Family of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge

"Middleton family" redirects here. For other people, see Middleton (name). For a 1939 film, see The Middleton Family at the New York World's Fair.
Further information: Ancestry chart
Family of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge

Coat of arms granted to Michael Francis Middleton (the father of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge) on 19 April 2011, as the armigerous head of the family[1]
Ethnicity English
Current region Bucklebury, West Berkshire, England
Earlier spellings Middeltone, Mideltuna, Middeltune
Place of origin United Kingdom
Members Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge
Michael Francis Middleton
Carole Elizabeth Middleton
Philippa Charlotte Middleton
James William Middleton
Captain Peter Middleton
Connected families Lupton, Goldsmith

Members of the Middleton family have been related to the British Royal Family since the marriage of Catherine Elizabeth "Kate" Middleton to Prince William in April 2011. Upon the union, she became Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge.

History

By the early 19th century, the Middleton family had established themselves in Yorkshire as cultural and civic figures of some importance, particularly in the legal profession. The law firm, Messrs Middleton and Sons, had been founded in Leeds by solicitor William Middleton, Esq. of Gledhow Grange Estate.[2][3] The family firm existed for over 150 years, closing in 1985.[4][5]

Notable descendants of William Middleton include solicitor Richard Noel Middleton, who founded the Yorkshire Symphony Orchestra,[6] the entrepreneur Michael Francis Middleton, and Michael's three children Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (née "Kate" Middleton), socialite and columnist Pippa Middleton, and businessman James William Middleton.

Other noted descendants of William Middleton are Captain Peter Middleton, who was Prince Philip's co-pilot, and solicitor Henry Dubs Middleton, chairman of the Leeds General Infirmary and the son-in-law of Sir Henry Hanson Berney, 9th Baronet.[7][8][9] The Middleton family were reported as being "members of the aristocracy" and "friends of British royalty" to whom they have "played host as far back as 1926".[10][11][12][13]

Michael Francis Middleton

Michael Middleton is the father of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. Michael's family has both wealth and ties to British aristocracy.[14][15] His great great grandfather was solicitor and gentleman farmer William Middleton, Esq. (1807–1884), of Gledhow Grange Estate, near Leeds.[2][3] Michael Middleton's family were reported as having entertained British royalty in Leeds since the 1920s.[16][17][18] It was reported that shortly before his daughter Catherine's royal wedding to Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, in April 2011, a "coat of arms was granted to Michael Francis Middleton, the armigerous head of the family".[1]

Michael Middleton was born in 1949 in Leeds where he spent his early years in Moortown.[19][20] His father, Captain Peter Middleton (1920–2010),[21] was a pilot who flew alongside Prince Philip as the Duke's co-pilot on a two-month flying tour of South America in 1962. British Pathé newsreel film shows Middleton alongside the Prince during the tour.[22][23]

Michael and Carole Middleton

Michael Middleton's grandfather, Richard Noel Middleton (1878–1951), was, according to a BBC documentary, a solicitor who met and married aristocrat Olive Lupton in 1914.[24] In 1921, Noel became the director of the firm his wife Olive Middleton née Lupton (1881–1936) had inherited upon her father's death.[25] Olive was a member of the Lupton family of Beechwood Estate who are described in the City of Leeds archives, as "woollen manufacturers and landed gentry; a political and business dynasty".[26][27][28][29][30]

It was reported in July 2016, that the First World War had seen Michael's grandmother, Olive Middleton, and her second cousin, Baroness Airedale, work together for the war effort. Gledhow Hall, the nearby ancestral seat of the Baroness's family, became a VAD hospital, with Olive working there both with her cousin, The Hon. Doris Kitson (daughter of Baroness Airedale), and with her sister-in-law, Miss Gertrude Middleton, as volunteer nurses.[31][32][33]

Clifton College – the boarding school for generations of Middleton men.

