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ANCESTRY OF DOROTHY OAKLEY (est 1610 - ?)
Wife of
Richard II Leigh and daughter of
Edward I Oakley & Ursula Severne
The OAKLEY
Family
DOROTHY OAKLEY, who married RICHARD II Leigh of
Carmarthen, was the youngest daughter of EDWARD I OAKLEY, a wealthy Warwickshire
gentleman. The OAKLEY family lived in the village of Great Wolford in the West
Midlands of England, but when DOROTHY’S eldest brother married in 1612 he took
over the family estate, and her parents and most of the other members of the
family moved 100 miles west and came to live in Carmarthenshire.
The name Oakley was given as a
forename to DOROTHY’S son OAKLEY LEIGH, and it continued to be adopted by his
descendants for several generations. As a surname it derived from a place name
that meant a clearing in an oak wood, and so has a similar origin to the name
Leigh. It became a common surname in the West Midlands. As there were no
dictionaries in DOROTHY’S time the spelling of English words varied, and the
family surname did not become established as Oakley until the later 17th
century, but to avoid confusion earlier spellings such as Ockley and
Okeley have not been given here.
The pedigree of our OAKLEY family was not recorded by
the heralds, but it can be traced back from documentary evidence for a further
three generations before DOROTHY, as follows:

The gentry
families into which the OAKLEYS married were influential locally, but they also
had connections with persons of national importance, such as Robert Catesby of
the Gunpowder Plot, and William Shakespeare. To accommodate the amount of
information found, the INGRAM family is described separately, as is the SHELDON
family of DOROTHY’S maternal grandmother, who is not included in the above
chart. The WHITE family of DOROTHY’S paternal grandmother and the SEVERNE family
of her mother, about whom less is known, are described here together with the
OAKLEYS. We begin with DOROTHY’S great grandfather JOHN I OAKLEY.
JOHN I OAKLEY and his FAMILY
JOHN
OAKLEY lived in the village of Great Wolford in the parish of that name, which
is in the south of Warwickshire close to the borders with Oxfordshire and
Gloucestershire, and within a short distance of Worcestershire. This area is in
the beautiful region of England that is known as the Cotswolds. He married JOAN
INGRAM, the daughter of the lord of the manor of Wolford, and the first
information we have of them comes from the will of JOAN’S widowed mother AGNES
in 1543, who made bequests to her daughter and to JOHN OAKLEY (see The INGRAM
Family).
JOHN
OAKLEY made his will in Wolford only two years later on 18 November 1545, and he
bequeathed 12 pence for the altar and 2 shillings for the bells, and 40
shillings to his brother THOMAS I OAKLEY whom he made overseer of the will. To
his daughter Anne he bequeathed the generous sum of £20, and £10 each to his
daughters Joyce, Mary and Joan, “provided always that my said daughters do
marry and bestow themselves after the mind and will of my wife and my brother
Thomas”, as otherwise they would have to depend on their good will. To his
younger son, THOMAS II OAKLEY, he bequeathed his house in Stow-on-the-Wold,
which is a market town in Gloucestershire about 6 miles to the south. His
brothers William and Thomas were made trustees on behalf of his son, who
presumably was still under age. His wife JOAN and elder son John II were to be
the executors, and she was to take the profits of his land until his debts and
legacies had been paid. The will was proved in Worcester in the same year, and
is now located at Worcester Record Office with the number 387.
The name
of JOHN I’S brother William was preceded by a symbol which indicates that he was
a clergyman in the Church of England. He would have been trained in the Catholic
Church, as Henry VIII’s separation from Rome had taken place not many years
before. This together with other information in the will, such as the size of
his bequests to his daughters (which were more than a labourer could earn in a
year), implies that JOHN was a prominent member of the village, though he was
more likely to have been a wealthy yeoman farmer than a member of the gentry.
Nothing further is known of the elder
son John II, and he does not appear to have left descendants of similar status,
yet there is no evidence that the younger son THOMAS II inherited property in
Wolford. No Oakleys appear in Wolford deeds before JOHN’S time, and he may have
moved there on his marriage, and lived on a farm which was given or leased to
him by his father-in-law, and which may have reverted to the INGRAM family after
John II’s death. A search for JOHN I’S immediate ancestors has also been
unproductive. There were no wills of an OAKLEY from Stow, where JOHN owned a
house, and no OAKLEYS in the Stow parish records, which begin in 1558. There
were also no OAKLEYS there in a 1608 muster roll (Smith, Men and Armour),
and no OAKLEYS of the required status were found anywhere in Gloucestershire.
Also, no OAKLEYS who were clearly related to JOHN, apart from those mentioned
later, were found in any of the neighbouring counties. There is no record that
his brother William OAKLEY was educated at Oxford University, but a search for
the parish which he served might give pointers to his origins.
JOHN’S
widow JOAN outlived her husband by over 20 years, and when she made her will on
26 April 1566 she was living in Chastleton to the south of Wolford, just over
the county boundary in Oxfordshire. She bequeathed money to buy altar cloths for
the church, and left ten shillings for the poor people of Chastleton, Wolford
and Chipping Norton. She bequeathed personal items such as a pair of sheets and
a blanket to each of her daughters Joan Collins, Joyce Gardener and Anne Grene,
and a sheep to each of their children and to the children of her daughter
Elizabeth Winsmore and of her ‘brother’ (actually brother-in-law) Thomas OAKLEY,
and to two godsons and ‘to everyone of my servants which shall be with me at
my death’. She gave a cow to her grandson EDWARD (THOMAS II OAKLEY’S son who
became DOROTHY’S father), and all the rest of her goods she left to her son
THOMAS II OAKLEY of Broadway, who was made her executor. Her brother John V
INGRAM and her brother-in-law Thomas I OAKLEY were to see that her will was
performed, and it was proved four years later in Oxford on 1 April 1570 (Oxford
Record Office, 185.21).
JOAN may
have gone to live in Chastleton to be with one of her daughters, as there were
farmers named Grene and Gardener in the parish later in the century. Her
daughter Elizabeth had not received a bequest in her husband’s will, presumably
because she had received her inheritance when she married. As Elizabeth received
no bequest in JOAN’S will, she had probably died by that time, and the same
applies to the other daughter Mary and to the elder son John II, who were not
mentioned. The parish records of Chipping Norton, the Oxfordshire market town
only 4 miles from Chastleton, show the christening of a John Oakley in 1564 who
may be JOAN’S great nephew, and further Oakley christenings and burials were
recorded there later. Her son THOMAS II OAKLEY was living in Broadway, a small
town in Worcestershire about 20 miles north west of Chastleton and a similar
distance from Wolford, and this continued to be an important place for the
OAKLEYS.
