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A62469 The antiquities of Nottinghamshire extracted out of records, original evidences, leiger books, other manuscripts, and authentick authorities : beautified with maps, prospects, and portraictures / by Robert Thoroton ... Thoroton, Robert, 1623-1678. 1677 (1677) Wing T1063; ESTC R22553 926,000 566

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patrimony here which was done so effectually in a few generations that 13 H. 8. Robert Thoroton then removed to Carcolston where I shall place the whole Descent passed all his Lands and Tenements in the Town and Fields of Thoroton to George Barret his Ancestors having parcelled away a considerable part before His Grandfather Robert Thoroton of Skreveton suffered a recovery of eight Acres here 4 H. 7. to one Thomas Orston Iohn Barret of Horbling in the County of Lincolne about 36 H. 6. married to his second wife Margaret one of the daughters of Thomas Staunton of Staunton in this County of Nott. Esquire this Iohn we suppose to be Grandfather of the before named George Barret as we guess Thomas might be his Father but certain it is that Richard Barret of Thoroton his son married ..... one of the three sisters and heirs of Richard Claxton son of Edmund Claxton of Balderton by whom he increased his Patrimony here and at Oxton in this County and had also his son and heir Richard Barret who to his first wife had Katherin the daughter of Thomas Shipman of Scar●ington to his second ..... the daughte● of .... Brookesby of Kilbington and to his third Dorothy daughter of ... Bingham By his first he had George Barret of Thoroton who first married Anne Bea●mont and after her decease Anne daughter of Iohn Savile of Oxton by whom he had Richard who by Frances daughter of Iohn Owtram of Carc●lston his wife Cousin German to my Grandfather Robert Thoroton had my kinsman Thomas Barret the present owner and other Children Richard George Iohn Frances and Anne Johannes Barret de Horbling Com. Linc. -Margareta fil Tho. de Stutton ux secunda Thom. Barret Georgius Barret de Thoroton 13 H. 8. .... fil ..... Pierpo●t Rich. Barret de Thoroton 38 H. 8. 4 Eliz. .... fil una 3. cohaer Edm. Claxton Rich. Barret de Thoroton 23 Eliz. -Katherina fil Tho. Shipman ... fil ... Brokesby-Dorothea fil .... ●ingham Georgius Barret 38. Eliz. -Anna fil .... Beaumont-Anna fil Joh. Savile Richardus Barret de Thoroton-Frances fil Joh. Owtram ob 1672. Thom. Barret de Thoroton Richardus Georgius Johannes My Cousin Barret hath about twenty one Oxgangs and I hold the Tythes and Glebe with the third part of the Tythes of Screveton c. by Lease under the Dean and Chapter of Lincolne as a portion or part of the Rectory of Orston which I had of Sir Edward Lake Baronet and he of the Marquess of Dorchester who held during the life of Nicholas Timperley of Norfolk Esquire Here were some Lands given to the Priory of Haverholme the Tenants whereof pay some Rents and Suit the Court-Leet at Staunton sometime belonging to that Priory to which part of a Farm of four Oxgangs also belonged and was bought of William Staunton Esquire by one .... Sprigge it was lately the inheritance of Grace the daughter and heir of William Sudbury of Sutton upon Trent first married to Gilbert Radford my School-master then to William Th●rold who died 1658. and left her four sons and a daughter Richard Thorold the eldest married Anne the youngest sister of Thomas Barret but the third husband of that Grace was Iohn Meringe son of William son of Iohn Mering and Dorothy his wife daughter and co-heir of Iohn Smith of Sutton upon Trent afterwards married to Nath. Lodge This Mr. Mering had a son William by this Grace on whom this Farm was settled but she hath since his death married another husband one .... Fancourt in it now dwells Henry Hall the son of Mr. Henry Hall who hath lately sold his Farm of four or five Oxgangs to .... Marriot the rest of the ●reeholders are but very few and very small yet some Land here was belonging to Belvoyr Priory and some very little to Sibthorp Colledge This Church is Dedicated to St. Elena the Queen Scarington THis was also a Berew of Orston and rated to the Dane-geld at two Car. The Land three Car. There the King William had two Plows or Car. and twenty three Villains and four Bordars having five Car. and an half The Chief Court of Orston hath been anciently and is still divided saving that all appear at Orston on St. Thomas day else there have ever been and yet are two distinct Courts kept one now at Screveton for those in Scarington Carcolston and Screveton c. the other at Orston for Orston Thoroton and that neighbou●hood that of Screveton in the 19 E. 1. and I believe before that time was kept at Scarington and since too for I have an old Writ by me of 10 E. 3. directed to the Bayliff of Robert de Whatton of Skerington It seems it was purchased of Roger Boson named in Orston by Robert Bardolf and Lora his wife which Robert 33 E. 1. left Amicia his daughter and heir then thirty years old and the wife of Ingeram Belet it was then called the S●k of Scarrington as I have seen it since called the Sok of Screveton at leng●h it returned again to the Lords of Orston with whom it continues It was together with that fourth part of a Knights Fee mentioned in Orston which William de Audeley had here Roger de Whattons in the 27 E. 1. who was younger brother of Sir Richard de Whatton Knight which Roger was then called de Skerington and had married Ioan the relict of Robert Moryn one of the three sisters and co-heirs of Iohn son of Oliver de Lovetot of Carcolston named before in Thoroton by whom he had Lands and a son called Richard de W●atton who married Agnes daughter and one of the co-heirs of Alice who had been the wife of Iohn le Palmer of Nottingham before spoken of in Wiverton by which Agnes the said Richard de Whatton had parcells of Land in Bingham Wiverton and Titheby formerly the possessions of Sir Richard de Wiverton Knight All which together with a considerable part of his other inheritance were by Fines 10 H. 5. and after 2 H. 6. by Margaret who had been the wife of Sir William Bagot Knight and sister and heir of Robert Whatton passed to Margaret who had been the wife of Sir Thomas de Rempston Knight and her heirs viz. the Mannor of Skeryngton with the Appurtenances eighteen Mess. one Toft forty six Bova●s of Land one hundred and forty Acres of Medow 13l. 4s. and 8d. ob Rent the Rent of a pair of Gloves and three grains of Pepper in Skerington Bingham Kercolston Wiverton Tytheby Kneveton Aslacton and Whatton Iohn de Knyveton and Agnes his wife held one part and ●oyce de Plumton another for life there is mention also of Maud and Margery after whose decease all should come to the said Iohn and Agnes if they chanced to over-live the said Ioyce Maud and Margery for their lives the Reversion to the Lady Bagot who conveyed it to the Lady Rempston before named who it seems had a
while before William Leek left to descend with his Mannor of Little Léek and other Lands in Gedling Carleton Stokebardolf Colwyke Saxendale and Stoke by Newark to Iohn Leek his son and heir Iohn Leeke Knight held the Mannor of Hucknall Torcard of the Crown by Knights Service and also by the Service of carrying one Gerfalcon from Michaelmas till Lent at the Kings cost with Horses and 2s. a day and half a Cistern of Wine and two Robes when he was warned to do the Service Iohn Biron Knight and Iohn Palmer of Hucknall purchased Lands and Tenements in Hucknall of Francis Leek Esquire to the value of 3l. 2s. 8d. per annum held of the Queen Eliz. in Capite Sir Iohn Leekes Mannor was in my time the inheritance of Lancelot Curtis The dispersed parcels passed through many hands Roger Porter son and heir of Maud Porter 33 E. 3. had a Mess. and eighteen Acres c. of this Fee and Thomas Breton brother and heir of Iohn Breton 41 E. 3. acknowledged to hold the two Bovats before noted to be William le Bretuns by Petit Serjeancy The Fee of Rad. de Burun William Briewer had in the beginning of King Iohn's time or sooner from whom it descended to Baldwin de Wake Lord of Brun or Burne in Lincolnshire of which Mannor 10 E. 1. Iohn Torcard and William Pitie were found to have held two Knights Fees in Lambecote and Hukenhale The first of the Torcards which succeeded Osmund and by their continuance here left their name to distinguish the place whom I have light upon was Gaufr Torcard who with the consent of Maud his wife and Henry his son for the health of his Soul and of his Ancestors and Successours and for the Soul of Alexander de Chiney gave to God and the Church of the Holy Trinity at Lenton and the Monks there serving God one Cart to be continually wandring about to gather up his dead Wood of Huckenale The Witnesses were Raph Murdac Raph de Chelnei Hugh his brother Philip de Beaumes Hugh de Lichelade Gilbert the Chaplain of the Castle Alan Robert Gregory Clarks Mr. Silvester Gaufr Torcard of Chillewelle William de Davidvill Henry Torcard his own son and others There was a Fine levyed 10 R. 1. between Galfr. Torcaz and Maud his wife Petents and William Pitie Tenent of two Knights Fees in Huckenhale and Lambecote whereof they all gave the Church of Huckenhale and five Bovats of Land there to the Church of Newstede and the rest equally divided between Galfr. and William Henry the eldest son of Galfr. had then married Alin the daughter of William who was then also his heir with whom he gave the third part of his share in marriage but if William should happen to have an heir Male Henry and Alina his wife were but to have half of Williams part after his death Roesia Torkard paid four Marks for two Fees in Huckenhale and Lambcote and Iohn Torkard the like summ afterwards for two Fees in Huckenhale then held of Iohan the relict of Hugh Wake who paid also 20s. for half a Fee in Kyleburne in Darbyshire which was also part of Buruns Fee Henry de Winkeburne was Lord of Hucknall 9 E. 2. Henry de Winkeburne and Albreda his wife did by Fine 5 E. 3. pass the Mannor of Hukenale Torkard to Alexander de Gonaldeston and his heirs The said Alexander and Alice his wife by another Fine conveyed it to Raph de Crumbewell and Avicia his wife during their lives and after their decease to Vlker son of the said Raph and Avicia during his life remainder to the right heirs of Raph. Raph de Crumbwell and Avicia his wife made a certain Causey otherwise than had formerly been to increase the Water to serve their Mills which was it seems in the Ditch and upon the Soil which belonged to the Prior of Newstede and extended from the Church-yard to the head of the Damm toward the East for which they gave the said Prior three Roods of Arable Land lying in the East field in diverse places at the Towns end towards Nottingham but the said Raph oppressed the Priory more in causing it to pay more than it ought in the several Scutages for in 5 E. 1. in that for the Welch expedition it paid but for the third part of a Knights Fee and there were Tenants who held ten Bovats of Torkards Fee and eight of Lutterells of Gamelston besides but this Raph Crumbwell got an Inquisition which found the Priory to have two parts of a Knights Fee in Demesne and Service of Tenants so that the Prior was forced to intreat that he might pay but for half a Fee which he thought too much before Vlgar Crumwell it seems gave his interest to the Priory of Beauvale which paid also for half a Knights Fee Raph de Crumbewelle Lord of Tatershale in the County of Lincolne passed his Mannor of Hukenall Torkard which his brother Vlker had for life to Richard de Chesterfeild Clark Richard de Tyssington Clark William de Wakebrugg and Iohn de la Pole of Asseburne to whom he levied a Fine of it Trin. 43 E. 3. They passed it to Hugh de Annesley of Rodyngton as did also Maud de Crumbewell Lady of Tatershall the better to convey it to the Priory of Beauvale with some other small things to which it was confirmed by the feoffees of Raph Lord Crumbewell after his death viz. William Bishop of Winchester William Gray Bishop of Ely Iohn Earl of Shrowsbury Iohn Lord Stourton Knight Iohn Fortescue Knight Chief Justice Walter Moyle one of the Justices of the Common Bench Iohn Radcliffe Esquire Thomas Teryll Knight Mr. William Say Clark Thomas Bylling Iohn Say Esquire William Venour Thomas Young Iohn Taylboys Senior Esquire Robert Scheffeild Richard Illingworth Richard Waterton Esquire Iohn Langholme Edward Blake Thomas Palmer William Stanlowe Iohn Vincent and Richard Flynt the rest were dead viz. Reginald Bishop of Coventry and Lichfeild Thomas Clifford Lord Clifford Robert Beaumont Clark Iohn Saucheverell Esquire and Iohn Stathum Beauvale 7 H. 6. paid for one half of a Knights Fee and Newstede for another After the dissolution they partly followed the fortune of those places with which they still continue The Rectory with the Patronage of the Vicarage 25 Ian. 24 Eliz. was granted to Edward Downinge and Peter Ashton The same Queen 27 Iun. 42 Eliz. granted to Michael Stanhope Esquire one of the Grooms of the Privy Chamber and to Edward Stanhope Doctor in the Laws the Mannor of Hucknall Torkard which did belong to Newstede to which at the Foundation King Henry the second gave the Church of Hokenhale which King Iohn confirmed 6 Ioh. at the yearly value of 13l. 9s. 10d. But now the principal part of this Township is the inheritance of the Lord Byron as it was in the time of King William the Conquerour There are now reckoned four or five Mannors
