Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Thomas Dymoke

Male Abt 1428 - 1470  (~ 42 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Thomas Dymoke was born about 1428 in of Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England; died on 12 Mar 1470.

    Notes:

    He was beheaded by the Yorkists before the battle of Stamford.

    Thomas Dymoke = Margaret Welles
    Robert Dymoke = Ann Sparrow
    Edward Dymoke = Anne Talboys
    Frances Dymoke = Thomas Windebank
    Mildred Windebank = Robert Reade
    Col. George Reade = Elizabeth Martiau
    Mildred Reade = Col. Augustine Warner
    Mildred Warner = Lawrence Washington
    Augustine Washington = Mary Ball
    George Washington

    Family/Spouse: Margaret Welles. Margaret (daughter of Lionel Welles and Joan Waterton) died on 13 Jul 1480. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Lionel Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Ashby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 17 Aug 1519; was buried in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England.
    2. 3. Robert Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1461 in of Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England; died on 15 Apr 1545; was buried in Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 4. Jane Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1467.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Lionel Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (1.Thomas1) was born in of Ashby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 17 Aug 1519; was buried in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Leon, Lyon.

    Lionel Dymoke = Joan Griffith
    Alice Dymoke = William Skipwith
    Henry Skipwith = Jane Hall
    William Skipwith = Margaret Cave
    Henry Skipwith = Anne Kempe
    Diana Skipwith = Edward Dale
    Katherine Dale = Thomas Carter
    Thomas Carter = Arabella Williamson
    Daniel Carter = Elizabeth Pannill
    Thomas Carter = Mary
    Anne Carter = Joseph Oswald
    Susannah Oswald = Gen. Daniel Stewart
    Martha Stewart = James Stephens Bulloch
    Martha Bulloch = Theodore Roosevelt
    Theodore Roosevelt

    Lionel married Joan Griffith about 1486. Joan (daughter of Rhys Griffith) was born about 1471; died after 1492. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. Anne Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point died after 1531.

    Lionel married Anne Heydon between 1505 and 17 Dec 1509. Anne (daughter of Henry Heydon and Anne Boleyn) died before 8 May 1521. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Robert Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (1.Thomas1) was born in 1461 in of Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England; died on 15 Apr 1545; was buried in Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1544

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Lincolnshire 1483-84, 1502-03, 1509-10, 1515-16. Merchant of the Staple of Calais. Treasurer of Tournai. Commander at the siege of Tournai in 1513.

    He was King's Champion at the coronations of kings Richard III, Henry VII, and Henry VIII, "by entering the hall during dinner on horseback to challenge in single combat any who disputed the king's right to reign." [Royal Ancestry, citation details below]

    Family/Spouse: Anne Sparrow. Anne (daughter of John Sparrow) died before 6 Mar 1543. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Edward Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1508 in of Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England; died on 16 Sep 1567.

  3. 4.  Jane Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (1.Thomas1) was born about 1467.

    Jane married John Fulnetby about 1485. John (son of John Fulnetby and (Unknown) Sothill) was born about 1455; died between 30 Aug 1523 and 3 Nov 1528. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Katherine Fulnetby  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1490; died before 6 Jan 1546; was buried on 6 Jan 1546 in Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 5.  Anne Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) died after 1531.

    Family/Spouse: John Goodrick. John (son of William Goodrick and Jane Williamson) was born in of East Kirkby, Lincolnshire, England; died between 1545 and 1546. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. Lionel Goodrick  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of East Kirkby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 29 Aug 1561.

  2. 6.  Edward Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1508 in of Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England; died on 16 Sep 1567.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1566

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Lincolnshire 1535-36, 1547-48, 1555-56. Knight of the shire for Lincolnshire, 1547, Apr 1554, 1558. Treasurer of Boulogne 1546-47.

    Hereditary Champion of England at the coronations of Edward VI in 1547, Mary in 1553, and Elizabeth in 1559. Knighted March or September (records vary) 1546.

    From the History of Parliament:

    The first Dymoke of Scrivelsby, Sir John, established his right to act as champion of England at the coronation of Richard II on the ground that the office was attached to the manor of Scrivelsby. Sir Edward Dymoke carried out his hereditary duty at the coronations of Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth. He sued out a pardon in October 1553 as Sir Edward Dymoke of Scrivelsby alias the King's champion.

