Malone Family of St. Kitts

The Malone family of St. Kitts is quite complicated and takes many twists and turns. I have tried to show how the Malone family ties into the Cranstoun family of Antigua through the marriage of the son of Solomon David Malone, Walter Federick Malone who married Irene Evelina "Irenie" Cranstoun.

The family of Walter Wittingham Malone of St. Kitts and Antigua, brother of Solomon David Malone, is linked to the Cranstoun family of Antigua as the sister of Walter Federick Malone, Ethel Louise Malone married her cousin Sir Walter Clement Malone son of Walter Wittingham Malone.

The Semper family of St. Kitts is linked to the Cranstoun family of Antigua through the daughter of Walter Federick Malone and Irene Evelina "Irenie" Cranstoun, Muriel Aileen Malone who married married Dudley Henry "Jack" Semper.

The Dickinson family of St. Kitts is linked to the Cranstoun family of Antigua through the son of Walter Federick Malone and Irene Evelina "Irenie" Cranstoun, Cecil Langford Malone who married Mabel Isabel "Maisie" Dickinson.

The Malliieu family of St. Kitts is linked into the Cranstoun family through the Semper and Dickinson family connections.

Malone Family Of St. Kitts

The Malone family begins with George Malone who landed in Antigua in 1784 and was thought to be a crew member of Lord Horatio Nelson. He was on Committee of Correspondence with David Cranstoun and George Cranstoun.

George Malone married Kathy McCarthy

Children:

  • David Mortimer Malone

  • Wife
    • Fisrt married Grace Hampstead then married Sara Eliza Symes who was the daughter of Nicholas Symes and his wife Catherine.

  • Children
    • Cyril Malone

    • Solomon David Malone

    • Stephen Malone

    • Walter Wittingham Malone

  • Parents

    David Mortimer Malone and ara Eliza Symes

Captain Henry Symes

The Symes family were an important family in the history of Antigua and we can trace our family pedigree through the History of Antigua and other historical documents to my 12 time great grandfather Adam Symes 1460-1505. Rather than documenting all that history let’s start with Captain Henry Symes 1698-1742, who was the Deputy Registrar of Antigua who married Sarah Lynch on 9 February 1715. This is noteworthy part of history as Sarah Lynch was coloured and Captain Henry Symes had to obtain special permission from the King in order to intermarry. (A note: his mother’s sister was married to Govenor Of Antigua John Yeamans)

  • Wife
    • Sarah Lynch her brother Francis Lynch married Mary Crump. Nathanile Crump Speaker of Antigua Francis Lynch son Nicholas Lynch had a daughter Mary Lynch who married Dr. Samuel Byam Athill President of Antigua.

  • Children
    • Henry Symes Died: December 1792 married Elizabeth Hunt and they had 3 children

      Henry Symes wife unknown and had two children

      John Symes who was the father of Elizabeth Symes who married David Cranstoun
      John Symes born (1771-1828) had five daughters and was the father of:

      Elizabeth Symes
      Ann Symes
      Mary Symes
      Margaret Symes
      Patricia Symes

      John Symes Will

      Dated 27 May 1828 -

      “I give to my nephew Henry Lynch Symes my Negro slave for him and his heirs.

      I give and devise unto my natural daughter Elizabeth Cranstoun (nee Symes) five named Negro slaves and their future offspring.

      I give to my natural daughter Margaret Symes five named Negro slaves and their future offspring.

      I give to my daughters my house and land with all buildings in High Street purchased from the late John Lavicount and divided between them share and share alike, (note the name John Lavicount and see the beginnings of the relationship between David Cranstoun and Manning Anderdon)

      I will and devise that my Negro man slave be sold and the proceeds be used for the maintenance and schooling of their nephew John Henry Donowa (son of my daughter Mary).

      I give and devise my female Negro slave be sold and the proceeds be used for the maintenance and schooling of their nephew William Barton (son of my daughter Ann).

