



ANCESTRY OF DOROTHY OAKLEY (est 1610 - ?)
Wife of
Richard II Leigh and daughter of
Edward I Oakley & Ursula Severne
The SHELDON Family
Here we describe the SHELDON family of
CHRISTIAN SHELDON, who was the mother of URSULA
SEVERNE who married EDWARD I
OAKLEY. The SHELDONS were wealthy landowners, their wealth being based on sheep
farming and the marketing of wool, supplemented by judicious marriages and land
purchases. Their surname derived from the place name Sheldon, which comes
from two Old English words meaning ‘shelf’ and ‘hill’. We were
fortunate in finding considerable information about many members of the SHELDON
family, not only our direct ancestors, so we are giving an expansive picture of
the family
The SHELDON arms and pedigree were first
recorded in the Herald’s Visitation of Worcestershire for 1569, and subsequently
in later Visitations of that county and of Warwickshire, in Sir William
Dugdale’s Antiquities of Warwickshire (p.584), and in Collections for
the History of Worcestershire (pp.64,145) by Dr Treadway Nash, vicar of St
Peter’s, Droitwich, in 1781. The arms, which pun on the family name, were ‘Sable,
a fess between three sheldrakes Argent’, i.e. a black shield with a
horizontal silver band between three silver sheldrake ducks.
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The SHELDON coat of arms
(from VCH for Worcestershire)
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From these pedigrees, a list of
CHRISTIAN’S SHELDON ancestors can be compiled, in which she is generation 3 in
the overall list which begins with DOROTHY OAKLEY
as generation 1.

RALPH I SHELDON and his
Family
The first persons shown
in the pedigree were RALPH I SHELDON and his sons Richard and MORRIS, who were
said to live in Rowley Regis in Staffordshire, which has since been absorbed
into the industrial region on the west side of Birmingham. They would have lived
there about 200 years before the pedigree was recorded. The Herald Sir William
Dugdale observed that William I SHELDON, a great grandson of MORRIS SHELDON,
held land in the Lordship of Birmingham, and he therefore presumed that they
descended from a younger branch of the de SHELDON family who lived within the
Lordship at Sheldon in Warwickshire, about 12 miles east of Rowley Regis. This
de SHELDON family held half a knight’s fee there until the middle of the 14th
century (Skipp, Discovering Sheldon). However, no direct evidence has
been found of a connection with our SHELDON family.
No documentary evidence
is available for RALPH I and his two sons, but Richard’s son John I is
presumably the John SHELDON of Rowley Regis who was named in a deed of 1416 held
at Dudley Archives in Worcestershire (deed 1172). This was a grant of houses and
yards by William Anthony, gent, of Dudley to John SHELDON and two others.
“John SHELDON esquire” was also recorded to be at Rowley in 1430.
Nothing is known of
MORRIS SHELDON except that he had a son JOHN II.
JOHN II SHELDON
and his Family
Dugdale noted that JOHN II SHELDON
married the daughter of JOHN COTTON of Cotton Hall in Cheshire, and that he
lived in the time of Henry IV (1399-1413) at Abberton in Worcestershire, 20
miles south of Rowley Regis. E.A.B. Barnard in The Sheldons, which is
very informative about the family, says that JOHN leased the manor of Abberton
from the Abbot of Pershore (p.3). Barnard’s working papers, Sheldon
Miscellanea, can be consulted at Birmingham Reference Library.
The next two generations both included
the name Ralph, but Dugdale and the Herald’s Visitations showed them as
one person. The correct pedigree with two successive RALPHS was given by
Barnard, by Dr Nash, and in a booklet at Beoley church in Worcestershire
(Pearson), where the SHELDONS lived later. The first of the two RALPHS, RALPH II
SHELDON, is JOHN II’s only known son.
RALPH II SHELDON
and his Family
Barnard tells us that
RALPH II SHELDON, the son of JOHN II of Abberton, married JOYCE RUDING, an
heiress descended from a family of considerable antiquity in Worcestershire who
owned property to the north of Abberton in Beoley, Feckenham, Hanbury and Martin
Hussingtree (p.3). The Victoria County History (VCH) for
Worcestershire shows the arms of Ruding of Hussingtree as ‘Argent, on a bend
between two lions rampant Sable a wyvern volant of the field’, i.e. a silver
shield with a silver flying two-legged dragon on a diagonal black band, between
two black lions standing on one leg (Vol. IV, p.137), and they were subsequently
quartered in the SHELDON arms. The Visitations do not go back far enough to
include JOYCE, but her father may be the William RUDING who according to Nash
inherited land in Feckenham parish, as she gave the name William to her eldest
son.
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The arms of RUDING of Hussingtree
(from VCH for Worcestershire) |
Apart from William, the
SHELDON pedigree gives the other children of RALPH and JOYCE as Richard II,
RALPH III, John III of London, Daniel of Spetchley near Worcester, another John
(IV), and Morris. The eldest son William I inherited his father’s manor of
Abberton (VCH, Vol. IV, p.5), but he established himself at Balford Hall
in Beoley in the reign of Edward IV (1460-1483). Beoley is pronounced ‘Beeley’,
and means ‘bee wood’. William bought Benyt’s Place in that parish in
1488. During the Wars of the Roses, William supported the Yorkists at the battle
of Bosworth in 1485, and as a result of the definitive Lancastrian victory there
he was deprived of his property, but it was restored to him before he died in
1517 (VCH, Vol. IV, p.14, note 25). An Inquisition Post Mortem (IPM) was
held at Pershore, a town 5 miles south of Abberton, and one of those providing
evidence was John RUDING of Hussingtree, gentleman, who presumably was a cousin.
It was said that William owned Balford Hall and 7 other houses and 460 acres of
land in Beoley, and property involving 20 houses in the city of Worcester and a
further 600 acres elsewhere in the county, including King’s Norton and
Northfield in the Lordship of Birmingham, and Feckenham and Pershore (Chan. Inq.
p.m., Ser. 2, clix, 87). In his will (PCC, 35 Holder) he made bequests to the
churches at Beoley and Abberton and to Pershore Abbey, and he bequeathed all his
lands to his brother RALPH III SHELDON.
RALPH III married PHILIPPA the daughter
and co-heiress of BALDWIN HEATH, and her ancestry is described next.
The HEATH Family
PHILIPPA HEATH’S pedigree according to
Dugdale is as follows.
The Ancestry of PHILIPPA HEATH

PHILIPPA’S father
BALDWIN HEATH lived at Ford Hall, a moated house near Tanworth-in-Arden, just
over the Warwickshire border 3 miles east of Beoley. BALDWIN’S father THOMAS
lived nearby at Aspley, and his grandfather JOHN HEATH came from Coleshill near
Birmingham. BALDWIN’S wife AGNES was the daughter and co-heiress of JOHN and
JOAN GROVE of Ford Hall, which is how that property came to BALDWIN. The HEATH
arms were ‘Vert, on a chief Argent, three cinquefoils Azure’, i.e. a
green shield with three blue five-petalled flower heads on a silver band
occupying the upper third of the shield; and the GROVE arms were ‘Argent, a
chevron between three pineapples pendant Gules’, i.e. a silver shield with a
red chevron between three pendant red pineapples. They were shown quartered in
the SHELDON arms in the 1619 Visitation of Warwickshire.
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HEATH and GROVE arms quartered
with SHELDON and RUDING
(from 1619 Visitation) |
The most famous of the HEATHS was
BALDWIN’S great nephew Nicholas HEATH, 1501-1578, who was Bishop of Worcester
and later Archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor under Queen Mary. He supported
Queen Elizabeth’s succession, but he refused to compromise his Roman
Catholicism, and would not take the Oath of Supremacy which declared Elizabeth
head of the church. He subsequently lived quietly and loyally in retirement. His
portrait painted in 1566 by Hans Eworth is now in the National Portrait Gallery
in London.
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Portrait of Nicholas HEATH, Lord
Chancellor to Queen Mary
(from Strong’s The English Icon) |
Among the information about Tanworth
families provided by John Burman in his book In the Forest of Arden, he
reproduced the text of BALDWIN HEATH’S will, dated 4 April 1526. He asked for a
priest to ‘sing for my soul and for the souls of THOMAS HEATH and ELIZABETH,
JOHN GROVE and JOANNA and all Christian souls in the chapel of Saint George
within the church of Tanworth [for] a year’. His daughter Elizabeth Bentford
was bequeathed ten cows and a heifer, and all the rest of his property he
bequeathed to his wife AGNES, who was to be the executor. His sons-in-law RALPH
III SHELDON and John Fulwood, together with William and Richard SHELDON, were
made overseers. John Fulwood was the second son of Robert Fulwood of Clay Hall,
and he succeeded to Ford Hall on BALDWIN’S death. His nephew, also John Fulwood,
married Mary Hill, who was related to the Shakespeare family in Stratford
through a Hill-Arden second marriage, and their son’s marriage in 1596 was
witnessed by William Shakespeare’s father John. This was the earliest of several
relations to the Shakespeare family in the Stratford area, as we shall see.
Having described the HEATH family, we
turn now to PHILIPPA HEATH and her husband RALPH III SHELDON.
RALPH III and
PHILIPPA SHELDON and their Family
According to the inscription on RALPH’S
tomb in Beoley church, RALPH III and PHILIPPA SHELDON had 11 children. The
eldest son was named William after RALPH’S elder brother, the second son (our
ancestor) was named BALDWIN after PHILIPPA’S father, and a daughter was named
Joyce after RALPH’S mother. From wills and pedigrees we know of other children
named Thomas, Francis, Henry, Mary, Elizabeth, Alice and Isabel.
RALPH inherited property in Abberton and
Beoley, but he also became associated with Broadway in the south of
Worcestershire, the town in which EDWARD I OAKLEY was born later. RALPH took a
lease in Broadway in 1509, and he became one of the most important tenants of
the Abbot of Pershore. Many abbeys and monasteries had got into financial
difficulties, and in 1533, a quarrel occurred between the Abbot and his tenants,
including RALPH SHELDON, which originated from the measures taken by the Abbot
to lift his debts (Letters and Papers of Henry VIII, vi, 298, cited in
VCH, Vol. IV, p.38). Another dispute arose in the same year, in which RALPH
accused the Abbot of not keeping his courts at Abberton and so bringing the town
into danger of decay, of trying to force him to give up his farms, and of
interfering with rights of common. The Abbot answered that he had been obliged
to move the courts in consequence of the threats used against him by RALPH
SHELDON (same reference, cited in VCH, Vol. IV, p.5, note 13).
