Michael Grant, 12th Baron de Longueuil explained

Michael Charles Grant
Honorific Suffix:12th Baron de Longueuil
Birth Name:Michael Grant de Longueuil
Occupation:Medical practitioner, painter
Spouses:Isabel Padua
Susan Casey, Janet Wells
Parents:Raymond Grant de Longueuil and Anne Maltby
Children:Angela, Rachel, Rebecca, David Alexander

Michael Charles Grant, 12th Baron de Longueuil (born 1947) is a nobleman possessing the only French colonial title recognized by the Monarch of Canada, currently his third cousin, Charles III.

Assumption of title and royal connection

He assumed the title of Baron de Longueuil in 2004 upon the death of his father, Raymond Grant, in Navarrenx, near Pau, France.

He is related to the monarch of the Commonwealth realms through his grandmother, Ernestine Maude Bowes-Lyon. She was first cousin to Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. The baron was a second cousin, once removed, to Queen Elizabeth II.

Career, art, and residence

A medical practitioner, Grant de Longueuil has interests in palliative medicine, working for 13 years at Hayward House. His interest in pain control led him to take a degree in clinical hypnosis. Since retiring from full-time work, he has started painting. He has a studio in the South of France in Navarrenx.

Family

Grant de Longueuil married Isabel Padua,[1] born in the Philippines and of mixed Spanish and Filipino origin. Together, they have three children:

His second wife is Susan Casey, daughter of the BBC comedy writer and producer James Casey. They have one son:

Family seat

The Barons de Longueuil have not lived in Canada for several generations, having lived in Scotland and France and, in the 1970s, in Luzon, Philippines.[3]

The original seigneury was sold[4] in the early 1800s. The Kingston home of the barons, Alwington House, was sold out of the family in 1910.[5] In 1993, the current baron and his wife visited the Longueuil Castle or Ardath Castle grounds on Wolfe Island, Ontario, without making any claim to them.[6] Ardath Castle had been in the family as early as 1795, when the Grant family purchased lands in the area.[7]

See also

External links


recognized by the Crown in right of Canada

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rachel Grant. .
  2. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 101st edition, ed. L. G. Pine, Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1956, p. 2389
  3. http://www.rachelgrant.com/pages/bio Rachel Grant biography
  4. Barbara Wall La Rocque, Kenneth S. (FRW) Keyes, Wolfe Island: A Legacy in Stone (2009), p. 52
  5. Wolfe Island: A Legacy in Stone, p. 52, p. 54
  6. Wolfe Island: A Legacy in Stone, pp. 61–62
  7. Wolfe Island: A Legacy in Stone, p. 50