Arms of the Stewarts, Dukes of Albany
Website begun April 2007
Last updated 26 May 2012
Welcome to the website of amateur genealogical researcher Jared L. Olar!
Here you may read what I have been able to discover about the families of my OLAR and SHAW ancestors and the families of my wife's SPENCER and RIGGS ancestors.
** I am always happy to receive additions and corrections to our family records. **
"A people who take no pride in the noble achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered by remote descendants." -- Lord Macaulay, History of England.
Website Index
Olar Genealogy
Mayflower Descents
Soldiers of the American Revolution
Notable Genealogical Relationships
Ancestral Surname Index (1600 to present, alphabetised)
Ancestral Surname Index (1600 to present, by nationality)
The first order of business here is to say "thank you." Ever since I first took a serious interest in my genealogy at the age of 12, many people have provided invaluable assistance in my research, and it would be a great injustice if I did not express my gratitude to them. First and foremost, my thanks must go to my late mother, Dolores Frances Shaw Olar (1936-2007), and my late grandmother, Frances M. Miller Shaw Keithahn (1917-1993), from whom I inherited not only a large amount of genealogical information -- the fruit of my grandmothers' many years of research -- but more importantly, it is thanks to them that I became interested in our family's history. Next, I must thank my late cousin, Clyde R. A'Neals (1911-1996), who shared with me the results of his decades of genealogical research, and his daughter, Geri Carver, who continued to assist me after her father's death.
All descendants and researchers of the Stewarts of Londonderry, New Hampshire, owe a great debt of gratitude to the late Philip Battell Stewart II (1922-1995), to whom the credit goes for discovering the link to the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran, Perthshire, Scotland. The late Scots genealogical researcher Kenneth Robertson also offered crucial assistance to Philip B. Stewart, as did retired Scots genealogical researcher James Dinwoodie. It is thanks to Mr. Dinwoodie that I was informed of the evidence supporting the Gartnafuaran connection to the Stewarts of Londonderry.
My fellow participants in The Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Group have provided and continue to provide immense assistance, especially Rev. Ryk Brown, Chuck Speed, Charles Stuart, Belinda Dettmann, and Kelsey Jackson-Williams. The Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Forum has particularly benefited from the research of Gordon MacGregor.
In some way, each of these cousins and helpers, and so many others I have not named, have made their own individual contributions to the research findings at this website. Thank you all!

The second order of business here is to answer this question: Why is the website named "Fess Chequy"? In the terminology of European heraldry, that is the name of the distinctive heraldic symbol of the great Scottish family of Stewart. The "fess chequy" is a checkered blue and white band that stretches horizontally across the shield. On the Shaw side, I am descended from the Stewarts of Londonderry, New Hampshire, who were a branch of the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran, Perthshire, Scotland. I have spent many years researching my Stewart ancestry, and in tracing my ancestors I have made the greatest headway with the Stewarts. Naturally, then, at this website I place a special emphasis on the ancestry of the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran -- so "Fess Chequy" seemed to be a fitting name.
This website has only been online since April 2007, and is a work in progress, but for now my descent from the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran may be found here:
The history of the Stewarts of Gartnafuaran is known for more than 300 years, from their origins just before 1500 until about 1815. They were one of the four principal families of the Stewarts of Balquhidder, a group of families who descended from the Stewarts of Baldorran, who were in turn a branch of the Royal House of Stewart in Scotland. As I mentioned above, I am a member of The Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Group, co-hosted on the internet by my distant cousins and fellow Stewart descendants Chuck Speed and Rev. Ryk Brown.
Here are links to the forum:
The Stewarts of Balquhidder Research Group (Chuck Speed's page)
The Principal Families of the Stewarts of Balquhidder (Ryk Brown's page)
For none remembers now the good, the ill
They did, the deeds they thought should last for aye;
But in the little room my voice can fill
They shall not be forgotten till I die.
So, in a lonely churchyard by the shore,
The sea winds sift the sand across the mounds
And those forgotten graves are found no more,
And no man knows the churchyard's holy bounds;
Till one comes by and stoops with reverent hands
To clear the graves of their encumbering sands."
-- Author Unknown, quoted in Severance's History of the Stewarts of Londonderry