    Dymoke's status had earlier been put to a more than symbolic test. It was during his first shrievalty of Lincolnshire that there took place the rising of 1536. The rebels came to Scrivelsby on 3 Oct. and forced the sheriff to assume the leadership of their host; moreover, until the banner of the Five Wounds was prepared one belonging to the Dymoke family was used. It was while Dymoke was nominally at the head of the insurgents that the chancellor of Lincoln was murdered at Horncastle, but a week later he and three of his kinsmen joined the royal forces under the Duke of Suffolk at Stamford. Many of those examined after the rising claimed that the gentry, and in particular the sheriff, might have (as one of them put it) 'stayed the rebels with a white rod', but whatever was thought of his conduct he suffered no punishment or disgrace.

    Dymoke's brief tenure of the treasurership of Boulogne lasted from the autumn of 1546 until the following spring. His appointment was mentioned by Sir Philip Draycott in a letter of 4 Sept. 1546, on 30 Sept. his precursor (Sir) Hugh Paulet spoke of expecting him by 1 Nov., and the Privy Council began sending him instructions in October; his successor, Sir Richard Cotton, was appointed on 17 Mar. 1547. It is not clear why Dymoke was appointed to the office, the only one of its kind which he was to hold, or why he relinquished it so speedily. If he went to Boulogne he must have returned before the coronation on 20 Feb. Both the lustre of this occasion and his recent knighthood may help to account for his election in the following autumn as senior knight of the shire in the first Parliament of the reign. He was, in any case, well qualified by birth, fortune and experience, while his marriage linked him with the governing group in the county which was headed by Edward Fiennes, 9th Lord Clinton, who married his sister-in-law, and included his fellow-knight Sir William Skipwith.

    Dymoke was to be re-elected to two Marian Parliaments when he sat with another kinsman-by-marriage, Sir Robert Tyrwhitt II, but there is no indication of the part which he played in the House or of his attitude towards the religious changes in which he became involved there. He was to remain in favour and employment under Elizabeth, and his appointment to a commission to impose the Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity shows that he must have conformed to this further settlement. In 1564, however, he was described as 'indifferent' and his eldest son, Robert, as a 'hinderer': Robert became an open recusant and died in prison for his religion in 1580.

    Edward married Anne Tailboys between 1523 and 1 Apr 1529. Anne (daughter of George Tailboys and Elizabeth Gascoigne) died after 1577. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Frances Dymoke  Descendancy chart to this point died between 11 Feb 1612 and 24 Apr 1613.

  3. 7.  Katherine Fulnetby Descendancy chart to this point (4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1490; died before 6 Jan 1546; was buried on 6 Jan 1546 in Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England.

    Katherine married William Dynewell about 1510. William was born about 1485; died before 6 Jan 1544; was buried on 6 Jan 1544 in Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. Anne Dynewell  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1515; died after 1550.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Lionel Goodrick Descendancy chart to this point (5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) was born in of East Kirkby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 29 Aug 1561.

    Notes:

    Also called Lion Goodrick. Steward of Hatfield, Hertfordshire.

    Family/Spouse: (Unknown) Robinson. (Unknown) (daughter of Nicholas Robinson) died before 1553. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Anne Goodrick  Descendancy chart to this point died after 1607.

  2. 9.  Frances Dymoke Descendancy chart to this point (6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) died between 11 Feb 1612 and 24 Apr 1613.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1607

    Notes:

    "Even though Frances Dymoke survived her husband Thomas Windebanck, and died testate around 1612, they must have been divorced or separated 'in some manner' as we have instances of Mary, widow of Edward Hunte, called, or calling herself, the 'wife' of Thomas Windebank, clerk of the Signet, at least between the years 1591-1600. The will of Thomas Windebank, around 1607/8, does not name a wife, and only mentions the known children by Frances." [John C. Brandon, citation details below]

    Frances married Thomas Windebank on 19 Aug 1566 in Scrivelsby, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England. Thomas (son of Richard Windebank and Margaret ferch Griffith) was born about 1550 in of St. Martin in the Fields, London, England; died on 24 Oct 1607; was buried in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 12. Anne Windebank  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1571; died on 7 Jun 1624; was buried on 8 Jun 1624 in St. Michael's, Faccombe, Hampshire, England.
    2. 13. Francis Windebank  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 21 Aug 1582; was christened on 21 Aug 1582 in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, England; died on 1 Sep 1646 in Paris, France.
    3. 14. Mildred Windebank  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1584; died before 26 Jan 1631.

