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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 19, No. 555, Supplementary Number by Various
page 6 of 43 (13%)
who died in 1674. The village of Werke, and its ruined castle,
are all that remain of the possessions of the barony; the
former consisting of a miserable cluster of thatched cottages;
the latter of mere fragments of ashlar work, near its
foundations and lines of its moat. The village stands on the
margin of the Tweed: and the castle is celebrated in the
border annals. Heton, of which we have just spoken, in Edward
the First's reign, belonged to William de Heton; and in the
next reign, to Sir Thomas Grey, captain of Norham Castle. Sir
John Grey, of Heton, in 1420, was graced with the order of St.
George, or the Garter; and from him the estate descended to
the Tankervilles.

The father of Earl Grey was Sir Charles Grey, who entered the army at an
early age, had a command in the American war, and commanded in chief the
military forces in the expeditions against the French West India Islands,
the successful result of which was the annexing of Martinique, St. Lucie,
Guadaloupe, &c. to our empire. He married, in 1762, Elizabeth, daughter of
George Grey, Esq. of Southwick, in Durham, (of a different family,) by
whom he had five sons and two daughters. He was created Lord Grey of
Howick, in 1801; and Viscount Howick, and Earl Grey, in 1806. He died in
the following year, and was succeeded by his son, Charles, second and
present earl.

Mr. Grey was born March 13, 1764, and educated at Eton, in the same class
with the late Mr. Lambton, (father of the present Lord Durham,) Mr.
Whitbread, and others, with whom he afterwards acted in political life. He
was then sent to King's College, Cambridge, where he displayed first-rate
abilities. On his leaving the University, he set out on the tour of Europe,
though only eighteen years of age. In Italy, he was introduced to the late
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