The outcome of these disputes is not
known, but it appears that RALPH and the Abbot were not bitter enemies, and that
of necessity they continued to meet for discussion of their affairs. This was in
the time of great religious tension during the Dissolution of the monasteries
and the confiscation of their property. One of these discussions was reported on
22 April 1538 by a so-called groom of the King’s Privy Chamber, who in fact was
a spy for the king (Letters and Papers, xiii, Pt.1, 303-4, cited in
Barnard, The Sheldons, pp.8,9). They had been speaking of the dissolution
of an abbey, and in support of this action of the king against the Roman
Catholic Church, RALPH was reported to have said “O good Lord, what a gift
hath God given unto the King and his noble Council now to perceive the
usurpation of the Church, wherewith we have been long deluded and mocked, and in
especial in the usurpation of the Church of Rome”. “Ah,” said the
Abbot in reply, “And I have loved you so well and taken you for so true a man
and so substantial a man. Well, well, I will love you no more.” Then the
Abbot, leaning over the table, said “I trust and I pray God that I may die
one of the children of Rome”.
The Abbey of Pershore was dissolved by
Henry VIII, as were all the other abbeys and monasteries, and the Abbot was
pensioned in January 1539/40, but beforehand he had arranged matters to suit
himself and some of the local gentry. In 1535 he had granted a lease for 63
years of the manor house and extensive fields in Broadway to Anthony Daston, who
later became the second husband of RALPH’S granddaughter Anne SHELDON, and on 5
September 1538 he had granted the lease for 80 years of the rest of the manor of
Broadway to RALPH SHELDON (VCH, Vol. IV, p.38). The Abbot benefited
because he received a large fine or down payment, whereas the annual rent, which
would go to the Crown after the Dissolution, was small. In this way the gentry
tenants were also benefited.
RALPH SHELDON of Abberton esquire
made his will on 28 March 1545, and Barnard notes (p.9) that despite his
reported remarks against the Catholic Church, he bequeathed his soul “unto
Almighty God and to our Lady Saint Mary and to all the Holy Company”, and he
directed that “every priest that shall be at my dirge and mass to have 12d,
And every clerk that can sing to have 4d, and to other that cannot sing 2d. I
will that a priest shall sing for me, my father and mother, my brother William
and BALDWIN HEATH and AGNES HEATH’S souls and all expired souls, Immediately
after my decease five years in our Lady Chapel at Beoley or Abberton at the
discretion of my wife and William SHELDON my son”. The formulaic phrases and
the references to “our Lady Mary” continue the medieval form adopted before the
split from Rome. They are typically Catholic, not Protestant, implying that,
despite his comments to the Abbot, he remained Catholic.
RALPH’S long will tells us much about
his wealth, and his desire to provide estates for his younger sons in addition
to his heir. He had bought the manor of Abberton in the previous year for his
sons William and Francis (VCH, Vol. IV, p.5), and at William’s request it
had been settled on Francis, but in his will RALPH required that his wife
PHILIPPA should be allowed to take the profits of the manor and to continue to
live rent-free in the manor house during her lifetime. She was also to have two
leases and 100 marks (£67), in addition to her jointure of lands to the clear
value of £40. In a nice touch, RALPH added “I will that my said wife shall
have during her life my pools at Broadway without any rent paying for the same,
to fish at her pleasure and liberty”.
The eldest son William II was bequeathed
“all such coals as be gotten at Coleorton”, which is about 50 miles away
in Leicestershire. This was an interesting investment, as coal was not in common
use until the next century. Few other bequests were made to William, because he
inherited the Beoley property as the eldest son and heir. His wife Mary was
bequeathed £20 for their daughters.
RALPH had many other properties to
bequeath. His second son BALDWIN (our ancestor) lived at Broadway, and he was
bequeathed the substantial lease within the manor that had been obtained from
the Abbot in 1538. He was also to receive £100, and lands to the clear value of
10 marks for his son William VI. BALDWIN’S daughter CHRISTIAN and sons Ralph IX,
Anthony I and William VI were each bequeathed £10.
To his son Thomas, RALPH bequeathed all
his lands in the city of Worcester and in widely scattered places, some near
Pershore, in Upton upon Severn to the south west, near Beoley, and near
Bridgnorth in Shropshire, 30 miles north west of Abberton. Thomas was also
bequeathed the lease of the parsonage of Wickwar in Gloucestershire, about 45
miles to the south west, and he was not to sell any of his inheritance. He was
given £200 provided he left Worcester and repaid his debts, and it is possible
that these debts resulted from business relating to Pershore Abbey that he had
conducted in that city in 1541. He had been MP for Worcester in 1542 and in 1545
(Bindoff, 1509-1558, pp.305,306), but he did leave there and he settled in
Childswickham near Broadway, where his descendants continued to live (Nash, Vol.
I, p.64).
RALPH’S son Francis was bequeathed 100
marks, a lease from Tewkesbury Abbey, and a croft and pasture for 500 sheep in
Broadway, for which he was to pay BALDWIN £7 a year rent. Francis’s descendants
continued at Abberton until the early 19th century (VCH, Vol.
IV, p.5). RALPH’S son Henry was not mentioned in the will, possibly because he
had recently been granted a manor near Abberton. Henry died in 1558, and his
young heir John died soon afterwards. Thomas’s daughter Mary was to have £6.13.4
when she married, and leases from Lord Windsor were to be sold to provide money
for William’s son Ralph V, BALDWIN’S son Ralph IX, and Thomas’s sons Ralph IV
and Thomas II.
RALPH’S daughter Mary was to have 400
marks “for the preferment of her marriage”, his daughters Alice and Joyce
were each bequeathed £20, and his daughter Elizabeth was to have the lease of
land near Droitwich. Joyce’s husband John Rugeley was excused the repayment of a
loan, and Elizabeth’s husband William Lench was forgiven rent that he owed. John
Fulwood, the son of PHILIPPA’S sister Joan, was bequeathed the lease of half the
manor of Aspley near where he lived at Ford Hall. Bequests of £4 were made to
RALPH’S brother John, £1 to his brother Richard’s son-in-law, £6.13.4 to poor
tenants, and a similar sum for mending highways near Abberton and Beoley, 5
shillings to his women servants, and 6 shillings and 8 pence and coals to his ‘waiting
men’.
RALPH’S wife PHILIPPA and his eldest son
William were made executors and residuary legatees. He died in Abberton on 21
December 1546 and was buried at Beoley on the 16 January following, and his will
was proved at the PCC (28 Alen) on 11 February.
PHILIPPA did not survive long to enjoy
her fishing, as she died within the next two years. She had little land to
bequeath, but she had other valuable possessions which tell us about the family
lifestyle. Her eldest son William II was to have a basin and a ewer of silver, a
set of 12 apostle spoons, and a double gilt spoon which Barnard presumes may
have had a representation of Mary or a patron saint (p.6). William was also to
receive a double gilt goblet and 6 gilt cups, a featherbed of down, various
items of linen, the greatest pot in the house, and the biggest pan. In addition,
he was to have “all those sheep that are now at Combe and all my wool at
Broadway and Combe if God call me, And if I live, then to pay me for it with all
the right and interest that I have in the said farm”. Finally he was to have
her best diamond and a ring, and his wife was to have a little diamond.
PHILIPPA’S son Henry was bequeathed 6
spoons, a silver saltcellar, a little gilt cup with a cover, a ring, two feather
beds and bedclothes and other linen, 2 pots and 2 pans, and 6 oxen, 6 cows, 100
sheep and 8 pigs. Her son Thomas was to have linen and 6 oxen, 6 cows, 50 sheep
and 6 pigs; his daughter was to receive £40 in addition to RALPH’S bequest to
her; and his son Ralph was to be kept at school for 2 years and his son Thomas
for one year and then to be apprenticed and paid a wage. PHILIPPA’S son Francis
was bequeathed 100 sheep and all her sheep at Broadway, and the rest of her
plate and household goods. Her sister Joan was given 4 silver spoons, 10 ewes
and one of her best gowns or a frock, and Joan’s husband John Fulwood was to
have a gold ring and £3.6.8, and their son John a similar sum that he owed for
rent. PHILIPPA’S ‘daughter Lench’s children’ (i.e. Elizabeth’s children)
were bequeathed £5, her ‘daughter Rugeley’s children’ (i.e. Joyce’s
children) were given £4, and all the rest of her clothes were to be shared among
her daughters. Her brother-in-law Richard II SHELDON was bequeathed £4, Gillian
RUDING £2, her servant Margot 10 shillings, all her other women servants 3
shillings and 4 pence, and all her tenants a quarter of malt.
Her sons William and Francis were to be
executors and residual legatees, and they proved the will at the PCC (23
Populwell) on 30 January 1548/9. There was no mention in the will of her son
BALDWIN, because he had died relatively young on 5 July 1548. His PCC will was
listed on the same page as hers, and had been proved 20 days earlier as we shall
see.
There was no mention in PHILLIPA’S will
of her daughter Mary, who had been a trouble to the family. The story is
surprising, as told in official documents of the complaint made by PHILIPPA and
her eldest son William at the Court of Star Chamber against Dame Ursula
Knightley of Offchurch near Warwick. Apparently, Dame Ursula had taken Mary into
her service at the request of PHILIPPA’S husband RALPH, and while there the girl
had engaged herself to marry one of the Dame’s servants named Sylvestre. When
RALPH died, PHILIPPA sent Mary to live at Balford Hall in Beoley, and from there
Mary secretly informed Dame Ursula that she was pregnant by Sylvestre, and she
asked to be taken away as she did not want her mother to find out. Dame Ursula
wrote to William, then in London, and told him the story, saying she would take
Mary before the crime was publicly known and be like a mother to her. William
refused, and sent Mary to the house of John and Alice Fox, but Mary escaped and
came to Dame Ursula at Offchurch, and of her own free will married Sylvestre.