THOMAS II OAKLEY and his
Family
The
Broadway parish records (now found at Worcester Record Office) show that THOMAS
had married Mrs ELIZABETH Sambache on 6 February 1559/60. She was the daughter
of THOMAS WHITE, and was a widow with three young children, whose first husband
William I Sambache had died in 1557. THOMAS OAKLEY would have known the family
well, because his uncle John V INGRAM had married William’s sister Alice
Sambache in 1545. THOMAS and ELIZABETH had only one child, EDWARD OAKLEY, and
his christening was recorded in Broadway on 24 February 1560/1. He was brought
up with his three stepbrothers, to whom he remained very close. The
inter-relationships between the families are such that for clarity they are set
out in a tree as follows.
The OAKLEY, Sambache and
WHITE Family Tree

The Sambache family may have been an
offshoot of the family of that name from Sandbach in Cheshire, as they bore the
same coat of arms, ‘Azure, a fesse Gules between three garbs Or’, i.e. on
a blue shield a red band through the centre third between three gold sheaves of
wheat. The arms survive in a somewhat damaged form in the west window of
Broadway church. The family had lived in the town since at least 1458, and they
were always referred to in the parish records as ‘gents’. However, they
were not among the major landowners, and their pedigree does not appear in any
of the Herald’s Visitations.
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The Sambache arms in Broadway church |
ELIZABETH’S father-in-law Richard Sambache had made his
will in 1556 (Worcester Record Office, p.28, folio 38), bequeathing his house
and lands and his goods to his wife Catherine, and after her death to his eldest
son William I, whose three children were to have £1 each. He left 80 sheep and 2
cows to his youngest son John II Sambache of Broadway, and he bequeathed his
lease at Little Wolford in the parish of Great Wolford (which he had from
Richard I INGRAM, THOMAS II OAKLEY’S uncle) to his middle son John I Sambache,
and £2 to each of John’s children. Thus he had two sons named John, but at that
time, when so many children died young, this was not uncommon as a means of
continuing a treasured family name. He also bequeathed £2 to each of the
children of John V INGRAM (Richard INGRAM’S brother), who had married his
daughter Alice Sambache. The inventory of his goods (Worcester R.O., p.140,
no.100a) was valued at £93, and it comprised the contents of six rooms plus the
kitchen, wool house, and stable, with farm animals and corn, and it included a
coat of mail, a sallet (a light headpiece of armour), and an old harness
(armour).
ELIZABETH’S mother MARGARET WHITE was
buried in Broadway in 1554, and a year later her father THOMAS WHITE married a
Joan Oakley, whom I cannot identify. We know of two Joan Oakleys, but neither
appears to have been this new wife. One was THOMAS II OAKLEY’S widowed mother,
but she still had the OAKLEY surname when she made her will. The other was
THOMAS’S sister Joan, but by 1566 her surname was Collins (like the film star),
and she had three children. THOMAS WHITE died a year after his second marriage,
and his widow married again. He had made his will just before he died, leaving
to each of the three children of his daughter ELIZABETH SAMBACHE ‘one feather
bed, the which feather beds are in the parlour that hath the chimney’. Her
husband William I was bequeathed ‘five butts [casks] and three tops,
all of oak’, and their eldest son William II five silver spoons. His wife
Joan was made the executrix, and the will was proved in Worcester (1556/23) in
the following January.
A lengthy inventory of THOMAS WHITE’S
goods was prepared by Ralph SHELDON, gent (who was a relative of THOMAS
II OAKLEY’S future daughter-in-law), and they were valued at over £46. They
included furniture, kitchenware, 6 silver spoons, linen, iron tools, barrels, 6
horses, and a sword, a dagger, a halberd (a spear and battle-axe on a 6 foot
long handle), another battle-axe, and bows and arrows. The possession of silver
spoons, feather beds, weapons, and a house with a chimney at that date, reveal
him as a man of some substance. He appears to have owned an inn called the
White Hart on the main road in Broadway, which has now become the
world-famous Lygon Arms. This hypothesis on White ownership is presented
in The Story of the Lygon Arms by Alison R. Ridley and Curtis F.
Garfield. The main evidence comes from a list in the Broadway parish records of
the parishioners who were responsible for maintaining specific parts of the wall
of the churchyard, and in 1532 THOMAS WHITE was number 25 in the list. The
corresponding names in 1633 and in 1710 were written alongside, and in each case
the person named can be identified as the landlord of the same inn. At other
places in the list the names can also be associated with successive occupants of
a property in the town, including members of the Sambache and SHELDON families,
so its use here in locating THOMAS WHITE at the White Hart appears to be
justified.
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The Lygon Arms in Broadway, probable birthplace of EDWARD OAKLEY |
The authors of the book also discovered
an earlier Thomas White in Broadway who could have been ELIZABETH’S grandfather
or great grandfather (pp.5-8). Early Chancery Proceedings in the years 1476-1485
show that he had brought an action in London for debt against ‘a man of power
and might’ for twelve sacks of Cotswold wool which were ordered and kept for
six years, and the comment is made that this Thomas White must have been making
a substantial income to afford to wait six years to be paid a debt of about £70
(equivalent to about £35,000 today, or about $60,000). His name is also cited in
The Stonor Letters and Papers in 1478, when Thomas Betson, a Merchant
Stapler, wrote to Lady Elizabeth Stonor to say that he must pay ‘White of
Broadway’ £4; and in The Cely Papers an agent writing in 1484 to his
master Richard Cely, Merchant of the Staple in Calais, reported that he had
dined with Thomas White at his master’s request to obtain information about a
certain matter. The Merchant Staplers had been granted a monopoly on the export
of wool, which was very profitable to the country. Cotswold wool was of the best
quality, and Broadway was near the centres of wool trading, so the three
references appear to fit together. It is suggested in the book (p.11) that as he
got older this Thomas White may have seen the need for a larger place for
merchants such as Thomas Betson to stay, and that his farmhouse had become an
inn in the late 1400s, during the more settled period after the Wars of the
Roses had come to an end, when there was a move to provide accommodation for
travellers.
It would be reasonable to conclude, therefore, that
ownership of the inn passed in 1556 from THOMAS WHITE to his daughter ELIZABETH
and then in 1560 to her second husband THOMAS II OAKLEY. It is known that
ELIZABETH’S son by her first marriage, i.e. William II Sambache, became the
owner of the inn later, perhaps when he came of age in 1568 or when he married
in 1578, and that he sold it in 1620. William’s wife was Jane SEVERNE, and his
stepbrother EDWARD I OAKLEY married her sister URSULA SEVERNE in 1583. EDWARD
was then living in Chastleton, where his grandmother JOAN OAKLEY had made her
will in 1566, and his father THOMAS II OAKLEY made his will there in 1586,
describing himself as a yeoman. THOMAS asked to be buried in Chastleton
church, to which he made a bequest, and he left 2 shillings to every poor
householder in the parish. The rest of his goods he bequeathed to his son
EDWARD, whom he made his executor. The rector of the parish and THOMAS’S cousin
John VI INGRAM were to be overseers of the will, and they were each to have 20
shillings to buy a mourning ring, as was then the custom. There was no mention
of ELIZABETH, who must have died earlier.
