculating in 1779; at Cambridge he was a friend of William Pitt.[11]

Barons Gisborough (1917–) edit

Baron Gisborough, of Cleveland in the County of York,[12] is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, created in 1917 for the Conservative politician Richard Chaloner (1856–1938).

Viscounts Long, of Wraxall (1921–) edit

 
Walter Long, 1st Viscount Long

Viscount Long, of Wraxall in the County of Wiltshire, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1921 for the Conservative politician Walter Long, who had previously served as Member of Parliament, President of the Board of Agriculture, President of the Local Government Board, Secretary of State for the Colonies and First Lord of the Admiralty.

His grandson, the second Viscount (son of Brigadier General Walter Long) was killed in action in the Second World War. He was succeeded by his uncle, the third Viscount. He had earlier represented Westbury in Parliament as a Conservative.

 
Arms of Viscount Long

As of 2012 the title is held by his son, the fourth Viscount. He served as a government whip from 1979 to 1997 in the Conservative administrations of Margaret Thatcher and John Major. However, Lord Long lost his seat in the House of Lords after the passing of the House of Lords Act 1999.

Arms of the Longe family edit

Further reading edit

  • Nicol, Cheryl (2016). Inheriting the Earth: The Long Family's 500 Year Reign in Wiltshire. Hobnob Press. ISBN 978-1906978372.
  • Fairbairn's book of crests of the families of Great Britain and Ireland; James Fairbairn
  • Royal illustrated history of Eastern England, Volume 2; A. D. Bayne
  • Historical Account of the Family of Long of Wiltshire; Walter Chitty
  • Diary of John Longe (1765–1834), Vicar of Coddenham
  • Calender of Early Mayors Court Rolls 1298–1307; A.H. Thomas, p. 64.

References edit

  1. ^ "AND Search or Browse". www.anglo-norman.net.
  2. ^ "Longe Name Meaning & Longe Family History at Ancestry.co.uk®".
  3. ^ Bardsley, Charles Wareing Endell; Bardsley, A. (11 September 1901). "A dictionary of English and Welsh surnames, with special American instances". London ; New York : H. Frowde – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ "Norfolk man named as Battle of Bosworth Yorkist fighter". BBC News. 31 August 2011.
  5. ^ Burke, John (1838). "A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry; Or, Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Etc".
  6. ^ Debrett, John (1819). "The Baronetage of England: Containing Their Descent and Present State, Their Collateral Branches, Births, Marriages, and Issue, from the Institution of the Order in 1611 : A Complete and Alphabetical Arrangement of Their Mottoes, with Correct Translations; a List of Persons who Have Received the Honour of Knighthood, of Extinct Baronets, of Such as Have Been Advanced to the Peerage, and of British Subjects Holding Foreign Orders of Knighthood".
  7. ^ Cokayne, George E. (George Edward) (11 September 1900). "Complete baronetage". Exeter : W. Pollard & co., ltd. – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ "The Angel and the Cad: Love, Loss and Scandal in Regency England review | Books | The Guardian". TheGuardian.com. 2 August 2015.
  9. ^ Shaw, William Arthur; Burtchaell, George Dames (11 September 1906). "The Knights of England. A complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England, Scotland, and Ireland, and of knights bachelors, incorporating a complete list of knights bachelors dubbed in Ireland". London Sherratt and Hughes – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ "Page 1478 | Issue 18259, 17 June 1826 | London Gazette | The Gazette".
  11. ^ Woolterton, Stephenie. "Charles Long's request for a pension".
  12. ^ "No. 30150". The London Gazette. 26 June 1917. p. 6286.
  13. ^ "LONG – Deaths Announcements – Telegraph Announcements". announcements.telegraph.co.uk.

