Lineage of the Viscounts of Kingston

George Seton, 3rd Earl of Winton (b 12.1584, d 17.12.1650)
m1. (26.04.1609) Anne Hay (dau of Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll)
2nd son Alexander Seton, 1st Viscount of Kingston (b 13.03.1620, d 21.10.1691)
  m1. Jean Fletcher (dau of Sir George Fletcher)
  (i) Jean (Ann) Seton (b 24.04.1651)
  m. James Douglas, 3rd Lord Mordington (b 1651, a 12.1677)
  (ii) Charles (b 04.04.1653, dvp unm 07.06.1682), Master of Kingston
  (iii) George Seton (b 29.07.1654, dvp unm 05.1678)
  (iv) Alexander Seton (b 04.11.1655, dvp unm 06.10.1676)
  (v) Isabel Seton (b 18.11.1656, d 16.06.1677)
  (vi) Barbara Seton (b 04.09.1659, d 05.11.1679)
  m2. (c1661) Elizabeth Douglas (b c1636, d 1668, dau of Sir Archibald Douglas of Whittinghame)
  (vii) Archibald Seton, 2nd Viscount of Kingston (b 05.10.1661, d unm 1714)
  (viii) James Seton, 3rd Viscount of Kingston (b 29.01.1667, d c1726)
  m. (before 16.04.1714) Anne Lindsay (bpt 20.05.1674, d 03.02.1743, dau of Colin, 3rd Earl of Balcarres)
  (ix) Elizabeth Seton (b 21.04.1668)
  m. (23.11.1695) William Hay of Drumelzier (b 12.1649, d 1726) - Senior bloodline of the Seton's who granddaughter married Seton of Abercorn, who line is as a result, the Head of the House of Seton.
  (x)+ Arthur Seton (b 30.12.1665, d 23.10.1691)
  (x)+ John Seton (b 11.10.1666, d 29.04.1674)
  m3. Elizabeth Hamilton (dau of John Hamilton, 1st Lord Belhaven)
  m4. (03/4.08.1686) Margaret Douglas (b 09.1651, d 10.1699/12.10.1692, dau of Archibald, Earl of Angus)

 

Early in the seventeenth century, Viscount Seton of Kingston married the
daughter of Sir Archibald Douglas, who succeeded her father as heiress of
Whittinghame, by whom he had eleven children, six sons and five daughters.
Both Archibald, the second Viscount of Kingston, and James, the third
Viscount having died without issue, the honours became extinct. The
Honourable Lady Elizabeth Seton, the youngest of the family, having
survived all the rest, became heiress of Whittinghame. She was married to
the Honourable William Hay of Drummelzier, second son of the first Earl of
Tweedale in the year 1695 and by this marriage came into the possession of
the estate of Whittinghame and Stoneypath Tower. The Hays of Drummelzier
were long proprietors of Whittinghame until the estate was sold in 1817 to
James Balfour Esq. The Parish of Whittinghame is siutated S.E. of
Haddington and E. of Morham, the mansion house still exists.

                                                                           
       A  hamlet  in  East  Lothian,  Kingston lies 2 miles (3 km) south of
       North  Berwick.  To the south is Fenton Tower, which was restored in
       2000  having  lain  derelict  for  350  years  and  to the east is a
       Ministry of Defence navigation facility (a Hyper-Fix Shore Station).