One daughter, first name unknown, [of Robert and Matilda (Grey) Ogle] married Sir Matthew Whitfield, knight, who was a witness 13 Henry VI and had a son Robert Whitfield.[1]
Robert Ogle and Maud Grey had a daughter who married Sir Matthew Whitfield, Knt.[2][3][4] According to Tudor Place, she was named Agnes (b.1410) [5] Hodgson & Hodgson-Hinde (1827) and Richardson (2011) list her first name as Unknown.[6][7][8]
Agnes and Matthew had a daughter Alison who was married in 1434 to Thomas, son and heir of Alexander ffederstanehaigh, while the title of Lord of Whitfield descended to their son Matthew Whitfield, who was born about 1409.[9]
Sources
↑ Sir Henry Asgil Ogle, Ogle and Bothal; or, A History of the Baronies of Ogle, Bothal, and Hepple, and of the Families of Ogle and Bertram, who held Possession of those Baronies and other Property in the County of Northumberland and Elsewhere ...: to Which is added accounts of Several Branch of Families bearing the Name of Ogle Settled in Other Counties ... (Newcastle, 1902), p. 50, found at FamilySearch.
↑ "Ogle," William Flowers, The Visitation of Yorkshire in the Years 1563 and 1564, Publications of the Harlean Society (London : Mitchell & Hughes, 1881), p. 34, found at Archive.org
↑ "Morpeth Deanery: Castle Ward, W.D.", John Hodgson (1827). A History of Northumberland in Three Parts: Part II, (vol. 1), (Newcastle: E. Walker, 1827), p. 384, found at Google Books.
↑ Douglas Richardson (2011). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd ed. (2011), p. 390, found at Google Books.
↑ "Morpeth Deanery: Castle Ward, W.D.", John Hodgson (1827). A History of Northumberland in Three Parts: Part II, (vol. 1), (Newcastle: E. Walker, 1827), p. 384, found at Google Books.
↑ Douglas Richardson (2011). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd ed. (2011), p. 390, found at Google Books.
↑ Agnes Ogle’s father was Sir Robert Ogle of Ogle Castle, who was granted a license to crenellate in 1341.
Google Books.