The subject of the Star Chamber
complaint was that six of Dame Ursula’s tenants rode to John Fox’s house and
took Mary away, and that Dame Ursula had been at fault in allowing Mary to
become pregnant, and in persuading her to marry the servant (Star Chamber
2/20/94, cited in Barnard’s Sheldon Miscellanea). The outcome of the case
is not known, but the pedigrees show that the marriage to Sylvestre did not
last, and that Mary took as her second husband George Ferrers of Wetherley, the
third son of Sir Edward Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton, between Birmingham and
Warwick. This was an amazing social comeback after such a scandal, as the
Ferrers family were well-known aristocrats descending from Norman royalty.
Baddesley Clinton was inherited in 1564 by Henry Ferrers, who was an antiquary
and provided Dugdale with information for his Antiquities, and he was
responsible for remodelling the interior of the house, which is now owned by the
National Trust.
Our ancestor was RALPH and PHILIPPA’S
second son BALDWIN, and we continue with his line, returning later to the eldest
son William II SHELDON, who as noted by Barnard was “destined to become the
greatest of all the SHELDONS”.
RALPH III and
PHILIPPA’S second son BALDWIN SHELDON and his Family

On the death of his father RALPH III
SHELDON in 1546, BALDWIN inherited the large part of the manor of Broadway in
Worcestershire that his father had leased in 1538 for 80 years. Barnard wrote: ‘The
SHELDONS, therefore, were now well established at Broadway, and they together
with the Savages and their near neighbours … the Sambaches, now more or less
beneficially and for many succeeding years dominated the immediate district,
which from before Domesday had been accustomed to the jurisdiction of the Abbots
of Pershore ‘ (pp.97-98). We learned of the Sambaches in The OAKLEY
Family, and the Savages were descendants of BALDWIN’S niece Anne SHELDON,
daughter of his brother William II, as we will see later.
BALDWIN’S name appears in the list,
drawn up in 1532, of the forty persons who maintained the wall of the churchyard
in Broadway (see The OAKLEY Family), and he lived in the town for most of
his adult life. According to Barnard he lived at West End manor house in the
south west of the town, which eventually became a barn of West End farm after
his descendants built another house nearby. It survived until it was replaced in
1989 by a new house copied from the original building, which had become too
decrepit to repair and restore by the new owner.
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Reconstruction of BALDWIN SHELDON’S West End manor house in Broadway |
The 1569 Herald's Visitation of
Worcestershire shows that BALDWIN’S wife JANE was the daughter of JOHN WHEELER
of Droitwich, a town north of Worcester. She was probably the sister of the
Gilbert WHEELER, gent, who witnessed the will of BALDWIN’S father. In
1543, Gilbert WHEELER had leased the 1-acre Vine Close, part of the property in
Droitwich that had belonged to the Austin Friars, and when he made his will in
1580 in Great Rollright to the south east of Weston, he bequeathed to his elder
son John 'a lease for certain ‘Bullarie’ [boilery] of salt water in
Droitwich' plus other leases. The will was proved at the PCC (2
Darcy) by his widow on 10 January 1580/1.
Droitwich had been a major source of
salt since the Iron Age, and the Romans constructed large engineering works near
their villa complex there. Operations continued around the river Salwarpe near
present-day Vines Park and Friar Street, and salt production in the town did not
finally cease until 1922. The drawing shows a 16th century salt
works.
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16th century German salt works, similar to those operated in
Droitwich
(from Savouring the Past) |
A William WHEELER who also leased part
of the Friary land may have been Gilbert's cousin. The Herald's Visitation shows
that he married Joan Smith who held the lordship of Martin Hussingtree, and he
presented to the church there in her right in 1541. William was the son of a
Gilbert WHEELER, and grandson of a John WHEELER of Crouch in Worcestershire.
William's eldest son John died unmarried in 1560, and the lordship passed to
John's brother Humphrey, who was MP for Droitwich in 1600. The WHEELER arms were
shown as 'Or, a chevron between three leopard's faces Sable', i.e. a gold
shield with a black chevron between three black leopard’s faces. A more
elaborate version appears in the east window of Droitwich church, but BALDWIN’S
family do not appear to have quartered these arms (Visitation of Worcestershire,
1634). The family of BALDWIN’S grandmother JOYCE RUDING had also held land
in Martin Hussingtree, and part of this land was sold to a Sir Edmund WHEELER.
BALDWIN held the rectory of Stanton,
south west of Broadway. Barnard (p.98) provides a translation of a document in
Latin to the effect that 'BALDWIN SHELDON gentleman holds by indenture dated
13 July 38 Henry VIII [1546], made to him by Princess Katherine late
Queen of England by the advice of her Council, all that rectory of Stanton co.
Gloucester, with all tithes and appurtenances belonging to the aforesaid
rectory. To have to him from the feast of St Michael the Archangel last past,
till the end of the term of 21 years then next following, paying therefor yearly
at the usual terms £8, with a clause of re-entry if the rent should happen to be
in arrears for the space of two months'. No doubt BALDWIN’S elder brother
William SHELDON had had some influence, as he was solicitor to the late queen,
as we shall see.
BALDWIN outlived his
father by less than two years, and was buried in Broadway on 5 July 1548,
leaving seven children, Ralph IX, Jane, CHRISTIAN, Anthony, William VI,
Elizabeth, and Ursula, all of whom were under 21. He was probably in his
mid-40s. Three other children, Catherine, Francis and Robert, had died young,
and a daughter Edith was buried on 24 September after his death.
BALDWIN had made his will on 6 June
1548, leaving his wife JANE 10 marks a year plus £40 and her chamber, and
'the sole administration of all my goods and chattels with all ye receipts and
revenues of all my lands and tenements and leases as well in Broadway and
Stanton as in all other places within the Realm of England, with the guiding and
oversight of all my children until such time as they do come to their full ages
as is appointed by this my will, with the usage of the ffattes [vats] in
Droitwich, if she so long do live sole and unmarried'. She was to account
yearly to the executors and overseers so that any surplus revenues could be
employed according to the will. If she married before the children came of age,
the executors would provide the account to the overseers.
JANE was to have half of his house if
she did not remarry, the other half to go to the eldest son Ralph IX. In
addition, Ralph was to have the part of the lands leased in Broadway that
BALDWIN was farming himself, and they were to pay rent for the house and land to
the second son Anthony. They were to be supplied each year by Anthony with 24
loads of wood from Broadway wood. BALDWIN also bequeathed to Ralph 'all those
my lands and tenements which my father hath given me for my child’s part,
trusting that my brother William will further assure the same to my said son and
his heirs'. This would have included the manor and advowson of Flyford
Flavell near Abberton, which had passed to BALDWIN’S father from his
brother-in-law John Fulwood.
When Anthony was 21 he was to have the
lands and tenements called 'Bentleys' in Tardebigge parish, which BALDWIN had
bought from Mr Pauncefoot, and the lease of part of the pastures called ‘Shadow
Hills’ which was owned by widow Jeffreys and her son. The parish included
Bentley
Pauncefoot, which now includes Upper and Lower Bentley farms and a
wood called The Shadow on the side of a hill. The lordship was held by the
Pauncefoot family, and the Jeffreys family were tenants of the manor house. In
1556 John Pauncefoot sold the site of the manor to Thomas Jeffreys, and in 1560
he sold the rest to BALDWIN’S elder brother William, who bequeathed it to his
son Ralph V in 1570. Before 1577 the manor had been sold to Henry Field, through
whose niece it passed to Sir William Whorwood, probably the son of Ralph V
SHELDON’S step-brother Thomas Whorwood (VCH, Vol. III, p.223).
BALDWIN also bequeathed to Anthony the
lease in the manor of Broadway. If he married and had a son and died before he
came of age, the son would inherit. If he died without issue the eldest son
Ralph would inherit, but it is not clear why Anthony was given precedence over
his elder brother.
The third son William VI
was bequeathed the mill during the Broadway lease, and the tithes in Stanton
once he came of age, paying the rent of the mill to Anthony. He was also to have
his choice of the holdings that became vacant in Broadway without any payment
apart from the rent, and the tithes of wool and lambs. In addition, if Anthony
died without issue, the land in Bentley Pauncefoot would go to William and his
heirs. If both died without issue, all the property would go to the eldest son
Ralph and his heirs, apart from any jointure they chose to leave to their wives.
The eldest daughter Jane was to have £40
'towards her preferment in marriage so that she follows the advice of my wife
and my executors and overseers', to be paid on the day of her marriage. His
daughter CHRISTIAN (our ancestor) was to have a similar amount on the same
terms, made up of £30 owing to BALDWIN from his father's will, and the £10 his
father had bequeathed to CHRISTIAN, both sums being still in the hands of
BALDWIN’S brother William II. His four younger daughters were to have £20 each
when they married. His two servants were left bequests; £4 to Baldwin Cox, and
20 nobles (£6.66) to Margaret Cross, also on their wedding days.
If
his wife's accounts showed by the time the sons came of age that the profits on
his lands, after providing her jointure and the education and bringing up of the
children, amounted to more than the bequests in the will, the excess was to be
divided into three parts. One part would be divided between the four youngest
daughters on their marriage, another part would go to his sons Ralph and
Anthony, and the third part was to go to his wife and his son William. His
mother (PHILIPPA) was to 'have the easement in my part of the manor place of
Broadway for the ‘couching’ [storage] of her wool & the dwelling of her
shepherd, keeping the same with slate and tiles and other reparations during her
natural life, desiring her to be good mother to my wife and children'. In
fact she must have died soon after him, as her will was proved 20 days after his.
The poor of Broadway were left 20
shillings, and the poor of Evesham were to have a similar amount. The poor of
Childswickham, where his brother Thomas lived, were bequeathed 10 shillings. The
poor of six neighbouring villages were also remembered, and three shillings and
four pence was to be distributed in each place, 'the same to be sent home to
their houses and divided by four of the ‘honestest’ men, in every township'.
The poor of the market town of Chipping Campden were to share 13 shillings and
four pence. This was a much wider distribution of alms than was usual.
BALDWIN’S wife JANE, his brothers
Francis and Henry, and his son Anthony were to be the executors, and his brother
William II and his “cousin Richard SHELDON” (perhaps the son of BALDWIN’S
uncle Daniel of Spetchley) were to be the overseers. Each was to be paid a sum
which has not been written into the copy of the will, and those who were
involved in the later accounting were also to be paid another undisclosed sum.
His wife was to retain her position as long as she remained unmarried and
continued to produce the account.