  3. 10.  Anne Dynewell Descendancy chart to this point (7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1515; died after 1550.

    Notes:

    Marshall K. Kirk's posthumously-published "A Probable Royal Descent for Thomas Bradbury of Salisbury, Massachusetts", edited for publication by Martin E. Hollick and published in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 161, page 27, January 2007, lays out an involved, circumstantial, and yet reasonably convincing case for a descent from Edward I for Anne Dynewell and by extension her great-grandson the seventeenth-century immigrant Thomas Bradbury (1611-1695). Much of it is founded upon genuine statements made about the family of John Whitgift (d. 1604), Archbishop of Canterbury, by Francis Thynne, Lancaster Herald from 1602 until his death in 1608, and thus a contemporary of the archbishop. Archbishop Whitgift was a son of this Anne Dynewell and her husband Henry Whitgift.

    The propositions for which Kirk argues are:

    (1) That this Anne Dynewell was a daughter of William Dynewell and Katherine Fulnetby, and

    (2) The aforementioned Katherine Fulnetby was a daughter of John Fulnetby and Jane Dymoke, who is known to have been a daughter of Thomas Dymoke and Margaret Welles.

    Anne married Henry Whitgift about 1530. Henry (son of John Whitgift) was born about 1505 in of Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England; died between 9 Jun 1550 and 7 Oct 1552. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. John Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury  Descendancy chart to this point was born between 1530 and 1531 in Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 29 Feb 1604 in Lambeth, Surrey, England; was buried on 27 Mar 1604 in Croydon, Surrey, England.
    2. 16. William Whitgift  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1535; died after 13 Jun 1615 in Clavering, Essex, England; was buried on 2 Oct 1615 in Clavering, Essex, England.


Generation: 5

  1. 11.  Anne Goodrick Descendancy chart to this point (8.Lionel4, 5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) died after 1607.

    Family/Spouse: Benjamin Bolles. Benjamin (son of William Bolles and Lucy Watts) was born in of Osberton, Nottinghamshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 17. Thomas Bolles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Dec 1576 in Osberton, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 19 Mar 1635; was buried on 17 Apr 1635 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England.

  2. 12.  Anne Windebank Descendancy chart to this point (9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1571; died on 7 Jun 1624; was buried on 8 Jun 1624 in St. Michael's, Faccombe, Hampshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 17 Jun 1624

    Notes:

    Her funeral monument in St. Barnabas Church, Faccombe, reads:

    HERE LYES THE BODY OF ANNE READE, YE DEARE WIFE OF HENRY READE ESQR: ONE OF YE DAUGHTERS OF SR THO: WINDEBANKE KT: CLARKE OF THE SIGNET TO THE LATE QUEENE ELIZAB: & TO K: IAMES THAT NOW IS, SHE WAS BEGOTTEN ON YE BODY OF FRANCIS DYMMOCKE HIS WIFE, ONE OF YE DAUGHTERS OF SR EDW: DYMMOCKE OF SKEERLSBY IN YE COVNTY OF LINCOLNE KT: CHAMPION TO YE SAID QUEENE ELIZA: & HER SVCCESSORS BY THE TENVRE OF HIS LANDES

    SHE DEBTED THIS WORLD TO REST WITH HER SAVIOR CHRIST YE 7TH DAY OF IVNE 1624 IN YE 53 YEARE OF HER AGE & LEFT BEHIND HER ISSVES OF HER BODY LIVING, 2 SONNES FRANCIS & ROBT. & 3 DAV: MARGARET MILDRED & ANN

    Note that John Bennett Bodie's transcription of this inscription gives her death date as 7 Jun 1624, whereas John Meredith Reade's transcription says 17 June of the same year. From images posted online, it would appear thatg Bodie is correct.

    Anne married Henry Reade on 3 Sep 1592 in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, England. Henry (son of Andrew Reade and Alice Cooke) was born in 1566; died on 12 Apr 1647; was buried in Faccombe, Hampshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 13.  Francis Windebank Descendancy chart to this point (9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born before 21 Aug 1582; was christened on 21 Aug 1582 in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, England; died on 1 Sep 1646 in Paris, France.