Although THOMAS was then ‘sick in
body’ he lived many more years, and a possible reason for him to make a will
at that time was that his son had married and presented him with a grandson. In
1596, THOMAS was included in a deed as one of the six people who farmed the 675
acres in Chastleton that belonged to the lord of the manor Robert Catesby. The
house in the picture below dates from that period, and may have been where
THOMAS lived.
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House in Chastleton |
On 28 March 1597 his son EDWARD leased
from Catesby a house and land ‘now in the tenure and occupation of THOMAS
OAKLEY father of the said EDWARD’, and when on 30 September 1599 EDWARD
leased further property from Catesby, THOMAS signed the deed with a cross
(Oxford R.O., E/24/1/4D/1 and E/24/1/5D/1). EDWARD proved his father’s will on
16 June 1602, not in Worcester or Oxford, but in London at the Prerogative Court
of Canterbury (PPC, 42 Montague), as was necessary if the testator owned land in
more than one diocese. However, there is no evidence that this was the case
here, and it is perhaps more likely that EDWARD chose to do so because he had
become sufficiently wealthy to be considered a gentleman, and it was a matter of
pride that the gentry proved their wills in the Prerogative Court, irrespective
of where they owned their lands. As it was his marriage that had raised EDWARD
to that status, his wife’s SEVERNE family is described next.
The SEVERNE Family
The SEVERNE Family Tree

The
SEVERNE family lived in Shrawley, a village near the river Severn west of
Droitwich in Worcestershire. The surname derives from the name of the river, and
according to local tradition the first Severnes were not of one family, but were
descendants of babies who in medieval times had been abandoned in the river in
baskets, like Moses, and were rescued by hermits living nearby and baptised at
the parish church. This tradition was recorded by Havins in Portrait of
Worcestershire (pp.75-6), but he remarks that ‘the SEVERNE family must
have had their work cut out trying to combat the belief’’.
The
SEVERNE pedigree and coat of arms were not recorded in the Herald’s Visitations
of the county until 1682-3, and even then it was stated that no proof was made
of the arms. They were ‘Argent, on a chevron Sable nine bezants’, i.e. a
silver shield with nine gold circles on a black chevron. The first person named
in the pedigree was JOHN I SEVERNE of Shrawley who possessed land in Shrawley
and Broadway. This would explain why his eldest son JOHN II and his two
granddaughters all chose marriage partners from Broadway, which is 25 miles to
the south west on the other side of the county. The entry for the family in
Burke’s Landed Gentry shows the arms and crest and the motto Virtus
Praesantior Auro (virtue is superior to gold), and it describes JOHN I as
living in the time of Henry VIII (1509-1547). The Shrawley parish register (now
in the Worcester Record Office) shows that he was buried on 2 January 1546/7.
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The SEVERNE arms
(from Burke’s Landed Gentry) |
JOHN’S
eldest son JOHN II married CHRISTIAN the daughter of BALDWIN SHELDON of West End
Manor in Broadway, and their two daughters were christened in Shrawley, Jane on
3 July 1561, and URSULA on 28 March 1568, JOHN being described as a bailiff.
Jane, who was named after CHRISTIAN’S mother, was only 16 when she married
William II Sambache on 13 May 1578, and their first four children were also
christened in Shrawley, but from 1583 they christened their children in
Broadway, by which time William had probably taken over the White Hart Inn. Jane
died in 1613, and when William was buried in 1630 it was recorded that he was
aged 83 and was the father of 26 children ‘by Mrs Jane Severne his sole wife’!
William’s
stepbrother EDWARD I OAKLEY would have got to know Jane’s sister URSULA, and
they married on 16 January 15 1583/4 when she was not yet 16. Their first child
William was christened in Shrawley on 21 May 1584, but her father JOHN SEVERNE
had been buried on 30 April. He had made his will 10 days earlier. He gave 3
shillings towards the church, 5 shillings to the poor men’s box, and a bushel of
rye to every poor household in the parish. To his wife CHRISTIAN he bequeathed
for life all his lands in Hillhampton (to the west of Shrawley), provided she
did not remarry, and after her death to her daughter URSULA and her heirs. He
also bequeathed to his wife all his houses and land in Shrawley parish, and
subsequently to his daughter Jane. His son-in-law EDWARD OAKLEY was to have his
leases in Hillhampton, provided he entered into a bond to allow CHRISTIAN to
have the net profits during her lifetime, and his other son-in-law William
Sambache was bequeathed another lease on similar terms. His two sons-in-law were
therefore well set up.
In the
will it was said that EDWARD had been promised ‘three years table for himself
and his wife’, but instead he would receive £40 and was forgiven the £40 he
owed. Among other bequests, JOHN’S brother Thomas SEVERNE was to have his best
gelding and his brother Robert SEVERNE his best cloak, Thomas the son of his
brother William SEVERNE was bequeathed 10 shillings, his sister Ann Barnsley £5
(she had married in 1553), William Sambache’s son John £10, URSULA OAKLEY £5 to
buy a gown, his servants 16 shillings, and the parson (who wrote the will) 30
shillings. His wife was bequeathed his lease of the parsonage and rectory of
Shrawley for life, after which it was to go to his two daughters, and she was to
share with his two sons-in-law all the rest of his goods, his lands, leases and
copyholds and the tithes of corn and hay belonging to the rectory, and all the
corn, grass and hay growing on the glebe. His wife was made joint executor with
William Sambache, and her stepbrother William Combe esquire (who will be
described later with the SHELDON family) and JOHN’S brother Thomas SEVERNE were
to be the overseers.
His high
standard of living was indicated by the inventory of his goods, which included 8
feather beds and 5 flock beds and other furniture, an exceptional quantity of
linen worth £25, gold or silver plate worth £10, kitchen and brewing equipment,
farm animals valued at £104 and crops at £64, and leases worth £20, the total
coming to £273, equivalent to about £50,000 today.
His widow
CHRISTIAN proved the will in Worcester on 16 June 1584 (1584/40b). She lived for
another 8 years, during which time several of her grandchildren were christened
in Shrawley. She made her will on 3 June 1592, leaving £6.13.4 to her
grandchildren John and Christian Sambache, a similar sum to her grandchildren
William and Martha OAKLEY, and 5 shillings to each of her servants. She died
soon afterwards, and the will was proved in Worcester on 26 June (Worcester R.O.
1592/63).