Acres of Medow with Pasture for six Oxen in the Hall Lesue and 25s. Rent with the Appurtenances in Esterleke and Westerleke with the Homages and Services of Peter de Godeham William Attemilne and Iohn Legett and their heirs thereby settled on the said Richard and Elizabeth for life remainder to Iohn Leek Chr. and Isabell his Wife and the heirs Males of the Body of Iohn and for want thereof to Isabel the Wife of Iohn Bonyngton and the heirs of her Body remainder to the right heirs of the said Iohn Leek There was the same Term another Fine levyed between Iohn de Leek Chr. and Simon his son Quer. and Richard de Leek and Elizabeth his Wife Deforc. of five Mess. four Tofts eleven Bovats of Land sixteen Acres of Medow and 11d. Rent with the Appurtenances in Saxendale Byngham Wireton Carcoston and Aslacton settled on the said Iohn and Simon and the heirs of Iohn Simon was his eldest son and Married Ioan the daughter and heir of Sir Iohn Talbot of Swawnington in Leicestershire the Relict of Sir Thomas Malory Knight as in Kilvington is noted by whom he had only four daughters Iohn Leek his second son Married Alice the daughter and heir of Iohn Grey named in Hicling who brought a great increase of Lands to this Family and was Mother of William Leek who about 37 H. 6. died seized of Leeks Mannor here and Lands in Saxendale c. leaving ●ohn his son and heir whose Posterity is mentioned in Landforth but Thomas Leek of Haslond second son of the said William and his Posterity were usually stiled Leek of Léek and inherited here though the other Line of Sutton in the Dale of Darbishire had to do here also as in Landforth and other places may be observed His son was Iohn Leek of Hasland who died the 21 Jun. 37 H. 8. leaving Raph Leek his son and heir twenty one years of age the third of May then past Raph was Father of Thomas and Gertrud first Married to Anthony Serleby then to George Chaworth who claimed to be heir to her brother slain about 41 Eliz. by ... Samon without issue but he had a natural son called Thomas Leek who bangled away his Estate and died an old man in Prison 2 Car. 2. having been brought over from Ireland in the beginning of the long Parliament to Witness against Thomas Earl of Strafford he is said to have left a daughter Married to one .... Bull. Elias de Staunton 9 E. 1. offered himself the fourth day against Thomas de Meverell and Agnes his Wife Roger de Mercinton and Elianor his Wife Raph de Munjoy and Isabell his Wife Henry de Kniveton and Isabell his Wife Iohn de ●rendon and Iohan his Wife Richard de Draycote and Agnes his Wife and Thomas de Lokesle in a Plea that they together with Roger le Botiller and Marjory his Wife should acquit him of the service which Edmund the Kings Brother exacted of him for his Freehold in Esterleke which he held of them the said Thomas Agnes Roger c. By a Fine 12 E. 2. between Richard le Botiller and Mary his Wife Quer. and William de Stocton Cler. Def. eight Mess. and four Virgats and one Virgat of Land with the Appurtenances in Esterleke or Great Leke were settled on the said Richard and Mary and the heirs of their bodies remainder to the right heirs of Richard By a Deed dated at Esterleke the Thursday next after the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul 4 E. 3. and after inrolled Robert de Iorce Knight settled on Sir Iohn de Leek Parson of the Church of Humbriston and Richard his son and the heirs of the body of Richard 39s. 1d. ob with the Appurtenances in Esterleke together with the homages and services of Sir William de Staunton Iohn son of Iohn son of Simon William son of Iohn son of Simon and divers others particularly expressed with remainders over to William and then to Iohn brothers of the said Richard and likewise to Beatrice and then Maud sisters of the said Richard which form of Entail is several times repeated by several persons of several parcels in Esterleke A Mannor in Esterleke 2 H. 5. was settled on Roger son of Raph Pare and on Ioan his Wife and their heirs and Thomas Staunton the elder of Sutton Bonington upon Sore Esquire 18 E. 4. whose son and heir was Thomas Staunton passed his Mannor in Esterleke to the said Raph Pare and Roger amongst many others viz. Sir Richard Noele the Justice Iohn Babington Esquire Chr. Neele c. Raph Pare of Great Leake in the County of Nott. Yeoman was Out-lawed in the County of Stafford concerning a Plea of Debt 30 H. 6. which Out-la●y was afterwards annulled by the grace of the Court in Michaelmass Term 31 H. 6. b●cause the said Raph alledged and the Jury found that he was a Gentleman born His Seal of Arms was a Chevron engrailed between three Crosse Crosselets which was affixed to his Deed bearing date Iuly 7. 21 E. 4. wherein he conveyed the Mannor of Hermeston in the County of Lincolne to Robert Crosseby and Isabell his Wife daughter of him the said Raph and heir to his Wife Isabell her Mother daughter and heir of Iohn Blake of Hermeston This Isabell Married to her second Husband Thomas Griffith and the said Robert Cosbe being dead the 7 H. 8. her self died seized 34 H. 8. of a Mannor in Great Leak or Esterleke and five Mess. three Cotag. one hundred Acres of Arable Land forty Acres of Medow and thirty of Heath and 4s. 4d. Rent of Assize in Great Leak held of the Honour of Tutbury by the service of the twentieth part of a Knights Fee and 6s. 8d. Rent Richard Cosbe son of her son Iohn Cosbe being then her heir and above twenty six years of Age. This Mannor came afterwards to be the possession of the Family of Armstrong of Rempston The Family of Rempston had some Lands in West-Leke which descended to Bingham as in Bingham and Rempston may be observed and were by Iohn Stapleton about the latter end of Queen Elizabeths Reign sold to Bar. Rag and George Bird the Tenents whose Posterity still have them this paid 17d. yearly or 13d. and a pair of Spurs of a Groat to the Mannor of Westleke which as also Cosbyes in Great Leak is of the Fee of Tutbury in the Baylywick of prima pars Agard which Family of Agard of Fosron ancient Bayliffs to the same and now Farmers have by Patent a Court-Leet here and at Bingham with Weyfs and Streys and Felons Goods c. The Advowson of the Church of Great Leak 8 E. 1. was determined to belong to the Prior of Repingdon And the Archbishop of York had a Mandate notwithstanding the claim of Iohn de Beningworth Elias de Staunton and Geoffrey son of Raph Bugg to admit a fit person to that Church upon the presentation
Anaguin Rector of the Church of St. George at Barton upon the Priories paying three hundred Marks wanting twelve and taking his Parsonage to Farm five years for thirty two Marks per annum of good new and lawful Sterling Money 13s. 4d. to the Mark to be paid in Bermondsey house The quarrel was They had presented one Thomas Raley whom Mr. Barthol had been nine years in getting out with his Apostolical Letters and other charges After the dissolution of Monasteries the Town of Nott. petitioned to have had this Advowson but King H. 8. Feb. 19. 34 H. 8. granted it to the Archbishop of York and his Successors who still enjoy it When the Prior of Lenton was Patron this Rectory was 20l. In the Kings Books now it is 19l. 3s. 9d. value In the Chancell on the South side upon the Wall is a Monument for Henry Sacheverell On the South-East end for Raph Secheverell on the wall also and at the North-East end on the ground one for William Sacheverell of Alabaster There are several Arms in the Windows besides as in the North-East Window Gules a Fesse embattailed Arg. between 3 Besants Barry of six Arg. and Azure a very small bendlett Gobonè Or and Gules Hen. Grey In the South-East Window Arg. A Bend Azure cross croslettè Or Lowdham In the next South Window the same Grey and one broken on the top the bottom is Barry Arg. and Azure two Flowers de Lis on the upper and one on the lower Or. In the next Pane Azure a Crosse Counter Compony Arg. Gules Cokfeild And Varry Arg. and Sab. an in escotch Here lyeth buried Henry Sacheverell of Barton Esq son and heir of Richard the third Son of Henry Sacheverell Knight and Elizabeth his wife daughter and sole heir of Henry Gray base son of Henry last Lord Gray of Codnor which died the 27 of December in the year of our Lord 1598. Here lieth buried Raph Sacheverell Esq son and heir of William second son of Henry Sacheverell Knight and Emme daughter of William Dethick Esq his wife had issue William Anthony Iohn Iohn Thomas Edmund and Raph and Henry Mary Lucy Iane Millescent Isabel Dorothy and Ellen Raph died the first of September 1605. and Emme died last of April 1606. About this are many Arms. Arg. on a Saltire Az. 5. Waterbougets Or Sacheverell impaling Arg. a Fesse Varry Or and Gules between 3 Waterbougets Sable Dethick Arg. 3 Hares and Bagpipes Gules Hopwelle Arg. a Lion Ramp Sable Corone Or Lord Morley Gules a pale Lozengy Arg. Statham Gule● a Shoveler Arg. collared Or Snitterton Az. a Lion Ramp Arg. Morley Az. a Buck tripping Arg. Lowe with Strelley Vavasor And Arg. a Fesse between 3 Crescents Gules Arg. 3 Roses Gules Sab. 3 Millstones pierced Arg. Hic jacet corpus Mariae Sacheverel filiae natu maximae Gulielmi Staunton nuper de Staunton in Comitatu Nottinghamiensi Armigeri uxòris Gulielmi Sacheverel de Morley in Comitatu Derbiensi Armigeri hujus Manerii Domini qui èx èá su●ceperat Henricum Gulielmum Radulphum Mariam Gulielmum Elizabetham Jocosam Rober●um Catharinam Ex quibus quatuor filii cum unâ filiolâ matre adhuc superstite nec non acerbam supradicti Henrici primogeniti hic itidem sepulti mortem supra quam ferre valuit deflente supremum diem obierunt Maria vero Elizabetha Jocosa Roberto in vivis relictis Ipsa d●cimo nono die Augusti Anno Domini Millesimo Sexcentesimo Septuagesimo quarto vitam cum morte commutavit Clifton Bank Town Wilford and Glapton A small Hamlet parcel of Clifton THis was a very eminent Mannor in the time of Edward the Confessour and did belong to the famous Gode the Countess who paid to the Dane-geld for it as two Car. and an half The Land was five Car. There when the Conquerours great survey was made William Peverell his natural son ●ad two Car. in Demesne four Sochm. nineteen Vill. eight Bord. having nine Car. There was a Priest and a Church and one Mill 12d and twelve Acres of Medow In the Confessours time the value was 19l. in the Conq. but 9l. with the ●oc it had in Willesford as much as was taxed or rated at three Car. The Land six Car. There twenty three Sochm. had seven Car. There was a Priest and eighteen Acres of Medow and half a Piscary or Fishing The Soc extended also into Bartone Bridgeford Normantune Cauord Willebye Stantune Cortinstoche Basingfelt Adbolton Gamelestune c. Here was also a small Berew of Barton of Raph Fitz-Huberts Fee which paid for two Bov. to the Geld and of the Taine-Land some belonging to Gatham which Vlchet held of the King and paid to the Tax as one Bov. He had here one Vill with two Oxen plowing and one Acre of Medow Langar as in that place will be noted and Clifton were principal Mannors and of the Demesne of William Peverell and with many other forfeited to the Crown by William his son in the beginning of the Reign of King H. 2. who before the nineteenth year of it had given them to Gerbode de Eschaud How they passed from him I find not but certain it is that Gerard de Rodes had them 1 Ioh. And Raph de Rodes a very great man was possessed of them 6 H. 3. whose son Gerard de Rodes Lord of Melles about the latter end of H. 3. or beginning of E. 1. granted the Mannors of Clifton and Wilford and the services of the Freeholders and Villans there and at Barton to Sir Gervase de Clifton reserving 30l. per annum Rent which afterwards he also released And Iohn de Beaulu likewise released the Mannors of Wilford and Clifton to the said Sir Gervase which were sold to him the said Sir Gervase by Sir Gerard de Rodes King Edward the first in the ninth year of his Reign reciting the Deed of the said Sir Gerard confirmed it Gervase son of Gervase de Clifton was Senescall in this Gerards time This worthy Family therefore which held Lands here and had their name from their residence at this place and sometimes at Wilford must not till this time pretend to be Lords of it notwithstanding the received Tradition and old Parchment writing importing that Sir Alvered de Clifton Knight was Lord of the Mannor of Wilford and Guardian of the Castle at Nott. in the time of William Peverell and his son Sir Robert de Clifton after him in like manner There is no Mannor of Wilford in Doomsday Book and King William or William Peverell built the Castle of Nott. himself and dwelt in it and his son after him yet 't is not unlike but that they might have some considerable trust or imployment under the Peverells Gervas de Clifton I find mentioned in the time of H. 2. who it seems had a daughter named Cecily the wife of Roger de Cressi who 3 Ioh. claimed Dower against William de Cressi who gave an account of twenty
was a Lady replete with all qualities that adorn her Sex and more eminent in them than in the greatness of her birth she was most devout in her duties to God most observant of those to her neighbour an incomparable wife a most indulgent Mother and most charitable to those in want In a word her life was one continued act of vertue she hath left a memory which will never die and an example that may be imitated but not easily equall'd she died in the 61 year of her age A. D. 1649. And this Monument was erected to her by her son Gervas Pierrepont On the South side of the Church Here lyeth the body of Sir Henry Pierrepont Knight who in his life time abounded with Charity and many other vertues for whom the Lady Frances Pierrepont eldest daughter of Sir William Cavendish of Chatsworth Knight and the most noble and renowned Lady Elizabeth his wife late Countess of Shrewsbury caused this Monument to be made being the least of many testimonies she hath given of her great and dear affections towards him He died the nineteenth day of March in the year of our Lord God 161● aged 69. and an half Ratcliffe IN Radeclive before the Norman Invasion Fredeghis was Taxed to the Danegeld at one Car. and an half for his Mannor The Land of it was three Carucats Afterwards Fredgis and Vlviet held it under William Peverell whose Fee it was and had there two Car. and fifteen Vill. six Bord. having four Car. and eighteen Acres of Medow and the Seat of a Fishing and an half and a third of a Fishing This in the Confessours time was 60s. in the Conquerours 32s. value Here was another Mannor which Swayn had before the Conquest rated also to the publick Tax at one Carucat and an half The Land of it was likewise three Carucats There Walter de Ayncourt whose Fee it was had afterwards in Demesne two Car. fourteen Villains three Bordars having three Car. and nineteen Acres of Medow This kept the old value 40s. Raph the son of William de Godenoure is accounted by the Sheriff 24 H. 2. to owe three Marks for having right of half a Knights Fee in Radclive This part which was Peverel's continued to the Family of the Lord Grey of Codnour from the first Henry whose Seal is Barry of six till the last yet Henry Lord Grey of Codnour 22 H. 6. was found to have held the Mannor of Radcliff of Grauby Fee viz. Deyncourts Henry Grey his son being also then found his heir Iames Wode Gentleman and Elizabeth his wife daughter and heir of William Burton of Burton Ioys Esquire 1 H. 8. bargained and sold to Richard Grey Esquire all their Meases Lands and Tenements Rents and Services in Radclive on Trent and Lamcote which they Covenanted to be of the yearly value of 43s. above all Charges This Richard Grey I suppose was Father of Thomas Grey and son of one of the Henrys natural sons of Henry the last Lord Grey of Codnor who settled this Mannor with others on Thomas Leek and Roger Iohnson in trust for them as in Touton more particularly will be noted Thomas Grey Esquire by Fine 38 H. 8. conveyed the Mannor of Woodhall in Ratcliff upon Trent and ten Mess. four hundred Acres of Land thirty of Medow two hundred of Pasture c. to the King by the advice of Thomas Cranmer as it is said to whom it was re-conveyed from the Crown by Indenture bearing date March 20. 1 E. 6. Harold Rosel of Radcliff Esquire married Dorothy the said Arch-bishops sister and Iohn Rosel his Grandson and heir son of Iohn Rosel the said Harold's son married Mary one of the daughters and co-heirs of Thomas Cranemer of Aslacton Esquire grand Nephew of the said Arch-bishop viz. son of Thoma● son of Iohn Cranmer his elder brother by which means this Mannor is now the inheritance of Thomas Rosell Esquire son of Gervas son of George son of the said Iohn and Mary Henry de Notingham when he died was found by the Jury 1 E. 3. to have held a certain Tenement of the heirs of Richard de Bingham and here was a certain capital Mess. and sevenscore Acres of Arable Land and three Acres of Medow c. and eight Acres of Medow held of Richard de Gray And that Henry son of Iohn son of the said Henry de Nott. was his Cousin and heir Henry de Nott. was a Knight about the beginning of Edward the first This I suppose was of Peverel's Fee too but Deincurts was the chief part and had the Advowson of the Church of whom held Hugh de Hoveringham and Raph de Go●sell who bought one Bovat here of Reginald son of Roger de Radclive and had a Fine levied 10 Ioh. which Walter de Gousel his son by the consent of Matilda his wife and his heirs gave to Gerard the Parson of Radclive and his heirs which Parson had a son named William The Seal of this Walter de Gousle is three Annulets whereof one is covered with a large Canton or Quarter Robert Daincurt and Hawisia his wife for their Souls health gave to God and St. Mary of Radeclive one Toft towards the sustentation of a Priest for ever to celebrate the Mass of St. Mary the Witnesses were Galfr. and Robert then Chaplains in Rad●live William the Clark William Marescall Gerard the Clarke Hugh Baisely Hosbert son of Hubert Mr. Thomas de Hotot claimed this Mannor and the Advowson of the Church of Radcliff 3 E. 3. as Cousin and heir of Hawisia de Eyncourt viz. son of Ioane daughter and heir of William son of Hawisia But the posterity of that Hugh Basily or some of his Family became by degrees possessed of most of this Fee and had their most constant residence here till about King Richard the seconds time that the Family of Rosel by the marriage of the heir female came from Cotgrave into their place where it still continueth The Lady Hawisia Deincourt gave divers of her Villains to Thomas Basily Walter de Gousil 17 E. 1. gave to him the homages rents and services of certain Tenents which he had here Richard son of William de Birtun gave to Thomas son of William Baysely certain Villains Lands and Houses and Margaret widow of that Richard released to him also 10 E. 1. He acquired Lands of divers other persons and had a son named Iohn Basily whom he over-lived who married Margery the daughter of Sir Iohn Folvile of Kerisby in Leicestershire about 23 E. 1. with whom he had Lands in Stanton and left issue Thomas Basely whose son Thomas married Alice one of the daughters and co-heirs of Robert Strelley William Eland married Cicely her sister Robert Basily son of the last Thomas in imitation of Deincourt I suppose bore Arg. Billettè and a Fesse Dauncè Gules as by his Seal and the Church Window may be manifested He had no issue