    Notes:

    Secretary of State under Charles I.

    "Francis Windebank matriculated on 18 May 1599 from St John's College, Oxford, where William Laud, who by 1608 had become his 'dear friend', may have been his tutor. He graduated BA on 26 January 1602 and entered the Middle Temple on 4 February 1603. In February 1605 he was granted a clerkship of the signet in reversion after Levinus Monck and Francis Gall before leaving on an extended tour through France, Germany, and Italy. On his return to England in February 1608 he took up work in the signet office, now able to write letters in both French and Italian, adding by 1616 a reading knowledge of Spanish. In July 1608 he married Edith Jackson, of obscure origins and, as he later hinted, limited means." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, citation details below]

    Multiple accounts of his escape to France in 1640 (see below) mention that he was accompanied by his secretary and nephew Robert Reade. This was the Robert Reade who was a brother of Col. George Reade of Virginia, both of them sons of Francis Windebank's sister Mildred by her husband Robert Reade. (See John Meredith Read, "The English Ancestry of Washington," The Atheneum number 3465, 24 Mar 1894.)

    From Wikipedia (accessed 8 Nov 2021):

    After a few years of continental travel (1605–1608), he settled at Haines Hill at Hurst in Berkshire and was employed for many years in minor public offices, eventually becoming clerk of the council.

    In June 1632, he was appointed by King Charles I as Secretary of State in succession to Lord Dorchester, his senior colleague being Sir John Coke, and he was knighted. His appointment was mainly due to his Spanish and Roman Catholic sympathies. The first Earl of Portland, Francis, Lord Cottington, and Windebank formed an inner group in the council, and with their aid the king carried on various secret negotiations, especially with Spain.

    In December 1634 Windebank was appointed to discuss with the papal agent Gregorio Panzani the possibility of a union between the Anglican and Roman Churches, and expressed the opinion that the Puritan opposition might be crippled by sending their leaders to the war in the Netherlands.

    Windebank's efforts as treasury commissioner in 1635 to shield some of those guilty of corruption led to a breach with Archbishop Laud. In the same year Windebank was one of the promoters of the Courteen association, and the next year he was for a time disgraced for issuing an order for the conveyance of Spanish money to pay the Spanish troops in the Netherlands.

    In July 1638 he urged the king to make war with the Scots, and in 1640, when trouble was breaking out in England, he sent an appeal from Queen Henrietta Maria to the pope for money and men. He was elected in March 1640 to the Short Parliament, as member for Oxford University, and he entered the Long Parliament in October as member for Corfe Castle. In December the House learnt that he had signed letters of grace to recusant priests and Jesuits, and summoned him to answer the charge, but the king allowed him to escape to France. From Calais, he wrote to Christopher Hatton, defending his integrity, and affirming his belief that the Church of England was the purest and nearest the primitive Church. He remained in Paris until his death, shortly after he had been received into the Roman communion.

    Windebank married and had a large family. William Laud referred in 1630 to his "many sons". He had five at least, and four survived him:

    Thomas (born c. 1612), was M.P. for Wootton Bassett and supported the Royalist cause in the English Civil War. He was made a baronet in 1645. He was Clerk of the Signet from 1641 until 1645 and again (after the Interregnum) from 1660 to 1674.

    Francis (died 1645) supported the Royalist cause during the English Civil War. He was court-martialled and shot for failing to defend Bletchingdon House, near Oxford.

    Christopher (born 1615) was an Englishman who lived in Madrid and worked as guide and interpreter for English ambassadors.

    John (1618–1704), a physician who was admitted an honorary fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1680 and was buried in Westminster Abbey.

    Of Windebank's daughters:

    Margaret married Thomas Turner (1591–1672), and was mother of Thomas Turner (1645–1714), president of Corpus Christi, Oxford, and of Francis Turner, bishop of Ely, one of the seven Bishops who, refusing to accept James II's Declaration of Indulgence, were imprisoned in the Tower of London.

    Frances married Sir Edward Hales on 12 July 1669.

    One other died unmarried at Paris about 1650.

    Two others became nuns of the Calvary at the Église Sainte-Marie-des-Anges, Paris.

