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  1. James Hay, Lord Hay and Lord Slains (c.1797 – 16 June 1815) was a British Army officer killed during the Waterloo Campaign. Biography. James Hay was the son of William Hay, 17th Earl of Erroll and his wife Alicia Eliot (d. 1812). Hay, an ensign in the 1st Foot Guards, was killed at the Battle of Quatre Bras while serving as aide-de-camp to ...

  2. James Hay, 1st Earl of Carlisle KB (c. 1580 – March 1636) was a Scottish courtier and English nobleman. Life. He was the son of Sir James Hay of Fingask, second son of Peter Hay of Megginch (a branch member of Hay of Leys, a younger branch of the Erroll family) and his wife Margaret, daughter of Crichton of Ruthven. [1] .

  3. On the 21st of June 1606, Hay was created a baron. In 1610 he was made a Knight of the Bath, and in 1613 Master of the Wardrobe. His accumulation of titles continued and in 1615 he was created Lord Hay of Sawley, and took his seat in the House of Lords.

  4. A study of James Hay, a little known 17th-cent. Scotsman who was a key figure in the early Stuart era. Unlike the vast majority of Scots who entered England with James I, Hay absorbed the...

  5. James Hay, 15th Earl of Erroll (20 April 1726 – 3 July 1778) styled Lord Boyd from 1728 to 1746, was a Scottish nobleman and the son of William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock. After his father was attainted in 1746, he became Mr James Boyd, but in 1758 he inherited the Earldom of Erroll from a great-aunt.

  6. 4 de mar. de 2018 · General Lord James Hay was born on 23 March 1788. He was the son of George Hay, 7th Marquess of Tweeddale and Lady Hannah Charlotte Maitland. He married Elizabeth Forbes, daughter of James Forbes, on 18 August 1813. He died on 18 August 1862 at age 74.

  7. James Gordon Hay (son of Elizabeth Forbes and Lord James Hay) had no children to his first wife, to his second wife: Mary Catherine Hill-Cox he had several, one of whom was Malcolm Vivian Hay (1881 - 1962), the last laird of Seaton.