      I give and devise that all monies owing to me at the time of my death be collected and divided as follows. To my niece Jane Copelan Richardson wife of George Richardson late of this Island and late of the City of Glasgow but bow residing in Aberdeen the sum of 75 pounds, remaining funds to be divided between the sisters.

      I appoint David Cranstoun to be my Executor and my daughters Elizabeth Cranstoun and Margaret Symes Executrix’s of my Will."

      George Cranstoun witnessed and signed to this Will.

      On 13 August 1817 an Indenture between John Symes of the first part, Joseph Donowa (carpenter) and Mary his wife (nee Mary Symes), Elizabeth Symes, Ann Symes and Margaret Symes of the second part, and Nicholas Symes of the third part witness that in consideration of the love and affection John Symes hath for his daughters and in consideration of the sum of twenty shillings paid by Nicholas Symes does convey and sell to Nicholas Symes eighteen Negro slaves and their children (all are named). To make a long story short, Nicholas basically paid John for the use of the slaves but they were to be returned to John’s children upon reaching age.

      The document above was rather lengthy and while reading it I became upset and angry. I had time to think and decided, one must truly understand the era of Antigua during the early 1800’s, and unless one has researched and delved into the history as deeply as I have I’m not sure one can, I hope the reader pauses a moment to think about that era.

      To realize and accept that your forefathers were one of the families that sold and traded human beings and their future offspring like cattle, is really a difficult thing to accept, it was once said to me, “it doesn’t paint a very nice picture of the family”. Quite frankly, I became disgusted upon reading the information as I was writing this family history. If I had read this information in the beginning I don’t honestly know if I would have continued and delved so deeply into our family history. One could say, “it is what it is” but it bothered me to actually see it in print.

      Nicholas Symes who married Catherine who were the parents of Sara Eliza Symes who married David Mortimer Malone

    • John Symes who married Catharine Harman daughter of Samuel Harman of Harman's on Antigua and Dorothy Llyod who was the daughter of Major Charles Llyod of Llyod’s in Antigua and Catherine Symes daughter of John Symes of Montserrat.

    • William Symes who married Elizabeth Walrod
  • Parents

    Captain Henry Symes Registrar of Antigua Died: 9 July, 1714 and Henrietta (widow) her sister was married to Govenor John Yeamans

Solomon David Malone

  • Wife
    • Susan Elizabeth Grieve Dyett cousin to Helen Antoinette Dyett wife of Honourable Dudley Henry Semper

  • Children
    • Edmund Alan Malone married Daphne Marshall 1905–1987 daughter of Burchell Marshall

    • Ethel Louise Malone married her cousin Sir Walter Clement Malone son of Walter Wittingham Malone

    • Frances Ida Malone married and divorced William deGrasse a descendant of Comte deGrasse who was defeated by Admirals Rodney and Hood and it was his defeat which made James 8th Lord Cranstoun famous in the "Battle of the Saints"

    • Walter Federick Malone

      Walter Frederick MaloneWalter Frederick Malone was his eldest son and he took over the management of S. D. Malone Ltd. Unfortunately the heydays of the sugar industry were in the past and slowly Walter had to start selling and closing down the stores, eventually he went bankrupt and had to close the final store on St. Kitts. It appears to me that Walter looked after the family business so his brother’s and sister’s could move on in life and from what I uncovered, it appears like they left Walter holding the bag. I only hope that they invited him and his family into their exciting and lavish world’s.

      Walter married Irene Evelina "Irenie" Cranstoun in 1915 at "Irenie's" home at Cassada Gardens in Antigua, the same year her brother, married my grandmother in Toronto, Ontario. Walter and Irene had four children:

      • Muriel Aileen Malone 1916–1996

      • Mildred Irene Malone 1918–2002

      • Cecil Langford Malone 1920–2001

      • Doreen Malone 1923–1984

    • Mary Alicia Malone 1887–? moved to Canada.