longe, family, longe, norman, longe, long, surname, anglo, norman, origin, name, longe, derives, from, anglo, norman, french, lung, lang, tall, high, family, descend, from, noble, family, préaux, were, barons, préaux, roumois, darnétal, normandy, variants, nam. Longe ˈ l ɒ ŋ Old Norman le Longe or le Long is a surname of Anglo Norman origin The name Longe derives from the Anglo Norman French Lung or Lang for tall or high 1 The family descend from the noble family of de Preaux who were barons in Preaux Roumois and Darnetal Normandy Variants of the name include le Long de Long Le Lung Longe Long and Longue 2 The family are believed to have arrived in England following the Norman Conquest and during the early 13th century divided into two branches the Wiltshire branch and the Norfolk branch In the Hundred Rolls of 1273 early variations have been found including Henry le Longe in Buckinghamshire John le Longe in Huntingdonshire and Walter le Longe in Shropshire 3 House of LongeNoble houseCountryDuchy of Normandy Kingdom of EnglandFounderRaoul de Preaux c 1100 TitlesVariousEstate s Gisborough HallDunston HallSpixworth ParkRood Ashton HouseMarkwell HallBenham ParkMornington HouseHingham HallSouth Wraxall ManorAbbot s HallDangan CastleReymerston HallYelverton Hall Sable semee of cross crosslets a lion rampant argent Contents 1 Longs of Wiltshire England 2 Longes of Norfolk England 3 Long baronets of Whaddon 1661 1710 4 Tylney Long baronets of Westminster 1662 1794 5 Earls of Mornington 1760 reverted 6 Barons Farnborough first creation 1826 1838 7 Barons Gisborough 1917 8 Viscounts Long of Wraxall 1921 9 Arms of the Longe family 10 Further reading 11 ReferencesLongs of Wiltshire England editThe Wiltshire branch settled in the county prior to 1200 The founder Robert I le Long is descended from the de Preaux family who were barons in Preaux Roumois and Darnetal Normandy Lineage nbsp South Wraxall Manor the house where the first tobacco was smoked in England by Sir Walter Long and his friend Sir Walter Raleigh 1 Robert I le Long 1325 c 1370 2 Robert II le Long 1350 1385 married N de Berkeley of Beverston Castle Gloucestershire 3 Roger le Long 1370 1448 married Isabel Saint Maur daughter of Roger de St Maur of Penhow Castle Monmouthshire 4 Robert Longe died 1447 a lawyer who bought the estates of Draycot Cerne and South Wraxall 5 John Long 1419 1478 6 Sir Thomas Long c 1451 1508 7 Sir Henry Long 1489 1556 8 Sir Robert Long 1517 1581 9 Sir Walter Long 1560 1610 10 Sir Robert Long 1st Baronet 1600 1673 11 Sir Walter Long 1594 1637 12 Sir James Long 2nd Baronet 1617 1692 13 James Long 1652 1690 14 Sir Robert Long 3rd Baronet 1673 1692 15 Sir Giles Long 4th Baronet 1675 1698 16 Sir James Long 5th Baronet 1682 1729 17 Sir Robert Long 6th Baronet 1705 1767 18 Sir James Tylney Long 7th Baronet 1736 1794 19 Sir James Tylney Long 8th Baronet 1794 1805 nbsp Rood Ashton House Wiltshire home of the Viscounts Long until 1930 High Sheriffs of Wiltshire 1322 Walter le Longe 1332 Gifford le Long 1483 Henry Long died 1490 of Wraxall 1500 Sir Thomas Long of Draycot c 1451 1508 of South Wraxall and Draycot 1506 Sir Thomas Long of Draycot c 1451 1508 of South Wraxall and Draycot 1511 Henry Long Kt of Draycot Cerne 1st term 1525 Sir Henry Long Kt of Draycot Cerne 2nd term 1536 Sir Henry Long Kt of Draycot Cerne 3rd term 1541 Sir Henry Long Kt of Draycot Cerne 4th term 1574 Sir Robert Long of Wraxall and Draycott 1600 Sir Walter Long Kt of South Wraxall and Draycot 1623 Gifford Long of Rowde Ashton 1627 Sir Walter Long Bt of Whaddon 1644 Sir James Long Bt of Draycot Cerne 1653 Thomas Long of Little Cheverell 1672 Sir Walter Long Bt of Whaddon 1703 Richard Long of Collingbourne 1704 Walter Long of South Wraxall 1726 Henry Long of Melksham 1745 Walter Long of Salisbury Wiltshire and Preshaw Hampshire 1764 Walter Long of South Wraxall 1794 Richard Godolphin Long of Rood Ashton 1819 John Long of Monkton Farleigh Lord Lieutenants of Wiltshire Walter Long 1st Viscount Long 3 March 1920 26 September 1924 Deputy Lieutenants of Wiltshire Sir Walter Long c 1565 1610 Walter Long 1793 1867 Walter Hume Long 1st Viscount Long 1854 1924 Richard Long 3rd Viscount Long 1892 1967 Notable descendants Anne Long Gifford Long Henry Long died 1556 Henry Long died 1490 John Long of Draycot Cerne Beeston Long Charles Edward Long Charlotte Long Edward Long Lislebone Long Richard Long died 1730 Richard Long died 1760 Richard Godolphin Long Richard Penruddocke Long Robert Ballard Long Samuel Long Walter Long c 1594 1637 Walter Long 1793 1867 Walter Long British Army Officer Walter Long MP for Calne 1701 Walter Long of South Wraxall Walter Long of Preshaw William Long