    Francis married Edith Jackson in Jul 1608. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 14.  Mildred Windebank Descendancy chart to this point (9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born in 1584; died before 26 Jan 1631.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 6 Aug 1630 and 31 Dec 1630
    • Alternate death: Aft 6 Aug 1630
    • Alternate death: Aft 15 Aug 1630

    Mildred married Robert Reade on 31 Jul 1600 in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, England. Robert (son of Andrew Reade and Alice Cooke) was born about 1568 in of Faccombe, Hampshire, England; died before 20 Mar 1627; was buried on 20 Mar 1627 in Linkenholt, Hampshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 18. Dr. Thomas Reade  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 18 Oct 1604; was christened on 18 Oct 1604 in Linkenholt, Hampshire, England; died in Mar 1669 in Exeter House, The Strand, Middlesex, England.
    2. 19. Robert Reade  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 20 Jul 1609; was christened on 20 Jul 1609 in Faccombe, Hampshire, England; died after 7 Mar 1668.
    3. 20. Col. George Reade  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1610 in Linkenholt, Hampshire, England; died between 29 Sep 1670 and 21 Nov 1671 in Virginia; was buried in Grace Episcopal Churchyard, Yorktown, York, Virginia.

  5. 15.  John Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury Descendancy chart to this point (10.Anne4, 7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born between 1530 and 1531 in Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 29 Feb 1604 in Lambeth, Surrey, England; was buried on 27 Mar 1604 in Croydon, Surrey, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Between 1530 and 1532
    • Alternate death: 28 Feb 1604

    Notes:

    From Wikipedia (accessed 19 May 2021):

    John Whitgift [...] was the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1583 to his death. Noted for his hospitality, he was somewhat ostentatious in his habits, sometimes visiting Canterbury and other towns attended by a retinue of 800 horses. Whitgift's theological views were often controversial.

    He was the eldest son of Henry Whitgift, a merchant, of Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, where he was born, probably between 1530 and 1533. The Whitgift family is thought to have originated in the relatively close Yorkshire village of Whitgift, adjoining the River Ouse.

    Whitgift's early education was entrusted to his uncle, Robert Whitgift, abbot of the neighbouring Wellow Abbey, on whose advice he was sent to St Anthony's School, London. In 1549 he matriculated at Queens' College, Cambridge, and in May 1550 he moved to Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, where the martyr John Bradford was his tutor. In May 1555 he was elected a fellow of Peterhouse.

    Whitgift taught Francis Bacon and his older brother Anthony Bacon at Cambridge University in the 1570s. As their tutor, Whitgift bought the brothers their early classical text books, including works by Plato, Cicero and others.

    Having taken holy orders in 1560, he became chaplain to Richard Cox, Bishop of Ely, who collated (that is, appointed) him to the rectory of Teversham, just to the east of Cambridge. In 1563 he was appointed Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge, and his lectures gave such satisfaction to the authorities that on 5 July 1566 they considerably augmented his stipend. The following year he was appointed Regius Professor of Divinity, and became master first of Pembroke Hall (1567) and then of Trinity in 1570. He had a principal share in compiling the statutes of the university, which passed the great seal on 25 September 1570, and in the November following he was chosen as vice-chancellor.

    While at Cambridge he formed a close relationship with Andrew Perne, sometime vice-chancellor. Perne went on to live with Whitgift in his old age. Puritan satirists would later mock Whitgift as "Perne's boy" who was willing to carry his cloak-bag – thus suggesting that the two had enjoyed a homosexual relationship.

    Whitgift's theological views were controversial. An aunt with whom he once lodged wrote that "though she thought at first she had received a saint into her house, she now perceived he was a devil". Thomas Macaulay's description of Whitgift as "a narrow, mean, tyrannical priest, who gained power by servility and adulation..." is, according to the author of his 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica entry, "tinged with rhetorical exaggeration; but undoubtedly Whitgift's extreme High Church notions led him to treat the Puritans with exceptional intolerance". In a pulpit controversy with Thomas Cartwright regarding the constitutions and customs of the Church of England, his oratorical effectiveness proved inferior, but was able to exercise arbitrary authority: together with other heads of the university, he deprived Cartwright of his professorship, and in September 1571 Whitgift exercised his prerogative as master of Trinity to deprive him of his fellowship. In June of the same year Whitgift was nominated Dean of Lincoln. In the following year he published [The Admonition to the Parliament], which led to further controversy between the two churchmen. On 24 March 1577, Whitgift was appointed Bishop of Worcester, and during the absence of Sir Henry Sidney in Ireland in 1577 he acted as vice-president of Wales.

