Gray History
The surname is originally
French, being first borne by Fulbert, Great Chamberlain of Rover, Duke of
Normandy, who granted him the castle and lands of Croy or Gray in Picardy which
he thereafter assumed as the family surname. His daughter, Arlotta, is said to
have been the mother of William the Conqueror. In England several families from
this source were raised to high rank, and spelt their name "Grey". From the
Dukes of Suffolk came the amiable and accomplished Lady Jane Grey, who was an
innocent victim of the ambitions of her father. She was proclaimed Queen of
England and reigned for nine days in 1553, but she perished on the block in
1554. Like many others, the Grays swore fealty to Edward I of England in the
Ragman Roll of 1296, but they were soon following Robert the Bruce on the long
fight for Scottish independence. Sir Andrew Gray was rewarded with several
grants of land, including Longorgen in Perthshire for his services to the crown.
Patrick Gray of Buttergask, the fifth Lord Gray, was one of the first promoters
of the Reformation in Scotland.
Andrew, eighth Lord Gray,
resigned his honours to Charles I and obtained a new patent in favour, after
himself, of his daughter Ann who had married William Gray, younger of Pittendrum
who was a staunch royalist. When he was killed in 1660, the title passed to the
Earls of Moray, but on the death in 1895 of the fourteenth Earl of Moray and
eighteenth Lord Gray, the title passed to his niece, Eveleen, Baroness Gray in
her own right. The present Lord Gray is barred from the chiefship of his family
by a famous decision of the Court of Lord Lyon in 1950 - the case of Gray
Petitioner, which established that in Scots heraldic law the bearing of a
compound or double-barrelled name, was an absolute bar to assuming the chiefship
of a Scottish clan or family. |