Sunday 18 August 2013

(64) Ainsworth of Backbarrow, The Flosh and Ardanaiseig, baronets

Ainsworth baronets
Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1785) from Blackburn (Lancs) established a cotton mill at Backbarrow in Haverthwaite (Lancs, now Cumbria) and lived latterly in the mill house there.  The property passed to his youngest son, Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1853), who rebuilt the mill in 1823 and Backbarrow House at much the same time.  In the next generation the business passed to two elder sons, Thomas Ainsworth (c.1807-75) and William Ainsworth (c.1808-62), who worked in partnership until 1852, when the partnership was dissolved, Thomas taking the Backbarrow property and continuing to trade as T. & W. Ainsworth, and William taking a cotton mill at Preston which the family also owned.  Thomas got into financial difficulties and the house and mills at Backbarrow were sold in 1871, but Thomas was still bankrupted in 1874 and died the following year.  It is possible that Backbarrow House was bought in 1871 by Thomas' youngest brother, Lt-Col. David Ainsworth (1823-1907), although he seems never to have lived there, renting Broughton Hall near Grange-over-Sands instead.

The second son of the first Thomas Ainsworth, David Ainsworth (d. 1819) moved to Preston, and his son, Thomas Ainsworth (1804-81), bought the Cleator Linen Mills in Cumberland and the nearby house called The Flosh from Henry Birley in about 1837.  Thomas at once remodelled the house and in 1866 further extended it by the addition of a new neo-Elizabethan wing with rich interiors.  The linen mills seem to have been successful and Thomas also developed iron ore deposits on his land, became an ironmaster and acquired shipping interests, so that at his death he left a substantial estate of £55,862.  
Advertising image for Cleator Flax Mills c.1900

The Flosh passed to his eldest son, David Ainsworth (1842-1906), who became MP for West Cumberland, 1880-85 and Egremont 1892-95.  However in 1898 David purchased Wray Castle, Hawkshead (Lancs) and this became his main seat for the last decade of his life.  He had no children and Wray Castle seems to have been sold after his death, while The Flosh passed to his younger brother, John Stirling Ainsworth (1844-1923), who was trained as a lawyer.  He used his share of his father’s estate to buy and substantially rebuild Harecroft Hall at Gosforth (Cumberland) and to purchase and update Ardanaiseig in Argyllshire.  Harecroft was near to his family’s business interests in Cumberland and may at first have been his main home, as he was High Sheriff of Cumberland in 1891 and Lt-Col. of the 3rd volunteer battalion of the Border Regiment in 1898-1902.  Later his interests may have shifted more to Scotland, where he became Liberal MP for Argyllshire in 1903-18; following his retirement was created a baronet.

Sir John’s son, Sir Thomas Ainsworth, 2nd bt. (1886-1971) seems to have been a dedicated foxhunting man.  In the 1920s and 1930s he lived in Ireland and served as MFH of a number of hunts in Meath, Galway, Kildare and Tipperary.  He settled eventually at Ballinakill, Kilfinny, Limerick, but it is not clear at what point he sold Harecroft, which became a prep school, or Ardanaiseig, which was converted into an hotel in 1979-80. 

In 1925 Sir Thomas had an affair with a married woman, Mrs Hope-Johnstone, which resulted in both of them being divorced by their spouses and marrying shortly afterwards.  He had sons by both of his two marriages.  The elder, Sir John Francis Ainsworth, 3rd bt. (1912-81), became an archivist and historian at the National Library of Ireland and lived at Carraphuca, Shankill (Dublin).  Like his father his interests were mostly in Ireland, although he was Chairman of the British Record Society 1937-40, and he sold The Flosh, which had come to him on his grandfather’s death, to Ennerdale RDC, which turned it into offices; it is now an hotel.  He died without issue and the baronetcy passed to his half-brother, Sir (Thomas) David Ainsworth, 4th bt. (1926-99), a merchant banker.  The present holder of the title is his son, Sir Anthony Thomas Hugh Ainsworth, 5th bt. (b. 1962), who lives in Bangkok (Thailand).

