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William LINGARD

William LINGARD

Male 1846 - 1922  (76 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William LINGARD was born in 1846 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare (son of Thomas LINGARD and Maria KENNY); died in 1922.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: 1869, New Zealand; HOW TROOPER LINGARD WON THE NEW ZEALAND CROSS The first award of the New Zealand Cross was that made to Trooper William Lingard, of Bryce's Kai-iwi Cavalry, Wanganui, in 1869. Mr. Lingard (died in Wellington, 1922) was born in Country Clare, Ireland; he was the son of an Imperial officer who had fought at Waterloo. Lingard was intended for the Army, but he came out to New Zealand in 1863 to try his fortune. He served in the Auckland Militia during the Waikato War, and followed a farmer's life in the Wanganui and Waitotara districts. He was a trooper in the Alexandra Lancers, a troop formed about 1865, and afterwards in the Kai-iwi Cavalry (Captain John Bryce), a corps which did a PAGE 537 great deal of patrol and scouting duty. It was while serving in the Cavalry in front of Tauranga-ika pa, inland from Nukumaru, in 1869, that he won the decoration of the New Zealand Cross by an act of great gallantry. Four troopers of the Cavalry rode up to the front of the pa one day in order to ascertain whether there were any Maoris in the stockade, as the place seemed unusually silent. These cavalrymen were Troop Sergeant-Major George Maxwell, Troopers Arthur Wright, Henry Wright, and William Lingard. They rode close up to the pa and galloped past the palisade. Suddenly a heavy fire was opened on them, and Maxwell was shot. He stuck to his saddle until he had ridden about a hundred yards from the stockade before he fell. Troopers George Small and Allan Campbell galloped forward and recovered his body under heavy fire. At the same time the horses of both the Wright Brothers were shot down about a chain from the palisading. Arthur Wright jumped off his horse before he fell, and, taking his saddle, ran down near the bush and rejoined the troop in the valley below, 400 or 500 yards from the pa. Henry Wright's horse did not fall until Arthur Wright was half-way to the troop. When the horse tumbled over he rolled on to his rider's leg and pinned him to the ground. The trooper lay in this position under fire, within a very short distance of the stockade; he kept firing his revolver at the palisade, but was unable to use his carbine. A Maori warrior, the locally celebrated Big Kereopa, came out from under the palisading with a long-handled tomahawk, and Wright would have been killed had it not been for the promptitude of Trooper Lingard, who galloped up and helped him away. He pulled him clear of the horse, and protected him under the heavy fire, while he (Wright) retreated, crouching. Lingard, when he saw Wright was in comparative safety, then turned his horse and galloped round to the far side of the pa. A few moment later he returned leading a Maori horse (looted from a settler) which had been tethered to a tutu bush; he cut the line with his sword. After assisting Wright to mount this horse the two troopers rode down the hill and safely rejoined their corps. Undoubtedly, had it not been for Lingard's courage and alacrity, combined with good horsemanship, Trooper Wright would have been tomahawked. The rescue was performed under a heavy fire at close quarters, and Lingard well deserved the New Zealand Cross bestowed upon him on the recommendation of Colonel Whitmore. Lingard was soon afterwards put in charge of a small party of scouts organized by Colonel Whitmore; he was invalided at Patea, and Sergeant (later Captain) C. Maling was then appointed to the command of the scouts, styled the Crops of Guides.

    Notes:

    See:-
    http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/genealogy/don_tran/fam_his/william_lingard_ruan.htm

    Died:
    http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19220622.2.86.2&srpos=1&e=-------10--1----0william%2Blingard%2Bwellington%2Bedinburgh%2Bblackie--


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Thomas LINGARD was born in Aug 1826 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare.

    Notes:

    Captain, 25th King's Owm Borderers. Fought at the Battle of Waterloo

    Thomas married Maria KENNY in 1823 in Ennis Church. Maria (daughter of William KENNY) was born about 1803; died on 25 Dec 1851 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare; was buried in Ruan Graveyard. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Maria KENNY was born about 1803 (daughter of William KENNY); died on 25 Dec 1851 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare; was buried in Ruan Graveyard.

    Notes:

    Maria Kenny married Thomas Lingard an officer in the Kings Borderers (also known as the 25th regiment) in 1823 in Ennis church (Connaught Journal, 1823). She had a large family (15 according to Cecil S. Kenny who does not list all 15 children). The boys from the family were brought up Protestant and the girls Catholic. I know little of her. In 1838 the birth of a daughter was announced to Thomas Lingard at Cooga(Ruan). In 1844 he was listed as a Cess payer at Coogey (modern day Cooga, Ruan) (Limerick Chronicle, 1844). In the same year the Limerick Chronicle announced the birth of a son to him at Cooga (Limerick Chronicle, 1844).

    Died:
    aged 47?


    Buried:

    Tomb of Maria Lingard
    http://foto.clarelibrary.ie/fotoweb/Preview.fwx?position=1&archiveType=ImageFolder&sorting=ModifiedTimeAsc&search=lingard&fileId=0874E8E09149F0AC42468A88E715356927E2F66EDDDF6356731D1C0F3F7667463E85551A1FE11B5E5A3F957F710C9E6B21437DF01E1A0EC7763BB65E6131DE63943DFFFA2D475ED7C090A2A4055112EA6F68A8C94C4F87306821C5039440161A2FBC6F229C4B317F0723DF1A66351F3AE96046509B91A474B2849F6AAB840EBFD23471F10BA2E3D9C28DC708DFFD1BA8208756343BD45FDEB2F9FC9DAC329AB9F4AEA55ED72FFAA6

    Notes:

    Possibly 10 children

    Children:
    1. Mary LINGARD was born in 1825 in Co. Clare; died on 11 Dec 1907 in Youghal; was buried on 13 Dec 1907 in North Abbey Cemetery, Youghal.
    2. Roger Rowson LINGARD was born in Aug 1826 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare.
    3. 1. William LINGARD was born in 1846 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare; died in 1922.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  William KENNY was born after 1803; died in 1878.
    Children:
    1. 3. Maria KENNY was born about 1803; died on 25 Dec 1851 in Cooga, Ruan, Co. Clare; was buried in Ruan Graveyard.