Yorkshire Hameldon in ..... c. Roger le Scrope Chr. when he died held this Mannor joyntly with Margaret his wife and 8 H. 4. left Richard le Scrope his son and heir or sooner On the Seals of Roger and Stephen le Scrope and Philip le Dispenser circumscribed with their names 9 R. 2. are yet visible on Rogers a Bend and likewise on the said Stephens with a large Mullett added to the top of the Bend on Philips is Barry of six a Canton Ermine with a file of three Labels two in the said Canton or rather quarter for 't is a large one and the other towards the Sinister part of the Escutcheon This Mannor descended as the Genealogy shows transcribed out of the Sicling of the great Gallery at Langar from Richard Lord Scrope to Emanuel the last Lord Scrope created Earl of Sunderland who married Elizabeth daughter of Iohn Earl of Rutland but having no issue by her he settled it and the rest of his Estate upon his natural issue which he had by Martha Ianes yet living of which his only son Iohn died unmarried the last of Iuly 1646. aged about twenty years but his three daughters which by that means divide the whole inheritance amongst them are yet living Oct. 2. 1672. Mary the eldest was first married to Henry Cary Lord Lepington eldest son and heir of the Earl of Monmouth but he leaving her a widow without children she is since become the wife of Charles Lord St. Iohn of Basing eldest son and heir of Iohn Marquess of Winchester and by him hath issue Elizabeth the second daughter is wife of Thomas Earl Rivers and Annabella the third of Iohn Howe second son of Sir Iohn Howe of Compton in Gloucestershire Baronet by whom she hath many children Her eldest son Sir Scrope Howe Knight hath lately married the Lady Anne daughter of Iohn Earl of Rutland and is heir apparent of this Mannor which in the division fell to the share of his Mother to whom our present Soveraign King Charles the second by his Letters registred in the Office of Arms bearing date the first day of Iune 1663. in the fifteenth year of his Reign in consideration of the good and acceptable service done and performed by Iohn Howe of Langar Esquire her husband and for a mark of his especial Grace and Royal favour granted and ordained that she the said Annabella should be had taken and esteemed as the daughter of an Earl of this Kingdom of England and that for and during her natural life she have hold use take and enjoy the Stile place degree precedency and priviledges thereof in as full and ample manner as if she had been the Legitimate daughter of Emannuel late Earl of Sunderland with a precept of obedience to all and every of His Majesties Subjects since when she is usually stiled the Right Honourable the Lady Annabella Howe Oliver de Eyncourt released to Raph de Rodes thirty one Bovats of Land and fifteen Tofts in Langar and Barneston which he had brought a Writ of right for in King Henry the thirds time for which the said Raph gave him 50s. of Land in Barneston which together with his other Lands there and some other in Braunceton in Lincolneshire the said Oliver gave to the Priory of Thurgarton to find two Chaplains to celebrate for him his Ancestors and Successors for ever Richard de Wiverton Knight gave also three Bovats in Barneston and Wiverton and two Acres of Medow in Berneston with his body to the said Priory of Thurgarton to find a Secular daily to celebrate Divine Service at the Altar of our Lady there for his Soul and his Wifes Thomas Artebrig 10 E. 3. had licence to give 63s. 6d. Rent out of Langar and Wiverton to make a Chantry in the Church of St. Andrew in Langar Queen Elizabeth 7 of Iune in the thirteenth year of her Reign granted to Henry Lord Scrope of Bolton the Lands late belonging to Thurgarton in the Fields of Langar and Barneston And to Iohn Dudley and Iohn Aiscough 29 Ianuary 17 Eliz. the Tythes in the Parish of Langar in the tenure of Sir Iohn Chaworth Knight at 12l. per annum late belonging to the Priory of Lenton These Tythes I suppose Mr. Howe purchased of the Lord Dunbar as he hath since done a Mess. and some Lands of Moses Foxcroft son of Iohn Rector of Goteham which were Henry Flowers of Langar and by Henry Walker a Captain for the King in the unhappy wars and Anne his wife sister and heir of Thomas Flower heir of the said Henry sold to the said Mr. Iohn Foxcroft so that now the whole Lordships of Langar and Barneston except the said Mrs. Walkers house and some little Medow which was her Ancestors the Flowers is become the possession of Mr. Howe who hath made a convenient Park of the Closes which he found nigh the house which is well stored with Deer much better than the Towns are with people where so considerable parts of the Fields are inclosed the too common fate of good Land in this County A Quare impedit 6 H. 6. was recovered by Guy Fayrfax and William Akworth Plaintiffs against Iohn Elingham Prior of Lenton and Thomas Smith Clark of the Advowson of the Church of Langar The Rectory of Langar which hath but the third part of the Tythes was 10l. and the Lord Scrope Patron 'T is now 10l. 7s. 11d. value in the Kings Books and Mr. Howe Patron In the South Cross-Ile is a fair Tomb for Thomas Lord Scrope and his Lady whereon lie their Effigies at full length at the feet whereof is the figure of their son Emanuel kneeling in much less proportion the Top or Canopy of the Tomb whereon are their Arms with quarterings is supported by tall Pillars of black Marble well polished In the windows on that side is Arg. a Saltier engrailed Gules Tiptoft And in some places Azure a Bend Or Scrope quartering the former In the North Ovire at Langar the feet against the East wall On the Lord Scroop's Tomb. On the North side in two Tables The Right Honourable and Noble Lord Thomas Lord Scroope Baro● of Bolton Masham and Upshall of the most Noble Order of the Garter Knight Lord Warden of the West Marshes Steward of Richmond and Richmondshire and Bow-bearer of all His Majesties Parks Forests and Chases within the same Lyeth here buried and died the 2 day of September Anno Dom. 1609. On the South side in two Tables The Right Honourable Thomas Lord Scroope c. married the Right Honorable Lady Philadelphia daughter to the Right Honourable Lord Henry Cari● Baron of Hunsdon Lord Chamberlain to our late Queen Elizabeth her Majesties Houshold who died the 3 of February 1627. and had issue only one Son Emanuel Scroope At the feet of the Tomb this Emanuel Scroope son and heir of the Right Honourable Thomas Lord Scroope and of the Right Honourable Philadelphia
Iohn the son of Thomas Metham held by reason of Sibyll his wife as of the inheritance of the said Sibyll and joyntly with her of the King in Capite the moyety of the Town of Lindeby by the Rent of a Skin of Gray Furr and one Mess. and two Carucats of Land in Willey mentioned in Beauvale by the Service of 10l. to the Exchequer Thomas son and heir of the said Iohn Metham being then twelve years old The King granted the moyety of the Town of Lindeby to one Laurence de Seyntmychell and by him entred Sir William de Hameldon and enfeoffed his son and Sibyll de Metham who in her widow-hood enfeoffed William de la Pole who gave it to the King in exchange for another Mannor viz. Mitton in Yorkshire King Edward the third gave it to Sir Tho. de Bourne Anno 1342. and he sold it again to William de la Pole and enfeoffed Edmund his son in the year 1345. About 6 H. 6. Thomas Hunt died seized of this moyety and left it to descend to his daughter and heir Ioan the wife of Iohn Hikelinge Esquire she being then above thirty years of age By an Inquisition taken at Nott. the Thursday after Palm-Sunday 23 H. 7. before Sir William Perpoint Knight Edward Stanhope Knight and Raph Agard I find that Iohn Strelley of Lindeby died seized of it 4 March 2 H. 7. leaving his son and heir Nicolas Strelley above twelve years old Elizabeth his Mother relict of the said Iohn the next year after was married to Iames Savage Esquire From Strelley it went to Staveley by the marriage of a daughter There was a Recovery 20 Eliz. of the Mannor of Lindeby wherein William Savyle Esquire and Martin Earle Gent. claimed against Iohn Savyle Gent. who called to warranty Thomas Staveley Esquire 'T is said Mr. Savile and Sir Iohn Byron made an exchange between this and Oxton Iohn second son of Sir Nicolas de Strelley married Ioane the daughter and heir of Iohn Hunt which I suppose should be Hikling of Lyndeby and by her had Iohn Strelley of Lindeby who by Elizab. the daughter of Will. Mering Esquire had Sir Nicolas Strelley Knight who married Elizabeth daughter and one of the heirs of Sir Brian Fitz-Randolph Knight but died without issue he had four sisters Anne the wife of Richard Bingham of Watnow Isabell the wife of .... Stavelly Elizabeth of ... Cade and Iane Strelley died unmarried The Kings moyety was commonly in the hands of great men and usually went with Maunsfeild as in that place will appear Thomas le Hayer or de le Haye and Iohn le Colyer took sixty eight Acres of the Kings Soil in Lindeby Haye of Richard de Oysell whose sons and heirs Hugh le Colyer and Robert de le Hay sold them to Sir Iohn de Crombewell who gave them to Newstede Priory before or about the beginning of Edward the third upon which 25s. 4d. was reserved yearly to the Crown and by the Exchequer men was exacted twice over till the Prior got a Supersedeas dated at Aukeland 12 Oct. 10 E. 3. That Priory had also one hundred and eighty Acres of waste in Lindeby Hay granted by King Edward the first May 20. in 22 E. 1. for 4l. per annum and in the 26 E. 1. were also arrented of Richard de Oysell the Kings Approver and measured by the Perch of twenty four foot according to the Assise of the Forest. The same Priory 4 E. 3. had one hundred and twenty Acres and diverse other parcels the Rents whereof they got by degrees discharged and Released That which belonged to Newstede King Henry the eighth passed with that Monastery to Sir Iohn Byron whose posterity still enjoyeth it being all or most of it now the Inheritance of the Honourable William Byron Esquire son and heir of Richard Lord Byron The Church viz. the Advowson of the Rectory was granted 6 Aug. 2 E. 6. to Robert Strelley and Frideswide his wife The Rectory of Lindeby was 8l. when the Prior of Lenton was Patron 'T is now in the Kings Books 4l. 9s. 9d. ob value and William Byron Esquire Patron In the South Quire of Lynby Church is a Tomb of ... Strelley On the South side is 1. Strelley impaling Mering 2. A Bend and File of three Labels impaling quarterly a chief Cheque and a Saltier And three Lozenges in Fesse and a Spread Eagle and a Saltier engrailed 3. A Bend quartering a Saltier engrailed on an Inescutcheon a File of three Labels 4. Strelley with a Roundell as was the first also impaling a Chief indented quartering a Bend and a File of three Labels On the North side of it Strelley with a Roundell impaling a Dragon erected and Strelley viz. Paly of six In a little North Window Az. a Fesse Dancy and Billettè Or Deincourt In a West Window in the Steeple Strelley viz. Paly of six Ar. and Az. with the Roundell And over the Porch in Stone Strelley without the Roundell In the North Quire Wall In this little Chappell under the two Grave-stones with Crosses lyeth George Chaworth Esquire and Mary his wife the daughter of Sir Henry Sacheverell Knight late Farmers of this Mannor place and Demesnes of Lynby between whom was issue three sons and three daughter which George died 22 Aug. 1557. and Mary his said wife died 15 Jun. 1562. On whose Souls God hath mercy Papplewick And Newstede BEsides what lay to Lindeby the Conqueror● great Survey mentions in Pappleuvic some of the Land of the Taynes which Alvric and Alfa and Elric had and paid to the Dane-geld for two Car. three Bov. but they were then waste There was Pasture Wood one leu long and half one broad In the Confessours time it was valued at 20s. William Peverell gave what he had here to the Monastery of Lenton at the first Foundation King Henry the second gave to Lenton Priory fourscore Acres of Effarts of Curtenhale in Northantescr and the Mill of Blaccliff in exchange for the Land of Papilwich which he gave to the Canons of Newstede in Schirwode which he there Founded King Henry the second gave the Town of Papulwick with the Church of the same and the Mill which the Canons of Newstede made with the Medow of Beskewod along the water with all the Appurtenances to God and St. Mary together with the New Stede or Place which he Founded in Shirewod for Canons Regular of the Order of St. Austine to whom he gave also long and large wastes lying about the said Monastery within the Forest which wastes in ancient Charters are called Kygell and Ravenshede and are described by their bounds and the particulars within them He granted the Monks also view of Frank-pledge and many other priviledges and freedoms and a Park of ten Acres according to the measure of the foot of the Forest by the Site of the said Monastery to be inclosed as they should