Backbarrow House, Upper Holker, Lancashire (now Cumbria)
A large early 19th century Tudor house of white limestone with gables, mullioned windows and conspicuous chimneys, built probably to the designs of George Webster of Kendal for the Ainsworth family, close to their cotton mill at Backbarrow.  The house was depicted in a lost painting of 1848 by James Foley, and described as a gentleman’s residence when it was sold in 1871.  It was demolished in the 1930s and only the entrance gates remain; no photograph of it has been found.  The adjacent Backbarrow Mills were noted in the 19th century for their picturesque setting, but their proximity to the house may have militated against its survival after they passed into separate ownership in the 1870s.
Engraving of Backbarrow Mills published in 1860.  Image: Old Cumbria Gazetteer





The Flosh, Cleator Moor, Cumberland

The Flosh from an old postcard of c.1905.
An earlier house was enlarged in 1837  when Thomas Ainsworth purchased it and again in 1866, when the neo-Elizabethan gabled south wing was added.  The buildings of different dates are now united by a cream roughcast with red sandstone dressings.  The disused porch is castellated, with gargoyles and much fussy carving, and in the cross-hall is a hugely over-designed Gothic fireplace, dated 1866.  The east rooms, overlooking the garden, with their elaborately moulded and gilded ceilings, can all be thrown together by removing sliding partitions.  The house was used as offices by Ennerdale Rural District Council and its successors in the second half of the 20th century but is now Ennerdale Country House hotel.


The Flosh: dining room in the 1866 wing.

Descent: Henry Birley (fl. early 19th cent.) sold c.1837 to Thomas Ainsworth (1804-81); to son, David Ainsworth MP (1842-1906); to brother, Sir John Stirling Ainsworth, 1st bt. (1844-1933); to son, Sir Thomas Ainsworth, 2nd bt. (1886-1971), who sold c.1938 to Ennerdale RDC; transferred 1974 to Copeland DC; who sold for conversion to hotel.


Wray Castle, Hawskhead, Lancashire (now Cumbria)

Wray Castle.  Image James@hopgrove.  Licenced under a Creative Commons 3.0 licence.
A castellated mansion, built in 1840-47 for Dr. James Dawson, a Liverpool surgeon, of sawn slate with hammered grey limestone dressings.  It was designed by J.J. Lightfoot, a close friend of Thomas Rickman, who is said to have drunk himself to death before the house was finished.  Wordsworth thought the house “added a dignified feature to the interesting scenery in the midst of which it stands”.  It has a vast turreted porte-cochere and a tall central lantern tower which dominate a generally asymmetrical and top-heavy building.  The battlements are robustly machicolated and punctuated by high-level turrets, daringly corbelled out from the wall, and the windows are inauthentically splayed on the outside.  The interior wastes a great deal of space: the broad central axis is articulated into three parts by triple Gothic colonnades without capitals.  Each section looks up through a hole into the upper landing, the central section right up into the lantern with its tall windows and niches and its turrets corbelled in at the corners (which do not appear outside!).  

Wray Castle: looking up into the central lantern tower from the inner hall

The upper landing offers not just the reciprocal views to the floor below and the lantern above but also an extended vista into the billiard room over the porte-cochere.  The principal rooms are themed Gothic, though they have lost much of their richness.  Mouldings and doors are on a gigantic scale, but the window traceries with their armorial glass are rather fiddly.  Were the main lights always fitted with plate glass?  The Music Room on the west side, reached awkwardly across a service corridor, has a Jacobean theme including a ceiling bedecked with threatening pendants.  The Morning Room in the SE corner, incorporating a turret, has a bastard classical ceiling, linenfold panelling and a curious alternation of windows and niches.  The back stair is the most dramatic space of all, climbing up in vertiginous stages to the lantern tower.  In the grounds, the fernery is a castellated glasshouse with a pyramid roof, ingeniously framed with chunks of limestone pavement.  There are also a gardener’s houe and boathouse in the same style.  The lodge is a little later than the house (perhaps 1856) and lacks some of its characteristic detail, but is still castellated and asymmetrical.  In 1991 the house was let and not in particularly good condition; it is now open to be public but largely unfurnished.

Descent: Dr. James Dawson (d. 1875); to nephew, Edward Preston Rawnsley; who rented by 1883 and sold 1898 to David Ainsworth (1842-1906); to widow, Margaret Ainsworth (d. 1920); sold after her death to Sir Noton Barclay, who gave 1929 to National Trust, which let it until c.2010 when it was opened to the public.

