For those interested in BEATTY, the following extract is from History of the Siege of Londonderry by Rev John Graham. p 249. Captain William Beatty, a distinguished officer at the siege of Derry. He was in the custom and almost daily habit of going out cf the city with small parties, and seldom returned without doing some execution on the enemy, or bringing in some small prey. In the latter end of June, Captain Beatty was seized with a violent flux which rendered him useless to the garrison, so he took protection from the enemy and went to his residence at Moneymore, to try if he could recover his health. Mr. Mackenzie, the Presbyterian minister of Cookstown, who went with his congregation to defend this city on this memorable occasion. and who published a well-known narrative of the siege afterwards, says. that Captain William Beatty had been in all the encounters and skirmishes with the enemy before he left the city, and ever behaved himself with great integrity and valour. He was the grandfather of the late Archdeacon Beatty, of Maydown, in the county of Longford; grandfather of Ross Beatty, ! of Clones Esq, and father of Mr. James Beatty, a respectable merchant of Newry sixty years ago, who was never known to cross the Boyne Water, without alighting from his horse and returning solemn thanks to God for the great deliverance of this country, by the signal victorv gained by King William, on the banks of that river. Brian