Michael Middleton has three brothers, including Richard, whose son Adam Middleton is godfather to Catherine's daughter, Princess Charlotte.[34][35]

Education and early career

Like his father, Peter, and grandfather Noel, Michael Middleton was educated at Clifton College, the public school in Bristol.[36] At Clifton, all three generations of Middleton men boarded at Brown's House.[37] The archives at Clifton record that Michael Middleton was a praepostor, the title for a college prefect at Clifton, Eton and other leading UK public schools. Middleton had represented Clifton at rugby in the 1st XV and had also gained his tennis colours.[38][39]

Middleton alma mater, Oxford University – New College, Hall

Middleton declined to follow in his father Peter's footsteps of studying at New College, at Oxford University, the alma mater of many members of Capt. Middleton's family. Middleton had been up at Oxford in the 1930s with his cousin, Cecil Middleton, a champion golfer. Peter Middleton's great uncle, the Right Hon. Lord Mayor Hugh Lupton (d.1947) and in-law, James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce were also Oxford alumni.[40][41][42][43]

Following Clifton, Michael Middleton worked briefly as a British Airways (BA) flight attendant. Having graduated from the company's own internal course, he then worked for BA as a flight dispatcher.[44][45]

Generations of Middleton lawyers

Michael Middleton's grandfather Richard Noel Middleton, great-grandfather John W. Middleton (d.1887) and great-great-grandfather William Middleton, Esq., were all solicitors in Leeds in Yorkshire. Richard Noel was also a founder of the Yorkshire Symphony Orchestra and later the director of William Lupton and Sons Ltd., the wool manufacturing firm which his wife Olive, had inherited in 1921.[46][47][48] Many of Michael Middleton's relatives were solicitors in the Leeds-based family firm, Middleton and Sons. His niece, Lucy Middleton, is also a solicitor.[49][50][51]

Middleton family's political connections

It was reported in June 2014, that Michael's great grandfather, politician Francis Martineau Lupton, was the first cousin of Sir Thomas Martineau, whose nephew was World War II Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain.[52][53][54]

Royal biographer Katie Nicholl revealed in 2013 that Michael Middleton's family tree is linked, via his fellow Leeds-born cousin, Lady Bullock (née Barbara Lupton),[55] to William Petty-FitzMaurice, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1782–83. Research also revealed that Michael Middleton is a direct descendant of King Edward III.[56][57][58][59][60]

A political event in Leeds on 27 September 1894, saw Michael Middleton's great grandfather – Liberal Unionist Francis Martineau Lupton – entertain his relative, The Right Honourable Joseph Chamberlain, a Member of Parliament and fellow Liberal Unionist. The conference was held at the Leeds Town Hall and was hosted by the Leeds and County Liberal Unionist's Club. Francis Martineau's cousin, politician and mayor Sir Thomas Martineau, was the brother-in-law of Joseph Chamberlain, father of Neville Chamberlain.[61][62][63]

Marriage and family

Michael Middleton's wife, Carole Elizabeth Middleton (née Goldsmith), was born on 31 January 1955 at Perivale Maternity Hospital in Ealing.[64][65][66] The daughter of a builder, Ronald Goldsmith (1931–2003), and Dorothy Harrison (1935–2006), she was raised in a small house in Southall,[67] and attended the local state schools.[68]

The couple met when they both worked for British Airways (BA) as flight attendants.[36] By 1979, Michael had been promoted within BA, becoming an Aircraft Dispatcher, one of British Airways' elite Red Caps,[69] at London Heathrow Airport, where he kept track of the airline's fleet on the ground. The couple was married on 21 June 1980, at the parish church of St James in Dorney, Buckinghamshire.[70] They bought a semi-detached Victorian house in Bradfield Southend near Reading, Berkshire.[36]

The couple has three children (two daughters and one son). Following the birth of their daughters Catherine Elizabeth (born 1982) and Philippa Charlotte (born 1983),[71] the family moved to Amman, Jordan, where Michael worked as a manager for BA from 1984 to 1987.[72]

