Wednesday, December 3, 2014

38. 2 Researching the Durnfords - William Durnford b 1565 m Edith lineage to Thomas Durnford b 1682 m Mary Lane

There is also reference to a William Durnford marrying Eleanor Wallen in 1586 in Ringwood, this would almost agree with the William who researchers show was married to Edith, or it could be one of his cousins.

Our ancestors beginning with this  William 1565, whose brothers most likely Thomas b 1560, and John born 1565:

1.  William Durnford  1565 married a lady known as Edith.

The recorded births are William 1589 , John 1590, Elizabeth, 1595 Mary 1598 and Edith 1599.  There are probably more children and the dates are estimates in order to research

2.William was the son of John Durnford b 1590 and d 1653.  The name of his mother is unknown.
John was a church warden at North Cadbury.        
Church of St Michael North Cadbury
                             

The recorded births for William born 1590 include John b 1624 Mary 1625, Ann 1622, Joan 1627, Elizabeth 1634, Robert 1634  and William 1632.

(There are probably more, however none that can be confirmed in searches.  As indicated in the story about the Civil War he had a lot of children. His son John held quite a lot of land on his death)* 

*Reference to a transaction in Wiltshire Records.

The dealings are listed below, but provide evidence that John as the eldest son of John must have inherited his estates here at Deverill. 

(Note the use of William in the generations)


3. Andrew's father was William Durnford b 1632 d 1675 and his wife Jane

The births are  * Andrew 1663 and Thomas 1665, and most probably William.1660

There are however no birth records to substantiate any births.


The name Andrew now gets passed down the lineage.  Normally there would be a link back to the maternal side with the name Andrew

Research reveals that there was a family of millers who were living in Hampshire

John who owned a Mill at Preshute and Thomas who had one in Goodworth Clapton  Andover


ANDREWS Thomas
1675 Nov 27
Andover or Goodworth Clatpton
m Sarah JELLIFFE of A
ANDREWS John
1687
Preshute


And by extreme co-incidence who should die around 1660 but the deceased prelate, who was the eldest son of the Rev. Richard Durnford, rector of Goodworth Clatford, Hampshire, by Louisa, daughter of Mr. William 



4. Thomas was the son of Andrew Durnford d 1690 from Andover region of Hampshire and he married firstly Mary Lancaster in 1670 and then Martha Philpots, in 1683 , at the age of 20.

Information relating to some Phillpotts in the area is listed below.

Martha and Andrew had two sons, Thomas 1682 and Andrew 1687. Andrew died an infant probably in childbirth with his mother.

5. Thomas married Mary Chater who died in 30 May 1714 buried at St Mary's Church Devizes and then he married Mary Lane.                                                  
St Mary's Church

The recorded births are Elias 1720, Elizabeth 1723 Anne 1724 and Andrew 1725

Some points to consider at this stage:



  • Was Andrew Durnford born 1663 (about) who died in 1720 the beneficiary of a will from Martha's family, either maternal or paternal, which provided him with lands and wealth?
  • Was he involved in the clothing trade or involved with the Andrew's family and their mills?


There is evidence to show that the whole area was at one time heavily into weaving, both wool and then silk.





PHILLPOTTS IN ANDOVER

Martha Philpots was born in Andover Hampshire around 1660.  The only family of Philpots in Andover at that time were that of John Philpots and his wife Mary.

Because of the lack of records, and the probability that Martha fits into this Phillpott family the following information may assist someone in the future.

Their children in Andover included Nicholas 1654, Abigale 1656, Thomas 1658, John 1663, Sarah, 1665.  A birth for Martha who would have been born around this time is not evident from Andover, however there are no future records for Abigale, could she have been Abigale Martha?

The Phillpott family had origins in London, Kent, and some branches owned estates at Compton near Winchester.

Sir Peter is also styled a knight of the Bath, but it does not appear when he was so made.
He was esquire when he served sheriff of Hampshire in 16 Hen. VIII., and knight when
he again served in 27 Hen. Till. In 1539 he was summoned to attend the reception of
the lady Anna of Cleves : see the Chronicle of Calais, p. 177.


He married Agnes, eldest daughter and co-heir of Thomas Troys of Hampshire esquire, by whom he had issue, 

three sons, — Henry- of Barton, ob. s. p. ; "John the martyr;" and Thomas, ancestor
of those of Thruxton and Compton : and two daughters, married respectively to Egerton
and Boydell, both of Cheshire. (MS. of Philipot the Herald in Coll. Arm.) 
The name of the daughter resident in the neighbourhood of Winchester does not appear.