Feast of St. Nicolas the Bishop before William Babington Knight Thomas Greyseley Knight Thomas Fulthorpe William Ascogh Iohn Curson Esq and Robert Cokfeld Esquire the Kings Justices assigned to take that Assise where Sir Henry Pierpount pleaded that he was Cousin and heir of the said Sir Iohn Heriz viz. son of Edmund son of Edmund son of Henry son of Sara the sister of the said Sir Iohn de Heriz and that the said Roger son of Roger Beler and Margaret his wife the elder daughter of the said Sir Richard de la Rivere had a daughter called Margaret married to Sir Robert de Swillington Knight by whom he had Sir Roger Swyllington Knight who had a daughter married to Iohn Graa of South Ingleby in the County of Lincolne who together with his said wife Margaret also by name intailed this Mannor and Wydmerpole and the Advowsons of the Churches by a Fine 1 H. 6. upon themselves and the heirs of their bodies remainder to the heirs of the body of the said Margaret remainder to Edmund Perpoynt Knight and after his death to Henry Perpoynt Knight and the heirs of his body remainder to the right heirs of Henry Perpoynt Knight Margaret died without heir of her body afterwards Edmund Perpoynt died afterwards the said Iohn Graa after whose death the said Henry Perpoynt Knight entred and had issue Henry Perpoynt Esquire who had issue Henry Perpoynt Knight then heir of this Mannor and Advowson and of the Mannor of Wydmerpole c. Elizabeth wife of Robert Sampson of the County of Suffolk about 8 H. 6. was found heir of Margaret wife of Iohn Gray Knight as in Boney is set down Yet they prevailed not here for I find that Sir William Pierpont son of Francis brother of the last Sir Henry 5 H. 8. suffered a Recovery of the Mannors of Tybshelf and Assheover and many o●her Lands in Darbyshire and of the Mannors of Sneynton Wydmerpole Gonaston and Bromwoodhouse with the Advowsons of the Churches of Gonaston and Wydmerpole and the Chapel of Bradbuske in the Parish of Gonaston in this County about which time he sold this Mannor to ...... Monox an Alderman of London whose posterity viz. Sir Humfrey Monox or his son still enjoy it There was a Chantry or Hospital Founded there by ..... Heriz called the Chantry or Hospital of Brodbusk in Gonaston which through many Patents of Concealments continueth an Hospital at this day and is called Gonaston Spittle The Rectory of Gonalston was 10l. value and Mr. Monox Patron which shows that older rate of Church livings was in the former part of the Reign of King Henry the eighth 'T is now 7l. 19s. 2d. in the Kings Books and Sir Humfr. Monox Patron On the North side of the Church at Gunnalston In Gonaldston Church three ancient Stone Tombs low on the ground two of Knights cross-leg'd upon one of their Shields three Hedge-hogs were imbossed the third is a Woman In the Chancel Quarterly Or and Azure Arg. a Chevron Azure a File of five Labells Gules Swillington Arg. on a Bend Azure three crossecrosletts Or. Azure three Hedgehogs Or 2.1 Heriz Arg. on a Chevron Azure three Besants a croslet Moline below Or. In the North Window of the Church Gules three Waterbougetts Az. Roos of Hamlake In the East Window of the North I le of the Church Party per pale Gules and Sable a Lion Ramp Arg. Belers Azure three Hedgehogs Or Heriz Arg. a Chevron Azure a File of three Labels Ermine Swillington In a North Window Paly of six Az. and Arg. a File of six Labels Gules In small Borders there is Heriz and Azure a Fesse Dancy and Crusuly Or. And in another the last Coat with Or a Lion Ramp sable interchangeably round the whole Pane. On the Wall Painted Arg. on a Chevron sable between three Oken-leaves proper three Plates and on a Chief Gule a Bird between two Anchors of the first quartering c. The Crest a Stock-dove with an Oke-branch in her Beak Monox Thurgarton Turgaston And Horspole THis place with Horspole and what belonged to it in Tideby in the Confesours time was valued at 3l. but when the great Survey was made in the Conquerours at 4l. being then the Fee of Walter de Aincurt who had in Turgaston and Horsepole in Demesne two Car. and ten Sochm. on nine Bov. of this Land which before the Conquest was Swains whose Mannor here paid the Tax for three Plow-land or Car. and three Bovats The Land being then found to be six Car. or for six Plows Raph de Ayncurt for the safety or health of his Soul and of his sons and daughters and for the Soul of his Father and of his Mother and for the Soul of Basilia his woman or wife and of all his Parents and Ancestors Founded an House of Religion at Thurgarton and in or at the Foundation of that House gave and granted to the Canons there regularly serving God and St. Peter by the Counsel and intreaty of Thurstin Arch-bishop of York of pious memory in pure Almes all Thurgarton and Fiskerton and the Park by Thurgarton and all the Churches of his whole Land to wit of Graneby c. as in that place is already set down which Alms of his he prayed all the sons of the Holy Church to maintain and defend and to his heirs if they preserved and sustained it with all its liberties he left Gods favour and his fatherly blessing for ever but if any did not he should incur Gods anger and his curse except he repented King Henry the second commanded the Sheriff of Nottss and the Men of the Soc of Dunham that the Canons of Thurgarton should well and peaceably hold their Mills upon Trent He likewise confirmed to them what Raph de Ayincurt had given and all the forementioned Churches viz. Graneby Elmeton Cotes Swafeild Haneword Scaupewick Kirkeby Braunceton Tymberland Blankeney and of the gift of William Fitz or son of Ranulf the Church of Blackwell of the gift of Matthew de Vilers the Church of Warinton in Lancashire the Church of Titheby the Chapel of Crophill and one Carucat of Land in the same Town of his Demesne of the gift of Gerard son of Walter de Sutton the Church of Sutton in Ashfeild and two Bovats of Land in the same Town of the gift of William Carpintar the Mill of Clive of the gift of Henry Hoseè one Bovat of Land in Egrum of Robert de Cauz the Mill of Doverbeck of William de Bella aqua 2s. out of the Mill of Kirlington of William Sampson the Land called Cressewelle of Robert de Hoveringham the Church of Hoveringham of Raph de Bellofago the Mill of Doverbéek which is called Snelling Milne with the Land and Medow lying to it of William de Bereville one Bovat of Land in Kirkeby of Hugh de Hoveringham seven Bovats of Land in Titheby which Emme his Grandmother and Robert his Father gave of Walter Willan of
Johannes Kn●vet Willielmus Knyvet miles ob 7 H. 8. Edmund Knyvet Thom. Knyvet Edmund Knyvet aet 7.8 H. 8. Willielmus Robertus miles s. p. Thom. Johan s. p. Johannes Clifton-Elizab Constant. Clifton Matild Dom. Willughby de Eresby ob 30 Aug. 13 H. 7. nx 2. Tho. Nevill 1. Rob. Willughby 3. Gerv. Clifton -Elizabeth Matilda Joh. Joh. Willielmus Fitz-Williams Willielmus Fitz-Williams Johannes Fitz-Williams Willielmus Fitz-Williams Tho. Joh. s.p. Will. Johannes de Crumwell-Idonia fil coh Rob. de Veteriponte -Rog de Leiburne mar 1. Alex. Frevill-Joana haer Simon Reg. Ruff. 43. Ossington Oschinton OSmund before the Norman Invasion had a Mannor in Oschinton rated to the Tax or Dane-geld at six Bovats The Land three Car. There afterwards Raph de Buron whose Fee it was become had three Car. four Sochm. on half a Bovat of this Land sixteen Villains six Bord. having six Car. and eighteen Acres of Medow Pasture Wood two leu long one leu broad In the Confessours time this was valued at 3l. in the Conquerours when the Survey was taken at 40● It had Soc in Almentune Hugh de Burun and Hugh Meschines his son his younger son Roger also praising the Act gave the Church of Oscinton in the year 1144.9 Step. to the Monastery of Lenton as in that place and Cotgrave is already shown Roger de Burun gave his body to God and the Church of the Holy Trinity at Lenton and there took the habit and Religion of the Cluniac Monks that God might avert the scourge of His wrath from him due for the very great multitude of his sins and for the Soul of his Lord King Richard the first his Ancestors and Heirs and likewise for his own gave and granted to God the said Church of Lenton and religious Brethren there serving God the whole Town of Oscington with all its Appurtenances Howbeit it seems he had given it to the Hospitalers of St. Iohns of Hierusalem before which occasioned Suits among the Religious especially for the Church Walter Smallet by his Deed inrolled 5 Ioh. for the Souls of King Iohn the Queen Roger de Burun his Father Mother and their Ancestors confirmed the Town of Oscinton to the Hospitalers retaining nothing but the Prayers of the House of that Hospital The Prior of Lenton 9 Ioh. produced the gift of Hugh de Burun and confirmation of Roger as it is before mentioned The Prior of the Hospital of Ierusalem pleaded that they had seisin of the Town of Oscinton where the Church is scituate of the gift of Roger de Burun who gave them that Town and produced his Charter testifying the same and also another Charter which especially spoke concerning the Church The Prior of Lentons Atturney knew not that he should put himself on the Jury before he had the advice of his Master and therefore day was given till fifteen dayes after Easter at which time viz. 10 Ioh. the Jury found that Roger de Burun presented the last Parson which died to the Church of Oscington and therefore the Brethren of the Hospital should have their seisin and the Prior of Lenton be in mercy Yet not very long before Roger Arch-bishop of York admitted and instituted Galfr. the Clark Parson of this Church upon the presentation of the Prior and Monks of Lenton and gave them 2s. a year as a Pension out of it There was a Fine levied at Leycester the Munday after the Feast of St. Andrew that same year viz. 10 Ioh. between Peter Prior of Lenton and Robert the Treasurer of the Prior of the Hospital of Ierusalem concerning the Advowson of this Church which the Prior of Lenton released to the Hospitalers and they gave to Lenton the moyety of the Advowson of the Church of Huneswrthe of their gift The Hospitalers enjoyed this whole Township in pure Alms with priviledges Spiritual and Temporal Charles Duke of Suffolk 34 H. 8. had licence to alienate the Mannor and Rectory of Ossington to Richard Andrewes Gent. and his heirs Edmund Cartwright Hugo Cartwright 3 Emundus-An fil Tho. Cranmer sor ob 1 Mar. Tho. Archiep. Cant. -Agnes fil Ric. Andrewes ux 2. ob 3 4 Ph. Mar. 2 Georg. Cartwright de Ossington -Doroth fil haer Will. Molyneux de Hawton postea nupta Dabrige-court Will. Cartwright de Ossington -Gracia fil cohaer Tho. -Will Dabridgcourt Dabrigecourt de Langdon mar 2. Hall Com. Warw. 1 Fulc Cartwright de Ossington Ar. -Mari fil Hen. Pierpont mil. Will. Cartwright de Ossington -Kath fil coh Will Marshall de Com. Essex Will. Cartwright fil haer aet 35. 1674. Georgius Geo. -Christian fil Christ. Beresford Georgius Carolus Francisc. Tho. Joh. Gervas Fran. ux Williel Strelley Mari. ux Ph. Lacock Grac. Fulc Stephenson Anna. Jane Kath. 2 Tho. 3 Will. 4 Hugo mil. -Mari fil haer Will. Cartwright de Eddingly Christian -Will Cartwright de Normantō Will. Cartwright de Normanton -Eliz fil Tho. Charlton de Chillwell Mari. ux Brookesby Doroth. Thom. Brome Chris. ux Tho. Barton de Holme mil. Elizab. ux Chr. Beresf Georg. Edm. Rob. Eliz. 1 Hug. Cartwright de Mallings in-An fil Cant. de Royney Com. Bodf ..... de Ossington fil haer s. p. Bond. -Jana un ex 17. fil Jo. Newton mil. renupta Jacobo Fitz-James Eliz. ux Regin Peckham Franc. fil Reginaldi -Will Cartwright de Norwell 1614. Th. Cartwright fil hae Franc. Cartwright 2 Georg. 4 Roland 1 Will. Cartwright fil haer -Jennet fil ... Legat. Ed. Cartwright de Norwell Franc. fil Reginaldi -Will Cartwright de Norwell 1614. who after the dissolution of Monasteries had Malling in Kent married Anne sister of Thomas Cranmer Arch-bishop of Canterbury This Edmund died seized of this Mannor and Rectory 21 Iuly 1 Mar. but it seems he had another wife Agnes the daughter of Richard Andrewes who died 18 Aug. 3 and 4 Ph. and Mar. This Mannor and Rectory continue with the posterity and name of the said Edmund Cartwright to this day In the Chancel on a Plate of Brass fixed in a Marble Grave-stone this following Inscription in Capital Letters MARY PIEREPONT daughter to Sir Henry Pierepont of Holme Pierepont Knight in the County of Nottingham and wife to Fulk Cartwright of Ossington in the same County died the 8 day of March 1670. On the South side of the Chancell at Ossington Of your Charite pray for the Soule of Reynold Peckham of Wrotham in the County of Kent Esquire which deceased the xxi day of Iuly in the year of our Lord God M. CCCCC L. Whose Soule God pardon At the upper end of the Chapel on the North side of Ossington Here resteth the Bodies of William Cartwright Esquire late Lord of this Mannor of Ossington Patron of this Church and of Grace his wife youngest daughter and co-heir of Thomas Dabridgcourt of Langdon Hall in the County of Warwick Esquire by whom he had issue Mary married to Thomas Rockly Fulk Dorothy married to Thomas
parcelled and were admitted accordingly It seems that Bertram de Mounboucher son of this Bertram and Ioane married Isabell the daughter of Sir Richard Willoughby of Wollaton to his first wife and afterwards Christian the sister of Sir Iohn de Woderington and died leaving his son Bertram who was by his first wife his heir 12 R. 2. and also a daughter called Isabell first married to Henry Heton Chr. and afterwards to Robert de Herbotell Esquire by whom she had Robert Herbotell who died 22 H. 6. and was Father of Bertram Herbotell who 2 E. 4. left his son Robert nine years old heir of this Mannor by descent from the said Isabell his great Grandmother who 5 H. 6. died seised of two parts of this Mannor called South Hall together with the Reversion of the third part which fell to her after the deaths of three Bertram Mounbouchers viz. her brother who died 1 H. 4. his son her Nephew 2 H. 5. and the last Bertram son and heir of her said Nephew who died without issue 4 H. 6. George Harbotell 20 H. 8. left his two sisters heirs of the Mannor of Dalton Travers in Northumberland and of this also viz. Alianor who was married to Thomas Percy and Mary late the wife of Edward Firton There was a Recovery 30 H. 8. wherein Raph Byrkheved and Christopher Harbotell claimed against Alianor Percy widow the moyety of the Mannor of Sutton c. and another 3 and 4 Ph. and Mar. wherein Robert Thomson and Richard Kynge claimed against Iohn Smyth the Mannor of Sut●on upon Trent c. and 6l. Rent with the Appurtenances in Sutton upon Trent Strarnethorpe and Wested who called Edward Fytton Knight Iohn Meringe of Sutton married Dorothy the daughter and co-heir of Iohn Smith and by her had William Meringe of Sutton Father of Iohn Father of William fourteen years old 1674. she was after married to Nath. Lodge Gloucesters Mannor continued in that name and Family long Henry Gloucester 20 H. 7. suffered a Recovery to Edward Stanhope Knight of the Mannors of Sutton upon Trent and Carcolston with the Appurtenances and fourteen Mess. two hundred Acres of Land forty of Medow one hundred of Pasture and 26s. 8l. Rent in Sutton and Carcolston These were shortly after Sir William Merings as in Carcolston is said This was Mr. Richard Hackers of Flintham his son Iohn sold it not long since to Hugh Shepherd who hath built a pretty little House and lives there The Jury 2 E. 1. found that Robert de Sutton held a Mannor in Sutton of Wiscard de Charron and his heirs he held likewise Warsop and Eykering c. he was son of William Sutton son of Roland whom I suppose to be a younger son of Harvey de Sutton before named and marrying the sister of Robert de Lexington advanced his posterity thereby a● in Warsop and other places of this Book may be noted This Robert de Sutton left his son and heir Richard de Sutton then viz. 2 E. 1. eight years old Who afterwards had a son called Iohn who married one of the co-heirs of Iohn de Somery Lord Dudley and his posterity becoming Lords Dudley this Mannor and Warsop as in that place will appear shortly came to be the inheritance of the Lords Ros of Hamlak The Jury 26 E. 3. found that William Lord Roos of Hamelak when he dyed held Orston and the Mannor of Warsop joyntly with Margaret his wife and the Mannor of Sutton upon Trent of Philip Queen of England as of the Honour of Richmond and that Thomas de Roos was his brother and heir Thomas de Roos of Hamelak Chr. 7 R. 2. held it when he died joyntly with Beatrice his wife as he did Screveton parcel of Orston and also Warsop Iohn de Roos