DASENT, SIR JOHN ROCHE, eldest son of Sir George Webbe Dasent (qv); b. 24 Jan 1847; adm. 14 Jun 1856; QS 1861; twice stoned by the “Skis” and was wounded by the frying-pan at the “booking” of the Cook on Shrove Tuesday 28 Feb 1865 (see Lusus Alt. West., 2nd series, 304-8); elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1865, matr. 7 Jun 1865; BA 1869; MA 1872; adm. Middle Temple 10 Nov 1882, called to bar 17 Jun 1885; secretary to his uncle John Delane, editor of the Times; entered Education Department as Junior Examiner Jul 1876; private secretary to Lords Spencer, Carlingford, Kimberley and Rosebery as Presidents of the Council, and to Lord Spencer as Lord Lieut. Ireland; CB 2 Jul 1895; Assistant Secretary, Board of Education 1900; knighted 26 Jun 1908; retired 1908; edited The Acts of the Privy Council of England 1542-1604, 32 vols, 1890-1907; m. 27 Jul 1878 Ellen, younger dau. of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry John Codrington KCB, Royal Navy; d. 21 Nov 1914.
DASENT, JOHN, eldest son of James Dasent, Assistant Judge of Nevis, W. I., and Frances Hickman; b. 19 Feb 1734/5; adm. Jan 1749/50 (Atwood's); left 1751; Attorney-General and subsequently Assistant Judge, Nevis; Chief Justice of Nevis from 1768; m. Eleanor, dau. of James Roche, Martinique; buried Nevis 22 Apr 1787.
DASHWOOD, ALEXANDER WILTON, brother of Thomas John Dashwood (qv); b. 25 Sep 1796; adm. 1 Feb 1810; left 1813; Merton Coll. Oxford, matr. 23 Jun 1815; Cornet, 19th Light Dragoons 23 Apr 1818; Lieut., 1 Nov 1821; 71st Foot, 4 Apr 1822; Capt., 23 Oct 1823; Maj., half-pay, unattached, 19 Sep 1826; Brevet Lieut. -Col., 23 Nov 1841; m. 15 May 1827 Marianne, dau. of Peter Still, Harley Street, London; d. 15 Mar 1877.
DASHWOOD, CHAMBERLAYNE, brother of Robert Dashwood (qv); b.; in school lists 1733-5 (Morel); Cornet 15 Jul 1731, 2nd Dragoon Guards 5 Apr 1732; Lieut., 25 Apr 1741; d. unm. 8 Sep 1743.
DASHWOOD, GEORGE, son of Lieut. -Col. George Dashwood, St. Ann’s, Westminster, and Algerina, dau. of Sir Algernon Peyton, Bart.; b. 12 Mar 1703/4; adm. Oct 1715; in under school list 1717; University Coll. Oxford, matr. 12 Jul 1720; of Peyton Hall, Suffolk; m. 9 Jun 1739 his cousin Margaret, sister of Sir Thomas Peyton, Bart. (qv); d. 20 Mar 1762.
DASHWOOD, HENRY, brother of George Dashwood (qv); bapt. 9 Apr 1706; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1716; left 1716.
DASHWOOD, ROBERT, eldest son of Richard Dashwood, Ledwell Hall, Oxfordshire, and Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Lewis, Stanford, Notts.; b.; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1727 (Morel); in school list 1729; payments to Mrs Morel for him and his brother Chamberlayne appear in The Dashwoods of Oxfordshire, 19-21; adm. Inner Temple 24 Jun 1729; apprenticed to John Way, Lyon’s Inn, attorney, 23 Jun 1730; Comptroller of Customs, Dublin, 20 Dec 1733 [check]; of Sandford, Oxfordshire; m. his cousin Anne, dau. of Francis Lewis, Stanford, Notts.; d. 15 Oct 1757.
DASHWOOD, ROBERT; b.; adm. (aged 11) Oct 1727; left 1733.
DASHWOOD, THOMAS JOHN, eldest surviving son of Thomas Dashwood, Calcutta, Senior Merchant, EICS Bengal, and Charlotte Louisa, dau. of James Auriol, Lisbon, Portugal (IGI), and sister of John Lewis Auriol, EICS Bengal; b. 27 Nov 1792; adm.; left 1808; Writer, EICS Bengal 8 May 1808; at Haileybury Coll. 1808-9; arrived in India 6 Sep 1810; Assistant to Register of Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut 1811, to Magistrate of Twenty-Four Parganas 1812; Register, Twenty-Four Parganas 1812; on furlough in England 1818-23; Judge of Dewanny Adawlut, Tirhoot 1823; officiating Judge, Patna Court of Circuit 1828; Civil and Sessional Judge, Tirhoot 1832; m. 13 Jun 1822 Susan, dau. of Thomas Wodehouse (qv); d. on board a steam boat off Mirzapur, India 17 Jun 1836.
D'Assigny, Marius; Usher in 1730. This entry by Russell Barker and Stenning rests on the fact that “Marius D’Assigny” is given as the author of the “Verses spoken by the King’s Scholars at Westminster, at their Annual Feast, on Queen Elizabeth’s Birth-day, 1729-30”, printed in R.Dodsley, ed., A Collection of Poems, 1758, vol.5, p.119-25, where Dodsley adds a footnote “One of the Ushers of Westminster School”. No person of this name is recorded in other sources at this time, and the probability is that “Marius D’Assigny” is a pseudonym, perhaps for Robert Freind (KS 1680, qv), to whom the poem is alternatively attributed (the poem cannot have been written by Rev.Marius D’Assigny (1643-1717), for it contains contemporary references showing that it must have been written in 1729/30)