Sir Peter Philpot was seated at Compton near Winchester. He was the son and heir of sir John Philpot of that place, (sheriff of Hampshire in lb' Hen. VII.. and K.B. at the marriage of prince Arthur in 1501), by Alice, daughter of William lord Stourton. 


There were several Phillpots                High sheriffs Hampshire
1501: John Philpot  
1525: Peter Philpot
1536: Peter Philpot


John Philpot was brn 1511 father Sir Peter Philpot Knight of Bath of Compton twice High Sheriff of that county who resoled to give his son a good education and did so at Wickham College

John Philpot (1516 - 1555) was an archdeacon of Winchester and an English Protestant martyr whose story is recorded in Foxe's Book of Martyrs. He was the third son of Sir Peter Philpot and was born at Compton, Hampshire, in 1516.  Writer of poetry


In 1554 he was in the King's Bench Prison, and even there he found something to dispute about, as some of his fellow prisoners were Pelagians. In October 1555 he was examined in Newgate sessions house, and, though Bishop Bonner did his best for him, he was convicted. 

When Queen Mary Tudor came to the English throne in 1553, everyone expected she would restore the Roman Church to a nation which had become Protestant. Fearing brutality, some clergymen fled. One who stayed in England was John Philpot, archdeacon of Winchester. Assured that he could speak freely, he debated Roman apologists in a convocation.

Philpot was a man of great learning, with knowledge not only of the Bible but of its languages, especially Hebrew. To persuade him to recant his Protestant beliefs would have been a signal victory. However, contemporaries say Philpot more than held his own in the debates.

Philpot was sometimes held in Bishop Bonner's coal house and sometimes in a tower. One day he might be loaded with chains, the next placed in the stocks. His opponents vowed openly to bring him to the stake, but at the same time sought to persuade him to recant his heresies. John Philpot held fast to his convictions through fourteen examinations.

Eighteen months passed in this imprisonment. There was no sign his resolve would weaken. Philpot managed to preserve secret notes about his hearings. Much of this material was later printed by John Foxe in his Actes and Monuments (better known as Foxe's Book of Martyrs).


On December 16th, Bishop Bonner passed the death sentence on his victim. Philpot was taken to Newgate and loaded with so many chains by the prison keeper that he had to send a servant to ask the sheriff to relieve him.

The sheriff ordered the extra chains removed. On the 17th, while he ate supper, Philpot was told he must die the next day. To this he replied joyfully, "I am ready: God grant me strength and a joyful resurrection."

He was burned at Smithfield on 18 Dec. 1555

Some future Phillpotts fared a little better, with Henry becoming the Bishop of Exeter and His brother the local MP.

Henry Phillpotts, D.D., Bishop of Exeter, was born on 6 May 1778 at Bridgwater, Somerset, England, the son of John Phillpotts, a factory owner, innkeeper, auctioneer and land agent to the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester Cathedral. One of twenty-three children, he grew up in Gloucestershire, and 
was educated at Gloucester Cathedral school

.

Henry Phillpotts, bishop of Exeter, second son of John Phillpotts, by his wife Sybella, was born at Bridgwater, Somerset, on 6 May 1778. 





His father had sold the estate of Sonke, in the parish of Langarren, Herefordshire, which had been in the family for two centuries, and had become the proprietor of a pottery and brick factory at Bridgwater.   (John and his wife Sybella Glover had 24 children)

In September 1782 he removed to Gloucester, where he bought and kept the Bell Inn and became land agent to the dean and chapter. Henry Phillpotts was educated at the Gloucester College school, and matriculated at Oxford, as scholar of Corpus Christi College, on 7 November 1791


Bell Inn in Gloucester, this may or may not be the same Bell Inn  (The Cotswsald area, simply stuning)


Elizabeth or Anne Lisle married “John Philpot of Compton, Esq.” The direct male descent was Sir John Philpott, Sir Peter, and finally Thomas Philpott, Esq., who received half of the estate


LANE FAMILY

Mary Lane was born 1691 and died 1737.

It seems she was born in Dorset, her father was Elias Lane and her mother Mary Randall married 23 August 1686 Buckland Newton

 Elias Lane b 1655 - 20th November 1731 Anglican Church Christchurch was the son of Elias Lane born 1620 - 1657 and his wife Edith.     Research shows Elias Lane as a Church warden.












Land dealings    that are relevant to John and Elizabeth Durnford as above.


Deverill, Longbridge

June 1710

Deed. Fine.

Conveyance by fine between William DOWN and Robert HOOPER, plaintiffs, and John DURNFORD and Elizabeth DURNFORD, his wife, deforciants, of a messuage with arable and meadow in the common fields in Longbridge Deverill to the use of Samuel ADLAM, gent., of Corsley.