Knight was then found their son and heir who about 17 R. 2. left it to his brother William and so it descended as in Orston may be seen to Roger Earl of Rutland who sold it to Fulc Cartwright Esquire Lord also of Ossington where William Cartwright Esquire his son resides who hath an house here also The owners of this Sutton 1612. are said to be Gilbert Earl of Shrowsbury who I suppose had the Rectory and what belonged to Wirksop which his Grace the Duke of Newcastle sold to ... Clark Fulk Cartwright Esquire Mrs. Lodge Thomas Lee Gent. Edward Sudbury Senior Thomas Truswell Senior William Truswell Thomas Childers Barth Cade c. The Vicarage of Sutton was ten Marks when the Prior of Wirksop was Patron 't is now in the Kings Books 5l. 6s. 8d. value and the Duke of Newcastle Patron Gresthorp And Normanton THese both were of the Fee of Roger de Busli after the Conquest before which they were in many hands In Gresthorp Dunning and Gran. for their two Mannors answered the Tax for six Bov. and an half and a fourth part of a Bovat The Land was two Car. There afterwards in King Williams time Roger the Man or Tenant of the said Roger de Busli had two Car. and four Sochm. twelve Vill. one Bord. having five Car. There were three Mills 20s. and twelve Acres of Medow and four Acres of Pasture Wood. This part retained the old value 3l. having Soc in Sudton In Normentune before the Conquest five Taynes Iustan Durand Elward Elmar and Alsi had every one his hall and every one was chargeable to the Dane-geld for one Bov. and the fifth part of a Bov. The Land was twelve Bov. There afterwards Roger the Man of Roger de Busli had nine Sochm. four Bord. having three Car. and twelve Acres of Medow In the Confessours time the value was 10s. in the Conquerours 6s. Here was also a parcel Soc to Scacheby half a Bov. ad Geldam There two Vill. and two Bord. had one Car. Another part was Soc to Fladburg of the Bishop of Lincolnes Fee which was six Bov. ad Geldam The Land twelve Bov. There eleven Sochm. had three Car. and six Acres of Medow Here was also a parcel Soc to Dunham the Kings Land which was one Bov. ½ to the Geld. One moyety of this Land belonged to Bodmeschell and the other to Dunham it was then waste Pasture Wood three qu. long two broad These townships as most or all of that Rogers did came to William de Lovetot who gave amongst the rest this Church of Normanton to the Priory which he founded at Radeford by Wirksop in the time of H. 1. as in that place will be shown Matildis de Lovetoft his great Grand-child who was sometime wife of Gerard de Furnivall gave the Mannor of Gresthorp with the Appurtenances and Whistan in Yorkshire except the Advowson of that Church to Alda who had been wife of William de Furnivall her son in lieu of her dower in the Mannors of Grengeley Whystan and Gresthorp during her life but it seems that before 52 H. 3. Thomas de
Newcastles Here dwelt before the Wars Mr. .... Lukin father of Mr. William Lukin and Sam. sometimes of Christs Colledge in Cambridge it is now the place of residence of Mr. Iohn Rolleston Secretary to his Grace the said Duke of Newcastle In 49 H. 6. and of the retaking his Royal power again the First Iohn Craven enfeoff'd William Craven his son Iohn Bride junior Thomas Chaterton Chapellan Richard Merser of Wersop Richard Colyngworth of the same Raph Bekwith Thomas Bekwith Robert Craven and Walter Graver in all his Lands and Tenements Rents and services with the Appurtenances in Sukholme Witness William Champen of Sukholme Iohn Plumtre of the same c. Norton Cuckeney Langwath Bonbusk Walley Milnethorp Holme Howbeck VVoodhouse Hatfeild Colingthwait Belgh or Bellers Grange THe Principal part of Cucheney the chief of all these and perhaps some other small Hamlets was the Fee of Hugh Fitz-Baldric and before the Conquest the free-hold of Swen who then answered for his Mannor to the Geld or Tax as two Car. The Land four Car. when the Conquerour took his survey one Richard held it of Hugh and there had in Demesne two Car. and three Sochm. on two Bov. of Land and ten Vill. five Bord. having three Carucats or Plows There was a Priest and a Church and two Mills 8s. Pasture Wood four quar long and four qu. broad This kept the value it had in the time of King Edward the Confessour viz. 30s. In Cuchenay there was also of the Fee of Roger de Busli where before the Conquest Alric and Vlsi had two Mannors answering the Tax for one Car. The Land whereof was sufficient for two Plows or two Car. There afterwards Goisfrid the Man or Tenent of Roger had one Car. and nine Vill. having three Car. Pasture Wood two qu. long two qu. broad In the Confessours time this was 20s. value then when Doomsday Book was made 2s. less Ioceus de Flemangh came to the Conquest of England in the time of William Duke of Normandy and acquired in Cukeney the third part of a Knights Fee and the said Ioce afterwards frequently called Coste begot a certain son Ric. by name In the same Town of Cukeney there dwelt or remained a certain man who was called Gamelbere or Gamelkere who was an old Drenghe or Dreyinghe before the Conquest interpreted by the learned Sir Henry Spelman a Knight or one that held Lands as it were by Military or Knights service and accordingly he held two Carucats of Land in the same Town of the King in Capite for such service of shooing the Kings Palfrey upon four feet with the Kings Nails or shooing Materials de Cluario or Cloera Domini Regis as oft as he should lie at his Mannor of Maunsfeld and if he put in all the Nails incloaverit the King should give him a Palfrey of four Marks or he was to have the Kings Palfrey giving the King five Marks of Silver as the Jury in 3 E. 3. found the service as he was also if he lamed the Horse pricked him or shod him strait c. inclaudet or includat as it was found 23 E. 1. not so agreeably And if an Army should be in Wales he was to do service according to the quantity of two Carucats of Land and likewise for Homage Gamelbere dyed without heirs of himself and the Land was an Eschaet in the hand of King Henry the first And that King gave that Land to Richard son of the said Ioce and his heirs to be held of him by the said service And the said Richard took a wife in Nottingham by name N. and begot on her a son called Richard she died and this Richard took another wife Cousin of the Earl of Ferrers and that Earl would not give him his Cousin unless he would give his said Cousin and her heirs of her to be begotten some Land And the said Richard before he married Hawise the Cousin of the Earl gave her and the heirs of her to be begotten two Carucats of Land in Cukeney which the said King gave him by the said service which some will think had relation to the name of Ferrers And the said Richard on her begot a certain son by name Thomas and the said Thomas was nourished in the Kings Court and after the death of Richard his father held that Land by the service aforesaid of the said King well and in peace untill the old War and then he made himself a Castle in the said Land of Cukeney for this Thomas was a warlike man or Souldier in the whole War And after the said War the Kingdom of England being p●cified and King Henry the second Reigning he Founded the Abby of Welbeck This Thomas took to wife Emma and begot on her a daughter Isabell by name After the death of the said Thomas the said Isabell his daughter was in the Custody or Wardship of the King by reason of the two Carucats of Land in Cukeney And the said King gave the Custody and Marriage of the said Isabell to Simon Fitz-Simon who married her who gave the Mill of Cukeney with the Appurtenances and Custom and Works lying to it to the Abby of Welbeck and all their Land in Deystorth and Bastegate and their whole Land which they had at Langwaith and one Bovat in the Field of Cukeney upon Hattefeild c. And the said Simon begot on the said Isabell three daughters viz. Agnes Isabel and Petronilla or Parnell and after the deaths of Simon and Isabel their said three daughters were in the Kings Custody and the King gave their Custody and Marriage to Sir Walter de Fawcomberg and the said Walter himself married the said Agnes the eldest and gave Isabell the second to Walter de Riebof to wife and Petronilla the third he gave to Stephen de Faucomberg his brother to wife with the said two Carucats in Cukeney which he held of the King reserving to himself and his heirs the Advowson of the Abby of Welbek quit from the said Petronilla and her heirs as appears by a Fine levyed between them in the Kings Court The said Walter and Agnes confirmed to the said Abby all the gifts of the said Thomas de Cukeny and Simon Fitz-Simon and Isabell his wife as did Gerard de Glanvill and Emme his wife c. Peter son of Walter de Faucomberg released from himself and his heirs to the said Abby all the right in that demand which he had against the said Abby concerning the prestation or performance of one Palfrey to him to be done of every Abbat newly made or created Walter de Faucomberg son and heir of Peter de Faucomberg likewise released all that demand which he exacted concerning the Palfrey c. Walter son of Walter de Faucomberg granted to the said Abby all the right and claim which he had in that Toft upon Humbre in Whiten Iohn de Faucomberg son of Walter de Faucomberg confirmed to
four sons Thomas Iohn Henry and Walter de Carleton Esquire who had two sons Hugh de Carleton fifteen years old and Iohn de Carleton thirteen co-heirs and parceners of the said Walters part whereof 6 Novemb. 7 H. 5. they had livery according to the Custome of the Mannor Thomas Carleton Esquire when he died about 7 H. 5. held the 30s. Rent and the White Hall in Carleton in Lindrick and Walter Carleton was his son and heir W. Walter Carleton son and heir of Thomas de Carleton of Lyncolne 14 H. 6. passed this parcel to Raph Makarell Esquire and Margery his wife Thom. del Greene vel de Carleton Clericus Henricus de Carleton 13 R. 2 -Maria 1 Tho. de Carleton Walterus de Carleton 14 H. 6. 2 Joh. 3 Henr. 4 Walt. de Carleton Hugo de Carleton aet 15. 7 H. 5. Johannes aet 13. The owners of Carleton in Lindrick 1612. are thus set down Sir Gervas Clifton Knight Sir Iohn Moyneux Knight Humphrey Pype Esquire of Wallingwells Iohn Buck Clark Robert Glossop and Sam. Simpson The Rectory of Carleton was 20l. 'T is now 15l. 13 s 4d. value in the Kings Books and as it hath been remains in the Cullation of his Grace the Lord Arch-bishop of Yorke Hodsok with the Hamlets IN Odesache Vlsi before the Normans came had a Mannor for which he paid to the Dane-geld for two Car. The Land being then known to be sufficient for four Plows or four Car. There afterwards Turold the Man of Roger de Busli whose Fee it then was become had two Car. and three Sochm. on four Bov. of this Land and twelve Vill. having twelve Car. There were two Mills of 16s. 4d. and eight Acres of Medow Pasture Wood one leu long and half one broad The value in former time and then also was 3l. It had Sok in Blyth of three sorts as in that place will be noted That Turold the Man of Roger I take to be Thorald de Lisoriis brother of Fulc de Lisoriis both Witnesses to Roger de Busli's Charter of foundation of the Manastery of Blyth dated 1088. and both concerned in this place in which Fulco gave two Bovats to that Priory and two which Roger Escossard held of him in Hodesak Pagan son of Cossard granted the Land of Hodesar which Fulco de Lisouriis gave to St. Mary of Blyth as Alms which Land Cossard held of the said Fulco c. Raph Cossard gave to that Monastery six Acres of his Demesne in Cossard-thorpe which his Grand-father Roger gave and three Acres and a Toft which Walter Cossard his father gave The Sheriff 6 R. 1. accounted for 22 s 8d. of the Chattels of Raph de Cossard-thorp sold being one of the Kings enemies Raph Coshart 7 R. 1. gave account of five Marks for having seisin of his Land of Cossard-thorp which was taken into the Kings hands for his being with Earl Iohn Henry de Cossardthorp called also Henry Cossard son of Raph Cossard gave to the Prior and Monks of Blith Roger de Cossardthorp son of Thorald and Beatrix his mother with her whole sequel and their whole Land in Cossard Thorp paying him and his heirs 2s. per an This is an Hamlet of Hodsac now called Costrop But the next Lord of Hodsac that I have found was Roger de Cressey who gave to God St. Mary and the Monks of Blyth half a Bovat of Land in Oulecotes and the Tythes of all his Mills of the Soc of Hodesac and the Monks granted him perpetually four Masses in a week for himself his Ancestors and Successours as well living as dead This gift the said Roger made upon the Altar at Blyth before many Witnesses which was confirmed by his son William de Cressi William de Cressi 2 Ioh. gave the King twenty Marks and one Palfrey that he might justly and according to the Custom of England be brought off from the Dower which Cecily the daughter of Gervas de Clifton claimed against him Cecily who had been wife of Roger de Cressi 2 Ioh. gave the King forty Marks and one Palfrey for having her reasonable Dower which concerned her of the Freehold which was the said Rogers in this County William de Cressi 3 Ioh. pleaded that Cecily was not the wife of Roger de Cressi so the cause was transmitted to the Arch-bishop of York who signified she was lawfully married to him But William said he signified his own will against right and Ecclesiastical custom and offered pledges to try it c. and had day given c. There was a Fine at Clarendon the Munday after Midlent 5 Ioh. between Cecily who had been wife of Roger de Cressi Petent and William de Cressi Tenent concerning the reasonable Dower of the said Cecily which she claimed against the said William of the gift of her said husband Roger in Hoddishac Gedling Kelum Weston Rampton and Marcham all which she quit to the said William and his heirs for half a Knights Fee in Melton and five Acres of Medow in Lokenges for her life W. de Cressi gave to the Monks of Blith the Damms of his Mills from the Bridge of Gildenebriges unto the Land of Suain Sarpesive in the same state they were Anno Dom. 1225. and gave them free firmage firmuram of the Damm of the Mills of Westcroft in his Land paying out of that Mill of Westcroft half a quarter of Rye at Mich. yearly to him and his heirs He released likewise to them 12d. yearly which they paid him for Land in Holm c. William son and heir of Roger de Cressi who was in Ward of Alice Countess of Augi in the former part of Henry the third held of her the whole Town of Hodsok with the Soke by one Knights Fee William de Cressi son of Roger de Cressi confirmed two Bovats in Hoddesak with the Appurtenances which Fulc de Lisoriis gave to the Almoner of St. Mary of Blyth c. and all the Lands Rents and Possessions which the Monks had acquired of him or his Ancestors from the beginning of the world till the Feast of St. Martin 1273. William de Cressi Knight granted for himself and his heirs to the Religious men the Abbat of St. Katherin of Roan and the Prior and Covent of Blyth and their successours that from thenceforth they might Hang Thieves taken within their liberty of Blyth who deserved hanging on the Gallows of Emmeslawe without any contradiction or claim of him or his heirs saving that he or his heirs should Hang the Thieves taken within their Liberty of Hodisac which should deserve hanging on the said Gallows And that if the said Gallows should be thrown down it might be lawful for the said Prior and Covent and their successours to make new ones or set up and repair the old ones as they should please William de Cressi son and heir of Sibylla de Cressi 6 E. 1.