    • Rev. William Mortimer Malone 1890–? married Inez Oldham

    • Florence "Florrie" E Malone 1891–?

    • Cyril Hampstead Malone 1892–? married Lilian Agatha Eliza Blake 1896–?

    • Dr. Donald Edward Malone 1895–? married twice Grace ? and unknown
  • Parents

    David Mortimer Malone and Sara Eliza Symes

Walter Frederick Malone

  • Wife
  • Children
    • Muriel Aileen Malone 1916–1996 married Dudley Henry "Jack" Semper 1905–1982

      In an interesting twist of fate, in December 2015 as I was putting the final touches on this book I was contacted by my second cousin Margaret Haward, the granddaughter of Irene Evelina “Irenie” Cranstoun and Walter Frederick Malone.

      She had contacted me through this web site and wrote me, “I am the daughter of Dudley Henry "Jack" Semper. My name was Margaret Helen Irenie Semper. I am married to the Reverend John Talbot Hayward we have a daughter:- Kathryn, Jill Hayward she was born 23 November 1993.”

      I was overjoyed as it had been a very difficult road to uncover the family of my grandfather’s eldest sister and to be contacted by Margaret seemed like the icing on the cake. I wrote her back telling her quickly how happy I was to hear from her and I sent a quick synopsis of what I could remember of her family background.

      She wrote back, “I would be more than happy to provide any information you require, but my father Dudley Henry Semper (Jack) for some strange reason would not talk about the families. I can remember as a teenager trying to find out from him details, I did not get very far. Mum, Aileen Malone did not say much either.”

      I wrote her back with a little more detail on her family and hopefully she will be able to get a copy of my book by Christmas.

    • Mildred Irene Malone 1918–2002

    • Cecil Langford Malone 1920–2001 married Mabel Isabel "Maisie" Dickinson 1924–?

    • Doreen Malone 1923–1984 married William McIntyre 1916–?

  • Parents

    Solomon David Malone and Susan Elizabeth Grieve Dyett (cousin to Helen Antoinette Dyett)

Walter Wittingham Malone - 1850–1917

  • Wife
    • Florence Henrietta Hart 1858–1947

  • Children
    • Bernie Malone - died young

    • Isobel Malone - died young

    • Kathleen Malone - died young

    • Canon Elwin Mortimer Malone 1881–1975 married Lucille La Beal 1887–?

      Elwin Mortimer Malone born 1881 in Antigua and he attended the Antigua Grammar School in the class of 1893. Elwin married Lucille La Beal and they had a son born in 1910 named Edward M Malone. Elwin was a Reverend and became Canon of the St. Peter’s Cathedral in Charlletown, Prince Edward Island and was a priest for 69 years. Elwin died in 1975.

    • Sir Walter Clement Malone 1883–1967

      Sir Walter Clement Malone died April 9, 1967 at the home of his eldest son John Clement Malone in Trinidad.

      Sir Walter Clement Malone was the son of Walter Wittingham Malone, brother of Solomon David Malone who married his cousin Ethel Louise Malone in 1917.

      Clement Malone was born in 1883 in Antigua into a coloured family whose members had risen to prominence as merchants, clergymen, lawyers and schoolmasters. He was educated at the Antigua Grammar School and after leaving school was employed as a teacher for one term. It was a position that young Clement did not regret leaving. He entered the civil service of the Leeward Islands and for a number of years, was assigned to St. Kitts as a clerk in the Treasury Department.

      After obtaining study leave, he proceeded to London and enrolled as a law student. He was called to the bar at Middle Temple in 1916 during the early stages of World War I. On returning to Antigua, he was called to the bar of the Leeward Islands and then settled to practice his profession in St. Kitts. The following year he married his cousin Ethel Louise Malone in 1917 and together they had three sons.

