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  1. Conolly, Lady Louisa (1743–1821), society woman and public benefactor, was born 5 December 1743, perhaps at Goodwood House, Sussex, fifth child of Charles Lennox , 2nd duke of Richmond, and his wife Lady Sarah Cadogan.

  2. Conolly, Lady Louisa (1743–1821), society woman and public benefactor, was born 5 December 1743, perhaps at Goodwood House, Sussex, fifth child of Charles Lennox , 2nd duke of Richmond, and his wife Lady Sarah Cadogan. After her parents’ deaths (1750, 1751) Lady Louisa and two younger girls came to live with their sister, Emily Fitzgerald ...

  3. Lady Louisa’s death in 1821 ended an era at Castletown. The Conolly estates, including Castletown, were inherited by Thomas Conolly’s grandnephew Edward Pakenham (1786–1848). Under the terms of Conolly’s will, Edward was required to change his name to Conolly.

  4. by Sandra Murphy. In 1759, at the tender age of 15, Lady Louisa Lennox married young Tom Conolly. Louisa was descended from royalty, her great grandfather was Charles II of England and her grandmother was Louise de Kerouaille, the infamous Duchess of Portsmouth. The illegitimate son of the king was granted the title Duke of Richmond and Louisa ...

  5. Louisa Connolly-Burnham wurde am 23. Juni 1992 in Solihull als Tochter von Anthony Burnham und Tracey Connolly geboren. Sie wuchs in Buckinghamshire auf und lebt heute in London. Sie besuchte die Tring Park School for the Performing Arts, die sie nach zwei Jahren abschloss. Ihre Schauspielkarriere begann sie 2007 mit dem Fernsehfilm Coming Down ...

  6. 15 de dic. de 2009 · October 16, 2008. Created by ImportBot. Imported from bcl_marc MARC record . Lady Louisa Conolly, 1743-1821 by Brian FitzGerald, 1950, Staples Press edition, in English.

  7. Lady Louisa Conolly. At six o’clock on the morning of 2 nd August 1821 Lady Louisa Conolly took her last breath at Castletown, the home she had shaped and loved for over sixty years. Throughout the previous eight weeks her family had kept vigil at her bedside, witnessing her fortitude as she endured ‘violent torture’, eased by opium ...