Wilford hath pulled down and sold the frame of Wood to George or Iohn Gunthorpe of Hickling to set up there after the burning his old one Henry Billidge had also a Farm which Thomas his Grand-child son of William his eldest son sold to ... Wileman whose son is yet owner of it This Thomas Billidge was a servant in the Earl of Newcastles Family as his brother William was in Sir Iohn Harpurs which William was reputed stout man and was a Captain in the late Wars in which he died a little before which his said brother Thomas went to Goa in the East-Indies on the account of Sir William Cortin where he stayed about seven years and then came hither and got a matter of a thousand pounds or more for his Land and returned into those parts where he became rich and died in a few years leaving his friends and relations Legacies and the poor of this Town 100l. as it is said but Mr. Blake who married his sister and got most of his Estate hath not yet performed his Will in that particular Richard Kirke a Romanist had likewise at the inclosure which he resisted to the utmost a considerable share which he was forced to convey to his brother Thomas and died in Prison Thomas Kirke of Flintham eldest son of that Thomas retains some his youngest son William sold some to William Iacson of East-Bridgeford and the rest with the house to the said Doctor Brunsell The Rectory was appropriated to the Priory of Wirkesop in the year 1349. And the Prior compounded with the Dean and Chapter of Lincolne for what concerned the Tythes here of Orston Sok for 4l. per annum which in case of non-payment they were to distrain for at Gringley and Walkringham Iohn Bellowe and Robert Big●tt had licence Decemb. 17.37 H. 8. to alienate the Rectory and Advowson of the Vicarage of Carcolston late belonging to the Priory of Wirkesop to Richard Wha●ley and his heirs The same persons had another grant 22 Nov. 38 H. 8. together with the Tythes of Corn and Hay within the Town and Fields o● Screveton then in the tenure of the said Richard W●●●ley late belonging to the said Priory of Wirk●op which parcell of this Rectory in Screveton amounts to one third of two third parts of the whole Ty●hes there and remains to Peniston Whalley Esquire The Tythes at Coleston are his Grace the Du●e of Newcastles but being charged with 20l. per annum to the King and that 4l. due to the Church of Lincolne are for the most part of no great value besides The Vicarage was ten Marks when the Prior of Wirksop was Patron And is now 6l. 1s. 10d. value in the Kings Books and the Duke of Newcastle Patron In the Church were lately in an upper Window Barry of six Arg. and Gules a File of three Labels Azure Or on a Fesse Gules three Waterbongets Arg. Bingham And Arg. five ●usells in Fesse Gules New-march And Party per pale Arg. Gules and Sab. a Lion Ramp Arg. And Arg. upon a Bend sable between six Crosse Cros●ets Gules three Besants Whatton And Sab. a Chevron between two Martlets and Crosse Cros●et botony f●●chè Arg. Gloucester I suppose Written on the Wall In piam memoriam Sanctissimi viri Gregorii Henson Exemplar sanctae qui vix imitabile vitae Qui verae speculum religionis erat 〈◊〉 Lethophagis Triadi Sex Mille Triuni Qui legavit agrum corpus hinc animam Hic jacet merito reparator scilicet aedis Mortuus vivus qui fuit est erit And upon another Wall Here lyeth the body of Gregory Henson Qui nunc emeritae permensus tempora vitae Adscriptus Divûm coelicolumque ●hero est ob .... Vpon the top of a Buttress in Free-stone is cut on the out-side A Fesse between three Hunters Horns quartering a Lyon Rampant And quarterly party per pale indented and a Flower de Lis Thoroton Lovet●t and Morin And under that Dec. 12. 1646. Regi Ecclesiae fidus Robertus Thoroton totius paterni cognominis pervetusti jae● superstitis parens decus ab antiquis hujus villae dominis Lovetotis scilicet per Morinos haereditariè genus terram ducens juxta Robertum Thoroton patrem Anno 1604. Peste mortuu● Mariam Owtram matrem Dorotheam Oldney uxorem ejus hic infra sepultu● fuit Anno aetatis suae 77. Cujus octo liberi viz. 1. Robertus qui ex Anna Chambers conjuge providissima hic etiam Anno 1660. inhumata genuit Robertum Thoroton M. D. virum Annae Boun Mariam triennem filiolam Anno 1655. submersam hic conditam huc usque lugentis Elizabetham Richardum Gervasium Mariam Thomam 2. Alicia 3. Richardus 4. Johannes pater Johannis Roberti Rogeri Franciscae Henrici Mariae Thomae Willielmi Dorotheae Annae 5. Maria. 6. Thomas 7. Dorothea Et 8. Francesca adhuc supersunt 1664. Screveton And Kirketon BEsides that which was of the Soc of Orston which in the Confessours time was rated to the Dane-geld at one Carucat The Land then esteemed three Carucats where in the Conquerours time were three Sochm. two Vill. and one Bord. having one Carucat and an half and eight Acres of Medow There was a Mannor in Screvinton of the Fee of Odo Bishop of Bayon which Toti had before the Normans came and paid to the Geld for it as twelve Bovats The Land was three Car. then but afterwards Hugh the Nephew of Herbert the Man or Tenent of the Bishop had there five Sochm. and four Villains and one Bordar having three Carucats or Plows and six Oxen and twelve Acres of Medow This was 25s. value in the time of King Edward the Confessour and when the Book of Doomsday was made 32s. There was in Escrevintun of the Fee of Roger de Busle also a Mannor which before the Conquest was Odincars then also Lord of Flintham and Bridgeford which was rated to the payment of the publick Tax at five Bovats The Land of it was one Car. There when the great Survey was made by the Conquerour one Sochm. with one Bordar had one Car. This in the Confessours time was 5s. in the Conquerours 8s. value The Tythes of these three Fees have ever been and are yet distinct Those of Orston Soc are the third part and belong to the Church of Lincolne as part of the Rectory of Orston and are now held by me of the Dean and Chapter The third part of the two remaining parts belonged to the Priory of Wirksop with Coleston which was Roger de Buslies Fee and are now the inheritance of Peniston Whalley Esquire the rest remain to the Church And the custom of dividing the Tythes is at eighteen the Rector of Screveton hath eight I for the Church of Lincolne have six and Mr. Whalley four There was a final agreement made at Nott. in the Kings Court the third day after the feast of St. Gregory next after Henry King of England son
ten Mess. ten Cottages c. in Mapurley in Darbyshire The Mannor of Broxtow and Maperley in Darbyshire late in the possession of Thomas Whalley Gent. and Richard Whalley Esquire Iuly 21. 12 Iac. were by the King granted to Philip Stanhope Knight his heirs and assigns as late the Lands of Richard Whalley Esquire paying 21l. 4s. per annum to the Exchequer This Mannor hath since passed through the Families of Byron and Stanhope and Isham Parkins Esquire sold it to Thomas Smith younger son of Sir Francis Smith of Ashby Folevile in Leicestershire who builded the House and adorned the Seat and in the Wars received the honour of Knight-hood but not long since it was sold to Sir Francis Top then Servant to his Grace the Duke of Newcastle his Lady was Elizabeth Chaplan whon had been Servant to the Duchess since her child-hood it remains Sir Iohn Toppes Baronet her son's 'T is now esteemed as I take it in the Parish of Bilborough Baseford And Algarthorpe or Eland-Hall THere were many Mannors in Baseford of William Peverells Fee and one which was Tayn-land which Aluric had before the Conquest paying to the Geld for four Bovats The Land was half a Car. He continued to hold it of King William when the great Survey was made and there had one Vill. holding one Car. and one Acre of Medow and two Mills 16s. and small Wood one Acre This held 20s. value as it had been formerly Alcwin had a Mannor here before the Conquest rated to the Geld at ten Bovats The Land was then twelve Bovats There afterwards Safred the Man or Tenant of William Peverell had one Car. two Vil. ... Bord. one Sochm. having two Car. ½ There was a Priest and three Acres of Medow and one Acre of Wood this likewise kept the old value 20s. Two other Mannors here Alfeg and Algod had which answered the Tax for two Car. and two Bov. The Land whereof was so much There Pagen and Safred the Men of William Peverell had one Car. two Vill. five Bord. having two Car. and three Mills 25s. 4d. and six Acres of Medow and a small Wood this also kept the old rate 40s. There was besides these another parcel one Bovat for the Geld which Escul held Philip son of Safrid and Maud his wife by the consent of William Peverell gave to the Monks of Lenton in honour of the High and undivided Trinity twenty four Acres of their Demesne viz. a little Essart at Broculstow and a Tilled place or Wong called Trucchere welle and another called Thorniwang another Copperodes besides two Bovats which William son of Gilbert held and two which Alfer had in Baseford Robert son of Philip de Baseford confirmed the four Bovats of the Villenage of Baseford and the twenty four Acres of Demesne which his Father gave and likewise confirmed to that Church of Lenton all the Land in Aldesworth of his Fee with a Medow called Brademedoe he likewise released to the same Church a Medow which he once sued the Monks for viz. the upper Island which the water of Lene did anciently compass One of these Mannors Iohn de Orreby held and Gilbert de Orreby 52 H. 3. had Free Warren here The Jury 19 E. 2. said that Simon de Orreby held Lands here during his life of the Inheritance of Alveredus de Sulney who was then found heir of the said Simon and above 26 years of age By an Inquisition taken 7 H. 6. it appears that Margery Langford held some of Sulneys Lands here and Iohn de Cockfeild others whose Family held also another Mannor in this place which went with Nuthall as in that place is shown Sir Raph Langford Knight was seised of eight Mess. two hundred Acres of Land ten of Medow ten of Pasture with the Appurtenances in Baseford which he passed to Anthony Fitz-Herbert Serjeant at Law and others 14 Ian. 2 H. 8. to fulfill his last Will he died 1 Febr. 5 H. 8. his Grandchild Raph Langford son of his son Nicholas then above four years old being found his heir This was a Family of principal note and great possessions in Darbyshire and other Counties William Hollys the younger Gent. 29 H. 8. claimed against Raph Langford and Dorothy his wife the Mannor of Baseford and likewise the Mannors of Blakwell Whitwell and Cressewell in Darbishire and the Advowson of the Church of Whitwell In 37 H. 3. the Mannors of Betewast in the County of Northampton of Lubbesthorp in Leicestershire and Basford in this County were confirmed to William de Cantelupe George de Cantelupe 1 E. 1. is found to have held nothing in Demesne in Basseford but that Stephen de Brokelstow held of him one Mill three Acres of Land and two of Medow in Fee for xiis. iiiid. and likewise held of him in Bondage fifteen Bovats and an half of Land for lxiis. and seven Cottages which yielded xvs. iiiid. His two sisters were his heirs of which Millecent de Monte alto who also married Eudo le Zouch succeeded him in this place The Jury 17 E. 2. found it not to the Kings damage if he granted to Thomas le Zouch that he should retain to himself five Mess. and eleven Virgats of Land with the Appurtenances in Basford which he had acquired of William de la Zouch A Fine 24 E. 3. of Lands in Baseford was levyed between Raph son of Raph de Crumwell and Maud his wife Quer. and Raph de Crumwell Chr. and Amicia his wife Deforc. whereby they were settled on Raph son of Raph and Maud his wife and the heirs of their bodies remainder to Raph and Amicia and the heirs of Raph. Another Fine was levied 46 E. 3. between Raph son of Raph de Crumbewell Knight and Elizabeth his wife Quer. and Raph de Crumwell Chr. and Maud his wife Deforc. of the Mannors of Baseford and Bleseby by which they were settled on Raph the son of Raph and Elizabeth his wife and the heirs of their bodies remainder to Raph and Maud his wife and the heirs of Raph quit from any other heirs of the said Raph the son of Raph and Elizabeth Gervas Clifton and Maud his wife late wife of Robert de Willughby 5 E. 4. granted to Anthony Wydevile Lord Scales and Newsells these Mannors and many others which were late Raph Lord Crumwells William Shirbourn 28 H. 8. claimed against William Hollys of London the younger Gent. the moyety of twenty Mess. c. in Basford who called to warrant Edward Knivett Esquire He and Fitz-Williams were the heirs of the Lord Crumwell as in Crumwell may be observed Sir William Copley in the right of Dorothy his wife died seised of the moyety of the Mannor of Basforth 28 Apr. 2 and 3 Ph. and Mar. as in Plumptre is said These came to the Family of Hollis and were by the last Earl of Clare save one dispersed amongst Freeholders but the