The
descendants of JOHN’S brother Thomas SEVERNE will be described briefly, as they
became involved in the later history of the OAKLEYS and INGRAMS. According to
the 1683 Visitation, Thomas inherited land in Broadway from his father, and
purchased other land in Powick to the south of Worcester (a place to which
reference will be made later). In 1577 he was one of several persons who bought
land in Broadway from CHRISTIAN’S brother Ralph SHELDON. Thomas died in 1594,
and his young son John III SEVERNE was made a ward of Queen Elizabeth, as was
customary if the heir as a minor held land of the Queen. The crown took the
profits of the estate, except what was necessary for his maintenance.
This John later sold his land in
Broadway to increase his Powick estate, and he married Mary Langley of
Shrewsbury in Shropshire, about 40 miles north west of Shrawley. Their son John
IV SEVERNE became a draper in Shrewsbury, where he was mayor in 1675, and he
purchased land to the west where he built Wallop Hall in Shropshire and Rhos
Goch just over the Welsh border in Montgomeryshire. These properties were
inherited in 1788 by his descendant Samuel Amy SEVERNE, who somewhat
coincidentally befriended the last members of the INGRAM family and inherited
their property as well. The Shropshire property amounted to 3,500 acres when it
was sold in 1920, and the present SEVERNE family lives on an estate only 10
miles north of Shrawley, which was inherited through Samuel’s daughter-in-law
Anna Wigley, whose ancestors received it from Edward III in the 14th
century (Burke’s Landed Gentry). This is one of few of our early families
we have been able to trace down to our own times, as it retained its gentry
status and did not die out in the male line.
The rest of the children of JOHN III
SEVERNE had remained in Worcestershire. In 1649 his daughter Catherine married
John Somers, who was an attorney and fought on the side of Parliament in the
Civil War. Their son, also named John, was a brilliant lawyer who as an MP
framed the Declaration of Rights which brought William and Mary to the throne.
The king granted him land in London which is still known as Somers Town, and a
pension of £2,100. In 1697 he became Lord High Chancellor of England and was
made Baron Somers of Evesham, and during the next reign he was involved in the
Naturalisation of the House of Hanover and the Regency Acts of 1705 and the Act
of Union with Scotland, both crucial legislation in the history of this country
(Dictionary of National Biography). In London he became a friend of the
famous essayist Sir Richard Steele, who (as will be described later) married one
of the OAKLEY descendants in Wales.
Catherine’s eldest daughter Mary Somers married Charles
Cocks, the MP for Worcester, and one of their daughters married into a Welsh
family who had connections with one of EDWARD OAKLEY’S sons and with Bridget
LEIGH. Charles and Mary’s great grandson, also a Charles Cocks, built Eastnor
Castle and was made Earl Somers in 1821.
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Eastnor Castle in Worcestershire
(from Treasures of Britain) |
Having described the SEVERNE family, we return now to
URSULA and her husband EDWARD I OAKLEY.
EDWARD I and URSULA OAKLEY and their Family
On the day
before his marriage to URSULA, EDWARD was bound in the sum of £100 on condition
that he solemnized the marriage, and that there was no legal impediment for him
to do so. He signed the bond, together with William Porter, a clothier of the
city of Worcester, who signed as surety on behalf of the SEVERNES. The marriage
made EDWARD a gentleman, which was how he was described thereafter, and it gave
him the wherewithal to live in that manner.
Their
first four children, William, Martha, John III and Ursula, were christened in
Shrawley while URSULA’S mother CHRISTIAN was still alive. A son Thomas III was
christened in Broadway in March 1592/3, probably while they were staying there
with William and Jane Sambache, and their other children were probably
christened in Wolford, where they had gone to live, but the early records of
that parish have been lost. A further nine children can be identified from
EDWARD’S will, making 14 in all. This was a large family, though not as large as
that of her sister Jane, and there may have been other children who had died
before the will was written.
The move
to Wolford came about because of an indenture dated 10 July 1586 (Gloucester
Record Office, D1447/1/276a), whereby EDWARD, described as gent and
son and heir of THOMAS OAKLEY of Chastleton, purchased land in Great Wolford
called Coopers Yardland from John VI INGRAM, gent, his father’s cousin.
John had inherited the land from his father and namesake John V, who had married
Alice Sambache, and he left Wolford to live in Broadway. EDWARD paid £100 for
the yardland, which was about 30 acres in size and would have consisted largely
of strips in the open fields, which were not enclosed until the 19th
century. At the time they were being farmed by William Howl and Anthony
Horseman.
This land
was not the only property that EDWARD obtained. John INGRAM had also inherited
from his father the lease from Merton College, Oxford, of Parsonage Farm and the
glebe land, amounting to 3 yardlands of arable and other land. The Registers
recording the annual payment of rent by leaseholders are still held in the
College library, and they show that John paid rent on the property up to 1587,
and that EDWARD began payment in the following year. From that time, members of
the OAKLEY family continued to live at the Parsonage for 200 years.
EDWARD
also developed interests elsewhere. As we have seen, in 1597 he leased from
Robert Catesby the property in Chastleton occupied by his father THOMAS. The
lease was for 61 years at a rent of 37 shillings and 4 pence a year, and he
covenanted that he would not plough up any of the 39 acres of pasture during the
last 7 years of the lease. Also included were 50 acres of arable land and 10
acres of meadow, and they bordered the ridgeway north of the village which forms
the county boundary with Gloucestershire. The indenture was signed by Catesby,
who later achieved notoriety as the ringleader of the Gunpowder Plot (see The
SHELDON Family).
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Signature of Robert Catesby of Chastleton manor
(from deed E/24/1/4D/1 at Oxford Record Office) |
In 1599,
EDWARD leased from Catesby for 100 years a building and 14 acres in Chastleton
which was occupied by a carpenter named Thomas Bromley. This was the document
that his father THOMAS signed by mark. A yeoman on one of the other Catesby
manors had leased the same property from Catesby only five days earlier, and
both leases were released to the new owner of Chastleton in 1606 after Catesby’s
death. The down payment made by EDWARD for his two leases is not disclosed. The
first had some legitimacy because it continued his father’s lease, but the
second looks more like a loan to Catesby, who was very short of money having
been severely fined for his part in the unsuccessful revolt of the Earl of Essex
against Queen Elizabeth I.
The plotters led by Catesby were
reckless Catholic conspirators against King and Parliament, and a second reason
why EDWARD might have been prepared to help save Catesby from debt, in addition
to his connection through his father’s tenancy, was that he was himself a
Catholic, though there is no suggestion that he knew of the plot or would have
had any sympathy for it. His affiliations are revealed by the Recusant
list for the Kineton Hundred of Warwickshire which was compiled on 10 September
1605, only two months before the Plot was due to take place, and it was very
helpful that Gene Hetherington found this list (Warwick Record Office,
CR1618/W19/3). In Wolford it included EDWARD OAKLEY, gent, and URSULA his
wife, who ‘do come to the church [of England] but do not receive the
communion’. On the other hand, they were no longer included in a similar
list compiled on 21 February 1605/6 after the Plot had failed, so they may have
decided that it was better to conform.