    In August 1583 he was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury to replace Edmund Grindal, who had been placed under house arrest after his disagreement with Queen Elizabeth over "prophesyings" and died in office. Whitgift placed his stamp on the church of the Reformation, and shared Elizabeth's hatred of Puritans. Although he wrote to Elizabeth remonstrating against the alienation of church property, Whitgift always retained her special confidence. In his policy against the Puritans and in his vigorous enforcement of the subscription test he thoroughly carried out her policy of religious uniformity.

    He drew up articles aimed at nonconforming ministers, and obtained increased powers for the Court of High Commission. In 1586, he became a privy councillor. His actions gave rise to the Martin Marprelate tracts, in which the bishops and clergy were strongly opposed. By his vigilance the printers of the tracts were discovered and punished, though the main writer Job Throkmorton evaded him. Whitgift had nine leading presbyterians including Thomas Cartwright arrested in 1589–90, and though their trial in the Star Chamber for sedition did not result in convictions they did agree to abandon their movement in return for freedom.

    Whitgift took a strong line against the Brownist movement and their Underground Church in London led by Henry Barrow and John Greenwood. Their services were repeatedly raided and members held in prison. Whitgift repeatedly interrogated them through the High Commission, and at the Privy Council. When Burghley asked Barrow his opinion of the Archbishop, he responded: "He is a monster, a miserable compound, I know not what to make him. He is neither ecclesiastical nor civil, even that second beast spoken of in revelation." Whitgift was the prime mover behind the Act against Seditious Sectaries which was passed in 1593, making Separatist Puritanism a felony, and he had Barrow and Greenwood executed the following morning.

    In the controversy between Walter Travers and Richard Hooker, he prohibited the former from preaching, and he presented the latter with the rectory of Boscombe in Wiltshire, to help him complete his Ecclesiastical Polity, a work that in the end did not represent Whitgift's theological or ecclesiastical standpoints. In 1587, he had Welsh preacher John Penry brought before the High Commission, and imprisoned; Whitgift signed Penry's death warrant six years later.

    In 1595, in conjunction with the Bishop of London and other prelates, he drew up the Calvinist instrument known as the Lambeth Articles. Although the articles were signed and agreed by several bishops they were recalled by order of Elizabeth, claiming that the bishops had acted without her explicit consent. Whitgift maintained that she had given her approval.

    Whitgift attended Elizabeth on her deathbed, and crowned James I. He was present at the Hampton Court Conference in January 1604, at which he represented eight bishops.

    He died at Lambeth at the end of the following month. He was buried in Croydon at the Parish Church of St John Baptist (now Croydon Minster): his monument there with his recumbent effigy was practically destroyed when the church burnt down in 1867.

    Whitgift is described by his biographer, Sir George Paule, as of "middle stature, strong and well shaped, of a grave countenance and brown complexion, black hair and eyes, his beard neither long nor thick." He left several unpublished works, included in the Manuscripts Angliae. Many of his letters, articles and injunctions are calendared in the published volumes of the State Papers series of the reign of Elizabeth. His Collected Works, edited for the Parker Society by John Ayre (3 vols., Cambridge, 1851–1853), include the controversial tracts mentioned above, two sermons published during his lifetime, a selection from his letters to Cecil and others, and some portions of his previously unpublished manuscripts.

    In his later years he concerned himself with various administrative reforms, including fostering learning among the clergy, abolishing non-resident clergy, and reforming the ecclesiastical courts.

    Whitgift set up charitable foundations (almshouses), now The Whitgift Foundation, in Croydon, the site of a palace, a summer retreat of Archbishops of Canterbury. It supports homes for the elderly and infirm, and runs three independent schools – Whitgift School, founded in 1596, Trinity School of John Whitgift and, more recently, Old Palace School for girls, which is housed in the former Croydon Palace.

    Whitgift Street near Lambeth Palace (the official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury) is named after him.

    A comprehensive school in his home town of Grimsby, John Whitgift Academy, is named after him.

