Wilhelmina Clara Liddell (b: 1864 d: )

Wife of Stewart MacDougall of Lunga, mother of Iain, Helen, Mary, Dorothy and Shiela
Daughter of George William Moore Liddell of Sutton House (died 1873) and Georgiana Crompton
born 1864
Siblings



Wilhelmina Clara Liddel
wife of Stewart MacDougall
mother of Ian, Helen, Mary and Shiela

Dorothy MacDougall daughter
drowned in a storm at Lunga

daughters Helen, Dorothy, Mary and Shiela MacDougall

Myrtle Wigram
First cousin on Lidell side
dua of sister Dorothy

Lettice Wigram
sister to Myrtle.Lettice was sadly cripppled after a fall from a window and died young.

Myrtle, Lettice and Violet
Wigram Cousins, daughters of Dorothy Liddel ( sister of Wilhelmina so Helen MacDougalls first cousins )

Helen MacDougall

Wilhelmina's sister D.I. Wigram
nee Liddell with (Granny) Violet de Vere (from C de Vere)

Shiela Hill Nee MacDougall with her daughter Caroline ( now Borg)
portrait image
Wilhelmina and Prince, Aunt Richie and Breagh ( taken by Helen MacDougall)
Wilhelmina and dorothy
Wilhelmina and her sister Dorothy

An attempt at unraveling some of theLiddells and Cromptons very much in note form

George WillianM Mooore Liddel came from Sutton House SUTTON ON HULL Geographical and Historical information from the year 1892
The village is pleasantly situated on slightly elevated ground, about three miles north-east of Hull, with a station on the Hull and Hornsea branch of the North-Eastern railway.
The church, dedicated to St. James
The fabric was thoroughly restored and re-seated with open benches, and the vestry built, in 1867.
At the same time the galleries, which had been erected over a part of each aisle, were removed.
The east window, containing five lights, was presented by Mrs. Liddell, in memory of her husband, George William Moore Liddell, of Sutton House, who died in 1873.
The stained-glass, representing the Crucifixion and other four scriptural subjects, was executed by Messrs. Ward & Hughes, of London. The west window, of five lights, is a memorial of the late William Liddell, Esq.
The pulpit is a very handsome piece of work in stone, ascended by three marble steps. The latter, as well as the two marble steps leading into the chancel, were the gift of the late Mrs. Liddell, who also presented the brass eagle lectern, in memory of her son, George William Liddell, who died in 1888. A peal of bells was placed in the tower to the memory of the same gentleman by Dorothy Isabel Liddell, his sister, in 1890.
Note SUTTON ON HULL, a parish in the wapentake and liberty of Holderness; 3 miles NNE. of Hull