Business success and inherited wealth

Their third and youngest child, a son named James William, was born in 1987.[36] By this time, when Catherine and Philippa were being privately educated at St Andrew's Preparatory School, in Pangbourne, Carole Middleton established Party Pieces. Since its inception, the company had made party bags – but it would soon also sell party supplies and decorations by mail order. By 1995, the firm was being managed by both parents and had moved into a range of farm buildings at Ashampstead Common. Also at this time the family purchased Oak Acre, a six bedroom Tudor-style manor house in Bucklebury, Berkshire.[73] In 2002, Carole and Michael Middleton bought "with cash" a flat in Chelsea, London, in which their children lived.[74] Carole and Michael Middleton are also the owners of a racehorse.[75][76]

By 2012, the couple were the owners of nearby Bucklebury Manor, a Georgian mansion with an estate of some 18 acres. Their grandson, Prince George spent his first few weeks at Bucklebury Manor.[71][77][78][79][80]

Reports revealed the Middleton's business as being very successful, resulting in the couple enjoying considerable wealth.[81] This wealth, combined with the large trust funds Michael Middleton inherited from his grandmother Olive Middleton, had enabled the Middleton tradition of independent education to continue.[82][83][84] Both daughters were sent to the independent Downe House, a girls' boarding school in Cold Ash, and finally the public school; Marlborough College, Wiltshire. Their brother James also attended Marlborough.[85]

Shortly before his elder daughter's royal marriage, Michael Middleton was granted a coat of arms. This features three acorn sprigs, one for each of his children. The oak represents England and strength as well as the family's home district of West Berkshire. The white chevronels symbolise peaks and mountains, said to represent the family's love of the Lake District and skiing, and the gold chevron represents Carole Middleton's maiden name of Goldsmith.[86]

The British press created the term Upper Middleton Class to describe the Middleton family's superior social position;[87][88] other reports refer to the family as being "minted....with a smattering of blue-blooded antecedents".[89][90]

Children of Michael and Carole Middleton

Catherine

The Middletons' first daughter, Catherine Elizabeth "Kate" Middleton, now known as HRH The Duchess of Cambridge, was born on 9 January 1982. Having been a boarder at both St Andrew's School, Pangbourne and also at Marlborough, she then graduated from the University of St Andrews. It was here, while living at St Salvator's Hall, that she met Prince William.[91][92] After a long relationship, and a six-month engagement, she married Prince William at Westminster Abbey on 29 April 2011.[72]

In December 2012, it was announced that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were expecting their first child; Catherine gave birth to a son, Prince George of Cambridge, on 22 July 2013, who is third in line to the throne. The Duchess' second pregnancy was announced on 8 September 2014, and she gave birth to a daughter, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge, on 2 May 2015.

Phillipa

Their second daughter, Philippa Charlotte "Pippa" Middleton, born on 6 September 1983, attended the same private boarding schools as her siblings and then studied English literature at the University of Edinburgh.[93] There she shared a house with Lord Ted Innes-Ker, a son of the Duke of Roxburghe, and with Earl Percy, heir of the Duke of Northumberland.[93] Following graduation, in 2008 she took an events management / marketing job with Table Talk, a London-based events catering company.[94] She has also written for Spectator, Waitrose Magazine, Vanity Fair and The Party Times, an online magazine which is an offshoot of her parents' company.[95]

In July 2016, Middleton became engaged to hedge fund manager and former racing driver James Matthews, eldest son and heir of David Matthews, the Laird of Glen Affric. It was reported that following her fiancé's inheritance of his father's lairdship, Middleton will be accorded the courtesy title of Lady Glenaffric.[96][97][98][99][100]

James

James William Middleton, their youngest child and only son, was born on 15 April 1987. He was educated – from age four – at St Andrew's School, Pangbourne, and, like his sisters, at Marlborough College. He started a degree in Environmental Resources Management at the University of Edinburgh before leaving in 2006 after one year to start his own cake-making business.[101] His company Boomf was reported in 2016 as employing over 100 people in peak periods.[102]

