Robert II le Long (1350–1385) married N. de Berkeley of Beverston Castle, Gloucestershire.
Robert Longe (died 1447), a lawyer who bought the estates of Draycot Cerne and South Wraxall 5.
In 2011, the will of Thomas Longe of Ashwellthorpe was discovered, giving historians the first positive identification of a common soldier fighting for the House of York during the Battle of Bosworth.
[6] The Long, later Tylney-Long Baronetcy, of Westminster in the County of London, was a title in the Baronetage of England.
She married William Pole-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington, who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long.
She married William Pole-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington, who assumed the additional surnames of Tylney and Long.
The 4th Earl of Mornington's wife was known in fashionable London society as "The Wiltshire Heiress",[8] as she was believed to be the richest commoner in England.
She also had financial investments in hand worth £300,000 (£28,000,000 in 2016) and had been sought in marriage by the Duke of Clarence, later King William IV.
In 1820 King George IV appointed Charles Longe Knight of the Order of the Bath[9] and on his retirement from political life in 1826 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Farnborough, of Bromley-Hill-Place, in the county of Kent.
[11] Baron Gisborough, of Cleveland in the County of York,[12] is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, created in 1917 for the Conservative politician Richard Chaloner (1856–1938).
Viscount Long, of Wraxall in the County of Wiltshire, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.
His grandson, the second Viscount (son of Brigadier General Walter Long) was killed in action in the Second World War.
He served as a government whip from 1979 to 1997 in the Conservative administrations of Margaret Thatcher and John Major.