(1750-1824), Collection of Parker family, Saltram House, Plympton (now National Trust) of Montagu Edmund Parker (d. 1831) of Whiteway and Blagdon, St John's Church, Paignton, showing the arms of Parker, with a crescent for the
difference of a second son, impaling:
Azure, a fox statant on grass proper in chief a sun in spendour or (Ourry) In 1772 he married Charity Ourry (1752–1786), daughter of Admiral
Paul Henry Ourry (1719–1783), of
Plympton House in the parish of Plympton St Maurice, Devon, MP for
Plympton Erle 1763–1775 and Commissioner for
Plymouth Dockyard. Paul Ourry was the second son of Louis Ourry, a
Huguenot refugee from
Blois in France who had obtained British citizenship in 1713 and a commission in the British army. Charity Ourry's mother was Charity Treby, daughter of George II Treby of Plympton House. By his wife he had two sons: • Montagu Edmund Parker II (d.1831), who survived his father, having in 1806 married Harriet Newcombe, a daughter of John Newcombe of Starcross. He left progeny 2 sons and 1 daughter: •
Montagu Edmund Newcombe Parker (1807-1858), eldest son and heir and heir to his grandfather, of Whiteway, MP for
South Devon. He died without progeny and his monument survives in
Exeter Cathedral. • John Parker (d.1847), 2nd son, who in 1841 married Lady Catherine Caroline Leslie, daughter of George Leslie and Henrietta Leslie, 14th Countess of Rothes. Lady Catherine died in 1844. Left one daughter, Louisa Harriet, who died in 1852 at age 9. • Harriet Sophia Parker, who in 1842 married as her second husband
Edmund Parker, 2nd Earl of Morley (1810–1864), her second cousin, and was the mother of
Albert Parker, 3rd Earl of Morley. • Francis Parker (b. 1782), likely died before 1823. ==Death==