Ingram baronets explained

Ingram baronets
Creation Date:1893[1]
Status:extant[2]
Motto:In hoc signo vinces, Under this sign you shall conquer
Arms:Per quarter Argent and Or guttee de poix on a Fess invected Gules four Escallops of the second
Crest:Upon a Rock proper issuant from a Wreath of Cinquefoils Or a Gryphon's Head erased quarterly Gules and Argent charged on the neck with an Escallop counter-changed

The Ingram Baronetcy, The Bungalow, Westgate-on-Sea in the County of Kent and of Swineshead Abbey in the County of Lincoln, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 9 August 1893 for William Ingram. He was managing director of The Illustrated London News and Liberal Member of Parliament for Boston. Ingram was the son of Herbert Ingram, the founder of The Illustrated London News, who also represented Boston in the House of Commons.

Ingram baronets, of Swineshead Abbey (1893)

The heir apparent is the present holder's son Herbert Rufus Ingram (born 2010).

Extended family

Sir Bruce Ingram, younger son of the first Baronet, was also a noted journalist and newspaper editor and served as editor of The Illustrated London News for 63 years.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage . 2000 . Debrett's Peerage . London . 033354577X . B551.
  2. Web site: Official Roll . The Standing Council of the Baronetage . 6 April 2022 . en.