Both of Catherine's siblings played a prominent role in their sister's wedding: Pippa was the maid of honour and James read the lesson.[103][104]

Captain Peter Francis Middleton and Valerie Middleton, née Glassborow

Michael Middleton's father was commercial pilot and RAF officer Capt. Peter Francis Middleton (1920–2010),[21][105] who had studied English at New College, Oxford University. He left Oxford in 1940 to serve as a RAF fighter pilot during World War II.[106] Commissioned as a pilot officer (on probation) in the RAFVR on 9 March 1941,[107] he was confirmed in his rank and promoted to flying officer (war-substantive) on 9 March 1942.[108] In May 1942, he was posted to the No 37 Service Flying School in Calgary, Canada. He spent two-and-a-half years as an instructor, training Spitfire, Hurricane and Lancaster pilots, receiving a promotion to flight lieutenant (war-substantive) on 9 March 1943.[109][110] After joining the reservist 605 Squadron at Manston, near Ramsgate, Kent, in August 1944, Middleton flew a de Havilland Mosquito fighter bomber, nudging the wings of unmanned German V1 flying aircraft to divert them from hitting London.[109] After the war, Middleton joined British European Airways as a pilot, but remained in the reconstituted RAFVR, receiving a reserve commission as a flying officer on 12 August 1949.[111] Promoted to flight lieutenant on 1 March 1951,[112] he relinquished his reserve commission on 12 August 1959.[113]

Capt. Peter Middleton was specially chosen in 1962 as Prince Philip's co-pilot on a two-month tour of South America. The Duke piloted 49 of the tour's 62 flights, often with Middleton by his side. The Duke later sent Middleton a letter of thanks and a pair of gold cufflinks. British Pathe newsreel film shows Middleton alongside the Prince during the tour.[22] Middleton met his granddaughter's fiancé, Prince William, on his 90th birthday and William attended Middleton's funeral in November 2010.[22][114][115]

Michael's mother, Valerie Glassborow (1924–2006), who would later marry Peter Middleton, worked at the Second World War Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) in Bletchley Park, along with her twin sister, Mary. The codebreaking regularly penetrated the secret communications of the Axis Powers  most importantly the German Enigma and Lorenz ciphers and is the birthplace of the world's first programmable, digital, electronic computer: Colossus.[116] Valerie's Bletchley Park colleague and friend, Lady Body (née Marion Graham), recalled in 2014 that she had shared a "rather special moment" with Valerie: "Our superior officer, Commander Williams, came into the room smiling and he said, ‘Well done, girls. A signal has been intercepted from Tokyo to Geneva and it's the signal that the Japanese are surrendering'. He told us that a message has gone to the King and the Prime Minister but that it could not be announced until Geneva has sent on the message to London."[117][118]

The Lupton family and British Royal family connections

Main article: Lupton family

Peter Middleton's mother, Olive Middleton (1881–1936), was a member of the Lupton family who, according to City of Leeds archives, were "woollen manufacturers and landed gentry; a political and business dynasty". It was reported in September 2013 that Baroness von Schunck, née Kate Lupton had been invited to the coronation of King George V in 1911.[27][29][89][119] As Members of Parliament and local politicians, the Lupton family contributed to the political life of both the UK and to the civic life of Leeds, especially in the areas of education, housing, and public health, for several generations.[27] Several members were Lord Mayors of Leeds. They were prominent Unitarians, a branch of English Dissenters, and worshipped at the Mill Hill Chapel, where a stained glass window commemorates the family.[120]

