MacGregor Ancestry: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox family | {{Infobox family | ||
| name = MacGregor Family | | name = MacGregor Family | ||
| image = | | image = | ||
| founders = [[Daniel MacGregor]], [[Anna MacGregor]] | |||
| founders = [[Daniel MacGregor]] | | home_base = Hyannis Port, Massachusetts; Washington, D.C. | ||
| business = MacGregor Enterprises; Blade hotel and casino interests; Comanche Princess | |||
| series = [[The MacGregors]] | | series = [[The MacGregors]] | ||
| | | books = ''Playing the Odds''–''The Perfect Neighbor'' | ||
| | | members = [[Alan MacGregor]], [[Serena MacGregor]], [[Caine MacGregor]], their spouses, children, and grandchildren | ||
| married_in = [[Shelby Campbell]], Justin Blade, [[Diana Blade]], Layna Drake, Cat Farrell, [[Naomi Brightstone]] | |||
| next_gen = D.C. MacGregor, Duncan Blade, Ian MacGregor, Laura, Gwen, Julia, Mac, and others | |||
| antagonists = | |||
}} | }} | ||
This page covers the ancestral lines that flow into the [[MacGregor Family]] across the [[MacGregor Series]]. Several of these lineages carry forward in visible ways — in coloring, in temperament, in the complications that shape the characters' inner lives. Nora Roberts weaves this heritage deliberately: the green eyes that appear where they shouldn't, the instinct for a card game, the stubborn pride that surfaces in every generation. | |||
== Family Tree == | == Family Tree == | ||
| Line 57: | Line 58: | ||
*** m. [[Preston McQuinn]] | *** m. [[Preston McQuinn]] | ||
== | == The MacGregor Line: Scottish Highlands == | ||
The MacGregors trace their heritage to the Scottish Highlands. [[Daniel Duncan MacGregor]] makes no effort to be modest about this. The MacGregor clan, he notes at every available opportunity, is one of the few clans permitted to use the crown in their crest — evidence, he insists, of blood both noble and strong. | |||
Daniel brought this identity with him to America wholesale: the burr in his voice, the pride in the name, the castle on the Massachusetts cliffs built to his own specifications and modeled on the great gray stone houses of Scotland. He named it **Castle MacGregor**. He considers this appropriate. | |||
The Highland temperament — volcanic, loyal, stubborn, large in every emotion — runs through Daniel into his children. Caine and Serena are the most obviously his: quick to argue, impossible to move once committed, ferocious in love. Alan has more of his mother's restraint, but even he carries the MacGregor will beneath the surface. Gennie Grandeau, sketching the family from the outside during ''One Man's Art'', perceives in Alan a temper that could be "wicked if loosed." | |||
The MacGregor name is passed forward deliberately. Daniel's eldest grandson is named **Daniel Campbell MacGregor** (D.C.) — the grandfather's name before the mother's maiden name before the family name, in the Scottish tradition of carrying the line forward in the body of the next. Laura Cameron's son is named **Daniel** as well. The name is not accidental. Daniel sees to that. | |||
== The Blade-Comanche Line == | |||
[[Justin Blade]]'s ancestry is the most dramatically visible of any lineage in the series. He is Comanche — his heritage shows in his face without ambiguity: high sharp cheekbones, a long straight nose, dark gold skin, straight black hair, and the bearing of a man entirely comfortable being looked at. | |||
His eyes, however, are an unexpected cool green. | |||
The explanation comes from deep in the Blade family history. A French woman — captured or encountered by Justin's Comanche ancestor — chose to stay after the man was wounded. She "didn't run," and she gave him green-eyed sons and daughters, and those sons and daughters passed the eyes forward through the generations until they surfaced again, startling and incongruous, in Justin's face. | |||
Justin's sister [[Diana Blade MacGregor]] did not inherit the green eyes — her coloring is darker, her eyes brown — but she carries the same high cheekbones and gold-toned skin. Their father was fully Comanche; their mother was partly Grandeau (see below), which introduced the French line that Adelaide Grandeau found so insufficiently genteel. | |||
Justin's parents died when he was sixteen. He had no safety net, no trust fund, no family to absorb the blow — only his sister to protect, and a mind that could read odds and people with equal precision. He built his empire from a single hotel in Las Vegas named **The Comanche**, never letting go of the name that carried his heritage forward into the world of American commerce and spectacle. | |||
The Comanche line extends into the third generation. [[Robert MacGregor Blade ("Mac")]] has his father's dark gold skin, black hair, and Comanche bearing. [[Duncan Blade]] carries the same look. [[Gwendolyn Blade Maguire]], by contrast, takes after her mother Serena — cream skin, blond hair with hints of red, eyes that edge into lavender. The Comanche and MacGregor lines divided cleanly in Serena and Justin's children, producing two distinct family faces in the same generation. | |||
== The Grandeau Line: New Orleans and Boston == | |||
The Grandeau family provides one of the more intricate ancestral threads in the series — a French-American aristocratic line from New Orleans that unexpectedly connects two branches of the family. | |||