The will was witnessed on 29 June by the
priest who had written the will, Richard Sambache, gent, THOMAS WHITE,
John Sambache, and others. Their inclusion as witnesses of the will of one of
the two major landholders in the town indicates that they were of high status in
the community. Richard Sambache of Broadway was the father of William Sambache
I, who was the first husband of our ancestor ELIZABETH WHITE, and the
grandfather of William Sambache II who married BALDWIN’S granddaughter JANE
SEVERNE, CHRISTIAN’S daughter. John Sambache was Richard's son, and THOMAS WHITE
was ELIZABETH’S father. William Sambache and ELIZABETH had been married three
years earlier (see The OAKLEY Family).
BALDWIN was buried in Broadway six days
later, and his brothers proved the will in London (PCC, 23 Populwell) on 10
January 1548/9. The church of St. Eadburga in Broadway, where he was buried,
stands to the south of the town near Broadway Court (Broadway Great Farm), where
BALDWIN’S niece Anne Daston lived later, and not far from West End Manor.
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|
The church of St Eadburga in Broadway |
BALDWIN’S widow JANE took as her second
husband John Combe of Stratford-upon-Avon, which is about 13 miles north east of
Broadway. They had a son William Combe, who was christened in Broadway on 13
June 1551, but John had died in the previous year, so the marriage must have
taken place within two years of Baldwin's death. The Combes were an interesting
family, and will be described later. On 22 November 1554, JANE married again, at
South Littleton which is about 6 miles north of Broadway. Barnard (pp.98-99)
provides the entry in the parish register which reads: “Matrimony was
solemnized openly in the face of the Church between Thomas Lewknor gentleman of
the parish of Alvechurch and Jane Combe widow gentlewoman of the parish of
Broadway, for they had a licence to be wedded without asking in the church of
any lawful priest & where they would. BALDWIN SHELDON was her first husband
dwelling in Broadway (after him ‘John a Combe’ of Stratford)”. Her husband
Thomas Lewknor had obtained chantry lands at Alvechurch, which is north of
Beoley on the road to Birmingham, and his first wife had died there on 10 March
1553/4. He died in 1571, and Jane lived a further 11 years in Alvechurch before
she was buried as Mrs Jane Lewknor in Broadway.
BALDWIN and JANE SHELDON’S eldest son
Ralph IX and their second son Anthony I and their families will be described
later. Their eldest daughter Jane married Nicholas Blaby, as shown in the 1569
Herald's Visitation and in a family tree of BALDWIN’S descendants in Nash's
History. Blaby bought a house and land in Broadway from his wife’s cousin
Ralph V SHELDON in 1577, and he was succeeded in 1593 by his grandson Ralph, son
of John Blaby. BALDWIN’S second daughter, our ancestor CHRISTIAN, married JOHN
SEVERNE of Shrawley, west of Droitwich, as described in The OAKLEY Family.
BALDWIN and JANE’S third son William VI
SHELDON was shown in the 1569 Visitation and by Nash to have married Margaret
Stokes and had a daughter Jane. He was buried in Broadway in 1576 when he would
have been only about 40 years old. It is interesting that he had brought a case
in the court of Chancery against our ancestor THOMAS II OAKLEY, in which he
complained that a yardland 'in the upend of the town of Broadway', which
he had inherited through his father from his grandfather RALPH III SHELDON, had
been obtained by THOMAS OAKLEY by unjust means. Only part of the document
survives, and neither the date nor the outcome of the case is known. The land
was presumably part of the holding that William had selected in accord with his
father's will. Despite the conflict, THOMAS’S son EDWARD OAKLEY later married
URSULA, the daughter of William's sister CHRISTIAN.
The pedigrees show that BALDWIN’S
daughter Elizabeth married Richard Edgiock, the marriage taking place in 1560 in
Alvechurch, where her mother lived with her third husband. Richard lived at
Salford near South Littleton. The next daughter Ursula also married in
Alvechurch, in 1568. She and her husband Hugh James lived at Astley, near
Shrawley where her elder sister CHRISTIAN was living. Her husband was made a
bequest in the will of CHRISTIAN’S husband JOHN SEVERNE in 1584, and in
CHRISTIAN’S own will in 1592, of which he was an executor. A brass plaque in
Astley church commemorates Ursula's death in 1604 as BALDWIN’S daughter.
Elizabeth, Ursula and Edith are three of the 'four younger daughters' to
whom BALDWIN made bequests, but the name of the fourth is not known. There is no
mention of her in the pedigrees or in the Broadway parish records, and she may
have been buried in Alvechurch.
The Combe Family
of JANE SHELDON’S second husband
BALDWIN SHELDON’S widow JANE married
John I Combe of Stratford-upon-Avon as her second husband, and their son William
I Combe was born in 1551. They are shown in the following tree together with the
family of John II Combe, who was John’s son by his first wife Margaret.
The Combe Family

The best account of the Combe family is
to be found in Sir E.K.Chambers’s William Shakespeare, which was
published in 1930. Shakespeare would have grown up knowing the Combes. John I
Combe was an agent of the bishop of Worcester, and was alderman of the Stratford
Guild in 1534. In 1537 he leased from John Greville the manor of Ruin Clifford
in Stratford parish for 60 years, at a rent of £9.10.0, and he also took a
99-year lease of 3 messuages and land from the bishop of Worcester in Welcombe,
another part of the parish, which he built up into a considerable estate. By his
first wife Margaret he had six children including a son John II Combe. After
Margaret’s death he married a widow, Katherine Quiney (who is not shown in the
above tree), on 30 April 1534, but they had no children. By her first marriage,
Katherine was the great grandmother of Thomas Quiney who married William
Shakespeare’s daughter Judith. After Katherine’s death, John married JANE
SHELDON as his third wife, by whom he had a son William I Combe, but he died in
1550 before the child’s birth.
In 1565, John’s son John II Combe
obtained a fresh lease of Ruin Clifford for 60 years at £40 rent, and he died in
1588 holding the capital messuage and a watermill. By his first wife Joyce Blunt
of Kidderminster he had 4 sons (only 3 are shown in the tree) who were about the
same age as his stepbrother William I. His second wife Rose Clopton (not shown)
was the daughter of William Clopton (died 1560) of Clopton House and New Place,
Stratford, who was an ancestor of Barbara Clopton who married Aston INGRAM in
1692 (see The INGRAM Family), and by her he had another
five children. She died in October 1579, and in 1583 he married Elizabeth
Kinnersley, but she died in 1584. In that year he was granted the arms
'Ermine, three lions passant Gules', i.e. an ermine shield bearing three red
lions with their right forelegs raised as if walking.
John I Combe’s posthumous son by JANE,
William I Combe, was brought up by his mother and her third husband Thomas
Lewknor in Alvechurch, where he later acquired the estate of Alvechurch Park,
but he would have known Stratford well, where his Combe relations lived. He
entered the Middle Temple on 19 October 1571, and was called to the bar on 9
February 1577/8 and practiced as a barrister in London, where he would again
have come into contact with William Shakespeare.
William was MP for Droitwich in 1588,
for Warwick in 1593, and for the county of Warwick in 1598, also becoming the
High Sheriff in 1608. In the cold winter of 1607-8, when there was a shortage of
corn and disturbances spread to Warwickshire, he wrote to the king’s chief
minister, Robert Cecil, earl of Salisbury, reporting the troubles. He lived in
Warwick, where he owned property and held a lease of tithes, and he gave counsel
to the town, in which he was held 'an honest gentleman, their neighbour, well
known to all' (quoted by Chambers). He also kept a close connection with
Stratford and advised the corporation in 1597, and took part in local affairs.
In 1593, William bought land in Old
Stratford next to a holding of the Combe family, and on 1 May 1602 William
Combe of Warwick esquire and John Combe of Old Stratford gentleman
(his nephew John III Combe) sold 4 yardlands of arable amounting to 107 acres,
to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon gentleman for £320 (ER27/1
at Stratford Record Office). This
was at a time when Shakespeare was still living in London, and several years
before he returned to Stratford. William and John Combe signed, and the deed was
‘delivered to Gilbert Shakespeare to the use of the within named William
Shakespeare’. The deed was witnessed by William VII SHELDON of Broadway, who
was BALDWIN’S grandson. William Combe had kept touch with his SHELDON relations:
he was the overseer of the will of his brother-in-law JOHN SEVERNE in 1584, and
of his stepbrother Ralph IX SHELDON of Broadway in 1586. On the other hand, he
did not share the Catholic religious views of the SHELDONS or of his brother
John II Combe. He prepared the recusant list for a part of the county in 1605,
which included some of his relations, and he was among those who informed the
authorities in 1595 of the presence in Alvechurch of the Catholic priest William
Freeman, who was consequently tried and sentenced to death (Wilfred English,
Alvechurch, p.30).
William Combe married
Alice the daughter of Richard Hambury, a London goldsmith, and following her
death in 1606 he married Jane the widow of Sir John Puckering, Lord Keeper of
the Privy Seal, who owned St. Sepulchre Priory in Warwick. He had no children.
In his will of 29 September 1610 (proved 1 January 1610/1) he left his property
to Jane, and he bequeathed a generous £10 to the poor of Stratford and a similar
sum to the poor of Broadway, and £20 to his nephew William VII SHELDON of
Broadway. Others mentioned in the will were his 'sister Edgiock'
(BALDWIN’S daughter Elizabeth), and his nephew John III Combe, and William II
Combe, the son of John's brother Thomas.
The eldest son of William's stepbrother
John II Combe was Edward Combe of Barford near Warwick, who had three daughters.
He inherited the Ruin Clifford property, and it passed on his death in 1597 to
his brother Thomas I Combe. Thomas had bought land in Old Stratford in 1584, and
in 1596 he bought The College, the only stone building in Stratford, which had
been the home of the parochial clergy until it was confiscated by the Crown. It
was the largest house in the town, larger even than New Place, which Shakespeare
bought shortly afterwards. He was a learned man and translated from the French,
and in 1593 he published a book of poems which, in the judgement of Peter Levi,
Oxford Professor of Poetry in recent years, deserve to be reprinted (The Life
and Times of William Shakespeare, p.25).
Thomas Combe was the father of six
children including William II and Thomas II. In his will of 22 December 1608 he
left his son William II the manors of Ruin Clifford and Crowle and a half share
in the Stratford tithes, and mentioned his uncle William I Combe.