Olive Middleton's father was Francis Martineau Lupton who, along with his four brothers, grew up at Beechwood, the family seat in Roundhay.[121] Two of his brothers became Lord Mayor of Leeds – Sir Charles, (founder of the law firm DLA Piper) in 1915 and Hugh in 1926. In their official roles they played host to Royalty.[23] In April 2014, it was reported that British Pathe had discovered newsreel footage from 1915 of Francis Martineau and his three brothers inspecting troops near Leeds.[122] Also discovered was footage from 1927 of a royal visit in which Mary, The Princess Royal, and her husband Lord Harewood are being greeted by the incumbent Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress of Leeds, Hugh and Isabella Lupton.[23][123]

On 27 May 1943, the Princess Royal reportedly enjoyed a music concert in Leeds with the city's Lady Mayoress, Elinor Lupton at her side. Miss Elinor Lupton was the first cousin of Olive Middleton and the daughter of Arthur G. Lupton. Elinor shared great grandparents with Beatrix Potter and died in 1979, having never married.[124][125] Arthur's son, Major Arthur Michael Lupton, was reported as having met with a serious horse riding accident while hunting with the Bramham Moor and died in 1929. Thus, the Lupton family seat, Beechwood, was entailed to his sisters, Elinor and her sister Elizabeth - "The Misses Lupton" - until Arthur Michael's son Thomas could inherit. The Lupton family were among the prominent local families to hunt at Bramham Moor and often the Princess Royal and her husband Lord Harewood, the 6th Earl of Harewood, would ride with the Bramham Moor Hunt. Sir Charles Lupton was Deputy Lieutenant of Yorkshire County (West Riding) when Princess Mary's father-in-law, the 5th Earl of Harewood, was his Lord Lieutenant.[126][127][128][129]

Francis Martineau Lupton's mother was Frances, a pioneer of girls' education who co-founded Leeds Girls' High School. Her father was Thomas Michael Greenhow of Newcastle, where he founded the Newcastle Medical School in 1834. Her maternal family was the Martineau dynasty of Norwich and later, Birmingham; her aunt, the sociologist Harriet Martineau being especially close to her.[130] It was reported in February 2014, that London's National Portrait Gallery, of which Catherine is patron, holds nearly 20 portraits of her ancestors; siblings Harriet and Dr James Martineau, a friend of Queen Victoria.[131]

Other

The Rev. Thomas Davis, a Church of England hymn-writer is also Kate's paternal ancestor.[132][133][134][135]

Origins of Middleton name

Middleton is a habitational surname originating from numerous different places in England and in southern Scotland. There are over 30 places similarly named which are derived from the Old English elements: midel + tūn (middle + enclosure, settlement); although some other places have different origins and derived from other elements, such as: micel (large, great), or *(ge)mȳthel (confluence).[136][137] Early recorded instances of the surname are: de Mideltone in 1166, within the Eynsham Cartulary;[138] de Midilton in 1221, within a charter to the Abbey of Arbroath;[139] and de Midelton in 1327, within the Subsidy Rolls of Sussex.[138]

Ancestry of Carole Middleton

Goldsmiths

The paternal Goldsmith family of Carole Middleton came from London. Carole's maternal family, the Harrisons, were working-class labourers and miners from Sunderland and County Durham two generations before.[140]

Royal ancestry

According to genealogists Patrick Cracroft-Brennan and Anthony Adolph, the Middleton siblings descend, via their mother, from Elizabeth Plantagenet, King Edward IV's illegitimate daughter by Elizabeth Lucy, via Sir Thomas Blakiston Conyers, 9th Bt. of Horden, Durham.[141][142] Thus, Catherine and Prince William's closest common ancestors are Sir William Blakiston of Gibside Estate and his wife Jane Lambton, making them eleventh cousins once removed,[141][142] These findings echo Christopher Challender Child's research, published in 2011.[143]

It was reported in December 2014 that the famous Blakiston-Bowes Cabinet, held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, provided proof that Catherine shared ancestry with Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. Catherine and the Queen Mother share a common ancestor, County Durham's Sir William Blakiston, whose great granddaughter, Elizabeth Blakiston, married into the Bowes-Lyon family who were ancestors of the Queen Mother, née Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon. The cabinet was made in Newcastle to celebrate the union of the two gentry families. Reports suggest that Catherine and the Queen Mother's blood cousinship was the reason why Catherine wore the Queen Mother's tiara when she wed Prince William.[144][145][146][147]