      The charming “Mr. Clem” as he was affectionately known by the people of St. Kitts and Nevis, quickly gained the trust, respect and affection of the community. His thorough knowledge of the law, his tenacity in maintaining his point of view and his courtesy won him the admiration of Bench and Bar alike. His integrity as a solicitor and dedication to his client’s cause won him considerable patronage. Within a short time his law practice extended to Antigua, Montserrat and at times Dominica. He even had the unusual experience of representing a man in St. Maarten in a Dutch court. His clients ranged from ordinary men and women to the powerful Barclays Bank and Royal Bank of Canada. When, in 1921 Malone applied to the Secretary of State for an appointment, Administrator Burdon’s reported that he bears a high character in the community and is suitable for employment in any legal post for which colour is not a bar.

      On the 28th December 1918, Malone and a small group of coloured middle class men holding positions in the professions and the business community formed the St. Kitts Representative Government Association (RGA). The Association had as its mission "to secure the achievement of popular representative government’’. Burdon felt that the gentlemen, with one possible exception, who have formed themselves into the Organizing Committee, represent exactly the classes unfit for Self-government. By the following year, 330 men had become members of the RGA and Clement Malone was its President. In a Petition addressed to His Majesty, the RGA complained that the people had no representation in the Legislative Council as the unofficial members were selected by the Administrator and they felt duty bound to support him. In order to correct this situation, they requested a franchise that was exclusively adult male who either owned real property valued at £50 or over, or paid an annual rent of £10, or made a yearly salary of £50 or an income of £ 30. Acting Administrator Wigley described the Association as a creation of Clement Malone whom he accused of seeking public attention and dismissed it lacking in support from among the influential persons of the Presidency.

      The RGA’s efforts produced no tangible results and it quickly disappeared from the scene but it was replaced in 1922 by the Taxpayers’ Association with a membership similar to the earlier Association. Its target was the introduction of Income Tax. The stand taken was based on the premise that persons who paid taxes should have a say in government and so it made issue of all the shortcomings of the colonial administration. Once again Malone was an active member. To counteract the opposition, Burdon recommended that Clement Malone be appointed to the Council but he saw no reason for equality of representation between the planters and the other social classes as he felt that their position as the class responsible for the sugar industry on the island gave them a right to the political power they held. In 1925, Administrator St. Johnston recommended that Malone be offered a place on the Executive Council on the grounds that he found the lawyer to be moderate in his views when he fully appreciated the real necessity for a proposal made by Government. However when the offer came Clement Malone declined to accept as he had publicly expressed the view that a member of the Legislative Council should not hold a position on the Executive of the Presidency of St. Kitts and Nevis. However, he later accepted to serve on the Executive of the Colony which met in Antigua.

      In 1935, Malone found himself caught up in the events that came to be known as the Buckley Riots. Along with Thomas Manchester, Victor John and William Seaton he did his best to defuse the tension caused by the heightened expectations of sugar workers. Their sympathetic, commonsense approach persuaded a significant number to return to their homes but was not enough to put an end to the agitation of the remaining crowd. When in March and April a number of persons were brought to trial charged with causing riots and other related matters, Malone was there to take the case. He scathingly pointed out discrepancies in the evidence delivered by members of the police force whom he accused of collaborating to bring about guilty verdicts. His defence was described as aggressive, and successful. It certainly persuaded a jury consisting of middle class businessmen to acquit the accused. The following year the planters of St. Kitts and Nevis came into conflict with the St. Kitts (Basseterre) Sugar Factory over the price to be paid for canes supplied to the Factory. Clement Malone and J. R. Yearwood were sent to London to represent the planters’ interests. The negotiation produced an increase in the price of cane.

      The 1937 election was contested by the Workers’ League on one hand and the individual members of the Agricultural and Commercial Society on the other. Clement Malone ran as an independent candidate and often appeared on the platform with W.E.L. Walwyn and P. Ryan but was endorsed by both organisations. As a result he won the largest number of votes from the small electorate. The other winning candidates were Thomas Manchester and Edgar Challenger, both members of the Workers’ League. Over the next couple of years the three of them worked for social reform by advocating legislation relating to Trade Unions, Workers Compensation, and Land Settlement. In politics, Malone proved himself to be a popular politician. Although at times an outspoken critic of Government, his sane judgement, and fearlessness won him the sometimes uncertain respect of the Administration and the esteem of the people.