Thomas's brother John III Combe
inherited the Welcombe estate, and in 1599 William Shakespeare’s parents chose
him to examine their selected witnesses in a lawsuit, and to advise them in
other legal matters. When he died in 1614 he left the Welcombe property to his
nephew Thomas II Combe, and he also left William Shakespeare £5, and a similar
sum to Sir Francis Smith 'to buy him a hawk', and declared that 'every
debtor should have 20 shillings for every £20 he owed'. He acquired much of
his wealth by money-lending, and his bequests totalled £1,500. The figure on his
tomb by the altar in Stratford church was carved by the same mason who made the
memorial to Shakespeare, who died four years later. John Combe has long been
known by a doggerel verse that was said to have been placed on his memorial,
related to the bad reputation of money-lenders: -
Ten-in-a-hundred lies
here ingrav'd.
'Tis a hundred to ten
his soul is not saved.
If any man ask, who
lies in this tomb?
Oh! ho! quoth the
devil, 'tis my John-a-Combe.
Thomas I's son Thomas II Combe entered
the Middle Temple on 14 November 1608, and he and his elder brother William II
succeeded to the chamber of their great uncle William I on 10 February 1608/9.
When Shakespeare died in 1616 he left Thomas II Combe his sword, something that
a man usually left to his own son, so Thomas may have been a godson. Thomas
lived at Welcombe, and was recorder of Stratford from 1648 until his death in
1657.
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Shakespeare’s bequest to Thomas Combe
(from Stratford-upon-Avon Record Office) |
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|
William Shakespeare’s signature on his will
(from Stratford-upon-Avon Record Office) |
BALDWIN and JANE’S eldest son
Ralph IX SHELDON and his Family
Ralph IX SHELDON was shown in the 1569
and 1634 Visitations and by Nash to have married Mary the daughter of Nicholas
Hubaud of Ipsley in Warwickshire. They included four of their seven children,
Thomas III, John V, Elizabeth and Jane, but there was no mention of Margaret,
christened in Broadway in 1558, or of Ralph, christened in 1566, who may have
died young, nor of Anne who married in Broadway in 1595.
Ralph IX made his will on 1 April 1586.
He bequeathed £100 to each of his daughters Elizabeth, Jane and Anne at the time
of their marriage, or £10 a year if they left home, and £100 to his son John V,
which was owed him by his stepbrother William Combe. His wife Mary was
bequeathed £11 plus £20 a year, and the use of his house and goods and the best
bed and chamber. Their son Thomas III was to provide her with food, drink and
clothes. The residue of the estate (including the manor of Flyford Flavell) was
bequeathed to his son and heir Thomas, who was made the executor. The overseers
included his cousin Ralph V SHELDON of Beoley, and his stepbrother William Combe
of Alvechurch. He was buried 8 days later, and his inventory was assessed at the
large sum of £249 on 10 May, equivalent to about £40,000 today. The will was
proved at Worcester on 5 January 1586/7.
Ralph’s son Thomas III SHELDON was
married in 1587 to Elizabeth the daughter of Richard and Ann Hoby of Badsey,
north of Broadway, and they christened two daughters in Broadway, Elizabeth in
February 1591, and Mary in December 1592. Thomas died in December 1593 aged only
37, and his brother John, the last of Ralph’s sons, died childless a year later,
thus ending the SHELDON name in Ralph IX’s line. In 1597, Thomas’s widow
Elizabeth married Philip Kighley of South Littleton, and in 1604 her daughter
Elizabeth, aged 13, married John Kighley of the same village, whose relationship
to Philip is not known.
Thomas’s younger daughter Mary married
William Sambache of Broadway, who was probably the son of Anthony Sambache, the
younger brother of William II Sambache who married Thomas’s cousin Jane SEVERNE
(see The OAKLEY Family). Mary also married young, as her husband was the
‘William Sambache of West End, gent’, whose children William and Mary
were christened in Broadway in 1606 and 1608, respectively. West End manor house
had been occupied earlier by Thomas’s grandfather BALDWIN, and the name William
Sambache appears in the churchyard wall list for 1633 alongside BALDWIN’S name
in the 1532 list. We will see later that a new manor house had been built nearby
in 1625.
Mary’s stepfather Philip Kighley had
died by April 1605, and her mother had married again by 1609 to Charles Ketilby,
who in that year sold the manor of Abbots Morton near Flyford Flavell. In 1618
they allowed William Sambache to become the owner of Flyford Flavell, but before
1640 it had been transferred to Edward I SHELDON of Beoley.
BALDWIN and JANE’S second son
Anthony I SHELDON and his Family
Anthony was married in
Alvechurch in 1560 to Jane Lewknor, the daughter of his stepfather Thomas
Lewknor. Four of their children, Margaret, William VII, Francis and Thomas IV,
were christened in Alvechurch in the next 5 years, and son Baldwin II was
christened in Broadway in 1577. They also had a daughter Jane whose christening
has not been found.
The 1634 Herald’s Visitations for
Worcestershire give the Lewknor arms as 'Azure, three chevronels Argent',
i.e. a blue shield with three narrow silver chevrons, and Anthony quartered them
with SHELDON and RUDING. The former chantry lands at Alvechurch that had
belonged to her father came to Jane and her husband after the death of her
brother Nicholas. In 1579, Nicholas had bought the manor of Hadzor on the
eastern side of Droitwich, and he left two-thirds to his brother-in-law Thomas
Copley of Bredon and the remaining third to Jane. The manor was sold in 1633,
the Copley portion fetching £750, and Jane's grandson William VIII SHELDON
receiving £400. In his will of 1 June 1580, Nicholas also left a cottage and 2
acres in Alvechurch to build an almshouse for 12 poor persons, funded by 100
marks a year from Hadzor manor. As he held the manor in chief of the crown, it
was necessary that the Queen gave permission, which she did in 1588. In the
event only 9 cottages were built, which were known as the Lewknor Hospital or
Almshouses. They were rebuilt in about 1800 and again in 1980.
Anthony had inherited from his father
BALDWIN the 80-year lease in Broadway. In 1576, his cousin Ralph V SHELDON of
Beoley granted a capital messuage and land at Broadway to Anthony, but it
appears from Barnard's Sheldon Miscellanea at Birmingham Reference
Library that Anthony had owned property in the manor at an earlier date, as it
quotes a 1576 deed in which Ralph granted to his widowed sister Anne Daston a
house and lands in Broadway 'late in the tenure of Anthony SHELDON gent',
which Anthony had granted to Ralph in the previous year. There is also mention
of a deed of 1564 involving Anthony and the then owner of the manor, and to
judge by his children’s christenings, he appears to have moved back to Broadway
from Alvechurch only a few years later.
Anthony died two years before his
brother Ralph and was buried in Broadway in 1584, being succeeded by his eldest
son William VII, as described below. The elder daughter Margaret was married in
1580 to William Draper of Grafton, about 10 miles north of Broadway. There is no
mention in the pedigrees of the second son Francis, and he probably died young.
The third son Thomas IV was married to Mary Farre in 1588 at Upton Snodsbury,
near his cousin’s home at Abberton, and she was included in a recusancy list in
1596 with Jane SHELDON, widow, presumably Thomas’s mother, Jane Lewknor.
Anthony’s younger daughter Jane married
Barnaby Bishop (1561-1635) of Brailes in Warwickshire, not far from Barcheston
where her father's cousin Ralph V had his tapestry weaving business, as will be
seen. The pedigree of the Bishop family was recorded in the Herald's Visitation
for Warwickshire in 1683, and shows that their eldest son John was born in 1586.
The booklet describing Brailes church relates that Barnaby's elder brother Dr
William Bishop, who was born in 1553 and studied at the Sorbonne, was
consecrated in Paris the Titular Bishop of Chalcedon, and was sent to England by
the Pope ‘for the comfort of Roman Catholics’ to exercise spiritual
oversight of all of that faith. He was thus the first Englishman to receive
episcopal orders from the Holy See after Henry VIII’s break with Rome and
establishment of the Church of England.
The recusant list for the Kineton
Hundred of the county for 10 September 1605, which was drawn up by Anthony's
stepbrother William Combe as remarked earlier, includes 'Barnaby Bishop gent'
and his wife Jane in Brailes, who were described as 'recusants since the
kings majesty’s Reign', i.e. since 1603. They were also included in similar
lists five months later and in 1627. Barnaby bought some of the lands of the
Guild of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which had been founded in Brailes in 1433 to
support a 'Free School of Grammar For the Erudition and bringing up of divers
and many poor Scholars', but had been confiscated at the Reformation, and he
applied its rents to the re-endowment of the school.
Anthony’s youngest son
Baldwin II SHELDON married Eleanor Bishop of Temple Grafton in 1599. Their
descendant Thomas SHELDON was living there in 1664/5 and paid tax on 7 hearths.
Earlier, before the battle of Edgehill in 1642, the Parliamentary army had
entered Warwickshire, and Margaret SHELDON at Temple Grafton had suffered losses
totalling £400. This was despite their commander's proclamation 'that no
soldier should plunder either church or private house, upon pain of death' (Edgehill
and beyond, p.131).
Anthony I
SHELDON’S eldest son William VII SHELDON and his Descendants
On the death of his father in 1584,
William inherited the 80-year lease that his great grandfather had taken out in
1538, so it still had many years to run. However, in 1595 Ralph V SHELDON of
Beoley settled the manor of Broadway on William, and he became the owner and not
just the leaseholder. William and his second cousin Walter Savage, the son and
heir of Anne Daston by her first husband, who were the two major landowners in
the parish, were donors of two of the six bells in Broadway church in 1603 and
1609, and their names are inscribed on them. The photograph shows that William’s
name was spelled 'SHELDOVN'.
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|
Inscription on bell in Broadway church donated by William VII SHELDON |
Barnard (p.103) wrote that William “must
have been a man of aggressive nature and tenacious of what he considered were
the rights of the Lord of the Manor”, as in 1609 and 1610 he was involved in
two disputes, one concerning the hill pastures in Broadway, and the other with
the villagers of neighbouring Childswickham about pools or fishponds that he had
caused to be made there. He married Cicely the daughter of Francis Brace esquire
of Doverdale near Droitwich, and they had at least 14 children. Cicely died in
1613, and Barnard informs us (p.104) that William moved to Haselor, a small
village near Temple Grafton where his son Brace and his younger brother Baldwin
II lived, leaving his eldest son William VIII to manage the Broadway estate. He
was buried in Broadway on 3 September 1626, aged 62.