Genealogical research by William Addams Reitwiesner, also published in 2011, found that Catherine is descended from Sir Thomas Fairfax (c. 1475–1520) and his wife Agnes Gascoigne, an ancestor of Diana, Princess of Wales, and a descendant of King Edward III, via Michael Middleton's grandmother Olive Middleton née Lupton. This ancestry makes Catherine and Prince William fourteenth cousins once removed.[148][149][150]

Arms

Family tree

Television and film portrayals

William & Kate, a television movie about Catherine's romance, was released on 18 April 2011, with Catherine and William played by Camilla Luddington and Nico Evers-Swindell respectively. Other members of the Middleton family were played by: Christopher Cousins (Michael Middleton), Serena Scott Thomas (Carole Middleton), Mary Elise Hayden (Pippa Middleton), and Calvin Goldspink (James Middleton).[153] A number of television programmes were also shown in the UK before the wedding which provided deeper insights into the couple's relationship and backgrounds, including When Kate Met William[154] and Channel 4's Meet the Middletons.[155]

References

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  2. 1 2 "Highfield House, view from". Leodis – a Photographic Archive of Leeds. City of Leeds UK Gov. Retrieved 24 June 2016. On the horizon, left, is Gledhow Grange, a large property in Lidgett Lane. The estate was once owned by solicitor William Middleton Esq. By 1900, Gledhow Grange was owned and farmed by William Pollard.
  3. 1 2 Reed, Michael (2016). "Gledhow Hall". David Poole. Retrieved 15 August 2016. A gentleman farmer, William Middleton Esq. had also lived in the area at Gledhow Grange Estate.
  4. "Headrow, Permanent House". Leodis – a Photographic Archive of Leeds. City of Leeds UK Gov. Retrieved 24 June 2016. The Headrow premises housed Middleton Solicitors until 1985...
  5. "Mr H. D. Middleton". Leeds Mercury West Yorkshire, England. 19 September 1932. Retrieved 7 November 2016. Mr. H. D. Middleton. the firm of Middletons, solicitors, of Permanent House, Leeds, which was founded by his grandfather (William Middleton, Esq.) in 1834. He was educated at Charterhouse and University College. Oxford, where he took his M.A. and distinguished himself ....
  6. "Valerie Middleton". Yorkshire Post. 23 September 2006. Retrieved 31 October 2016. Kate's great-grandfather, Richard Noel Middleton, was a solicitor, a founder of the Yorkshire Symphony Orchestra...
  7. "Headrow, Permanent House". Leodis – a Photographic Archive of Leeds. City of Leeds UK Gov. Retrieved 24 June 2016. Also a solicitor was Henry Dubs Middleton ...As Chairman of the Leeds General Infirmary, Henry (Dubs Middleton) had played host to Princess Mary when she visited the Leeds General Infirmary in 1932 ....Keen golfers, Mr and Mrs Henry D. Middleton (d.1964) - the daughter of Sir Henry Hanson Berney, 9th Baronet -....
  8. Tominey, Camilla (14 February 2016). "Truth behind Prince George's love of aviation". UK Daily Express. Retrieved 3 November 2016. It (photo) shows the Duchess of Cambridge’s grandfather, Captain Peter Middleton, with Prince Philip in 1962.
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  12. "Headrow, Permanent House". Leodis – a Photographic Archive of Leeds. City of Leeds UK Gov. Retrieved 24 June 2016. As Chairman of the Leeds General Infirmary, Henry (Dubs Middleton) had played host to Princess Mary when she visited the Leeds General Infirmary in 1932 (Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer West Yorkshire, England, 26th February; "She (Princess Mary) was escorted by Mr. H. D. Middleton...")
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  14. "Kate Middleton Biography". Bio. Bio. 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2016. It was on this job at British Airways that Carole met Michael Middleton, a dispatcher, whose wealthy family hails from Leeds and which has ties to British aristocracy.
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  41. London, Bianca (24 September 2014). "Why Kate Really Should be Called the Duchess of Oxford". Daily Mail. Retrieved 28 September 2014. Kate's grandfather studied English at New College in 1939, before leaving to train as a pilot during the Second World War