Ardanaiseig, Kilchrenan, Argyllshire

Ardanaiseig House: entrance front

Ardanaiseig House: the garden front
A two-storey mansion of granite with sandstone dressings, built by William Burn for James Archibald Campbell in 1833-34 and known first as New Inverawe.  It is an asymmetrical crowstepped Jacobean house which sprawls north to a stable court.  The east (garden) front, though architecturally dull, enjoys a splendidly contained prospect of Loch Awe across terraced lawns.  The house was modernised after 1880 for Sir John Ainsworth and was converted into an hotel in 1979-80.  The combination of muscular Gothic details from the 1880s and modern decorator's colours and fabrics has considerable charm but led one journalist to describe it as a combination of Edgar Allen Poe and Laurence Llewellyn Bowen!

Ardanaiseig House: drawing room


Descent: James Archibald Campbell (1807-79); sold c.1880 to Sir John Stirling Ainsworth, 1st bt. (1844-1923); to son, Sir Thomas Ainsworth, 2nd bt. (1886-1971), who sold after 1937.

Harecroft Hall, Gosforth, Cumberland

Harecroft Hall.  Image: Grisdale's Estate Agents, Cockermouth

A rather low early 19th century house enlarged in 1881 with gables, slate hanging, timber framing and diamond shaped chimneys for Sir John Stirling Ainsworth (1844-1933).  It was used as a prep school in the late 20th and early 21st century but was for sale in 2012.

Descent: ...sold by 1877 to Sir John Stirling Ainsworth, 1st bt. (1844-1923); to son, Sir Thomas Ainsworth, 2nd bt. (1886-1971) who sold in or soon after 1924 for use as a school.

The Ainsworths of Backbarrow, The Flosh, Ardanaiseig and Harecroft Hall


Ainsworth, Thomas (d. 1785), of Backbarrow.  Cotton manufacturer at Backbarrow (Lancs).  He married 1769, Sarah (d. 1796), daughter of David Barton and had issue:
(1) Joseph Ainsworth;
(2) David Ainsworth (d. 1819) (q.v.);
(3) Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1853) (q.v.).
He lived at Blackburn (Lancs) and later at Backbarrow (Lancs).
He died in 1785.

Ainsworth, Thomas (c.1777-1853), of Preston and Backbarrow.  Youngest son of Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1785) and his wife Sarah, daughter of David Barton.  Cotton manufacturer at Backbarrow (Lancs); in partnership with William Ainsworth of Preston to 1852.  He married Lydia Wells, daughter of Rev. William McQuhae of St. Quivox, Moderator of the Church of Scotland, and had issue including:
(1) Thomas Ainsworth (c.1807-75) (q.v.); 
(2) William Ainsworth (c.1808-62) of Preston, cotton spinner and manufacturer; JP; in partnership with his elder brother until 1852; died unmarried, 22 March 1862; will proved 4 June 1862 (estate under £16,000);
(3) Elizabeth Ainsworth (b. c.1811); died unmarried;
(2) Lt-Col. David Ainsworth (1823-1907) (q.v.)
He inherited the house and mill at Backbarrow from his father and rebuilt the mill in 1823.
He died in 1853.

Ainsworth, Thomas (c.1807-75), of Backbarrow.  Elder son of Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1853) and his wife Sarah, daughter of David Barton; born about 1807.  Cotton manufacturer at Backbarrow; bankrupt 1874.  He married, 21 July 1851, Mary McDowal of Maybole (Ayrshire) and had issue: 
(1) Mary Bonella Ainsworth (1854-1946), m. 3 May 1876, Francis Janvrin (1851-91), son of Thomas Ashton Hodgson Dickson of Abbots Reading, Haverthwaite (Lancs) and had issue one son and one daughter; died 3 July 1946; will proved 4 September 1946 (estate £3,662);
(2) Lydia Anne Ainsworth (b. c.1856); unmarried and working as a secretary in London, 1891; 
(3) Florence Elizabeth Ainsworth (c.1857-1934); died unmarried, 6 April 1934; will proved 12 June 1934 (estate £2871).
He inherited the house and mill at Backbarrow from his father in 1853, but in 1871 sold the house and mills; in 1874 the firm of T. & W. Ainsworth was liquidated for the benefit of the creditors.  
He died at Torquay, 25 April 1875, aged 68; will proved 27 May 1876 (estate under £100).