      On the 24th April 1940, Malone was appointed Puisine Judge to the newly constituted Supreme Court of the Leeward and Windward islands. This meant that he could not contest the elections of September that same year. His appointment was greeted with a sense of satisfaction among the people of the colony. To the man in the street it was a justified reward for years of professionalism. His career in politics was over and he turned his attention to the Bench but issues of social development were never far from his thought.

      Clement Malone also served on various boards and committees. He was a moving spirit on the Education Board and Vice-President of the Cricket and Football Associations. In 1943 he was appointed to a Board of Inquiry into the trade dispute between the Sugar Producers Association and the St. Kitts Nevis Trade and Labour Union. He recommended among other things, said that the bonus to sugar workers should not be discontinued, that this bonus should be paid in December and that is should be calculated solely on a percentage of the wages earned during the year. Estate pay books were to be made available to the Federal Labour Officer or an officer of the Trade Union in case of dissatisfaction on the part of a worker.

      Malone discharged his duties faithfully and with confident ability and this made him an ideal candidate for higher office. In 1942 he succeeded Sir Wilfred Wigley as Chief Justice of the Leeward and Windward Islands. His peers saw in it opportunity. For the third time a coloured West Indian was being appointed to the highest judicial post in a colony. (Previous appointments were Conrad Reeves, Chief Justice of Barbados and Charles Lewis, Chief Justice of Sierra Leone.} The significance of this lay in that within fifty years of emancipation from slavery Britain had had to recognise the unmistakable worth of her colonial subjects irrespective of race and caste. This appointment meant that the new Chief Justice and his family would have to take up residence in Grenada. Two years later His Lordship received a knighthood in recognition for his commitment to the law and his contribution to society.

      In Grenada, Malone soon found himself involved once again in social issues. 1947 saw the launching of the Grenada Cooperative Nutmeg Association. It was the culmination of activity that had started in 1942. The purpose of the GCNA was to secure a stable price, to end the competition between Grenadian exporters, to eliminate the middleman and increase profits and to set standards of quality. Malone was foremost among those who spoke in support of the association and on that occasion his views were aired on radio in a speech entitled “A West Indian University.

      In 1951, it was his birthplace that needed his calm approach to volatile issues. That year Antigua found itself in the throes of a general Strike. The planters stopped the crop, claiming that it was a waste of resources to reap a crop of less than seven thousand tons a week. The Labour Commissioner tried to settle the dispute but the Antigua Trades and Labour Union accused him of being, “incompetent, a coward and a crook.” Other matters added fuel to the flames and in April the sugar curers at the factory refused to clean the mixers. Furthermore the AT&LU had not informed the employers that May 1st was to be celebrated as Labour Day and workers were to be called off the job. After May Day workers from all walks of life refused to return to their jobs and the AT&LU demanded the reinstatement of the sugar curers.

      Governor Blackburne attempted, unsuccessfully, to bring the strike to an end. Sir Clement Malone, who had retired from the Bench the previous year was called upon to head a Commission of Inquiry into the matter and the adversaries were given the opportunity to air their differences. The proceedings started on the 11th June but were disrupted when a state of emergency was declared. British Troops had been called in and the AT&LU refused to appear before the Commission. Malone saw this stance as “fancy and not of sober reality.” It was only when the soldiers were withdrawn three weeks later that the AT&LU returned to the table and the Commission resumed its work. The hearings ended on the 2nd August and in its subsequent report the Malone Commission accused the AT&LU of striking first and thinking later. However the report found it “inadvisable and impracticable to ban unofficial strikes.” It also found “by no means feasible” the employers’ bid to separate trade unions from politics. The report sharply criticized the AT&LU for not informing the employers of its intention to celebrate May 1st but did not issue the condemnation that the employers demanded. It also recommended the nationalization of the sugar industry in Antigua.