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  43. "Headrow, Permanent House". Leodis – a Photographic Archive of Leeds. City of Leeds UK Gov. Retrieved 24 June 2016. Keen golfers, Mr and Mrs Henry D. Middleton (d.1964) – the daughter of Sir Henry Hanson Berney, 9th Baronet – were members of the Alwoodley Golf Club, as were their sons Ralph and Cecil, a champion golfer....Ralph's brother, Cecil, and his cousin, Peter Middleton – son of Richard Noel – were up at Oxford University in the 1930s.
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  56. Nicholl, Katie (13 December 2013). Kate: The Future Queen. Weinstein Books. Retrieved 16 August 2015. (Michael Middleton's family were) linked to earls, countesses, a former Prime Minister – William Petty-FitzMaurice, (the first) 1st Marquess of Lansdowne, who served as Prime Minister...
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  84. Walker, Tim (22 July 2014). "The Duchess of Cambridge is related to Beatrix Potter, who once gave the Middleton family her own original hand-painted illustrations". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 19 October 2014. It was in the Lake District in the summer of 1936 that Peter's mother Olive Lupton was rushed to hospital with peritonitis, dying on September 27, aged only 55, leaving behind a large trust fund for her descendants
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  87. Bennett, Rosemary (2 May 2015). "Sloanes lose their place in society to the polite new Middleton class". The Times. Retrieved 28 November 2015. ...tunnelling their way into the higher echelons were the Upper Middletons, a new social grouping. Named in honour of their most famous family...
  88. Gaudoin, Tina (29 July 2015). "How Kate Middleton Imploded the Class System and Gave Rise of a New Kind of Brit". Town and Country Magazine. Hearst Communications. Retrieved 28 November 2015. The Upper Middleton classes, or UMs, have their eyes on the prize: royalty at best...
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  96. London, Binaca (21 July 2016). "Pippa Middleton flashes her '£200,000' engagement ring walking her dog Rafa – as it's revealed she will get her own title as Lady Glen Affric when she marries James Matthews". Daily Mail. UK. Retrieved 21 July 2016. As Australian art historian Michael Reed explained: 'In coming years and particularly as the future Lady Glenaffric, Pippa Middleton will be able to entertain lavishly on her husband's grand Scottish Glen Affric Estate....Pippa's future father-in-law, David Matthews, is the Laird of Glen Affric and owns a 10,000-acre Scottish estate near Loch Ness in the Scottish highlands. When David dies, James will inherit the title and Pippa will have her own title bestowed upon her as his wife, which she can use in the Commonwealth.
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  98. Gutteridge, Nick (20 July 2016). "Middleton of the Glen! How Pippa will get a title to rival her sister Kate after engagement". Daily Express. UK. Retrieved 21 July 2016. ...following her engagement to the son of a Scottish Laird...Mr Matthews is the son of David Matthews, the Laird of Glen Affric....The 32 year old sister of the Duchess of Cambridge will one day become Lady Glen Affric and have access to a sprawling 10,000 acre Scottish estate....Pippa will be able to use the courtesy title...bestowed on her as the heir's wife
  99. Matthews, Spencer (1 October 2013). Confessions of a Chelsea Boy. UK: Pan Macmillan. ISBN 1743513216.
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  101. Fellowes, Jessica (1 October 2008). "The 'posh-preneurs' who mean business". The Daily Telegraph. London.
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  104. Ross, Tim (29 April 2011). "How Kate Middleton's brother risks upsetting the Prince of Wales". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  105. McClure, Matt (7 April 2011). "Hope and glory: Air war vet looks to reminisce with Kate Middleton". Calgary Herald. Retrieved 14 March 2016. Greig worked alongside Kate Middleton's grandfather, Capt. Middleton, training pilots.
