His paternal grandparents were John McTavish, tacksman of Garthbeg, and Mary (née Fraser) McTavish of Garthmore. His grandmother was descended, through Simon Fraser of Dunchea and the Frasers of Foyers, from an illegitimate son of the 1st Lord Lovat.[4]
After his wedding to Emily Caton of Maryland, they lived at Brooklandwood estate in the Green Spring Valley of Baltimore County, where Emily had been born,[6] before moving to 1,000 acres of the "finest farm land in Howard County,[7] given as a wedding gift from his wife's grandfather and named "Folly Quarter" after the MacTavish family estate in Scotland. Folly Quarter was built near her grandfather's estate and home Doughoregan.[8][9]
Personal life
On August 15, 1815, MacTavish was married to Emily Caton, the fourth daughter of Richard Caton and Mary (née Carroll) Caton.[8] Emily's maternal grandfather was Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the only Catholic and the longest-surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence.[10][11] They were staunch Roman Catholics, members of St. Paul's Catholic Church in Baltimore County.[12] John and Emily were the parents of four children:
MacTavish died on June 21, 1852, at age 65. His widow died on January 26, 1867, at Folly Quarter and was interred with MacTavish at Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore, Maryland.[16]
References
^ abcSylvanus Urban: The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume XXXVIII, New Series, July to December 1852, John Bowyer Nichols and Son, London, p. 213.
^Jehanne Wake: Sisters of Fortune: America's Caton Sisters at Home and Abroad, Simon and Schuster, New York, 2011.