    The Whitgift Centre, a major shopping centre in Croydon, is named after him. It is built on land still owned by the Whitgift Foundation.


  6. 16.  William Whitgift Descendancy chart to this point (10.Anne4, 7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1535; died after 13 Jun 1615 in Clavering, Essex, England; was buried on 2 Oct 1615 in Clavering, Essex, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Buried: 2 Aug 1615, Clavering, Essex, England

    Notes:

    He and his son John were trustees of the Hospital of the Holy Trinity at Croydon, founded by Archbishop John Whitgift for the benefit of the poor.

    Family/Spouse: Margaret Barley. Margaret (daughter of John Barley and Philippa Bradbury) died before 5 Jan 1605; was buried on 5 Jan 1605 in Clavering, Essex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Family/Spouse: (Unknown first wife of William Whitgift). [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Elizabeth Whitgift  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Mar 1574 in Clavering, Essex, England; died on 26 Jun 1612; was buried in Croydon, Surrey, England.


Generation: 6

  1. 17.  Thomas Bolles Descendancy chart to this point (11.Anne5, 8.Lionel4, 5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) was born on 22 Dec 1576 in Osberton, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 19 Mar 1635; was buried on 17 Apr 1635 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: Mary Witham. Mary (daughter of William Witham and Eleanor Neale) was born before 30 Jun 1579; was christened on 30 Jun 1579 in Ledsham, Yorkshire, England; died on 5 May 1662 in Heath Hall near Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; was buried on 16 Jun 1662 in Ledsham, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Thomas married Elizabeth Perkins on 20 Apr 1596 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England. Elizabeth (daughter of Thomas Perkins and Thomasine Besacle) died before 16 Oct 1610; was buried on 16 Oct 1610 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Joseph Bolles  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 19 Feb 1608; was christened on 19 Feb 1608 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England; died before 29 Nov 1678 in Wells, York, Maine.

  2. 18.  Dr. Thomas Reade Descendancy chart to this point (14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born before 18 Oct 1604; was christened on 18 Oct 1604 in Linkenholt, Hampshire, England; died in Mar 1669 in Exeter House, The Strand, Middlesex, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 1606, Linkenholt, Hampshire, England

    Notes:

    "A noted Royalist. [...] He was admitted scholar of New College, December 10th, 1624; Fellow, January 15th, 1626; LL.D., 1638; Advocate of Arches Court; Principal of Magdalen Hall, 1643; resigned his Fellowship, September 21st, 1645, and Edward Farmer, of the parish of St. Helen's, Abingdon, was admitted in his place. He had a king's letter in his favour, dated March 31st, 1624; and in 1642 trailed a pike for King Charles in the university, and served his Majesty in the army, but on the decline of the king's cause changed his religion and became a secular priest; esteemed a good scholar and civilian." [John Meredith Read, citation details below]

    According to John Bennett Bodie (citation details below), the Linkenholt parish register says he was baptized 18 Oct 1604, earlier than the 1606 birth year given by other sources.


  3. 19.  Robert Reade Descendancy chart to this point (14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born before 20 Jul 1609; was christened on 20 Jul 1609 in Faccombe, Hampshire, England; died after 7 Mar 1668.

    Notes:

    He was secretary to his uncle, Sir Francis Windebank, Secretary of State under Charles I, and accompanied him on his escape to Paris in 1640. We do not know the dates of his birth or death, but he is mentioned in the nuncupative will of his brother Dr. Thomas Reade dated 7 Mar 1668.

    In a letter from Paris to his cousin Thomas Windebank, 19 Mar 1641, he mentions a trunk that had been left behind in his chamber at Whitehall, and regrets its loss, "for there were many good things in it which I had gathered together, and such as had no relation to the State."