William VII SHELDON’S daughter Margaret,
who was christened in Broadway on 24 August 1592, married her second cousin John
III OAKLEY of the Parsonage in Great Wolford, whose mother URSULA SEVERNE was
the daughter of Margaret's great aunt CHRISTIAN. Their son Edward, named after
John’s father EDWARD I OAKLEY, was christened in Broadway in 1614, and they also
had a daughter who was named Cicely after Margaret's mother.
William VII SHELDON’S eldest daughter
Margery married Robert Harewell of Evesham. The second daughter Mary married
John Vickeridge of Natton near Tewkesbury, and their son John was christened in
Broadway on 21 February 1607/8, but Mary died in 1611 and is commemorated on two
slabs in the chancel. William’s second son, named Brace after his mother's
family, married Margaret Kempson of Temple Grafton. The third son Thomas V died
at the age of 5, the next son Anthony II died at 14, and another son was buried
as 'a male child', presumably before he was christened. Three daughters,
Jane, Elizabeth and Anne, also died young. Another daughter named Jane died in
1619 aged 22, bequeathing 'towards moulding, repairing and beautifying the
Chapel in the Nether end of Broadway, 50 shillings' and 'to the repairing
and pitch of the church way leading along the west end, from my brother
SHELDON’S manor house towards the Church, 50 shillings'. A daughter Frances
married Thomas Westcote of Tamworth, north east of Birmingham. The youngest
daughter Anne, who was christened on 1 January 1610/1, married Robert Talbot.
She placed a memorial to her parents 'in the middle Alley' of Broadway
church, but it is no longer there, perhaps having been removed in 1866 when the
floor of the nave was re-laid with red tiles (Barnard, pp.101-103).
William VIII SHELDON, the eldest son of
William VII and Cicely, was married in 1607 to his third cousin, Anne the
daughter of Walter Savage of Broadway Court, and they had 15 children over the
next 20 years. The first Thomas, Anthony, Mary and Edward died young, and their
names were given to children who were born later. Ann also died young, as
probably did Andrew, who is not included in the pedigrees. Nothing further is
known of Philippa or the second Thomas, Mary and Edward, though their names do
appear in the pedigrees.
William built a new manor house in 1625,
only a short distance from the original which appears subsequently to have been
occupied by William Sambache, who had married William's cousin Mary, the
daughter of Thomas III SHELDON, as described earlier. The new house is now known
as Wych House.
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|
Wych House, Broadway, built in 1625 by William VIII SHELDON as a new manor house |
In 1634, William VIII SHELDON settled
his estate. His eldest son William IX was married and his first two
grandchildren had been born, so this would have been a routine arrangement, but
he also appears to have been in need of money. The arrangements he made are set
out in two documents numbered ER3/3305 and 3306 at Stratford Record Office. The
first, in Latin and dated 1 September, was a 'licence to alienate' lands
in Broadway, which gave William royal permission by Letters Patent to sell or
dispose of property held of the Crown by knight service. The second document was
dated 2 November, and it involved William the elder, esquire, his wife Anne, and
their eldest son William the younger, gent, Walter Savage,
esquire, who was Anne's nephew and represented her side of the family, and
John OAKLEY, gent, William's brother-in-law, who represented on behalf of
his wife all of William's brothers and sisters. It also involved John Keyt of
Ebrington (owner of Ebrington manor), and Anthony Langston of Littleton, both
places about 6 miles from Broadway.
The property in the settlement comprised
the manor of Broadway, with the 'chief rents' due to the lord of the
manor and the right to hold a Court Leet, the capital messuage occupied
by William the elder and four other houses, a mill, 570 acres plus commons, and
the tithes of hay, wool and lambs. It was stated that the arrangement was made
in consideration of £4,500 paid by Keyt to William the elder, and for a jointure
for Anne in case she outlived her husband, 'and for the natural love and
affection which the said William Sheldon beareth unto the said William his son',
and for the conveying and settling of the estate.
The settlement gave William and Anne the
use for life of the coppice wood, the chief rents, and the rents from a quarry
and a claypit, which would afterwards go to their son. William the younger had
the use of the manor and court leet, the capital messuage (with two pigeon
houses), a house called Hathways, the mill, a headland, and 50 acres. Keyt and
Langston were to have the use of 3 yardlands of copyhold land, 30 acres of
arable, and the reversion of a house and one yardland. Keyt was to have the use
of the rest of the land, of yearly value at least £247 clear of all charges,
which was described in detail and included the parsonage house, the tithes, a 6
acre meadow in the possession of William Sambache, a hop yard, and 10 yardlands
of arable, meadow and pasture in the open fields. The signatures of the two
William Sheldons, Walter Savage and John Oakley appear at the foot. This
document signalled the beginning of the decline of this branch of the SHELDONS.
William VIII died in June 1653. His
eldest daughter Cicely married Robert Savage of Calway Hill near Beoley, who may
have been a relation. Her brother Sherington SHELDON became a distinguished
Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, and the youngest of the family, Anthony IV, was
killed in 1644 aged 17 at the second battle of Newbury in the Civil War
(Barnard, p.104).
The eldest son William IX married
Philippa the only daughter of Sir Richard Tracy, Baronet, of Stanway House in
Gloucestershire, 4 miles south west of Broadway. The house was built in 1626,
presumably by her father, and a much-photographed gatehouse was added later.
Barnard tells us (p.105) that the marriage took place without the consent of her
father, but reconciliation took place, and on 17 June 1637 he bequeathed £1,500
to their daughters. A Tracy from the previous generation had become the second
wife of William IV INGRAM of Earls Court in Worcester, as described in The
INGRAM Family, and the Tracy coat of arms appears on one of the SHELDON
tapestries which are described later.
William and Philippa's first child
Richard may have been christened at Stanway. Their second child Ann was
christened at Broadway in 1634, and the other two children Elizabeth and
Catherine were christened at Great Wolford when they were staying at the
Parsonage with William’s aunt Margaret OAKLEY. The eldest daughter died in 1639.
Nash tells us that Elizabeth married Richard Savage, presumably the son of
Walter Savage the younger of Broadway Court, and that Catherine married John
Barcroft. Their mother Philippa died in 1640, and William married Mary née
Brett, the widow of Spencer Lucy of Charlecote Park near Stratford (Barnard,
p.105). He was probably a younger brother of Robert and Richard Lucy who were
successive owners of Charlecote at that period, and a great grandson of Sir
Thomas Lucy from whom Shakespeare is said to have poached deer.
William and Mary had three sons and four
daughters. Barnard reported the rest of William IX’s life story (The
Sheldons, Part II, Chapter II). William was actively engaged in support of
King Charles in the Civil War, and probably met the king when he stayed at ‘Mr
Savage’s house’ in Broadway on 16 June 1644. After the king’s defeat, the
cases of William and his father came before the Committee for Compounding in
April 1649. William claimed he was not worth £200 in estate and had not had a
commission against Parliament. Barnard remarks that this was probably true, as
his estate at Broadway was already but a shadow of the former SHELDON
possessions. At the restoration of the monarchy, he was one of the JPs in the
first commission of the peace to sit at the Quarter Sessions of July 1660. He
was claimed to have an estate of £600 a year, a very good income, but it was
actually less than £175. His wife Mary died in 1661, and he took as his third
wife Mary Burst, the widow of Sir Robert Staresmere. They had no children, and
she died in 1670.
In 1663, 'Captain William SHELDON'
was in command of The Clergie Band, at that time made up of 43 officers and men
but later many more. He was also made one of the Band of Gentlemen Pensioners or
Gentlemen-at-Arms at £100 a year. This later became one of the oldest corps in
England apart from the Yeomen of the Guard. The Captain was also put in command
of a foot company as Deputy Governor of Guernsey in the Channel Islands off the
French coast. This was no sinecure. In 1670 William complained that he had no
money or provisions for the troops, and as war with Holland had been
threatening, the fortifications of Guernsey were strengthened and the garrison
reinforced and paid, but money was short again in 1674. He was accused of
smuggling French salt into England as Guernsey salt in order to make money, and
he always lived in a more or less impecunious state. Then at about midnight on
29 December 1672, Castle Cornet on Guernsey blew up when the powder magazine was
struck by lightening. Among those killed were the wife and mother of the
Governor, Lord Viscount Hatton, and his steward. Apparently there is a large
collection of letters in the British Museum between Hatton and SHELDON, who may
even have been the Lieutenant of the Company of Foot who had a miraculous escape
in the explosion, being thrown clear into an entry. The castle was surveyed in
1678-80, and it was recommended that over £16,000 should be spent and that the
Governor and his Lieutenant should continually reside in the island. In the
event the castle was patched up. The oil painting below shows the castle before
the explosion.
 |
Castle Cornet on Guernsey, where William IX SHELDON was Deputy Governor
(from Guernsey Museum and Art Gallery) |
He complained in November 1680 that he
still needed money for his men, but he was dead before Christmas. The St. Peter
Port parish record contains the entry 'Monsieur William Sheldon, Lieutenant
Gouverneur de cette Isle, fut Interée Le Mardy 21 Decembre 1680', and a
memorial was erected there in his honour. The inscription under the
SHELDON arms reads 'Here lieth the Body of Capt. Will. Sheldon of Broadway in
ye County of Worcester, Justice of Peace in ye said County. A person of great
courage, being Captain of a Troop of Hussars in ye Service of King Charles ye
first of Blessed Memory, in whose Service he behaved himself both loyally and
gallantly during ye Civil Wars of England, though much to ye impairing of his
Estate. From ye year 1664 hath been his Majesty’s Lieut. Governor of ye Castle
and Isle of Guernsey where he served his Majesty faithfully 16 years 11 months
and 3 weeks. Departed this life the 18 day of XII month Anno Dom. 1680, being
aged 71 years'.
When he was in his 60s, he
had married Mary the widow of Richard Loveyn, as his fourth wife, and they lived
at the house called Hathways in Broadway that had been included in the 1634
settlement. They had two sons and two daughters, and in 1678 he had conveyed the
manor of Broadway to his son-in-law John Barcroft, in trust, to be sold for the
benefit of his children after his death. The manor had been mortgaged for
£8,500, and it was sold to Sir Francis Winnington. There was a lawsuit against
his widow, and an inventory in the Chancery proceedings gives the assets as £325
and debts as £7,199. The manor of Broadway had been sold for £5,900.
