A buck’s head couped Proper attired Or between the attires a sun of the last and charged on the neck with two bezants and a plate.
Shield
Per fess Argent and Ermine three piles one issuing from the chief between the others reversed Sable.
Motto
Esse Quam Videri[1]
Sir Edward Hulse, 1st Baronet
The Hulse Baronetcy, of Lincoln's Inn Fields in the County of Middlesex, is a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain. It was created on 7 February 1739 for Edward Hulse,[2] Physician in Ordinary to Queen Anne, George I and George II. The third baronet was High Sheriff of Hampshire in 1802. The sixth Baronet represented Salisbury in the House of Commons. The tenth Baronet was High Sheriff of Hampshire in 1978 and Deputy Lieutenant of the county in 1989. The Hulse family has common origin with the Holles Earls of Clare.
The family seat is Breamore House, Breamore, Hampshire.
^Burke's Peerage. 1949.
^"No. 7774". The London Gazette. 27 January 1738. p. 1.
Hulse, 1st Baronet (c. 1682–1759) Sir Edward Hulse, 2nd Baronet (1714–1800) Sir Edward Hulse, 3rd Baronet (1744–1816) Sir Charles Hulse, 4th Baronet (1771–1854)...
Edward Hulse may refer to: Sir Edward Hulse, 1st Baronet (c. 1682–1759) of the Hulsebaronets Sir Edward Hulse, 2nd Baronet (1714–1800) of the Hulse baronets...
Hulse, Baronet, M.D., physician to Queen Anne and Kings George I and George II, the house is still inhabited by the Hulse family (see Hulsebaronets)...
baronet Edward Jeremy Westrow Hulse (born 1932), baronet Edward Michael Westrow Hulse (born 1959), heir apparent to the Hulse baronetcy Erroll Hulse (1931–2017)...
Rose Hulse (née Adkins) is an American-British entrepreneur who was voted as one of the fifty most influential people working in the UK’s OTT industry...
Charles Hulse, 4th Baronet (12 October 1771 – 25 October 1854) was a British Member of Parliament. He was the eldest surviving son of Sir Edward Hulse, 3rd...
today the Wynn baronets are represented by the Williams-Wynn baronets. Sir John Wynn, 1st Baronet (c. 1553–1627) Sir Richard Wynn, 2nd Baronet (c. 1588–1649)...
the son of Sir Edward Hulse, 3rd Baronet and Mary Lethieullier: his parents lived at Breamore House in Hampshire. Hulse was commissioned as an ensign in...
George IV. Born the second son of Sir Edward Hulse, 2nd Baronet and Hannah Hulse (née Vanderplank), Samuel Hulse was educated at Eton College and commissioned...
future baronets, and empowering them to offer a further inducement to applicants; and on the same day he granted to all Nova Scotia baronets the right...
Francis Henry Drake, 5th Baronet 1771–1794 Sir Henry Strachey, 1st Baronet 1794–1810 Sir William Kenrick 1810–1812 Samuel Hulse 1812–1827 Sir Frederick...
leaving school Whitworth became an indentured apprentice to his uncle, Joseph Hulse, a cotton spinner at Amber Mill, Oakerthorpe in Derbyshire. The plan was...
General Sir Hew Whitefoord Dalrymple, 1st Baronet (3 December 1750 – 9 April 1830) was a Scottish general in the British Army and Governor of Gibraltar...
Hartwell Catherwood 19th-century American writer Mary A. Holmes Georgie A. Hulse McLeod 19th-century American author, hymnwriter Mary Markwell Kate Simpson...
"The baronetage of England, or, the history of the English baronets, and such baronets of Scotland, as are of English families". White's Directory of...
death in 1812, he married as his second wife Mary Hulse, daughter of Sir Edward Hulse, 3rd BaronetHulse, on 22 March 1816. The couple had no children. "PORTMAN...
the Land Purchase Act of 1853. He was an uncle of Sir Henry Johnson, 1st Baronet and of John Allen Johnson-Walsh. "Ballykilcavan". Irish Historic Homes...
of the Christian religion. Published in pursuance of the will of ... J. Hulse ... as having gained the annual prize instituted by him in the University...
daughters, as well as a stepdaughter born to Ruth and her first husband, Dickie Hulse, an RAF fighter pilot killed in action during the Second World War. In 1953...