Broome George deceased Thomas Christian William and Elizabeth deceased William Iohn Elizabeth and Hugh and deceased the last of December in the year of our Lord 1602. He was Sonn and heire of George Cartwright and of Dorothy sole heire of William Molineux The aforesaid Grace departed this life the 20 day of March in the year of our Lord 1633. At the vpper end of the Chancell on the North side at Ossington A PROSPECT OF OSSINGTON HOUSE FROM THE FEILD ON THE WEST SIDE AS IT now is some part haveing beene ruined in the late rebellious warr Sutton upon Trent IN Sudton of Roger de Buslies Fee there was Soc to Gresthorpe one Bov. ad Geld. but the Sok was waste There was six Acres of Medow and some was Soc to Scacheby one Bov. ad Geld. the Land half a Car. There one Sochm. had one Car. Before the Conquest William son of Scelward had a Mannor in Sudton which was chargeable to the publick Taxation of that time for two Car. and six Bovats The Land was five Car. This afterwards was given to Earl Alan of Richmond whose Man or Tenant there called Herveius had two Car. or Plows thirteen Sochm. on the moyety of this Land and seventeen Villains three Bordars having eight plows or Carucats There was a Priest and a Church and three Fishings and one hundred Acres of Medow Pasture Wood one leu long half a leu broad This kept the ancient value 4l. The Posterity of this Hervey took their Sirname from this place as it is very probable because the next owner I have had any notice of was of that name Hervey de Sutton and Robert his Man 22 H. 2. gave account of five Marks of the Amercements of the Forest. Hervey de Sutton and his heir Robert gave to the Canons of Radeford near Wirksop the Church of Sutton and the right of Patronage thereof and whatsoever other right they had therein And there was a Fine levied at Nottingham 20 H. 3. between Walter Prior of Wirksop and Richard de Sutton of the said Advowson whereby it was declared to be the right of the said Prior as that which he had of the gift of Hervey de Sutton Father of the said Richard whose heir he then was his elder brother Robert Herveius homo Comitis Alani tenuit Sutton 14 W. 1. ........ .......... Herveius de Sutton 22 H. 2. Richardus de Sutton haer 20 H. 3. Agnes-Gilb de Muscamp Adam de Muscamp Johannes de Sutton Steph. de Coverham-Marger Steph. de Coverham Alicia Guichard de Charrons-Maria Guichardus de Charron-Alicia 3 E. 2. Bertram Mounboucher 3 E. 3 -Joana 3 E. 2. Bertram Mounboucher ob 12 R. 2. Chr. -Isabel fil Ric. Willoughby mil. -Christ sor Joh. de Woderington Chr. ux 2. Bertram Mounboucher ob 1 H. 4. Bertr Mounboucher ob 2 H. 5. Bertram Mounbocher ob 4 H. 6. s. p. Henr. Heton Chr. -Isabella-Robertus Herbotell mar 2. Robertus Herbotell ob 22 H. 6. Bertram Harbotill ob 2 E. 4. Robertus Herbotell aet 9. 2 E. 4 -Richard Harbotel mil. -Jana fil Hen. Willoughby mil. de Wollaton Georgius Harbotell 20 H. 8. Alianora-Thom Percy Maria-Edward Fitton Edward Fitton miles Georgius Anthonius Steph. de Charron 34 E. 1. ... Faber-Eliz Willelmus de Caunton Johan Joh. Robertus fil haer ob ultra mare ante patrem s. p. Rolandus de Sutton-Alicia sor cohaer Rob. Dom. Lexington being dead beyond the Sea before his Father without issue This Church King Edward the first in the thirty second year of his Reign being at Strivelin 25 Ap. licensed to be appropriate to the Monastery of Wirkesop The Writ of Ad quod Damnum was returned the year before 31 E. 1. Richard de Sutton who held a Knights Fee in Sutton Carleton and Meringe had five daughters and heirs first Agnes married to Gilbert de Muscam by whom she had Adam de Muscamp and Iohn I suppose called also of Sutton secondly Margery married to Stephen de Coverham by whom she had Stephen thirdly Alice without issue a Benefactress to Newstede to which place she gave one Bovat in Sutton upon Trent which the Earl of Richmond confirmed she made Margery de Coverham her sister her heir of whom Thomas de Sutton their Uncle the Parson who was a great Benefactor also to Newstede acquired their parts as also of Agnes whose purparts were conveyed to Henry de Gloucestre Parson of Sutton from whom they descended to Iohn de Gloucestre his brothers son his heir which Iohn enfeoffed Hugh de Normanton who re-infeoffed him and Ioane his wife who had the moyety of the Mannor of Sutton upon Trent and 3 E. 3. claimed the priviledges accordingly The Jury 18 E. 1. in the Assize found that Iohn de Sutton not compelled by force or fear but of his own Will made the writings to Henry de Gloucester Parson of Sutton concerning one Mess. and thirty Acres of Land and two of Pasture in Sutton in which Deeds or Chartels he sold his Mannor there Fourthly Mary another of the daughters and heirs of Sir Richard de Sutton was married to Guichard de Charron who 4 E. 1. with Adam de Sutton whom I suppose the son of Agnes and Gilbert de Muscamp before named claimed several royalties in Sutton He had Free Warren granted here 18 E. 1. By his wife the said Mary he had a son named Stephen who enfeoffed his said Father in this Land which he settled on Guichard de Charun his son by a second wife to whom and to Alice his wife his brother the said Stephen de Charrun by Fine 34 E. 1. passed his Mannor of Sutton upon Trent which the said Gwischard the younger and Alice his wife by another Fine 3 E. 2. settled on Bertram de Mounboucher and Ioane his wife their daughter and the heirs which the said Bertram should beget on the body of the said Ioane reserving 20l. per annum during the life of the said Gwischard and after his death a Rose at Midsummer to his heirs Bertram and Ioane 3 E. 3. claimed a Market here every Munday and a yearly Fair for two daies viz. the Eve and Feast day of St. Iames the Apostle and Free Warren which King Edward the second granted 7 Aug. 2 E. 2. at Northampton to Guichard de Charrun father of the said Ioane whose heir she was There was another daughter of the said Sir Richard de Sutton fifthly Elizabeth who was married to a certain Smith by whom she had William de Caunton and Iohn de Caunton and Iohn de Caunton was heir of her Purpart and enfeoffed divers Tenants William Bevercottes had the state of the said Iohn de Calneton 3 E. 3. and at the said time he with Iohn de Gloucester Iohn de Bolyngbrok Peter Foune and Robert de Lanum pray'd that they might be admitted to Fine and use the priviledges in Common which could not be
Lovethot was seised of the Mannor of Gringele and gave by her Deed to the Prior of Wirksop a Wind-Mill there which Matilda afterwards gave the said Mannor to William de Furnivall her son who put himself into the possession of the said Mill all his life and died without heir of himself whereby the said Mannor reverted to the said Matilda who again enfeoffed the said Prior of the said Mill and died after whose death Iohn de Vescy seised the said Mannor and ejected the said Prior and so held until the Battel of Evesham where he was taken and then came Thomas de Furnivall whose right and inheritance the aforesaid Mannor ought to have been and compounded with Edward the first and Henry de Alemaine viz. that the said Thomas should enfeoffe the said Henry of the said Mannor to hold to him and the heirs of his body remainder to King Edward the first which Henry died without heir of himself and the King gave the said Mannor to Constancia wife of the said Henry in Tenency And the Jury found precisely that Iohn de Vescy and his servants did unjustly eject the said Prior out of the said Mill. And afterwards the said Prior in the fifth year of King Edward the first complained that before judgement given Richard son of Albred with forty others by the Command and Mission of Henry de Luffenham Constable of Tikhill with force and arms pulled down the said Mill c. William de Anne Constable of Tikhill made it appear and the Prior denied not that the Mill then viz. 19 E. 2. stood not where it did of old on the soyle of the Prior but two Selions off on the soyle of the King Therefore the Prior had order if he pleased to build it where it formerly stood and to recover the Suit to it by the Common Law There was more ado afterwards concerning this Mill and Suit to it in the former part of the Reign of E. 3. Simon de Bereford 3 E. 3. claimed to have in the Mannor of Gringele Emendation of Bread and Ale Free Waren Park Wrek and Weyf William de la Pole granted this Mannor of Gringeley on the Hill to King E. 3. It was granted to Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster together with Wheatley as part of Tikhill where it continued till it was sold away by King Iames. The Rectory of Grenelay or Gryngeley late belonging to the Monastery of Worksop with the Rectory of Adenburgh and other things was granted 7 E. 6. May 4. to Sir Iames Folejambe Knight and his heirs by the Kings Letters Patents paying yearly for the Rectory of Adenburgh 18l. and for that of Gryngeley 22l. 13s. 4d. The owners of Gringley super montem in 1612. are thus set down George Dawson Arthur Gray Edmund Crosse William Gamstone senior Thomas Sturton William Walsham Henry Wylde Francis Williamson de Walkringham Gent. The Vicarage of Gringley was 8l. when the Prior of Wirksop was Patron 'T is now 7l. 18s. 4d. value in the Kings Books and the Earl of Devonshire Patron Everton Scaftworth Harwell IN Evreton of the Arch-bishop of Yorks Sok of Sudton was one Car. and ¼ of a Bovat and in Scaftord one Car. ad Geldam In Evretone and Hereuuelle of the Fee of Roger de Busli in Oswardebec Wapentac Soc to Burton there was two Bov. ¼ ad Geldam The Land one Car. There one Sochm. had half a Car. and one Acre and an half of Medow Pasture Wood one qu. long one broad And likewise in Heruuelle and Evretone Sok to Grengeley three Bov. ⅓ ad Geldam The Land one Car. There one Sochm. one Vill. had half a Car. and three Acres of Medow Pasture Wood hve qu. long two qu. broad Roger Arch-bishop of York who lived in the time of King Henry the second gave the Church of Everton to the Chapel which he Founded near York Minster as in East Retford is said and his successour Sewall in the year 1258. ordained that the Vicar of Everton should have the Altarage and the whole Land of the Church with an inclosure in Harwell Inge or half a Mark out of the Purse of the Sacrist and the Tythe of the Hay beyond the Town of Scaftworth directly towards Bawtrey and the Tythe Hay of Birthinge and the said Sacrist was to find a dwelling House for the said Vicar or to give him half a Mark yearly for a House and there the said Sacrist was also to give to the poo●●●ree Marks per annum William de Haplisthorp at Darby 53 H. 3. offered himself the fourth day against Simon son of William concerning a Plea of one Mess. and the moyety of one Bovat in Everton and against Sigrida de Sutton Adam and Iordan her sons of one Mess. and one Bovat in the same Town and against Robert son of Gilbert de Hayton and Cecilia his daughter of the moyety of a Bovat except two Acres and they came not c. The Jury 26 E. 1. found that Iohn Freschevede held in the Town of Herewell one Bovat of Land in Demesne seven Natives or Villains holding five Bov. in Villenage Of the Mannor of Wheatley he held also of the King in Capite paying 12d. per annum and making two appearances at the Court of Wheatley and that he was a Bastard and had no heirs and therefore the Land was taken into the Kings hands as an Eschaet Another Inquisition found that he held six Bov. of Land and 20s. and 1d. Rent in Herewell and that William was his father and infeoffed him of the said Land and Rent to hold to him and the heirs of his body in default whereof to Simon de Freskenade and Arnald his brother and their heirs to whom the Land ought to descend and that Arnald died at the Feast of the Purification of Mary 26 E. 1. Thomas de Maresay mentioned in Gamelston held about that time in Everton a Capital Mess. in Demesne and held five Bovats of Arable Land in Socage of Thomas Arch-bishop of York paying 6s. 2d. per annum and Suit of Court There was a Fine levied 19 E. 2. between Iames Spinay and William de Cliff Clark Quer. and Robert Spinay Clark Deforc. of the Mannors of Everton and Scaftworth thereby settled on the said Iames and the heirs of his body remainder to William his brother and the heirs of his remainder to Alice his sister and her heirs William de Cliff and Iames de Spinay in an Assize taken 2 E. 3. recovered their seisin of one Mess. and forty Acres of Land and twenty of Medow in Scaftworth and twenty Marks for damage against Iohn de la Cressover and William his son and others The Jury 33 E. 3. found that Iohn de Grey of Rotherfeild held when he died one Toft with a certain Garden and sixty Acres of Land ten of Medow with the Appurtenances in Everton of the Arch-bishop of York by the service of 8s.