Some indication of EDWARD’S wealth is provided by the
Lay Subsidy tax for Wolford of 1610, in which he paid 8 shillings and 4 pence
tax on goods worth £5 (PRO, E179/193/274). He was not the wealthiest in the
parish, as a William Brent paid the same tax, and a James Bishop paid 13
shillings and 4 pence on goods worth £8. His INGRAM cousin would probably have
paid more than any of them had he been alive, but he had died, and his young son
was being brought up by his stepfather in Wiltshire.
At about this time, EDWARD’S eldest daughter Martha
married Thomas Chapman of Blockley parish in Gloucestershire, to the west of
Wolford. EDWARD’S son John III, who had become his heir on the death of the
eldest son William at an unknown date, was married in 1612 to his second cousin
Margaret SHELDON of Broadway, and a grandson EDWARD III OAKLEY was christened
there on 3 July 1614. By that time, EDWARD and URSULA had moved to Wales, taking
most of the rest of the family with them. The evidence is provided by a document
of 30 March 1614, in which EDWARD gave his address as Llanarthney in
Carmarthenshire, when he assigned the 61-year lease of land in Chastleton to
John Wakeman esquire, of Beckford in Gloucestershire, as trustee (Oxford Record
Office, E/24/1/4D/2). The move had presumably come about so that John and his
wife could take over at the Parsonage, and perhaps this had been envisaged in
John’s marriage settlement. It is possible too that EDWARD and URSULA were still
concerned that they might be accused of being recusants, with the consequent
threat of fines and the sequestration of property, these laws having been
enforced with greater stringency after the Plot, though in view of the time that
had elapsed since the Plot it is unlikely that this was still their motivation.
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Signature of EDWARD OAKLEY on 1614 deed
(from deed E/24/1/4D/2 at Oxford Record Office) |
They may have chosen Llanarthney, 100 miles away,
because the Tywi valley was good farming land and may have been available at a
reasonable price, and it was not far from Carmarthen to which other English men
of standing, such as RALPH LEIGH, had been attracted in recent years. They would
have known of it also from two near neighbours, one of them, Richard Daston, a
relation through the SHELDONS, who had become Justices of Great Sessions for
West Wales, serving Carmarthen and other major towns.
Only two years later, on 22 August 1616,
EDWARD made his will, and he gave his address as Beili Glas (green bailey). The
farm is near Dryslwyn castle, where one of the LEIGH relations in the PRICHARD
Ancestry had been constable in the 13th century, and it can be seen
in the distance on the far side of the river Tywi in the picture below, which
was taken from the castle ruins.
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EDWARD OAKLEY’S farm beyond Dryslwyn castle ruins
(from Dryslwyn Castle) |
EDWARD left £100 each to his sons
Francis, Edward II and George, presumably named in order of seniority, to be
paid when they reached the age of 25. His daughter Elizabeth was to have £100
one year after her marriage, provided she married according to her mother’s
wishes and for her advancement, and her sisters Mary, Anne and ’Dorrity’
(DOROTHY) were bequeathed 100 marks (£67) on the same conditions. EDWARD
reported that he had given his daughter Martha a dowry of £250 on her marriage,
and had made arrangements to pay a further £50 to help to redeem the estates
that were to be assured to her and her husband Thomas Chapman, and he explained
that his wife URSULA as executrix would pay the additional money once Thomas’s
parents had carried out their side of the agreement. His wife URSULA was
bequeathed four yardlands in Chipping Norton and property in another parish, and
all the rest of his goods provided she did not remarry. If she did remarry,
EDWARD’S stepbrother Anthony Sambache of Gloucestershire and his son-in-law
William Knight of Llangathen in Carmarthenshire were to be trustees on behalf of
his unmarried children.
To his son-in-law Nicholas Chapman, who
had married his daughter Catherine, he bequeathed his new cloak and new boots,
and their daughter Anne was to have £10 when she was 16. His new black suit of
clothes, his best hat and his best stockings, were to go to his son-in-law
William Knight, and his second best suit of clothes, his doublet, breeches,
stockings and second hat were to go to Francis Sambache. His son John and his
sons-in-law Thomas Chapman, Samuel Francis, Nicholas Chapman and William Knight
were each bequeathed a piece of gold worth 22 shillings to make a ring to wear
in his memory, as was ‘my good friend Mr Christopher Middleton, vicar of the
parish where I now dwell’, who wrote the will. EDWARD must have died soon
afterwards, as URSULA proved the will in London on 5 May 1617 (PCC, 39 Walden).
EDWARD I OAKLEY’S descendants in England

Three of EDWARD’S children, William,
Ursula and Thomas, are known from their christenings but were not mentioned in
the will. William, the eldest son, had died, and the same may be true of the
others, though Ursula may be the wife of the son-in-law Samuel Francis. Thomas
may have married and been given his inheritance at that time, and he may be the
Thomas OAKLEY, gent, who was named in the Wolford manorial court rolls in
1626 as a free tenant, and was churchwarden in that year and in 1638, and
constable in 1625 (Warwick R.O., QS/40/1/1). ‘Dorothy the wife of Thomas
OAKLEY, gent, of Little Wolford’ was buried in Wolford on 14 November 1666,
and Thomas died in Great Wolford (perhaps at the Parsonage), and was buried
there on 9 August 1669. He paid tax on only one hearth in Little Wolford, as did
his sons William, Anthony and Thomas junior (Warwick R.O., QS/11/3-48), who had
been christened in Wolford between 1625 and 1632.
EDWARD’S eldest daughter Martha and her
husband Thomas Chapman had 6 children. They appear to have received their
promised estate, as when their eldest son Robert was constable of Blockley in
1643 his home was given as Stapenhill, a farm in the north of the parish. Martha
had died in 1632 aged only 45, and two years later the Herald’s Visitations for
the county described her husband as a ‘’disclaimer’, which means that he
disclaimed the right to bear arms. He died in 1646 aged 66.
EDWARD’S son and heir John III took a
new lease of the Parsonage at Great Wolford in 1624, and another in 1629 for the
lives of his children Edward III and Cicely, and of John Sambache, the younger
son of John Sambache of Botley in Berkshire. The lease included the mansion
house, the glebe lands and the tithes, and responsibility for the maintenance of
the chancel of the church, and he was to pay the warden and scholars of Merton
college £8 a year and ‘6 quarters of good dry and sweet wheat, and also 8
quarters of good dry and clear malt, at the feast day of St Margaret the Virgin
… or for as much ready lawful English money … as the best wheat and the best
malt shall be sold for in the markets in the city of Oxford’. The payment in
these terms had been introduced to provide a hedge against inflation, which had
been rampant in the 16th century, but otherwise the terms of the
lease had not been altered for over 100 years. John was obliged to travel to
Oxford each year to pay the rent, but he did not do so in 1645. This was towards
the end of the Civil War when the king’s headquarters were in the city, and he
probably judged the journey too dangerous.
