17th century , Surgeon of the University of Edinburgh whose descendants later succeeded to the Auchinbowie property The progenitor of the Munros of Auchinbowie is generally regarded as
Alexander Munro of Bearcrofts who served as a major in an infantry regiment and saw action at the
Battle of Worcester in 1651. He later took up a career of politics. His ancestry can be traced to
George Munro, 4th of Milntown who descends from
Hugh Munro, 9th Baron of Foulis (d. 1425), an early chief of the Clan Munro of Ross-shire, Scotland. Alexander Munro of Bearcrofts had seven children: •
George Munro, 1st of Auchinbowie (1666–1721), famed for his victory over the Jacobites at the
Battle of Dunkeld in 1689. He came into ownership of Auchinbowie, a property about four miles south of
Stirling through his wife Margaret Bruce of Auchinbowie. Later as a Major in Sir Charles Graham's Regiment of Foot he fought at the
Siege of Namur (1695). • Archibald Munro (born 1666 - died 1697) •
John Monro, a surgeon who was the driving force behind the foundation of the
University of Edinburgh Medical School and whose descendants would later succeed to the estates of Auchinbowie. • Margaret Munro. • Lillias Munro. • Jean Munro; married William, second son of Sir William Sempil of Cathcart. • Mary Munro.
18th century George Munro, 1st of Auchinbowie had three children: ,
Scotland • Alexander Munro, 2nd of Auchinbowie who married Anne, daughter of
Sir Robert Stewart, Lord Tillicoultry in 1719. •
George Monro (1700–1757) who was a British Army officer famed for his resolute but ultimately unsuccessful defense of
Fort William Henry in 1757 during the
Seven Years' War /
French and Indian War which was made famous by the novel and later the film
The Last of the Mohicans. However, when
John Alexander Inglis wrote his history of the Monro of Auchinbowie family in 1911, he had not at that time identified the younger George Monro as a member of the family. • Margaret Munro - born 1707. Alexander Munro, 2nd of Auchinbowie (d. 1742) had nine children: • George Munro, 3rd of Auchinbowie (1721–1793) who was an army surgeon who served in the
42nd Highlanders otherwise known as the
Black Watch under the chief of the Clan Munro; Colonel
Sir Robert Munro, 6th Baronet. In 1750 George was Surgeon in
William Maule, 1st Earl Panmure's
25th Regiment of Foot. He saw active service in Germany and afterwards in the war against the French in America. In 1781 he was appointed Physician General to the garrison in
Menorca and went through six months siege by the French and Spanish. According to R.W Munro, writing in 1965, George Munro is found in Colonel Johnston's printed roll of army medical staff and as he joined the 25th Foot in 1744 this suggests that he may have been at the
Battle of Culloden in 1746. • Alexander Munro, a writer in
Edinburgh. (1724–1750). • John Munro. • Cecil Munro. (1719–1786) • Five other children - all died young. George Munro, 3rd of Auchinbowie had two sons: • Major George Munro who married Elizabeth Aylmer. They had two sons and one daughter. •
Lieutenant-General Hector William Munro, 1st of Edmondsham (d. 1821) was
Governor of Trinidad and who married Philadelphia Bower of
Edmondsham. They had three sons and four daughters. ==Alexander Monro
primus==