Ainsworth, Lt-Col. David (1823-1907), of Backbarrow.  Third son of Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1853), born 21 August 1823.  Educated at Rugby, Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1842; Civil Law Tripos, 1st Class, 1847; LL.B. 1864); and the Inner Temple (admitted 1843; called to the bar, 1849); special pleader; an income tax commissioner; JP and DL for Lancashire; Major in 4th battn, Lancashire militia 1874-81; Lt-Col. commanding 1st volunteer battn. King's Own (Royal Lancaster) regiment.  He married, 28 June 1860, Mary Jane Leigh, second daughter of William Clare, late of Hindley House (Lancs) but was without issue.
In 1880-91 he rented Broughton Hall, Grange in Cartmel.  He may have bought Backbarrow House when it was auctioned in 1871, but if so he seems never to have occupied it.
He died 7 April 1907 at Boscombe (Hants) and his will was proved 28 May 1907 (estate £10,571).

Ainsworth, David (c.1773-1819), of Preston.  Second son of Thomas Ainsworth (d. 1785) and his wife Sarah, daughter of David Barton.  Capt-Lieutenant in the Loyal Preston Volunteers, 1801.  Cotton spinner and machinery manufacturer; bankrupted in 1807-08 by the failure of both businesses (Watson Ainsworth & Co. and Watson, Kay, Catterall & Ainsworth), but discharged later the same year; later a partner in Ainsworth, Catterall & Co of Backbarrow and Church Street Mill, Preston, which in 1816 became the second factory in Preston to be lit by gas.  He married, 11 February 1801, Alice (1788-1827), daughter of Richard Hatton of Park Lane (Lancs) and had issue:
(1) Thomas Ainsworth (1804-81) (q.v.);
(2) Anne Barton Ainsworth (b. 1806) of Leamington Spa; died unmarried, 10 October 1865; will proved 9 July 1866 (estate under £10,000);
(3) Sarah Ainsworth (b. 1808) of Leamington Spa; died unmarried, 12 June 1875; will proved 17 July 1875 (estate under £18,000);
(4) A daughter, died young.
He died 13 May 1819.  His will was proved in the Deanery Court of Amounderness, 17 January 1820.

Ainsworth, Thomas (1804-81), of The Flosh.  Only son of David Ainsworth (d. 1819) of Preston and his wife Alice, daughter of Richard Hatton of Park Lane (Lancs), born 21 March 1804.  Linen manufacturer and iron master; in partnership with Alfred Holt from 1852 as part-owners of the Blue Funnel shipping line.  High Sheriff of Cumberland, 1861; Income Tax Commissioner and member of Whitehaven Board of Guardians; a Liberal in politics.  President of Manchester New College, 1860-63. He married, 24 May 1836, Mary Laurie (1808-67), daughter of Rev. John Stirling DD of Craigie (Ayrshire) and had issue:
(1) David Ainsworth (1842-1906) of Wray Castle (q.v.); 
(2) Sir John Stirling Ainsworth (1844-1923), 1st bt. (q.v.); 
(3) Thomas Hamilton Ainsworth (1845-47); died in infancy;
(4) Rev. William Macquhae Ainsworth (1848-91); born 20 December 1848; educated at University of London and Lincoln's Inn; Unitarian minister at Lancaster, 1877-83 and Brixton, 1884-91; disappeared and supposed to have accidentally drowned near Constantinople, 27 May 1891, during a visit to the Middle East; a memorial collection of his sermons, prayers and travel letters was published in 1891;
(5) Mary Alice Ainsworth (1850-96), m. 1877, Dr. Thomas Sutton Townsend MD (c.1847-1918) and had issue; died 19 April 1896; will proved in London, 8 June 1896 (estate £1951).
He purchased The Flosh and the Cleator Linen Mills in Cumberland in 1837.  The Flosh was remodelled c.1840 and extended in 1866.
He died 28 June 1881 and his will was proved 12 November 1881 (estate £55,862).  An obituary was published in the Whitehaven News.  His wife died 1 February 1867.

