St Loe is an English surname. A French family who took their name from Saint-Lô in Normandy came to England in the Norman Conquest, and later held the manor of Newton in Somerset, now called Newton St Loe, where they built a fortified house called Newton St Loe Castle.[1]
Notable people named St Loe or St Lo include:
Edward St. Loe (died 1578), English landowner, MP for Bath and for Downton
Elizabeth St Loe (née Hardwick; c.1521–1608), known as Bess of Hardwick, English noblewoman and businesswoman, married for a time to Sir William St Loe
George St Lo (sometimes written as St Loe; 1655–1718), British naval officer and politician
Sir William St Loe (1518–1565), English soldier, politician and courtier
^Collinson, John (1791). The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset. Vol. 3. Bath. pp. 341–345 – via Internet Archive.
called Newton StLoe, where they built a fortified house called Newton StLoe Castle. Notable people named StLoe or St Lo include: Edward St. Loe (died 1578)...
was the courtier Sir William Cavendish. Her third husband was Sir William StLoe. Her last husband was George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, sometime keeper...
Newton StLoe is a small Somerset village and civil parish located close to the villages of Corston and Stanton Prior, between Bath and Bristol in England...
Sir William StLoe (1518–1565) was a 16th-century English soldier, politician and courtier. He was the third husband of Bess of Hardwick, his second wife...
Newton StLoe Castle was a fortified manor house in the village of Newton StLoe, Somerset, England. Parts of it survive: a 14th-century keep and 15th-century...
left his post. Townsend was succeeded by a young journalist named John StLoe Strachey, who would remain associated with the paper for the next 40 years...
Judith Margaret Loe (born 6 March 1947) is an English television actress. She was married to actor Richard Beckinsale until his death in 1979 and was...
is an 18th-century Grade I listed country house in the parish of Newton StLoe, Somerset, England, situated 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Bath. Newton Park...
George St Lo (sometimes written as StLoe; 19 April 1655 – 20 September 1718) was a British naval officer and politician. An officer of the Royal Navy...
Wake 1269: Thomas de St Vigor 1273: John de St Valery 1274: Richard de Coleshill 1278: John de Cormailles 1283: Sir John de StLoe (de Sancto Laudo) 1285:...
a December 16, 1912, letter from Theodore Roosevelt to journalist John St. Loe Strachey, Roosevelt wrote that Schrank was not a madman, but had a "disordered...
Newton StLoe SSSI (grid reference ST715657) is a geological Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) close to the River Avon, near the village of Newton...
Beaumont and Fletcher / edited, with an introduction and notes by J. St. Loe Strachey. (Mermaid series). London: T. Fisher Unwin. T0336880 "A Genealogical...
Mendip Hills to the south and the Hinton Blewett, Marksbury and Newton StLoe plateau areas to the east. The River Chew was dammed in the 1950s to create...
has been the country seat of several prominent families including the StLoes, one of whom married Bess of Hardwick. They lived at Sutton Court and expanded...
formation of the Great Western Railway, of the site of a Roman villa at Newton St. Loe, near Bath. The account of the excavations was followed by a poem of 120...
Retrieved 20 December 2017. "Benefice of Saltford, Corston and Newton St. Loe" (PDF). All Saints Corston. Retrieved 23 December 2017. "All Saints Church...
and has 15,000 students. Bath Spa University, which is based at Newton StLoe, achieved university status in 2005, and has origins including the Bath...
The Newton Park campus, to the west of Bath near the village of Newton StLoe, is the largest of the university's three main campuses. It is here that...
1945), British Conservative politician; son of Major Thomas Strachey John St. Loe Strachey (1860–1927), journalist and newspaper proprietor; second son of...