**Philippe Grandeau** was Gennie's grandfather. He left a detailed logbook of his life — a document rich enough that it functions almost as a family archive, preserving the Grandeau history in his own words. Gennie (Genviève Grandeau) grew up in New Orleans with French aristocratic roots on her mother's side and, by her own account, a pirate somewhere further back in the tree. | |||
The Boston branch of the Grandeaus is a different proposition. **Adelaide Grandeau** was a firm, narrow-minded woman who considered certain bloodlines a social liability to be managed rather than a heritage to be honored. She was Justin Blade's father's aunt-in-law — his mother, who had Grandeau connections, was Adelaide's half-sister. When Justin's parents died, Diana came to live under Adelaide's roof. | |||
Adelaide did not approve of the Blade blood. She did not approve of the Comanche heritage. She managed Diana the way she managed everything: with rigid propriety and the quiet communication that Diana was tolerated rather than loved. Diana learned, under that roof, to present a cool and flawless exterior to the world and to expect very little warmth from the people who were supposed to provide it. | |||
This means that **Gennie Grandeau** and **Diana Blade** share a family name — and the complicated figure of Adelaide Grandeau between them. Gennie's warmth and Diana's guardedness are in some ways mirror responses to the same ancestral line: one who received the French legacy as something rich and storied, one who received it as a standard she could never fully meet. | |||
When Gennie married Grant Campbell and entered the MacGregor orbit, Daniel recognized the name. His response was not entirely comfortable. But he recognized the woman, and drew her in. | |||
== | == The Campbell Line: Politics and Loss == | ||
The **Campbell** name arrives in the MacGregor family through [[Shelby Campbell MacGregor]], who marries [[Alan MacGregor]] in ''All the Possibilities''. It carries weight. | |||
**Senator Robert Campbell** was a distinguished United States Senator — a man of genuine principle and political standing. He was assassinated. Both of his children, [[Grant Campbell]] and [[Shelby Campbell MacGregor]], were present when it happened. | |||
The wound split them in different directions. Grant removed himself from the public world entirely — retreated to a lighthouse on the Maine coast and observed humanity through the safe distance of his comic strip, "Macintosh," rather than live inside it. Shelby went the other direction: she built a life that was intensely personal, intensely present, and very deliberately not political — until Alan MacGregor made that impossible, and she chose him anyway. | |||
The senator's looks passed to Grant rather than Shelby. Grant is dark, with deep green eyes — his father's face. Shelby has the wild red-auburn hair and gray eyes that come from somewhere else in the family line. | |||
**Deborah Campbell**, the senator's widow, survived him. She remains active in Washington social life throughout the series — warm, engaged, and present in her children's lives in the way that people who have survived great loss sometimes become more, not less, committed to the living. | |||
The Campbell blood is, in Daniel's view, the one slight imperfection in an otherwise excellent family arrangement. He says this while clearly adoring every Campbell in his orbit. He says it because he is Daniel, and it would not be like him to miss the opportunity. | |||
== | == The Whitefield Line == | ||
[[Anna Whitefield MacGregor]]'s maiden name is Whitefield. She graduated from Smith College at the age of twenty and became one of the foremost authorities in thoracic surgery — a career that, in the era she built it, required a particular kind of determination to navigate. | |||
Anna's family background is not explored in depth in the series. What comes through is temperament: the calm, the precision, the capacity to hold a complicated household together without appearing to do anything at all. These qualities, in the MacGregor children, belong to Alan almost entirely — and can be glimpsed in the steadier moments of Caine and Serena when the situation requires it. | |||
The Whitefield line's most visible contribution to the family may simply be the counterweight it provides. The MacGregor fire needs somewhere to rest. Anna is where it rests. | |||
## See Also == | |||
* [[MacGregor Family]] | * [[MacGregor Family]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Daniel Duncan MacGregor]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Justin Blade]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Genviève Grandeau Campbell]] | ||
* [[ | * [[Diana Blade MacGregor]] | ||
* [[Castle MacGregor]] | |||
[[Category:The MacGregors]] | |||
[[Category:Families]] | [[Category:Families]] | ||
Latest revision as of 22:26, 24 June 2026
| MacGregor Family | |
|---|---|
| No image available | |
| Overview | |
| Founders | Daniel MacGregor, Anna MacGregor |
| Home base | Hyannis Port, Massachusetts; Washington, D.C. |
| Family business | MacGregor Enterprises; Blade hotel and casino interests; Comanche Princess |
| Appearances | |
| Series | The MacGregors |
| Books | Playing the Odds–The Perfect Neighbor |
| Members | |
| Core members | Alan MacGregor, Serena MacGregor, Caine MacGregor, their spouses, children, and grandchildren |
| Married in | Shelby Campbell, Justin Blade, Diana Blade, Layna Drake, Cat Farrell, Naomi Brightstone |
| Notable antagonists | |
[[Category:The MacGregors characters]]
This page covers the ancestral lines that flow into the MacGregor Family across the MacGregor Series. Several of these lineages carry forward in visible ways — in coloring, in temperament, in the complications that shape the characters' inner lives. Nora Roberts weaves this heritage deliberately: the green eyes that appear where they shouldn't, the instinct for a card game, the stubborn pride that surfaces in every generation.