      The 1950’s also saw an intensification of efforts leading up to the creation of a Federation of the West Indies. Sir Clement’s statements demonstrated a more down to earth approach to the initiative. Malone felt that practicalities should come before politics. He suggested that the coordination of transport and communications services and a better marketing of the economic resources of the region should be the first steps towards creating a meaningful political unit in the West Indies. The designers of the West Indies Federation however, chose to follow the political path with disastrous consequences. The Federation ended ingloriously in 1962 amid quarrels between the Trinidadian and Jamaican leaders. The next attempt took a path very similar to that suggested by Malone but he was not to see its fruition. Sir Clement Malone died in Trinidad on the April 9, 1967 at the home of his eldest son, John Clement Malone. He was 84 years old and still enjoying the respect and adulation of many West Indians.

      I found an article in The Virgin Islands Daily News - Sep 7, 1945, with the headline, West Indian Knighted By King George - Sir Clement Malone, Knight, First Negro Jurist To Be So Honored In 50 Years.


      Children:

      • John Clement D Malone 1919–1990 married Juliet Patricia Mansell 1921–2001

        Eldest son of Sir Walter Clement Malone, born at "Rest Harrow" on Cayon St in Basseterre. later moved to a house on the west side of Basseterre's Pall Mall Square (now known as Independence Square) and the future home of Irene Cranstoun-Malone's daughter Mildred.

        At 13 years of age with his mother Ethel they traveled to Canada on their way to her sister Mary's house in Toronto at 367 Delaware Ave. John married Juliet Patricia Mansell and would eventually write a book on the Malone family called "Double Heritage", which I have a copy of. His father Sir Walter Clement Malone died at his home in Trinidad in 1967.

      • Sir Denis Eustace Gilbert Malone

        Sir Denis Eustace Gilbert Malone was a Caribbean jurist. In 1941 he graduated from Wycliffe College in Toronto. He was commissioned a flight sergeant in the Royal Air Force on May 15, 1945. He served as Solicitor-General of Barbados, and then in February 1961 was appointed a Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of British Honduras (today Belize). He rose to Chief Justice of Belize in 1974 until his replacement in 1977 by Albert Staine, who became the first native of Belize to hold that position. He was knighted in July 1978. He went on to serve on the Supreme Court of the Bahamas as a Justice from May 1979 to September 1983, Acting Chief Justice from September to December 1983, and Senior Justice from January 1984 to November 1989. Afterwards, he became Chief Justice of the Cayman Islands; in 1991, he called for more court facilities to handle the rising backlog of civil and criminal cases.

        He married Diana Traynor and died in February 2000 in Poole, Dorset, England.

      • Dr. Ralph Maurice Hampstead Malone 1924–2012 married Dr. Elizabeth Oliver

        Dr. Ralph Maurice Hampstead Malone, beloved husband of Dr. Elizabeth Oliver-Malone (Anesthesiologist), father of Ann Louise (Felix Munoz-Garcia) and Sharon (Bill Langman), grandfather of Ben, Josh, Olivia and Gabriel and uncle to Clement and Susan of London, England.

        “Born and raised in St. Kitts, British West Indies he attended high school at Harrison College in Barbados. Ralph received his Bachelor of Science from Sir George Williams College, Montreal and later graduated in Medicine from Queen’s University, Belfast.

        He went on to specialize in Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Ralph returned to Barbados to practice. He enjoyed flying light aircraft and instructing student pilots in his spare time. He and Elizabeth married in Toronto in 1969 and returned to Barbados to live and work. They moved to Toronto with their two young daughters in 1974, moving to St. Catharines in 1976 where Ralph and
        Elizabeth worked until their retirement in 1998.