surgeon Richard Long courtier Robert Long soldier Thomas Long of DraycotLonges of Norfolk England editThe Norfolk branch settled in the county prior to 1299 with reference being made to both Robert le Longe and John le Longe who were traders of saltpetre in Norwich and the City of London The family is descended from a Baron de Preaux in Normandy Another branch settled in Suffolk in the 1300s with Walterus le Longe and Rogerus le Longe both mentioned as bailiffs in Dunwich Suffolk in 1332 and 1333 In 1619 the Longe family purchased estates of Reymerston Hall and later Spixworth Hall in 1685 and Dunston Hall in 1859 In 1903 the Suffolk branch purchased Abbot s Hall in Stowmarket Suffolk which is now the Museum of East Anglian Life In 2011 the will of Thomas Longe of Ashwellthorpe was discovered giving historians the first positive identification of a common soldier fighting for the House of York during the Battle of Bosworth 4 nbsp Arms of Longe of Spixworth Hall Norfolk 5 High Sheriffs of Norfolk 1641 Robert Longe 1588 1656 of Reymerston Hall 1644 Robert Longe 1619 1688 of Foulden Norfolk 1752 Francis Longe 1726 1776 of Spixworth Hall 1757 Israel Longe of Dunston Hall 1786 Francis Longe 1748 1812 of Spixworth Hall 1975 Major Desmond Longe 1914 1990 of Woodton Grange Norfolk High Sheriffs of Suffolk 1984 Nicholas Longe of Grange Farm Hasketon Woodbridge Notable members William of Wykeham 1324 1404 Bishop of Winchester and Chancellor of England John Longe 1549 1589 Archbishop of Armagh and member of the Privy Council of Ireland Rev John Longe 1765 1834 of Spixworth Hall Vicar of Coddenham and diarist Francis Davy Longe 1831 1905 of Spixworth Hall First Class cricketer Long baronets of Whaddon 1661 1710 editThe Long Baronetcy of Whaddon in the County of Wiltshire was created in the Baronetage of England on 26 March 1661 for the politician Walter Long He was succeeded by his son the second Baronet He was unmarried and the title became extinct on his death in 1710 6 Sir Walter Long 1st Baronet Sir Walter Long 2nd BaronetTylney Long baronets of Westminster 1662 1794 edit nbsp Sir Robert Long 1st Baronet The Long later Tylney Long Baronetcy of Westminster in the County of London was a title in the Baronetage of England 7 It was created in 1662 for Robert Long with remainder in default of male issue of his own to his nephew James Long and the heirs male of his body He was the son of Sir Walter Long Long never married and was succeeded according to the special remainder by his nephew James the second Baronet He was the son of Sir Walter Long Three of Sir James s grandsons the third fourth and fifth Baronets all succeeded in the title The latter represented several constituencies in the House of Commons He married Lady Emma daughter of Richard Tylney 1st Earl Tylney see Earl Tylney Their son the sixth Baronet succeeded to the substantial Tylney estates including Wanstead Manor on the death of his maternal uncle in 1784 and assumed the additional surname of Tylney His only son the eighth Baronet died young in 1805 and the baronetcy became extinct Catherine Tylney Long daughter of the seventh Baronet and sister of the eighth and last Baronet inherited the family estates She married William Pole Wellesley 4th Earl of Mornington who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long See Earl of Mornington for further history of this title Sir Robert Long 1st Baronet Sir James Long 2nd Baronet Sir Richard Long 3rd Baronet Sir Giles Long 4th Baronet Sir James Long 5th Baronet Sir Robert Long 6th Baronet Sir James Tylney Long 7th Baronet Sir James Tylney Long 8th BaronetEarls of Mornington 1760 reverted edit nbsp William Pole Tylney Long Wellesley 4th Earl of Mornington Catherine Tylney Long daughter of the seventh Baronet see Tylney Long baronets and sister of the eighth and last Baronet inherited the family estates She married William Pole Wellesley 4th Earl of Mornington who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long The 4th Earl of Mornington s wife was known in fashionable London society as The Wiltshire Heiress 8 as she was believed to be the richest commoner in England Her estates in Essex Hampshire and Wiltshire were said to be worth 40 000 per year in rents 3 500 000 in 2016 She also had financial investments in hand worth 300 000 28 000 000 in 2016 and had been sought in marriage by the Duke of Clarence later King William IV See Earl of Mornington for further history of this title William Pole Tylney Long Wellesley 4th Earl of Mornington William Pole Tylney Long Wellesley 5th Earl of MorningtonBarons Farnborough first creation 1826 1838 edit nbsp The Right Honourable The Lord Farnborough In 1820 