Family Tree
- Alan MacGregor
- m. Shelby Campbell
- Daniel Campbell
- m. Layna Drake
- Julia Campbell
- m. Cullum Murdoch
- Travis Murdoch
- Fiona Joy Murdoch
- m. Cullum Murdoch
- Daniel Campbell
- m. Shelby Campbell
- Alan MacGregor
- Caine MacGregor
- m. Diana Blade
- Laura MacGregor
- m. Royce Cameron
- Daniel Blake Cameron
- m. Royce Cameron
- Ian MacGregor
- Laura MacGregor
- m. Diana Blade
- Caine MacGregor
- Serena MacGregor
- m. Justin Blade
- Robert "Mac" MacGregor Blade
- m. Darcy Wallace
- Ethan Blade
- m. Darcy Wallace
- Duncan Blade
- m. Catherine Farrell
- Gwendolyn Blade
- m. Branson Maguire
- Anna Lauren Maguire
- m. Branson Maguire
- Amelia Blade
- Robert "Mac" MacGregor Blade
- m. Justin Blade
- Serena MacGregor
Campbell Branch
Grant Campbell
- m. Geneviève Grandeau
- Adria Campbell
- Matthew Campbell
- Cybil Campbell
The MacGregor Line: Scottish Highlands
The MacGregors trace their heritage to the Scottish Highlands. Daniel Duncan MacGregor makes no effort to be modest about this. The MacGregor clan, he notes at every available opportunity, is one of the few clans permitted to use the crown in their crest — evidence, he insists, of blood both noble and strong.
Daniel brought this identity with him to America wholesale: the burr in his voice, the pride in the name, the castle on the Massachusetts cliffs built to his own specifications and modeled on the great gray stone houses of Scotland. He named it **Castle MacGregor**. He considers this appropriate.
The Highland temperament — volcanic, loyal, stubborn, large in every emotion — runs through Daniel into his children. Caine and Serena are the most obviously his: quick to argue, impossible to move once committed, ferocious in love. Alan has more of his mother's restraint, but even he carries the MacGregor will beneath the surface. Gennie Grandeau, sketching the family from the outside during One Man's Art, perceives in Alan a temper that could be "wicked if loosed."
The MacGregor name is passed forward deliberately. Daniel's eldest grandson is named **Daniel Campbell MacGregor** (D.C.) — the grandfather's name before the mother's maiden name before the family name, in the Scottish tradition of carrying the line forward in the body of the next. Laura Cameron's son is named **Daniel** as well. The name is not accidental. Daniel sees to that.
The Blade-Comanche Line
Justin Blade's ancestry is the most dramatically visible of any lineage in the series. He is Comanche — his heritage shows in his face without ambiguity: high sharp cheekbones, a long straight nose, dark gold skin, straight black hair, and the bearing of a man entirely comfortable being looked at.
His eyes, however, are an unexpected cool green.
The explanation comes from deep in the Blade family history. A French woman — captured or encountered by Justin's Comanche ancestor — chose to stay after the man was wounded. She "didn't run," and she gave him green-eyed sons and daughters, and those sons and daughters passed the eyes forward through the generations until they surfaced again, startling and incongruous, in Justin's face.
Justin's sister Diana Blade MacGregor did not inherit the green eyes — her coloring is darker, her eyes brown — but she carries the same high cheekbones and gold-toned skin. Their father was fully Comanche; their mother was partly Grandeau (see below), which introduced the French line that Adelaide Grandeau found so insufficiently genteel.