EDWARD’S widow URSULA married again, as
is shown by a deed of 10 October 1623 (Oxford R.O., E/24/1/4D/3) in which the
61-year lease in Chastleton was assigned to her son John by Thomas Warren of
Barton-on-the Heath, William Knight of Llangathen (John’s brother-in-law), and
Samuel Freeman of Beckford, and ‘Henry Beuchampe of the Town of Carmarthen
and URSULA his wife sometime the wife of EDWARD OAKLEY late of Llanarthney
deceased’. Their signatures, including URSULA’S mark, were witnessed on that
date by the vicar of Broadway and others, and separately on 2 December,
presumably in Wales, by William Knight, Francis OAKLEY (John’s brother), William
Bowen and Walter Thomas. It is possible that URSULA’S second husband was related
to the Beauchamps of Powick in Worcestershire, as this is where her cousin John
III SEVERNE had his estate. The lease soon changed hands again, as on 21 October
1628 John and his mother and stepfather, together with his brother-in-law
William SHELDON, assigned the lease to the new owners of Chastleton for £560, a
considerable sum (deed E/24/1/4D/6).
John and Margaret appear to have kept
open house at the Parsonage, as his sister and two of Margaret’s family
christened some of their children in Wolford in the 1630s while staying with
them, and in 1634 John was involved in a settlement of the estate in Broadway of
Margaret’s brother William SHELDON. In the same year, John paid a fine of £10 ‘for
distraint of knighthood’. Charles I had decreed that all landholders worth
£40 a year and over should take a knighthood, this presumably being a useful
means of raising cash. John’s unwillingness to do what he was asked had already
caused him to appear in the Quarter Sessions records for 1625 (QS40/1/1). He had
been ordered to pay 40 shillings to the Overseers of the Poor of Wolford towards
the maintenance of a bastard child begotten by his brother, but had paid only
half that sum, and the constable Thomas OAKLEY had been required to bring him
before the Justices but had not done so. The outcome is not known.
It has already been suggested that this
Thomas was John’s brother, but the brother who was the child’s father may have
been Francis OAKLEY, who had made his will shortly before on 30 December 1624.
He bequeathed £5 to his ‘father-in-law Henry Beacham’, who was actually
his stepfather, £10 to his brother Edward II, £3 to his brother-in-law Nicholas
Chapman whom he made his executor, £5 each to Nicholas’s children William and
Anne and £20 to the second son Walter, £10 to John’s son Edward III, and £10 to
Thomas the son of Elizabeth Chubley deceased (who was probably his sister
Elizabeth). He asked for the legacies to be paid out of the £60 that John had
borrowed from him. When the will was proved much later in Oxford on 15 July 1652
by his brother Edward, it was stated by the church official who recorded the
probate grant that Francis had died ‘in the parts beyond the seas’. It is
possible that he had taken part in the Thirty Years War in Europe, in which
England had made ‘a belated effort at intervention in 1625’ (MacCulloch,
Reformation, p.499).
John was again in trouble at the Quarter
Sessions in 1646 (Warwick R.O., QS40/1/2), as the previous Overseer of the Poor
had nominated him for that post, but he had refused. Then in 1652 he was one of
the inhabitants who refused to pay their taxes (QS40/1/3). He died in 1656 aged
67 and Margaret died in 1663, and they were succeeded at the Parsonage by their
son Edward III, who had married Margaret Barry of Thame in Oxfordshire and paid
an entry fine of £200 when he took over the lease. He paid tax on 7 hearths,
which was equalled by only one other house in Great Wolford, but was not as many
as the 11 hearths of his INGRAM cousin in Little Wolford (QS/11/3-10). He died
in 1670 at the age of 56, and his gravestone in Wolford church shows a coat of
arms ‘Argent, on a fesse between three crescents Gules, as many fleur de lis
Or’, i.e. a silver shield with red crescents above and below a red band with
three gold fleur-de-lis, and it empales the Barry arms ‘two lions passant’.
The crescents look like acorn cups, hence ‘oak’, so with the fleur-de-lis the
arms were a pun on the OAKLEY surname. Their pedigree was not recorded in any of
the Herald’s Visitations, so they had not proved their right to bear arms. The
arms were those of the Oakeley family of Lower Oakeley near Bishops Castle in
Shropshire, whose pedigree is well established back to medieval times, but close
examination of the pedigree with the help of a descendant who has written on the
subject has shown no clear connection between the families. It seems more likely
that our OAKLEYS had adopted the arms of the family with a similar surname. It
was not uncommon for two unconnected gentry families to bear the same arms, and
was the case for the NASH family.”
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Gravestone of Edward III OAKLEY in Wolford church |
Edward and Margaret’s elder son John IV
OAKLEY (1657-1715) continued the lease of the Parsonage, and in 1707 he was
short of money, so he borrowed £190 from his nephew, using as security Coopers
Yardland which his great grandfather EDWARD I had bought in 1586. Thus began the
series of debts in which his descendants were involved for the remainder of the
century. The main sources of information on these transactions are documents
D1447/1/276 and 279 at Gloucester Record Office, which are among the papers of
Lord Redesdale who purchased the overlordship of Wolford in 1819, supplemented
by documents DR41/31, pages 109, 130 and 136, in the Bloom Collection at
Stratford Record Office. In his will (Gloucester R.O., D1447/1/276h), John IV
OAKLEY directed that if his only surviving son Edward IV ’shall settle
himself so in the world as to enable himself to pay down so much money as shall
pay my said debts and legacies, then my said executors shall permit him to have
the parsonage except so much as shall raise the sum of £40 per annum for his
mother’. It appears that his son Edward IV was the cause of the debt. John
bequeathed £120 to each of his unmarried daughters, and his wife was bequeathed
all his plate and jewels and his household goods. The inventory of his goods
came to £392, and his gravestone also bore the new arms.
John’s son Edward IV (1685-1740) had been living in
London, but he took out a new lease of the Parsonage for £170, and after his
mother died in 1734 he renewed it for a term of 21 years and not for lives,
because he had no children and was the last OAKLEY of this line. On the same
day, he mortgaged the lease for £283 to his wife’s brother in London. This was
his main asset, and had been sufficiently profitable to maintain the eldest son
of each generation in the manner of a gentleman. The mortgage was later
increased to £500, and the mortgage on the Yardland was increased to £250 and
transferred to his three brothers-in-law. When the lease expired in 1756,
Edward’s nephew Edward Oakley Gray I, who had been a vintner in London, obtained
a new lease from the College, and he remained at Great Wolford until his death
in 1771. His son Edward Oakley Gray II was brought up by his aunt Martha and her
husband, who had become trustees of the properties, on which the total mortgage
was then £850. The son was living in Buckingham when he renewed the lease of the
Parsonage in 1798, and finally he sold the Yardland in 1802 and gave up the
lease two years later, so the family connection with Wolford came to an end. The
property was described as 60 acres of arable plus rough pasture and some timber,
and its annual value was £145, including tithes at £95.