Ainsworth, David (1842-1906), of Wray Castle  Eldest son of Thomas Ainsworth (1804-81) and his wife Mary Laurie, daughter of Rev. Dr. John Stirling of Craigie (Ayrshire), born 2 March 1842.  Flax manufacturer and ironmaster; director of local railway companies in Cumberland.  Educated at University College London and Manchester New College (matriculated 1861), and Lincoln's Inn (called to the bar, 1870, but did not practice); Liberal MP for West Cumberland 1880-85, Egremont 1892-95.  He was an active Unitarian and with his brother William visited American Unitarian congregations in 1872; President of the British & Foreign Unitarian Association, 1881-83; Treasurer 1874-91 and President 1896-1900 of Manchester New College.  He married, Apr-June (or according to one source, 16 September) 1874, Margaret (1838-1920), daughter of Henry McConnel, cotton spinner, of Cressford (Derbys) but had no issue.
He inherited The Flosh from his father in 1881, and purchased Wray Castle (Lancs) in 1898, but the latter was sold after his widow's death.  He also maintained a London household in Pont Street, Chelsea.
He died 21 February 1906 and his will was proved 23 May 1906 (estate £155,118); he left £20,000 to his 'devoted friend', Miss Maud Smith.  His widow died 25 April 1920 and her will was proved 13 July 1920 (estate £20,909).

Ainsworth, Sir John Stirling (1844-1923) of Ardanaiseig, 1st bt.  Second son of Thomas Ainsworth (1804-81) and his wife Mary Laurie, daughter of Rev. Dr. John Stirling of Craigie (Ayrshire), born 30 January 1844.  Educated at University College School and UCL (BA 1864, LLB 1866, MA 1868); High Sheriff of Cumberland 1891; Lt-Col. of 3rd vol. bttn. Border Regiment 1898-1902; MP for Argyllshire 1903-18; JP for Cumberland and Argyllshire.  He married, 4 November 1879, Margaret Catherine (c.1855-1918), daughter of Robert Reid Macreadie of New South Wales and had issue: 
(1) Janet Mary Ainsworth (b. & d. 1880); died in infancy;
(2) Jean Barbara Ainsworth (1883-1937), born 3 December 1883; m. 16 February 1905, Algernon William John Clotworthy Skeffington (1873-1956), 12th Viscount Massareene & Ferrard of Antrim Castle (Antrim) (who m.2, 1940, Mrs Florence Clementina Vere Vere-Laurie), and had issue one son and one daughter; 
(3) Sir Thomas Ainsworth (1886-1971), 2nd bt. (q.v.); 
(4) Margaret Louise Ainsworth (1887-1946), born 18 June 1887; m.1, 5 November 1912 Arthur George Murray Smith (1886-1914, died of wounds received in action), son of George Murray Smith of Gumley Hall (Leics) and had issue one son, and m.2, 26 November 1924, John Pollock (d. 1966) of Mountainstown, Navan, Meath and had further issue; she died 5 July 1946, aged 59; her will was proved 13 September 1947 (estate £14,280 in England)
(5) John Stirling Ainsworth (1889-1914); born Oct-Dec 1889; killed in action, 13 October 1914.
He purchased Harecroft Hall, Gosforth (Cumbld) and Ardanaiseig (Argylls) c. 1881.  He rebuild the former and altered the latter.  He inherited The Flosh (Cumbld) from his elder brother in 1906.  
He died 24 May 1923 at Harecroft Hall and his will was proved 18 December 1923 (estate £105,134).  His wife died 8 October 1918.

Ainsworth, Sir Thomas (1886-1971), 2nd bt.  Elder and only surviving son of Sir John Stirling Ainsworth (1844-1923), 1st bt. and his wife Margaret Catherine, daughter of Robert Reid Macreadie of New South Wales, born 8 February 1886.  Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge (BA); served as Lt., 11th Hussars, Westmorland and Cumberland Yeomanry; Steward of INHS Ctee, Jt-MFH and Huntsman Meath 1922–25, MFH and Huntsman Co Galway 1925–26, Kildare 1926–27 and Tipperary 1928–32; JP for Cumberland and Argyllshire.  He married 1st, 9 February 1911 (divorce 1925), Lady Edina Dorothy Hope (1888-1964), daughter of Henry Francis Conyngham, 4th Marquess Conyngham (who m.2, 27 October 1925, Hans Wellesley Hamilton (1886-1942), 2nd Baron Holm Patrick), and married 2nd, 10 September 1925, Marie Eleanor (May) (1898-1969), daughter of Compton Charles Domvile and formerly wife of Evelyn Wentworth Hope-Johnstone, and had issue: 
(1.1) Sir John Francis Ainsworth (1912-81), 3rd bt. (q.v.); 
(1.2) Iris Helen Hersey Ainsworth (b. 1916), m. 22 April 1939, Nicholas St. Vigor Fox of Lough Park House, Castlepollard (Westmeath) and had issue two sons and one daughter; 
(2.1) Sir (Thomas) David Ainsworth (1926-99), 4th bt. (q.v.).
He inherited The Flosh, Harecroft Hall and Ardanaiseig from his father but sold them all in the late 1930s and rented seats in hunting country including Braunston Manor (Leics), Ballinakill, Kilfinny (Limerick) and Ballyneale House (Limerick).
He died 1 March 1971.