WILTSHIRE


Deverill, Longbridge

17 June 1710

Deed. Grant.


Conveyance by John DURNFORD, yeoman, of Longbridge Deverill, and Elizabeth DURNFORD, his wife, to William DOWN of Corsley, dyer, and Robert HOOPER, yeoman of Corsley, of a messuage with arable and meadow in the common fields in Longbridge Deverill to the use of Samuel ADLAM, gent. of Corsley.






Church of St Peter and St Paul Deverill











Thumbnail History:

The village of Longbridge Deverill is part of the Deverill valley. This encompasses six villages on the Wiltshire Downs where the western edge of Salisbury Plain dips into Somerset. Longbridge is the principle village and its parish includes neighbouring Crockerton. The other Deverills are Hill, now in Longbridge parish, Brixton, Monkton and Kingston
.
The name Deverill refers to the River Deverill, which flows through the whole valley. It rises to the west of Kingston Deverill and flows north, passing through the six villages. At Crockerton it meets the Shearwater Stream and becomes the River Wylye. The name Deverill literally means 'diving rill'. There are points along its route where it peters out and flows underground, hence the disappearing rill or stream.

The names Long-bridge and Hill are obvious. Brixton is named after an early landholder. Crockerton is named after a person, or potters in general. Monkton means Monk's Farm and Kingston goes back to the Conquest, after which the land was owned by the Crown.

The valley has been continuously inhabited by farming people since at least 3500 B.C. The first settlements were on high ground, as this was drier and easier to clear. Archaeological evidence has been found on Cold Kitchen Hill, possibly a Celtic name meaning Hill of the Wizard. Another suggestion is that the site was given this name after it was abandoned - a cold kitchen because no one lived there. There was also a settlement at Pertwood Down.

There are three long barrows in the valley. Two are over 100 yards in length, one on Cold Kitchen Hill, the other on Pertwood Down. The third is much smaller, on the lower slopes of Cold Kitchen Hill. A round barrow on Middle Hill in Kingston Deverill was found to contain a rare and beautiful necklace made of a glass-like substance found in the Baltic. This provides proof of trade between Wessex and the continent.

The first evidence of organised villages is around 600 B.C. An Iron Age site is on Cow Down at Longbridge Deverill. The settlement on Cold Kitchen Hill was occupied until c350 B.C. Another Iron Age site is near Keysley Farm between Kingston Deverill and Pertwood.

The valley continued to be both active and important during Roman times. Two Roman roads crossed at the ford at Kingston Deverill. One was the ancient lead road from Portchester and the other from Poole. The two join at the boundary between Monkton and Kingston Deverill. There were probably Roman villages at Longbridge, Hill, Monkton, Kingston and Lower Pertwood.

There is a strong connection with King Alfred, and his famous battle against the Danes at Ethandun. Alfred gathered his forces together at two meeting places, and it is possible that one of these was Court Hill at Kingston Deverill.

There are three Sarsen Stones in a field next to the church, which were found by a farmer on King's Court Hill. It is said that King Egbert held court here. Local tradition says that Alfred climbed neighbouring King's Hill to view the enemy's position. It is therefore quite possible that Alfred used these Sarsen Stones on King's Court Hill as a meeting point.

Prior to the Reformation, the Church was the main landowner in the Valley. At Domesday William the Conqueror confiscated much land from the English nobility, but left the holdings of the Church well alone. Longbridge, Crockerton and Monkton belonged to the Abbots of Glastonbury from the 10th century.


"Thynne family will flourish as long as the wall is cared for"

The story is that a Jewish pedlar cursed the family, threatening them with extinction if the wall is ever allowed to collapse.

At Hill Deverill there is a Manor House which was occupied by the Ludlow family in the 17th century. Their coat of arms is still visible on the Tithe barn, built c. 1500. It is also over the door of 86 Monkton Deverill.

Among the buildings of interest in Crockerton is Bull Mill. This is a large house of rubble stone, built mainly in the 15th and 16th centuries. It belonged to the owner of the Mill across the river Wylyewith the same name. There are also numerous listed buildings in the villages, including several cottages and houses built in the 17th and 18th centuries.

The Everett family of Heytesbury ran a large clothing factory in the 17th century, then the Wards and the Jupes ran a successful silk mill.

There is also sufficient water power here to drive a mill suitable for textiles. Bull Mill is mentioned in the Domesday Book, although the present building is 16th century. Originally a woollen cloth mill, it was converted to silk spinning in 1824 and greatly expanded until it was closed in 1894.



In the information about the Royalists, the tenants of Bull are mentioned

















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