The Broadway churchwarden's book records
that in 1694 a certain Mary Sheldon was in receipt of parish relief for 40
weeks, and for the whole year of 1695. She died early in 1696, described as the
daughter of William Sheldon esquire. We know nothing of the rest of William’s
children, and the SHELDON line of our ancestor BALDWIN SHELDON had come to a sad
end.
Now we turn to the life of BALDWIN’S
elder brother William II SHELDON and his wife with their descendants. We are
fortunate in finding considerable information on the collateral lines and on the
whole SHELDON family.
RALPH III and PHILIPPA’S
eldest son William II SHELDON and his Family

William II SHELDON was educated in law
at the Middle Temple in London, and in 1528 at the Inner Temple, and in 1532 he
became a Justice of the Peace in Worcestershire before he held any property in
the county, and before his father’s appointment to that position. He held this
appointment until his death, and he was also a JP in Warwickshire from 1554 to
1559. His father RALPH had been nominated but not selected as Sheriff of
Worcestershire in 1541, 1542 and 1544, and Bindoff remarks (p.306) that he may
therefore have been of sufficient standing to secure William’s election in 1542
as ‘knight of the shire’, the more senior of the two Members of
Parliament for Worcestershire. William was again MP from 1547 to 1552 and at
various intervals to 1567, and he outdid his father by becoming Sheriff in 1547,
1556 and 1567.
He was Marshal of the
Inner Temple in 1542 and 1544, and no doubt this brought him to the attention of
Henry VIII’s sixth wife, Queen Catherine Parr, for whom he became solicitor by
May 1544. By 1548 he had been made steward to Sir Thomas Seymour of Sudeley
Castle in Gloucestershire, who in the previous year had married Catherine Parr
following the death of king Henry VIII. Sir Thomas was the brother of Jane
Seymour, who had been Henry VIII’s third wife but who died after giving birth to
Henry’s only son, and he was made Baron Sudeley by his young nephew, the new
king Edward VI. William SHELDON’S position as steward would not have lasted
long, because Catherine died in childbirth in September 1548, and a year later
Seymour was charged with treason and executed for plotting against his own
brother, who was Protector during the king’s minority.
William SHELDON has been
described as the richest commoner in England, and Habington, the chronicler of
Worcestershire, said of him “in our age for wisdom, estate and authority in
our county equalled most of the gentlemen of England”, yet he never received
a title. At a meeting of the Privy council in July 1554 it was agreed that,
whereas William SHELDON esquire was to have been made a Knight of the Bath
(presumably with others as part of the celebration of the approaching marriage
of Queen Mary), “he shall now in consideration of his small ability and
living be spared and forborne from receiving that Order”. No reason was
given for the change of mind. It is possible that his earlier connection with
Seymour had counted against him, though changes in monarchy from Edward to Mary
and then to Elizabeth did not seem to affect his career. Apparently he was also
not affected by the royal changes of religion, as in 1564 he was among those
described by Bishop Sandys as “indifferent in religion or else of no religion”
(Bindoff, p.307).
Between 1535 and 1564 he held many Crown
appointments. He was commissioner for musters of troops for the county in 1539,
and in 1547 he was receiver in the Court of Augmentations which was set up after
the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and collected the sums received in respect
of the monastic estates in eight Midland counties. When the Court was dissolved
in 1553 he retained his post in the Exchequer court which replaced it, with fees
of £100 plus porterage. He was appointed to survey the lands of the bishopric of
Worcester in 1560, and he was collector of loan for the county in 1562 (Bindoff,
pp.306,307).
He was always interested
in finding ways of developing schemes in which to invest his money. The family
owned large flocks of sheep, and he exploited the profits from sheep farming and
wool stapling, in which several of his agents were engaged. He possessed
property in Birmingham, then a growing little town, and its markets made a
useful centre (Barnard, p.13). He also entered the market in monastic lands. In
1544 with his brother Francis he bought property in Worcestershire for £1,804,
most of which they resold, and with his brother BALDWIN in 1546 he bought the
manors of Eckington and Tenbury, which they also sold subsequently. In 1545 he
leased for 21 years the manor of Shrawley, where his niece CHRISTIAN SHELDON
lived later on her marriage to JOHN SEVERNE. He was granted the reversion by
Henry VIII, but sold it in 1558, retaining the lease and the advowson and
Shrawley wood. In 1550 his cousin Nicholas HEATH obtained from Edward VI a
licence to sell property in Blockley parish to William. Bindoff points out
(p.307) that William’s “appointment in the augmentations ought to have put
him in a favourable position for making further acquisitions, but although he
continued to buy lands none of his purchases was from the crown, and most of
them were not of former monastic property”; i.e. he did not abuse his
position.
In about 1530, William SHELDON had
married Mary Willington, one of the 7 daughters of William Willington, a wealthy
Merchant Stapler of Barcheston north of Wolford, who was involved in some of the
INGRAM deeds (see The Ingram Family). The Willington arms were ‘Or, a
saltire Vair‘ i.e. a gold shield with a St Andrew’s cross in a stylised blue
and white pattern. William Willington had bought the manor of Barcheston in
1507, and had settled there, depopulating the village to provide pasture for his
sheep. In the Midlands, there was a good deal of such forcible eviction of
tenant farmers, especially before about 1540 (Youings, p.59). His 7 daughters
all married into prominent families. One married Sir Edward Greville of Milcote
near Stratford, and their descendant, the poet Fulke Greville, was given Warwick
Castle by king James I and was raised to the peerage as Lord Brooke. Another
daughter became the grandmother of Sir Thomas Holte, who between 1618 and 1635
built the spectacular Aston Hall, now within the city of Birmingham. The
youngest daughter Catherine married Sir Richard Catesby’s only son William, one
eventual outcome of which was that they became the grandparents of Robert
Catesby of the Gunpowder Plot.
It may be that William SHELDON’S
marriage to Mary Willington enabled him in 1535 to purchase the manor of Weston
for £533. It was in Long Compton parish, 3 miles south of Barcheston, and close
to JOHN III INGRAM’S estate in Little Wolford. Weston had been depopulated in
about 1510 and enclosed, in a similar manner to Barcheston, and in 1545 William
obtained a licence from the king to empark 300 acres, to be called Weston Park.
He wished to use the land for hunting, but as this was a royal prerogative he
had had to obtain permission. The manor house became William’s home for a time,
but his son Ralph V later replaced it with a much larger building. After the
death of his father RALPH III SHELDON in 1546, William inherited Balford Hall in
Beoley. In 1544 he acquired further land in Beoley which had belonged to
Alcester monastery, and five years later he bought the manor from John Neville,
Lord Latimer.
By 1543, William and Mary SHELDON had
two surviving sons, Ralph V and William IV, and four daughters, Anne, Philippa,
Goditha, and Catherine. They had had another son Francis who was buried in
Beoley in 1542. Mary died in 1554 and was also buried in Beoley. By 1559 William
had married Margaret the daughter of Sir William Brooke, Lord Chief Baron of the
Exchequer, and widow of Sir William Whorwood, Attorney General to Henry VIII. We
know what William SHELDON looked like at that time, because his portrait was
painted in 1560 by an unknown artist.
 |
Portrait of William SHELDON
(from Birmingham Reference
Library) |
Around 1560, William SHELDON purchased
2,000 acres of land at Skilts, between Beoley and his mother’s home Ford Hall.
It had been a grange of Studley Priory, and had been purchased in 1536 by Sir
Edmund Knightley, husband of Dame Ursula who had taken William’s sister Mary
into service. William emparked it for deer, and at Lower Skilts, overlooking the
Warwick road, he built ‘a very beautiful house of brick’ of 32 hearths,
which he made his home with his second wife. It was described in the VCH
for Warwickshire in 1945 (Vol. 3, p.177), by which time the western half had
been demolished, and by 1992 only the gatehouse survived.
 |
North elevation of William SHELDON’S Lower Skilts
(from The Story of
Lower Skilts in Warwickshire) |
William SHELDON became the owner of the
Barcheston estate of his father-in-law William Willington in 1561. He may have
expected to inherit it on Willington’s death in 1554, when he had acted as
executor together with Willington’s cousin William Barnes, but it went instead
to Barnes, and SHELDON brought pressure on him to withdraw, even causing him to
be put in prison for several weeks. An affray took place in 1555 which resulted
in lawsuits, and in 1558 the estate became the subject of a chancery suit
against SHELDON and his co-executors for payment of legacies.
Having become the owner of Barcheston,
SHELDON established there the enterprise for which he is best known, the first
tapestry-weaving business in England. It was a great success, and was much
admired: when the Town clerk of Warwick visited the Earl of Leicester in 1571
hoping for aid in relieving the town’s poverty, the Earl remarked ‘I marvel
you do not devise some ways among you to have some special trade to keep your
poor on work as such as SHELDON of Beoley devised which me thinketh should be
not only profitable but also a means to keep your poor from idleness’. John
Humphreys explained the background in his book Elizabethan Sheldon Tapestries
in 1924. Tapestries had been woven in France and particularly in Flanders
for many centuries, and in England they were bought by such important figures as
Cardinal Wolsey and Henry VIII, the king having over 2,000 in his many palaces.
But the price was prohibitive for the smaller English mansions, which had to
make do with painted cloths. When England benefited later from the plunder of
Spanish galleons laden with gold and silver from the new colonies in South
America, a larger market developed for the domestic display of great means.
Humphrey’s work was updated in 1928 by
Barnard, who provides information about Richard Hyckes, the man who was put in
charge of the enterprise, including the statement that Hyckes married Anne
INGRAM of Wolford. It is possible that Hyckes had travelled abroad with William
SHELDON’S son Ralph in 1554 or 1555, and may have received instruction in
tapestry weaving at that time. Barnard pointed out that there was a pool of
suitable craftsmen locally, who would soon have become skilful at the craft. The
SHELDONS had themselves become a famous weaving family in the 15th
century, and had developed around Beoley a successful cottage industry making
and selling cloth, to the extent that other weavers took action before the Privy
Council in an attempt to curb their trading activities (Pearson, p.21). Most of
the tapestry manufacture at Barcheston took place during the time of William’s
son Ralph, so further description will be provided later.