King George IV appointed Charles Longe Knight of the Order of the Bath 9 and on his retirement from political life in 1826 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Farnborough of Bromley Hill Place in the county of Kent 10 Long was elected FRS in 1792 FSA in 1812 and was given an honorary LLD by Cambridge University in 1833 where he had studied at Emmanuel College Cambridge matriculating in 1779 at Cambridge he was a friend of William Pitt 11 Charles Long 1st Baron FarnboroughBarons Gisborough 1917 editMain article Baron Gisborough Baron Gisborough of Cleveland in the County of York 12 is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom created in 1917 for the Conservative politician Richard Chaloner 1856 1938 Viscounts Long of Wraxall 1921 edit nbsp Walter Long 1st Viscount Long Viscount Long of Wraxall in the County of Wiltshire is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom It was created in 1921 for the Conservative politician Walter Long who had previously served as Member of Parliament President of the Board of Agriculture President of the Local Government Board Secretary of State for the Colonies and First Lord of the Admiralty His grandson the second Viscount son of Brigadier General Walter Long was killed in action in the Second World War He was succeeded by his uncle the third Viscount He had earlier represented Westbury in Parliament as a Conservative nbsp Arms of Viscount Long As of 2012 the title is held by his son the fourth Viscount He served as a government whip from 1979 to 1997 in the Conservative administrations of Margaret Thatcher and John Major However Lord Long lost his seat in the House of Lords after the passing of the House of Lords Act 1999 Walter Long 1st Viscount Long Walter Long 2nd Viscount Long Richard Long 3rd Viscount Long Richard Long 4th Viscount Long James Long 5th Viscount Long 13 Arms of the Longe family edit nbsp Arms of Viscount LongSable semee of Crosses Crosslet Or a Lion rampant Argent between two Flaunches Or nbsp Arms of Longe of Spixworth Hall NorfolkGules a saltire engrailed or on a chief of the second three cross crosslets of the first nbsp Arms of Long of South Wraxall WilshireSable semee of cross crosslets a lion rampant argentFurther reading editNicol Cheryl 2016 Inheriting the Earth The Long Family s 500 Year Reign in Wiltshire Hobnob Press ISBN 978 1906978372 Fairbairn s book of crests of the families of Great Britain and Ireland James Fairbairn Royal illustrated history of Eastern England Volume 2 A D Bayne Historical Account of the Family of Long of Wiltshire Walter Chitty Diary of John Longe 1765 1834 Vicar of Coddenham Calender of Early Mayors Court Rolls 1298 1307 A H Thomas p 64 References edit AND Search or Browse www anglo norman net Longe Name Meaning amp Longe Family History at Ancestry co uk Bardsley Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley A 11 September 1901 A dictionary of English and Welsh surnames with special American instances London New York H Frowde via Internet Archive Norfolk man named as Battle of Bosworth Yorkist fighter BBC News 31 August 2011 Burke John 1838 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry Or Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Etc Debrett John 1819 The Baronetage of England Containing Their Descent and Present State Their Collateral Branches Births Marriages and Issue from the Institution of the Order in 1611 A Complete and Alphabetical Arrangement of Their Mottoes with Correct Translations a List of Persons who Have Received the Honour of Knighthood of Extinct Baronets of Such as Have Been Advanced to the Peerage and of British Subjects Holding Foreign Orders of Knighthood Cokayne George E George Edward 11 September 1900 Complete baronetage Exeter W Pollard amp co ltd via Internet Archive The Angel and the Cad Love Loss and Scandal in Regency England review Books The Guardian TheGuardian com 2 August 2015 Shaw William Arthur Burtchaell George Dames 11 September 1906 The Knights of England A complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England Scotland and Ireland and of knights bachelors incorporating a complete list of knights bachelors dubbed in Ireland London Sherratt and Hughes via Internet Archive Page 1478 Issue 18259 17 June 1826 London Gazette The Gazette Woolterton Stephenie Charles Long s request for a pension No 30150 The London Gazette 26 June 1917 p 6286 LONG Deaths Announcements Telegraph Announcements announcements telegraph co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Longe family amp oldid 1219851334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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