        As in Barbados, Ralph, was an advocate for the Family Planning Association, working with the organization for many years. In 1999, Ralph and Elizabeth moved to Niagara-on-the-Lake. Ralph will be fondly remembered for his compassionate attitude, kindness, sense of humour, love of travelling, painting, photography, fishing and patron supporter of The Arts and heritage museums. He is predeceased by his parents, Sir W. Clement and Lady Ethel Malone, and his older brothers, John (Pat) and Sir Denis (Lady Diana).”

    • Beatrice Gertrude Malone 1885–? married unknown, emigrated to Australia married and died giving birth to a stillborn child

    • Dr. Reginald Hampstead Malone 1886–1973 married Ruth St. James 1890–1984

      Dr. Reginald Hampstead Malone born in Antigua on January 19, 1886 was married to Ruth St. James and they had three sons and a daughter. He attained his medical degree at McGill University in Montreal and his Attestation papers show he enlisted at the rank of Captain and was a medical officer and retired as Lieutenant Colonel in the Canadian army during WWI. He travelled to India with his family and became important in that country and returned to England and died in 1973 in Sheffield, England.



      Children:

      • Colonel Arthur Reginald Malone 1918–1995

        Arthur Reginald Malone the first son was born August 4, 1918 in Montreal, Quebec. He first married Cecelia Hendrica Francesca De Keijser in 1946 in Singapore and they had two sons, twins named John and David. Secondly, he married Margery Josephine Prosser and they were married in Saskatchewan, Canada in 1963. Arthur died 12 October 1997 in Cumberland England, they had no children. Margery Josephine Prosser was previously married to James Denis Adams 1917–1960 and they had a daughter named Gillian Adams. Here it becomes a little confusing, so here we go, see Nancy Ruth Malone, below.

      • Dr. David Malone was born 1922 in Kausali, India. married Marjorie ?

      • Peter Elwin Malone

        Peter Elwin Malone

        Peter Elwin Malone was born in 1926 in India, he was an architect. He married Kathleen Lesley Rodger on March 3, 1956 in Sheffield, Yorkshire West Riding, England and they had one son, Tim Malone, who lives in South Africa and supplied me with the information on his family.

        Peter Elwin Malone returned at the age of 5 to Scotland with the rest of his siblings and their mother. They went to school in Edinburgh and didn’t see their father, Dr. Reginald Hampstead Malone, for about 10 years. At the age of 17 Peter Elwin Malone joined the Gurkhas. In 1971 at the age of 45 Peter and his family moved to South Africa. Peter Elwin Malone died in 2010 in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa

        .


      • Nancy Ruth Malone 1929–1985 married Donald Fraser Forsyth 1934–1995

        Nancy Ruth Malone

        Nancy Ruth Malone was born February 3, 1929 and married Donald Fraser Forsyth in Chelsa, Middlesex, England, they had no children. Nancy Ruth Malone died of colon cancer in May 1985 in England. She and Donald had no children of their own, but did adopt two. Here’s a bit of scandal for you, Nancy died a long and painful death, eventually succumbing to colon cancer. During her illness, Arthur Reginald Malone's step daughter, Gillian Adams (Margery Prosser’s daughter from a previous marriage) nursed Nancy.

        Gillian Adams and Donald Fraser Forsyth had an affair and after Nancy died, they eventually married. Donald Fraser Forsyth was an extremely wealthy man and when he died Gillian inherited a fortune! Their daughter lives in South Africa.


    • Frederick Hart Malone was born 20 October 1887 and attended the Antigua Grammar School class of 1908. In 1910 he was in New York and was a student in Montreal. In 1814 he enlisted in the Canadian army. After the war his travel documentation showed his occupation to be a schoolmaster.

    • John Edgar Otto Malone 1890–1918 died in WWI at time of his death he was Captain No. 368 U.A, Infantry.

  • Parents

    David Mortimer Malone and Sara Eliza Symes

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