William SHELDON of Beoley Esquire
made his will on 3 January 1569/70, and as a result of his determination to
provide detailed instructions about all his property, it fills 16 closely
written pages, including a 2 page codicil that was added on 27 September 1570.
The details are particularly interesting as an example of the interests of a
wealthy man of the time, though in the ways in which he made productive use of
his money he may not have been a typical example.
The will shows no particular religious
interest, thus supporting the comment five years earlier that he was indifferent
or of no religion. He began in conventional Church of England style by
bequeathing his soul ‘unto Almighty God my Maker and Redeemer Jesus Christ
trusting by the merits of His glorious passion and Resurrection to be saved’,
and he made no bequests to churches. His executors, who included his elder son
Ralph V and two of his sons-in-law, received the greater part of his
considerable estate for six years to pay debts and legacies. Most of the
freehold was then to pass to the heir, providing he allowed it to be encumbered
with various annuities and life grants to his stepmother and sisters. Frampton
in Gloucestershire and the lease of Wadborough Park near Worcester were left to
his younger son William IV, who was allowed to take four deer a year at
Wadborough, and £40 out of the profits of Frampton. William was also to have a
fifth of the residue of the household stuff and plate, and a fifth of the
armour, which was usually kept at Beoley, ‘except the hangings of tapestry
and arras which I do will shall remain at Beoley from heir to heir‘.
He explained that by agreement he had
begun to extend the coal mines in Coleorton onto neighbouring land, and he
wished his executors to continue this work, which would be ‘beneficial unto
my heir or heirs but great commodity to a great number of the Queen majesty’s
subjects to have the said coals at reasonable price for their fuel’. He was
very interested in enterprises of this kind, whereby he provided employment in a
worthwhile undertaking, together with an opportunity to make a profit, and
thereby to increase the wealth of the country as well as of his heirs.
This interest extended to his
tapestry-weaving business. His executors were also to lend money to persons who
‘use the art of making tapestry’, and the first loan was to be made to a
servant of ‘Richard Hyckes the only author and beginner of this Art within
this Realm’. In the codicil he explained that he had paid Sir John
Throckmorton £2,500 for the manor of Barcheston, and had placed Richard Hyckes
there rent-free for him to make tapestry and other fabrics. He had agreed in
writing with Hyckes about the money that he and his heirs would lay out each
year, and how the money and other expenditure were to be repaid, adding ‘And
for that his trade will be greatly beneficial to this common wealth to trade
youth in, and a means to store great sums of money within this Realm that will
[otherwise] issue and go out of this Realm for the same commodities to the
maintenance of the foreign parties and to the hindrance of this common wealth’.
He thought that Ralph would share these considerations, but he made arrangements
for the enterprise to continue without Ralph’s support.
He explained that his father had
disparked some of Beoley Park, and that he had done the same and intended to
dispark most or all of it. Disparking was the opposite of emparking,
and meant that a private park was converted to agricultural use so that it
provided food and employment to benefit others than the owner who had kept it
for his private hunting grounds. William was unhappy that the land was not put
to productive use. He gave his reason for disparking ‘that the soil of the
ground thereof may be used and employed rather to the benefit of the common
wealth than used and employed for the keeping of things for the pleasure of few
men’. This attitude seems remarkable for the time, and it is also striking
that William forces his heir to be equally public spirited. His son Ralph would
inherit Beoley, and if at any time within 16 years he newly emparked or kept his
deer in a section that had been disparked, and did not reverse the situation
within a year, he would not be an executor and would not receive a legacy, which
would otherwise go to Ralph’s son Edward when 21.
William’s second wife Margaret was to
have £300, with a further £300 within a year. His son William and daughter
Goditha were each to have the £80 bequeathed to them by their grandfather
William Willington. In addition, each of his daughters was bequeathed £100, as
were his sons-in-law Edmund Plowden and Anthony Pollard; his son William was
bequeathed 200 marks, and Plowden was bequeathed an extra £100 as overseer of
his children and as executor. Among many other bequests, the unmarried children
of his sister Lench and his sister Rugeley were to share £20, and
the children of his sister Ferrers (Mary, who had earlier given him so
much trouble) were to share £40.
If £3,000 remained after all his debts
had been paid, his daughter Catherine was to have £200 towards the marriage of
her children except the eldest son, his daughter Philippa was to have 200 marks
if she had children, but £100 otherwise, and Goditha and William were made
similar bequests. £700 was to go towards the marriage of Ralph’s children apart
from the eldest. The remainder of the £3,000 was to be used to buy land for
William’s son William IV and his heirs, and if there were no heirs he directed
that one third of the land was to go to the sons of his late brother BALDWIN and
their male heirs, another third to Ralph IV the elder son of his brother Thomas,
and the remainder to Thomas II the younger son.
William had bought for £10 a 51-year
lease of all the tolls, fairs and markets each week in the lordship of Bishops
Castle in Shropshire, to begin in 1575, and this would go to his grandson
Edmund, the son of Edmund Plowden, when he was 24. This was an appropriate gift,
as the Plowdens lived in that area. If William’s son Ralph outlived him, the
executors were to pay £200 towards the cost of Ralph’s livery, presumably for
distinctive dress for his servants. An interesting bequest was of £4 to each of
his musicians. Perhaps they played to him at mealtimes, as in the drawing.
 |
Music at mealtime
(from Food and cooking
in 16th century Britain) |
William SHELDON died at Skilts on 24
December 1570, aged about 70, and the will was proved by Ralph at the PCC on 10
February 1570/1 (8 Holney). He was buried at Beoley on 15 January, and Barnard
reports that Clarenceux King-of-Arms and other heralds came from London to be
present at the ceremony. The funeral certificate is still at the College of
Arms.
His son Ralph built a chantry chapel,
known as the SHELDON chapel, next to the chancel of Beoley church, to house
family memorials and the altar which had been a gift to Ralph from Pope Gregory
XIII in 1580. There he erected memorials to his grandfather RALPH III SHELDON
and his great uncle William I SHELDON. He pierced the wall between the chapel
and the chancel with an arch, in which he placed an elaborate memorial to his
parents, with the arms of SHELDON, RUDING, HEATH and GROVE quartered with
Willington.
 |
|
William II SHELDON’S arms on his tomb at Beoley church |
The effigies on the tomb, of Italian
workmanship, show his father in armour, his head resting on a helmet with a
crest, and gauntlets at his feet, and his mother with cap and ruff.
 |
|
Figure of William II SHELDON on his tomb |
William’s widow Margaret died in 1589
aged 80, and she was buried in London. She had had two children by her first
husband, and in her will (PCC, 17 Drury) she bequeathed a gold chain to her
son-in-law Sir Thomas Throckmorton, whose sister Anne married William SHELDON’S
son Ralph. She bequeathed a standing cup to Ralph, and 40 shillings for the
repair of the highway adjoining Skilts Park.
William II and Mary SHELDON’S daughters
and their younger son William IV are described next, followed by the elder son
Ralph and his descendants.
William II and
Mary’s daughters and their younger son William IV SHELDON
The younger son William
IV made his will on 30 September 1587 as William SHELDON of Wadborough Park,
Worcestershire, Esquire, and his wife Jane proved the will at the PCC on 27
October of that year. William’s portrait was painted by the artist Hieronimo
Custodis, who came to England in 1587 from Antwerp to escape persecution as a
Protestant, so William appears to have been one of the first to give him a
commission after his arrival (Strong’s The English Icon, p.203). This
interest in a new artist is consistent with the impression of his character that
is provided by his will, which reveals him as a lover of fine clothes and
horses. Custodis painted portraits in 1590 of William’s brother Ralph and of
Ralph’s son Edward, which are similar in style, the men being shown wearing soft
collars instead of the usual ruff.
 |
Portrait of William IV SHELDON
(from The English Icon) |
In his will, William left £20 to his
nephew and godson Walter Savage, and ‘my armour for my own body with two head
pieces, my great dagger and girdle, my staff, my grey colt, my silk nightgown,
my cloak guarded with velvet, and my black cloth cloak’, and ‘all my
statute books’. Anthony Savage was to have ‘my black satin doublet and
hose cut upon velvet and my taffeta cloak lined through with tuffed taffeta’.
Other bequests were of his roan colt, his green velvet hose and
coloured satin doublet, his fine mare, his young black horse,
his grey trotting nag and the best of [his] mare colts the next year, and
a hogshead of wine lying at Wadborough. He bequeathed 1000 marks to his
daughter Mary, and made provision for the possibility that his wife was carrying
another child. His wife and daughter were to have his manor of Frampton for 21
years, paying 200 marks a year to his father’s heirs as had been directed in his
father’s will. His wife was bequeathed all his plate, jewels and household
stuff, and his daughter got 10 feather beds and any leases left at the time of
his death. There does appear to have been a second child, Jane, but she was
buried in Broadway on 28 March 1588. The other daughter Mary may also have died
young, as the pedigrees say that William was childless.
William IV SHELDON’S sisters all made
good marriages. Philippa, who had been named after her grandmother PHILIPPA
HEATH, married Anthony Pollard of Newnham in Oxfordshire, a younger brother of
Sir John Pollard, but they had no children. Goditha married Robert Brayne of St
James in Bristol. The youngest sister Catherine married Edmund Plowden of
Plowden near Bishops Castle in Shropshire. He was a celebrated Catholic jurist,
noted for his skilled advocacy in recusant trials (Dictionary of National
Biography).
The eldest sister Anne SHELDON married
Francis Savage of Elmley Castle, west of Broadway, who was MP for Worcestershire
in 1552, and they had five sons and two daughters. He died in 1557, and Anne
moved to Broadway when she took as her second husband Anthony Daston, who had
obtained the lease of a large part of Broadway manor from the Abbot of Pershore
in 1535. They lived at Broadway Great Farm, and in 1574, two years after
Anthony’s death, Anne bought the house and the 2,960-acre farm. The gatehouse
still survives, and above the archway are carved Anne’s arms of SHELDON
quartering RUDING and Willington, and the crests of Savage, SHELDON and Daston.
Anne died in 1619 aged about 90, having outlived all her sons apart from Walter
Savage, who took over the Broadway property. By her second marriage she had a
daughter Anne, who married Ralph Hubaud of Stratford, and in 1605 Shakespeare
bought from him for £440 a half share in the Stratford tithes. Thomas I Combe
owned the other half of the tithes.
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Arms of Anne SHELDON on
the gatehouse of Broadway Court |