These were the descendants of EDWARD I OAKLEY who lived
in England, but he also had children who grew up in Wales, including his
youngest daughter DOROTHY who married
RICHARD II LEIGH.
EDWARD I OAKLEY’S descendants in Wales

We have seen that EDWARD’S son-in-law William Knight
was living in Llangathen parish in 1616 and was still there in 1623. He appears
then to have moved across the Tywi valley to Llanarthney, where he paid the Lay
Subsidy tax in 1626 and 1628 (PRO, E179/220/127A and 123), and he was named as a
creditor in a Llanarthney will in 1649. He may have been born in
Carmarthenshire, perhaps related to a Francis Knight who was named in a will in
the north of the county in 1603. He had died by 1660, as his widow Catherine
OAKLEY made her will in Llangathen on 22 October of that year (NLW,
SD/1660/132). She was the second of two of EDWARD’S daughters of that name, the
other having married Nicholas Chapman. She had no children of her own, and
although a few bequests were made to her husband’s relations, most were to her
own family. To her brother Edward II OAKLEY she gave a yoke of her best oxen,
two of her best horses, and six of her best cows, and she bequeathed £5 each to
her nephews and nieces OAKLEY I LEIGH, Francis LEIGH, Ursula Hawker, Elizabeth
Fitzsymonds and Abigail LEIGH. OAKLEY, Ursula and Abigail are known to be
children of her sister DOROTHY, but this is the only evidence we have of Francis
and Elizabeth. The husbands Thomas Hawker and Bernard Fitzsymonds were among the
witnesses. Bequests were made also to Eleanor, Anne, Ursula, Catherine, Altham,
Mary and Oakley Gwyn, the grandchildren of her brother Edward OAKLEY; to
grandchildren of her brother George I OAKLEY (i.e. children of his son John V
OAKLEY and of his daughters Mary Scurlock and Elizabeth Lewis); and to William
Chapman the eldest son of her brother-in-law Nicholas Chapman, who presumably
lived nearby. Despite their surname, no connection has been found between
Nicholas and Thomas Chapman of Gloucestershire who had married Catherine’s
sister Martha, and Nicholas may have been a member of a Carmarthenshire family
which included a Richard Chapman who died in 1679 leaving goods valued at £989.
Catherine’s most surprising bequest was
of a house and land in Llanarthney to Altham Vaughan of Golden Grove, esquire.
He was the son of Richard Vaughan the second Earl of Carbery, and his second
wife Frances Altham, and had been born a few years before Altham Gwyn,
Catherine’s great nephew, so it is possible that the Earl had been godfather to
the Gwyn baby. The families were connected in that a Gwyn cousin had married the
Earl’s aunt Mary Vaughan, and Altham and his eldest brother Francis Vaughan were
members of Carmarthen council at the same time as Catherine’s nephew John V
OAKLEY. In addition, the Earl’s sister, also Mary Vaughan, married Sir Francis
Lloyd, whose mistress was Catherine’s niece
Bridget LEIGH, and a few years after Catherine’s death her nephew OAKLEY I LEIGH
married a descendant of the Earl’s ancestor
HUGH VAUGHAN.
Information concerning Catherine’s
brother Edward II OAKLEY is to be found among the papers of the Edwinsford
estate at the National Library of Wales. In 1633, Edward and his wife Anne sold
80 acres in Talley parish near the estate, and in 1637 they were granted a 21
year lease of a house and land in the parishes of Talley and Llandeilo by
Nicholas Williams of Edwinsford, whose wife was a sister of Sir Francis Lloyd.
There was to be another link between the families, because Nicholas’s grandson
Sir Nicholas Williams married Mary Cocks of Worcestershire, the granddaughter of
Catherine SEVERNE whose great grandfather John I SEVERNE was also Edward’s great
grandfather. Edward OAKLEY made his will on 22 May 1662 in the parish of
Llanegwad near Llanarthney, and he bequeathed £30 to his wife Anne in place of
her dowry, and £20 each to his grandchildren Altham, Ursula and Anne Gwyn (NLW,
SD/1668/72). His goods were valued at £78, much the same as for his sister
Catherine. His daughter Jane had married Harry Gwyn, whose father David Gwyn had
paid the Lay Subsidy in Llangathen in 1626 and 1628, and whose grandfather was
an illegitimate son of Sir Rhys ap Thomas of Dinefwr, whose career is described
in the PRICHARD ANCESTRY.
Edward II’s youngest brother George I OAKLEY had moved
the 10 miles west from Beili Glas, where their father had died, to Carmarthen,
which was an important administrative and judicial centre as well as a port and
a market town, and in 1628 he paid 16 pence Lay Subsidy there on land valued at
20 shillings (PRO, E179/239/234). In 1641 he was mayor of the borough, and
during the Civil War he bought a store of stolen cattle and drove them to the
king’s quarters in Worcester, where they were sold to buy pistols for the royal
army (Lloyd, II, 28-29). By the end of the war he was dead, and in 1646 letters
of administration were granted to his widow Mary OAKLEY in London (Transactions
of the Carmarthenshire Antiquarian Society, Vol.25, 1934, p.13).
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Signature of George I
OAKLEY
as mayor of Carmarthen
(from Carmarthen Order Book) |
Mary (whose maiden name is not known)
lived for a further 30 years. In 1662 she contributed 40 shillings towards the
Free and Voluntary Present to king Charles II, who had recently been restored to
the monarchy, and in 1673 she paid tax on a house with 13 hearths, which must
have been one of the biggest buildings in the town, and on a house with 4
hearths, which was also above average in size (PRO, E179/264/15 and 22). She
made her will on 28 April 1676 (NLW, SD/1677/19), and a witness said later that
she signed the will while sitting in her own hall, as the main room was called.
She bequeathed to her granddaughter Mary Lewis a silver tankard and pewter
dishes, and ‘all the loose feathers now in my dwelling house and which are
not put up in any bed or bolster’. Eight of her grandchildren were to have
£1 each, and money for mourning rings was bequeathed to her sons John V and
Jonathan OAKLEY, to her son-in-law John Scurlock, and to Theophilus Bevan who
had married her granddaughter Elizabeth Lewis. The family was prominent in the
borough council in the 1660s, as her son-in-law George Lewis was mayor in 1661,
her son John in 1662, her son-in-law John Scurlock in 1665, and her nephew
Richard III LEIGH in 1666, and this continued into the next generation, as John
Scurlock’s son-in-law Martyn Beynon was mayor in 1678, and Theophilus Bevan was
mayor in 1697.