Justin's parents died when he was sixteen. He had no safety net, no trust fund, no family to absorb the blow — only his sister to protect, and a mind that could read odds and people with equal precision. He built his empire from a single hotel in Las Vegas named **The Comanche**, never letting go of the name that carried his heritage forward into the world of American commerce and spectacle.
The Comanche line extends into the third generation. Robert MacGregor Blade ("Mac") has his father's dark gold skin, black hair, and Comanche bearing. Duncan Blade carries the same look. Gwendolyn Blade Maguire, by contrast, takes after her mother Serena — cream skin, blond hair with hints of red, eyes that edge into lavender. The Comanche and MacGregor lines divided cleanly in Serena and Justin's children, producing two distinct family faces in the same generation.
The Grandeau Line: New Orleans and Boston
The Grandeau family provides one of the more intricate ancestral threads in the series — a French-American aristocratic line from New Orleans that unexpectedly connects two branches of the family.
- Philippe Grandeau** was Gennie's grandfather. He left a detailed logbook of his life — a document rich enough that it functions almost as a family archive, preserving the Grandeau history in his own words. Gennie (Genviève Grandeau) grew up in New Orleans with French aristocratic roots on her mother's side and, by her own account, a pirate somewhere further back in the tree.
The Boston branch of the Grandeaus is a different proposition. **Adelaide Grandeau** was a firm, narrow-minded woman who considered certain bloodlines a social liability to be managed rather than a heritage to be honored. She was Justin Blade's father's aunt-in-law — his mother, who had Grandeau connections, was Adelaide's half-sister. When Justin's parents died, Diana came to live under Adelaide's roof.
Adelaide did not approve of the Blade blood. She did not approve of the Comanche heritage. She managed Diana the way she managed everything: with rigid propriety and the quiet communication that Diana was tolerated rather than loved. Diana learned, under that roof, to present a cool and flawless exterior to the world and to expect very little warmth from the people who were supposed to provide it.
This means that **Gennie Grandeau** and **Diana Blade** share a family name — and the complicated figure of Adelaide Grandeau between them. Gennie's warmth and Diana's guardedness are in some ways mirror responses to the same ancestral line: one who received the French legacy as something rich and storied, one who received it as a standard she could never fully meet.
When Gennie married Grant Campbell and entered the MacGregor orbit, Daniel recognized the name. His response was not entirely comfortable. But he recognized the woman, and drew her in.
The Campbell Line: Politics and Loss
The **Campbell** name arrives in the MacGregor family through Shelby Campbell MacGregor, who marries Alan MacGregor in All the Possibilities. It carries weight.
- Senator Robert Campbell** was a distinguished United States Senator — a man of genuine principle and political standing. He was assassinated. Both of his children, Grant Campbell and Shelby Campbell MacGregor, were present when it happened.
The wound split them in different directions. Grant removed himself from the public world entirely — retreated to a lighthouse on the Maine coast and observed humanity through the safe distance of his comic strip, "Macintosh," rather than live inside it. Shelby went the other direction: she built a life that was intensely personal, intensely present, and very deliberately not political — until Alan MacGregor made that impossible, and she chose him anyway.
The senator's looks passed to Grant rather than Shelby. Grant is dark, with deep green eyes — his father's face. Shelby has the wild red-auburn hair and gray eyes that come from somewhere else in the family line.
- Deborah Campbell**, the senator's widow, survived him. She remains active in Washington social life throughout the series — warm, engaged, and present in her children's lives in the way that people who have survived great loss sometimes become more, not less, committed to the living.
The Campbell blood is, in Daniel's view, the one slight imperfection in an otherwise excellent family arrangement. He says this while clearly adoring every Campbell in his orbit. He says it because he is Daniel, and it would not be like him to miss the opportunity.
The Whitefield Line
Anna Whitefield MacGregor's maiden name is Whitefield. She graduated from Smith College at the age of twenty and became one of the foremost authorities in thoracic surgery — a career that, in the era she built it, required a particular kind of determination to navigate.
Anna's family background is not explored in depth in the series. What comes through is temperament: the calm, the precision, the capacity to hold a complicated household together without appearing to do anything at all. These qualities, in the MacGregor children, belong to Alan almost entirely — and can be glimpsed in the steadier moments of Caine and Serena when the situation requires it.
The Whitefield line's most visible contribution to the family may simply be the counterweight it provides. The MacGregor fire needs somewhere to rest. Anna is where it rests.
- See Also ==