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  114. "Wartime RAF pilot who in peacetime flew for BEA and accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour of South America – Obituary – Peter Middleton (1920–2010)". The Times. UK. 27 November 2010. Retrieved 10 August 2015. Peter Middleton's first close encounter with the Royal Family was when he acted as First Officer to the Duke of Edinburgh on a two-month flying tour of South America that Prince Philip made in 1962. The second was at his 90th birthday in September when he met Prince William, who was about to become engaged to his granddaughter Kate...The Duke piloted 49 of the tour's 62 flights, often with Middleton by his side... (The Duke later sent Middleton) a letter of thanks and a pair of gold cufflinks...
  115. Rayner, Gordon (21 June 2013). "How the family of 'commoner' Kate Middleton has been rubbing shoulders with royalty for a century". Daily Telegraph. UK. Retrieved 10 August 2015. In 1962 the Duchess's grandfather Peter Middleton, an airline pilot, acted as first officer to the Duke of Edinburgh on a two-month flying tour of South America.....He (Peter Middleton) passed away in 2010 at the age of 90 and both Kate and Prince William attended his funeral
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  117. Singh, Anita (18 June 2014). "Duchess of Cambridge learns grandmother's wartime past". Daily Telegraph. UK. Retrieved 7 August 2015. ‘Well done, girls. A signal has been intercepted from Tokyo to Geneva and it's the signal that the Japanese are surrendering......(he) did say a message has gone to the King and the Prime Minister but it cannot be announced until Geneva has sent on the message to London....
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  142. 1 2 Turner, Robin (31 July 2013). "Prince George related to Llywelyn the Great, claims genealogist". WalesOnline. Media Wales. Retrieved 13 October 2013. 'This means that Prince George's parents William and Kate are related to each other through Edward IV'
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  145. Cliff, Martha (9 December 2014). "Kate really was destined for royalty! The Duchess of Cambridge shares an ancestor with the late Queen Mother historian reveals". Daily Mail. UK. Retrieved 12 December 2014. Kate's direct ancestor, Sir Thomas Blakiston Conyers, also attended the funeral of his Gibside cousin Mary Bowes, Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne. Mary Bowes was the great great great grandmother of the Queen Mother.
  146. Richardson, Katie (8 December 2014). "Duchess of Cambridge shares Queen Mother's County Durham ancestor according to new research". The Northern Echo. p. 7. It makes sense that Kate wore the Queen Mother's tiara when she married Prince William – both women share a great deal; Durham ancestry, the vast Gibside Estate and the same famous cabinet
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  149. "The Ancestry of Catherine Middleton" (PDF). New England Historic Genealogical Society. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 September 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2013. Prince William and Kate Middleton are fourteenth cousins once removed through Diana, Princess of Wales (pp. 116–17), and fifteenth cousins twice removed through Charles, The Prince of Wales (pp. 118–19)
  150. Cracroft-Brennan, Patrick (28 April 2011). "Royal Wedding: William and Kate are (very) distant cousins". Channel 4. Retrieved 7 October 2013. 'This makes William and Kate fourteenth cousins once removed through his mother and fifteenth cousins through his father.'
  151. 1 2 3 "The arms of Miss Catherine Middleton". College of Arms. 1 May 2011.
  152. Walker, Tim (22 July 2014). "Duchess of Cambridge is related to Beatrix Potter". UK Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2 November 2014. The snow-covered peaks featured on the Middleton family crest represent the Lake District and are perhaps also a reminder of one-year old Prince George’s famous literary relative.
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  154. Rewind TV: When Kate Met William; Kate and William: Romance and the Royals; The Suspicions of Mr Whicher; The Crimson Petal and the White The Observer, 1 May 2011
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Further reading

External links

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