George I and Mary OAKLEY’S son-in-law
John Scurlock arranged for the restoration of the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School
during his time as mayor, and in 1677 he was High Sheriff of the county. His
house in Carmarthen had 9 hearths, but he also owned property in Llangunnor
parish on the other side of the river Tywi, including a mill in which his
tenants had to grind their corn. When he died in 1678, his inventory revealed
that he had a richly furnished house, in which the dining room had 21 chairs and
stools and a couch, all 'of turky work', a woven material of wool with a
pile in imitation of Turkish carpets, and 11 'Russhia' chairs covered in
a very durable leather made of skins impregnated with oil distilled from birch
bark. The contents of the nine rooms were valued at £100, his clothes at £28,
linen at £46, silver plate at £46, farming stock at £162, and the goods in his
shop and out on credit at £550. With other items the total came to £998,
equivalent to about £70,000 today (NLW, SD/1679/24).
John and Mary Scurlock’s eldest son Jonathan was
educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and became a JP, but he died in 1682
aged only 29, and his memorial in St Peter’s church exhibits the Scurlock arms
of three red bands on a silver shield. Jonathan’s daughter Mary became the
second wife of Sir Richard Steele, who with Addison is known as the father of
political journalism.
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Sir Richard Steele
(from Mary Evans Picture Library) |
According to the Dictionary of
National Biography, Steele was born in Dublin in 1672, the son of a
wealthy attorney, and in 1705 he married a widow with extensive estates in
Barbados, but she died a year later. He met Mary at the funeral, and they
married in 1707. She was described as ‘a cry’d up beauty’, and was the ‘Dear
Prue’ in his letters which are now at the British Museum. He was
good-natured, but perpetually in debt, and he enjoyed the tranquillity of his
wife’s home in Llangunnor and the view of Carmarthen from Llangunnor church. In
London he was a member of the Kit Kat club, where he met the politician John
Somers, artists such as Vanburgh, and John Vaughan the third Earl of Carbery,
who had succeeded Pepys as the President of the Royal Society. He founded The
Tatler magazine in 1709, which began with news and gossip but became a
collection of essays until it ended in 1711. With Joseph Addison he began The
Spectator, which is still published today. It took advantage of the greater
leisure that had been created among the gentry and the professional and
commercial classes, and so would have been popular in Carmarthen, which had
become the centre of fashion in south Wales. Steele became an MP in 1715, and
was knighted in that year. Mary died on 26 December 1718 aged 40 and was buried
in Westminster Abbey, and he retired from publishing and writing in 1724, then
later moved to Llangunnor. He died in Carmarthen in 1729, and was buried in the
Scurlock vault in the church.
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The Spectator magazine
(from Mary Evans Picture Library) |
Returning now to the children of George I and Mary
OAKLEY, their younger son Jonathan was an Oxford-educated lawyer who had been a
trustee with his cousin Richard III LEIGH of Sir Francis Lloyd’s will in 1667.
He made his will at the age of 39 on 4 September 1677, only a year after his
mother’s death, and as he had no children he left all his property in
Llanarthney and Carmarthen to his wife Elizabeth. He bequeathed £20 each to
three of his nephews, and the same amount to the council so that the interest
would provide 15 shillings for an anniversary sermon, and 9 shillings for bread
to be distributed among the poor on the same day. His inventory was prepared by
his cousins Richard III and OAKLEY I LEIGH, and by William Davies of Dryslwyn,
who also prepared the inventory of Oakley Gwyn in 1688. It included a silver
tankard, a silver tumbler, and 6 silver spoons, and was valued at £19 (NLW,
SD/1677/42).
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Signatures of Richard III and OAKLEY LEIGH and of William Davies
(from inventory to will SD/1677/42) |
Jonathan’s
widow erected a memorial in St Peter's church in Carmarthen, in which he
is shown wearing a wig and holding a rolled parchment. Underneath is a
tablet with the Oakley arms in colour, and an inscription in gold letters
on a black marble pane which says that he was
descended from the OAKLEY family of Wolford in
Warwickshire. A transcript of the inscription has been
published, in which the arms are shown with the crescents and the band
marked 'g' to represent 'gules' (red), and the fleur-de-lis
marked 'o' to represent 'or' (gold).
The same arms had appeared for the first time only 7
years earlier on the gravestone of his first cousin Edward III OAKLEY in
Wolford church, except that Jonathan's arms had a small crescent in
addition to indicate a younger son.
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Memorial to Jonathan Oakley
(from Dineley’s Progress) |
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Inscription on
Jonathan's Memorial
(from Dineley’s Progress) |
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George and Mary’s elder son John V OAKLEY was a mercer
in Carmarthen, and was elected mayor in 1662. In 1661 he contributed 20
shillings towards the Free and Voluntary Present (PRO, E179/264/13), and in 1673
he paid tax on 5 hearths. Despite his prominent position in the town he
occasionally got into trouble. The Plea Rolls describe a case in 1655 in which
he was accused of trespass and assault in which he beat and wounded a Thomas
Davy, to which he pleaded not guilty (Transactions of the Carmarthenshire
Antiquarian Society, XI, 73). The outcome of the case is not known. He continued
to attend council meetings until shortly before his death in 1688, and he
appears to have lived at that time in the house with 13 hearths on which his
mother had paid tax in 1673, as his inventory described the contents of many
rooms including 11 bedrooms. They had names such as ‘The Globe’, ‘the
Fleur-de-Lis’, and ‘The Prince’s Arms’, so it appears to have been an inn. His
goods were valued at £214, including silver plate at £42 (NLW, SD/1688/32).
John’s elder son George II OAKLEY had 6
children, but 3 died as babies and possibly a fourth as well, and another died
aged 23. Several of the children of OAKLEY I LEIGH died young in the same
period, and it may be that the town was an unhealthy environment, even among the
relatively wealthy. George himself survived his father by only 4 years. His son
John VI OAKLEY married Elizabeth Aubrey whose brother was an attorney in London
and a clerk in the Exchequer Office. John and Elizabeth had nine children, four
of whom also died as babies. One of the children was given the uncommon name
Vincent, which had appeared in the families of his Great Wolford cousins in the
two previous generations, and this suggests that they remained in contact with
each other. John’s son George III OAKLEY died in 1767, leaving a daughter
Elizabeth who died a spinster in 1794. George had a brother Thomas who was a
surgeon. He died in 1790, and his daughter Mary Aubrey OAKLEY died a spinster in
1801 aged 50. She appears to have been the last OAKLEY in Carmarthen, and she
died at much the same time as their cousin in England ended the family’s links
with Wolford.
By Derek Williams August 2006
Home
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Oakley Ancestry
Oakley Family | Ingram Family | Sheldon Family | Bibliography
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Derek Williams 2006, 2007
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