Iohn de Hothum Bishop of Ely bearing date 29 Decemb. 1329.3 E. 3. was to this effect viz. That for the Mannor of Cukeney with the Appurtenances and two Mess. one hundred and twenty Acres of Land eight of Medow six of Wood with the Appurtenances in Holbeck by Cukeney which the said Bishop gave to the said Abbat and Covent they the said Abbat and Covent without any compulsion freely bound themselves and their successours to find eight Canons in their Abby daily to celebrate Divine Offices for the Soul of Edward King of England Grandfather of the then King and for the Soul of Edward late King of England father of the said then King for the wholesome estate of the Lady Isabell Queen of England the said Kings mother and of her children and chiefly for the state of the King and the Lady Philippa his Consort Queen of England while they lived and for their souls when they should die Also for the souls of Alan and Maud father and mother of the said Lord Iohn de Hothum Bishop of Ely and for the souls of the children of them the said Alan and Matildis then dead and of the living when they should die and for the Soul of Frier or Brother William de Hothum sometimes Bishop of Dublin for the state of the Lady Mary de St. Paul Countess of Pembroke and her Soul when it should be separated from the body and also for the Soul of Peter de Gaveston late Earl of Cornewall and for the Souls of Sir Iohn de Wogan and Isabell his wife and for Sir Raph Camoys and Elizabeth his wife and for their Souls after death for Sir Iohn de Fawconberg and for his Soul after his decease and especially for the healthful state of the said Lord Bishop while he should live and afterwards for his Soul and for all theirs who had faithfully served him and bestowed benefits upon him and for all the faithful departed And besides this they and their successours to celebrate in their Abby as long as the world should endure the Anniversary of the said Lord Bishop with such solemnity as the Anniversary of their first and principal Founder as well in Alms to the poor as in Divine Obsequies was wont in times past to be celebrated and every day whereon Commemorations of the dead should be read in their Chapter House his Soul should therein be absolved by name And when any of the said eight Canons should by sickness or other lawful cause be hindred from celebrating another Canon of their House should faithfully supply his turn And when any of those eight should go the way of all flesh another Canon should immediately be put in his place They were also to swear that they would never diminish the number of eight but maintain the said celebration for ever decently and that they would never obtain any thing of the Pope or the K. of England or the superior of the Order of the Praemonstratenses or of any other whereby any thing should be subtracted from the said celebration And every new Abbat before the Covent should do him obeisance or he be install●d in the Monastery and every Novice before he should be admitted to probation in their Monastery should be bound by the same Oath faithfully to keep every Article of the said ordination according to his utmost power for ever Furthermore if their said Order which God forbid should by any emergent chance be suppressed or transferred to any other Order then they willed and granted by the Tenour of the said agreement that the said Bishop or his heirs without any obstacle might enter and peaceably enjoy the said Mannor of Cukeney and two Mess. one hundred and twenty Acres of Land eight of Medow six of Wood with the Appurtenances in Holbeck by Cukeney But that the present ordination might last for ever without any diminution the said Abbat and all the Priests of the Covent with Candles burning and Stoles hung at their necks solemnly excommunicated all and every one that should weaken break diminish or violate or procure the said ordination or any part of it to be weakned broken diminished or violated by any means or presume to go against it in any thing subjecting themselves and their successours in this to the Jurisdiction and cohercion of the Abbat of Neuhus father of their Abbat and of the yearly Visite●s that if in their Visitation they found any thing of this ordinance violated or diminished they might proceed against them as guilty of Perjury and excommunicate And lest oblivion should obolish what gratitude had charitably instituted This Ordination was every year on All Souls day to be read through in their Monastery in the presence of all the Brethren But King Henry the eighth 26 Febr. 30 H. 8. granted to Richard Whalley and his heirs the Scite of the Abby of Welbeck and all the Houses and Lands beneath the Scite of it and the two Granges called Bellers Grange and Hirst Grange and the several Closes and Groves c. Queen Elizabeth 20 May 1 Eliz. granted licence to Richard Whalley Esquire and William Whalley Gent. to alienate the House and Scite of the Monastery of Welbeck by the name of the Demesne of the Mannor of Welbeck and the said two Granges Bellers and Hurst and the Grange of Gledethorpe and the Mannor of Norton and the Grange called Hardwick Grange to Edward Osborne Citizen and Cloathworker of London and his heirs She 9 Febr. 42 Eliz. granted to Robert Booth Esquire and Ranulph Catterall Gent. the whole Scite c. which sometime was belonging to and parcel of the Lands late of Richard Whalley Esquire It is now Nov. 11. 1674. the Mansion House of his Grace the Duke of Newcastle of whose Noble Atchievements I ought to have given some particular account but that the Dutchess his wife not long since dead hath done it far beyond my hopes in her famous Books especially that of his Life besides what himself hath communicated to the World in several Poems and his most excellent pieces concerning Horsmanship both in French and English whereof he is so great a Master that though he be above eighty years of age he very constantly diverts himself with it still insomuch that he is thought to have taken as great pleasure beholding his great store of choice well-managed Horses wherewith his fine stables are continually furnished appear to exercise their gifts in his magnificent Riding-house which he long since built there of Brick as in elder time any one could take to see the religious performances of the Monks in the Quire of the great Church of St. Iames now utterly vanished except the Chapel for the house was any part of it which of late years also hath lain buried in the ruines of its roof the want whereof doth a little diminish the glory of this brave Palace yet seeing that neither the Wisdome nor Piety nor Charity of those formerly concerned here nor their Right
Anno 1453. as also was his son Iohn Talbot Viscount Lisle whom he had by his second wife Margaret the daughter of the famous Richard Beauchamp Earl of Warwick The body of our Noble Earl was brought over and buried at Whitchurch after whose death Burdeaux was presently taken by the French and an end made of that War and the Civil Wars begun here by the Dukes of York and Somerset Iohn the second Earl of Shrowsbury his son by his first wife the forenamed Matilda was a most excellent young man and most like his ancestors he fell in the Battel of Northampton the sixth of the Ides of Iuly 1460. fighting on the part of King Henry the sixth who was then taken Captive by his Adversaries Elizabeth daughter of Iames Botiller Earl of Ormond was his wife and Sir Humfr. and Sir Christopher Talbot his brothers He was buried here and had Inscriptions upon his Tomb Prose and Verse c. He and his father were both Knights of the Garter as these Earl usually were and he 35 H. 6. was Lord Treasurer He had sons Iohn Iames Gilbert of Grafton Knight of the Garter and Banneret father of Iohn father of Iohn c. of whom the present Earl of Shrowsbury is descended and Christopher another son of this great Earl who was Arch-deacon of Chester and Rector of Whitchurch nigh Blackmere and George Anne the daughter of this second Earl was wife of Sir Henry Vernon of Haddon His said son Iohn Talbot the third Earl of Shrowsbury Weishford and Waterford was born on the Eve of St. Luke the fourth hour after midnight 1448. he married Katherin daughter of Henry Stafford Duke of Buckingham and died in the City of Coventry the fourth of the Kalends it should be Ides of Iuly 1473. and was buried in the Chapel of St. Mary at this Wirksop The Inquisition saith his death was on the Saturday next after the Feast of the Nativity of St. Iohn Baptist 13 E. 4. otherwise 28 of Iune which is 4 of the Ides of Iuly and that George his son and heir was then above three years old This George the fourth Earl was also Knight of the Garter and a great man with King Henry the eighth His first wife was Anne the daughter of William Lord Hastings Chamberlain to King Edward the fourth by whom he had his eldest son Francis and many children his second wife was Elizabeth daughter and heir of Sir Richard Walden of Kent by whom he had a daughter Anne the heir of her mother married to Peter son of Sir William Compton to whom she brought Henry Lord Compton Ancestor of the Earl of Northampton and was after married to William Herbert Earl of Pembroke This Earl George died the twenty sixth of Iuly 1538. and was buried at Sheffeild To his son Francis Earl of Shrowsbury did King Henry the eighth 22 Novemb. 33 H. 8. grant the whole Scite and Precinct of the Monastery or Priory of Worksop and all Mess. and Houses and several Closes and Fields and four Acres of Arable in Manton in the Parish of Worksop c. to hold to him and his heirs of the King in Capite by the service of the tenth part of a Knights Fee and also by the Royal service of finding the King a Right-hand Glove at his Coronation and to support his Right-arm that day as long as he should hold the Scepter in his hand paying yearly 23l. 8s. 0d. ob Rent His first wife was Mary daughter of Thomas Lord Dacres of Gillesland she died 28 March 1538. His second was Grace the daughter of Robert Shakerley This Earl Francis was also Knight of the Garter as was also his son and heir George whose first wife was Gertrude daughter of Thomas Lord Ros. and Earl of Rutland by whom he had Francis Gilbert Edward and Henry Katherin the wife of Edward son and heir of William Herbert Earl of Pembroke Mary the wife of Sir George Savile Ancestor of the Lord Halyfax and Grace married to Henry Cavendish eldest son of Sir William Cavendish whose widow this Earl George took to his second wife she was Elizabeth the daughter of Iohn Hardwick of Hardwick in the County of Derby Esquire and first married to ... Barlow of that County next to Sir William Cavendish by whom only she had issue then to Sir William St. Low and lastly to this great Earl she adorned these Counties with the magnificent Houses of Chattesworth Hardwick Oldcotes and this Worksop Mannor and with her Illustrious Off-spring the Families of the Earls of Devonshire and Duke of Newcastle The four sons of the Earl her husband before named three whereof were Earls all failed of issue Male so that the Lands of this mighty Earldom and this Lordship became divided Francis married Anne daughter of William Earl of Pembroke without issue His brother Gilbert Earl after him married Mary daughter of Sir William Cavendish and of the said Elizabeth the Countess his Mother-in-law by whom he had three daughters and heirs Mary wife of William Herbert Earl of Pembroke without issue Elizabeth of Henry Earl of Kent she was acquainted with the great Antiquary I. Selden and accused for cutting down the best Oaks of all England both here and at Sheffeild she also left no child and Aletheia the wife of Thomas Earl of Arundell she bore him Henry Earl of Arundell who by his wife Elizabeth daughter of Esme Stuart Duke of Lenox begot Thomas since the Kings return restored to the Dukedom of Norfolk and Henry Lord Howard and Earl Marshall of England his brother who manageth all this Noble Inheritance for him whilest he remains not so capable of such affairs in Italy A SOUTH-WEST PROSPECT OF THE CHURCH OF RADFORD BY WORKSOP A. 1677. A SOUTH PROSPECT OF WORKSOP MANNOUR The old Abbey Gatehouse at Radford by Workshop as it now is A. 16●6 A good part of the Church is yet standing in which lay William de Lovetot the Founder on the North side by the wall at the lowest step tending to the high Altar he died 7 Id. Apr. Richard de Lovetot his son is buried below his father under a white stone at the left side of Sir Thomas Furnivall William Lovetot son of Richard by the lowest step in the same pavement The last Thomas Furnivall lyeth in a Tomb of Alabaster beyond the principal Quire on the North side and William on the South side Ioane the wife of Thomas Nevill was buried above the principal Quire and lay with her Image of Alabaster very near her husband Maud their daughter was buried in the Chapel of St. Mary before the Image of the blessed Mary near the side of the Stall Thomas de Furnivall son of Bertha buried at the bare-foot Friers in Doncaster died the fourth of the Ides of May. The Inscription upon the Tomb of Iohn the second Earl of Shrowsbury in this place was thus Sepulchrum magnanimi ac praepotentis Domini Domini Johannis Talbot Comitis Salopie
Parliament as Burgess and a daughter .... wife of William Greaves who had Robert Greaves Town-Clark also and Burgess who for his loyalty to King Charles the first being in Newark Garrison suffered great loss of his interests here his brother William Greaves was Parson of Nutthall and left three sons of good rank in this Town William who is Alderman and Register of the Arch-deacons Court Iohn and Edward Greaves the Apothecary Humfrey their Uncle brother of the said William the Parson and of Robert the Town-Clark hath a son Iohn Greaves Parson of Whitwell in Darbyshire William Skeffington Esquire and Elizabeth his wife the relict of Francis Thornhagh reside in this Town in an House on St. Mary Hill purchased of Thomas Mucklow of Broughton Sulney who had it by the marriage of one of the daughters and heirs of Alderman Parker of which name and kindred there are now two Iohn Parkers Aldermen the one a Mercer the other an Apothecary of which Trade there were lately above twenty more than formerly have been when the gains and employment were greater whereof Adrian Gardiner was the oldest who brought up many sons very well his eldest is Mr. Robert Gardiner of Sléeford in Lincolneshire his two youngest which were by a latter wife were Doctors Ioseph of Physick who died at Nottingham and Iames of Divinity who is now Subdeane of Lincolne and Chaplain to his Grace the Duke of Monmouth Thomas Charleton Esquire named in Chillewell married Tabitha the daughter of William Nix Alderman whose House in Bridlesmith Gate is now the dwelling of the said Thomas who hath built there as Mr. Samuel Stables named in Maperley who was successour of Alderman Stables hath done nigh the Swine Gréene William Toplady son and heir of Alderman Francis Toplady Vintner was one of the first leaders of this Dance of building new Fronts in this Town which hath been of late very well followed as I hope it will be still because many people of good quality from several parts make choice of habitations here where they find good accommodation which must be no small advantage to the place Here are Counsellours at Law Edward Bigland Esquire William Savile Esquire and Iames Farwell Esquire son of Sir Iohn Farwell and half brother of Richard Slater of Nutthall Esquire Atturneys Mr. Raph Edge Alderman son of Walter Edge of the same profession Laurence Athorpe Vinc. Beverley Arthur Ricards c. The Free School flourisheth under Mr. Cudworths care who married Mr. Alderman Christopher Halls daughter There are many Gentlemen and persons of good Estates and great Traders besides these concerned and owners in this Town with the particular recital of whom I cannot now further tire the Reader The Vicarage of St. Maries was twenty Marks and so was the Rectory of St. Peters and the Rectory of St. Nicolas ten Marks when the Prior of Lenton was Patron St. Maries is now 10l. 5s. value in the Kings-Books and the Marquess of Dorchester Patron St. Peters 8l. 8s. 6d. and the King Patron as he is also of St. Nicholas which is but 2l. 16s. 8d. value This Church is now almost rebuilt of Brick it was demolished in the Rebellion for the safety of the Castle In St. Maries Church South I le ....... Richardi Samon quondam Majoris Aldermanni istius villae qui obiit xviii die mensis Decembris Anno Dom. M. CCCC LVII And in the Window of the same I le and on a Tomb Arg. a Bend Azure between a Mullet pierced and an Annulett Gules Samon Orate pro anima Johannis Salmon Agnetis uxoris ejus On the first Earl of Clare's Tomb H. S. E. Johannes Hollies de Houghton Equ Aur. Denzilli F. Willielmi N. in Baronem Houghton nec non in Comitem de Clare per Regem Jaco●um crectus uxorem duxit Annam Thomae Stanhope de Shelford Equ Aur. Filiam è quâ Filios Johannem postea Comitem de Clare Denzillium in Baronem Hollies de I feild in Comita●● Susserie per serenissimum Regem Carolum II. promotum Franciscum qui coelebs obi●t As Car●lum Willielmum Carolum in cunis demortuos Filias etiam Eleonoram Olivero Vicecomiti Fitz-Williams ac Comiti de Tyrconel Arabellam Thomae Wentworth de Wentworth-Woodhouse in Com. Ebor. Baronetto postea vero in Vicecom Wen●worth Comitem de Strafford evecto Copulatas ac Elizabetham ante nuptias defunctam Suscitavit Diem obiit II.I. Octobris Anno Dom. M.DC.XXXVII On the second Earls Tomb H. S. E. Praenob Johannes Comes de Clare Johannis F. Denzillii N Vxorem duxit Elizabetham Horatii Vere Equ Aur. Baronisque de Tilbury in re bellicâ clarissimi filiam et cohaeredem Equâ Filios Johannem in canis demortitum at Gilbertum postea Comitem de Clare Filias verò Annam Edwardo primogenito Theophili Comitis Lincolnie Elizabetham Wentworthio Comiti de Kildare Arabellam Edwardo Rosseter de Somerby in Com. Linc. Equ Aur. Matrimonio conjunctas Mariam in cunis alteram Mariam ante nuptias defunctas Eleonoram superst Katherinam Margaretam in coelibatu direptas Susannam Johanni Lort de Stackpole-Court in Agro Pembr Baronetto desponsatam Franciscam infantulam exanimem Dianam Henrico Bridges filio haeredi Thomae Bridges de Keynsham in Com. Somers Equ Aur. enuptam Penelopen Jacobo Langham de Entesbroke in Com. Northampt. Baronetto copulatam Dorotheam Franciscam in teneri state sublatas Procreavit Diem obiit secundo Januarii Anno Domini M. DC LXV In the Chancel on a Black Marble Grave-Stone cut in two Brass Plates A Fesse between three Spread-Eaglets with a Crest viz. a Dog tyed to a Tree And Anno Dom. 1607. In memoriâ aeternâ justus erit Nicholas Kinnersley Esq and his mother Dear Amye their Corpes this Stone doth here cover They live now with Christ in whom they did trust Their Bodies do wait the rising of the Just. On another Brass Plate Hic jacet Radulphus Hansby Art Mr. quondam socius Johannensis Cantab. ibidemque Taxator Hujus Ecclesiae vicarius Bartonensis in Fabis Rector Qui obiit Novemb. xx Anno Dom. 1635. Hansbius hac cecidit terra lapsum extulit aura Quo jacet hic casu surgit in Astra suo On a Monument Johannes Alton in Artibus Mr. ob solertiam prudentiam experientiam medicorum apud boreales saltem partes facile princeps uxorem habuit Elizab. Brightman quae apprimè modesta erat foemina venerabilis matrona pro morum suavitate apud omnes gratissima ex eâ duos suscepit liberos Georgium Eleonoram uxorem Thomae Bray Armig. matremque Elizabethae Bray quae nupta Fran. Pierreponto summae pietatis observantiae gratitudinis ergô hoc Monumentum in defunctorum memoriam quâ fieri potest sempiternam propriis sumptibus erigi curavit Obierunt uterque circiter annum Aetatis suae octogesimum Ille autem 22. de Febr. Anno Dom. 1629. Haec decimo Novemb. Annoque Dom. 1638. On a Grave-stone Johannes Alton