Ainsworth, Sir John Francis (1912-81), 3rd bt.  Only son of Sir Thomas Ainsworth (1886-1971), 2nd bt., and his first wife, Lady Edine Dorothy Hope-Conyngham, daughter of 4th Marquess Conyngham, born 4 January 1912.  Educated Eton and Trinity College Cambridge (BA 1933, MA 1937); FRHistS; General Editor, British Record Society, 1937-40; Inspector of Manuscripts, Irish Historical Manuscripts Commission, 1943-50; on the staff of the National Library of Ireland 1950-c.1975; External Lecturer in Palaeography and Medieval History, University College, Cork 1966–81; District Commissioner, Kildare Branch of the Irish Pony Club 1959-62, Chairman of Dublin Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 1965-66 (V-Chm 1963-65 and 1966-67), Jt Huntsman Curragh Beagles 1964–81.  He married 1st, 26 August 1938 (div. 1946), Josephine, daughter of Cdr. Walter Randolph Bernard RN and 2nd, 19 February 1946, Anita Margaret Ann, daughter of Harold Arthur Lett of Kilgibbon and Ballynadara, Enniscorthy (Wexford) but had no issue.
He lived at Carraphuca, Shankill, Dublin in 1972.
He died 30 April 1981.

Ainsworth, Sir (Thomas) David (1926-99), 4th bt.  Only son of Sir Thomas Ainsworth (1886-1971), 2nd bt., and his second wife, Marie Eleanor (May), daughter of Compton Charles Domvile, born 22 August 1926.  Educated Eton; served as Lieutenant, 11th Hussars; merchant banker.  He married, 6 May 1957, Sarah Mary (fl. 2003), daughter of Lt-Col. Hugh Carr Walford and had issue: 
(1) Serena Mary Ainsworth (b. 1958), born 13 March 1958; m. 1987 Stelios Peratinos of Corfu and had issue two sons; 
(2) Tessa Jane Ainsworth (b. 1959), born 6 August 1959; m. 1986 Nicholas Cecil John Fortescue (b. 1953) and had issue twin daughters; 
(3) Sir Anthony Thomas Hugh Ainsworth (b. 1962), 5th bt.; born 30 March 1962; educated at Harrow; Lt. in Royal Hussars, 1982-85; director of Richard Glynn Consultants since 2000; m. 2003 Anong Pradith and has issue a daughter; lives in Bangkok (Thailand);
(4) Charles David Ainsworth (b. 1966); born 24 August 1966; educated at Harrow; company director.
He died 24 November 1999.

Sources

Burke's Landed Gentry and Peerage and Baronetage, successive editions; J.M. Robinson, A guide to the country houses of the North-West, 1991, pp. 108, 111, 255; A. Taylor, The Websters of Kendal, 2004, p. 133; Sir H.M. Colvin, A biographical dictionary of British architects 1600-1840, 4th edn, 2008, p. 191; M. Hyde & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Cumbria, 2010, pp. 279, 703; http://www.cleatormoorblog.co.uk/2011/09/thomas-ainsworth.html;  http://www.unitarianhistory.org.uk/Unitarian%20Members%20of%20Parliament%20in%20the%20Nineteenth%20Century.pdf.

Location of archives

Ainsworth family of Cleator and Gosforth, baronets: family papers, 1819-1940 (Cumbria Archive Service, Whitehaven, YAIN)
Ainsworth, Sir John Stirling (1844-1923), 1st bt.: grant of baronetcy, 1917 (Lancashire Record Office, DDX 1039)
Ainsworth, Sir Thomas (1886-1971), 2nd bt.: hunting diaries, 1906-12 (National Library of Ireland, MSS. 23567-23569)


Coat of arms

Gules, three battleaxes, two and one, and as many buckle's tongues to the dexter, one and two, argent.

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