  4. 20.  Col. George Reade Descendancy chart to this point (14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1610 in Linkenholt, Hampshire, England; died between 29 Sep 1670 and 21 Nov 1671 in Virginia; was buried in Grace Episcopal Churchyard, Yorktown, York, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 25 Oct 1608
    • Alternate death: 1671, Virginia

    Notes:

    "George Reade, born 25 Oct. 1608, son of Robert and Mildred (Windebank) Reade, who had come to Virginia in Sir John Harvey's party upon his return as governor of Virginia, 1637. On 27 Aug. 1640 George Reade was appointed by the King 'to the place of Secretary [of the Colony] in the absence of Richard Kemp who has lately arrived in England.' Reade was clerk of the Council, 1648, burgess for James City, 1649, and for York, 1656, and was appointed to the Council in 1658, holding that office until his death." [Adventurers of Purse and Person, citation details below]

    He is a "gateway ancestor" for PNH's sister-in-law, a descendant of Edward III and over five thousand other medieval people. A daughter of Edward III's son John of Gaunt, Joan Beaufort, was married twice; through her second marriage, to Ralph de Neville, George Reade is an 8X-great grandson of Edward III. Through her second marriage, to Robert Ferrers, Reade is a 9X-great grandson of the same king, and also a 9X-great grandson through another of Edward's sons, Lionel of Antwerp.

    He and his wife Elizabeth Martiau were great-great grandparents of George Washington:

    George Reade = Elizabeth Martiau
    Mildred Reade = Col. Augustine Warner
    Mildred Warner = Lawrence Washington
    Augustine Washington = Mary Ball
    George Washington

    It has been suggested that George Washington was named George after this particular great-great-grandfather. It does appear that George Reade represents the most recent, and possibly the only, previous instance of a George in Washington's ancestry.

    George Reade and Elizabeth Martiau were also ancestors of Queen Elizabeth II:

    George Reade = Elizabeth Martiau
    Mildred Reade = Col. Augustine Warner
    Mary Warner = Col. John Smith
    Mildred Smith = Robert Porteous
    Robert Porteous = Judith Cockayne
    Mildred Porteous = Robert Hodgson
    Rev. Robert Hodgson = Mary Tucker
    Henrietta Mildred Hodgson = Oswald Smith
    Frances Dora Smith = Claude Bowes-Lyon
    Claude George Bowes-Lyon = Cecilia Nina Cavendish-Bentinck
    Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon = King George VI
    Queen Elizabeth II

    And of Meriwether Lewis:

    George Reade = Elizabeth Martiau
    Mildred Reade = Col. Augustine Warner
    Elizabeth Warner = Col. John Lewis
    Col. Robert Lewis = Jane Meriwether
    William Lewis = Lucy Meriwether
    Meriwether Lewis

    And of General George S. Patton:

    Thomas Reade = Lucy Gwynne
    Mildred Reade = Philip Rootes
    Elizabeth Rootes = Rev. John Thompson
    Philip Rootes Thompson = Anna Davenport
    Eleanor Thompson = William Thorton
    Susanna Thompson Thorton = Andrew Glassell
    Susan Thornton Glassell = George Smith Patton
    George Smith Patton = Ruth Wilson
    General George S. Patton (1885-1945)

    George married Elizabeth Martiau about 1641 in Yorktown, York, Virginia. Elizabeth (daughter of Capt. Nicholas Martiau and (Unknown first wife of Nicholas Martieu)) was born in 1625; died between 10 Feb 1686 and 24 Jan 1687 in Virginia; was buried in Grace Episcopal Churchyard, Yorktown, York, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Mildred Reade  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Williamsburg, Virginia; died after 4 Jan 1695.
    2. 24. Elizabeth Reade  Descendancy chart to this point

  5. 21.  Elizabeth Whitgift Descendancy chart to this point (16.William5, 10.Anne4, 7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born in Mar 1574 in Clavering, Essex, England; died on 26 Jun 1612; was buried in Croydon, Surrey, England.

    Notes:

    In the church at Croydon was once a marble tomb inscribed:

    HERE LIETH ELIZABETH BRADBURY
    WYFE UNTO WYMOND BRADBURY OF
    NEWPORT-POND IN ESSEX GENT. DAUGTHER
    TO WILLIAM WHITGIFTE OF CLAVERINGE IN
    THE COUNTY AFORESAID GENT. AND SECOND
    BROTHER TO DOCTOR JOHN WHITGIFTE ARCH-
    BISHOPPE OF CANTERBURY; AND WHO HAD
    ISSUE BY HER ABOVE NAMED HUSBAND JANE,
    WILLIAM, ANNE AND THOMAS, AND DECEASED
    THE 26 DAY OF JUNE AN. DÑI 1612, BEING
    OF THE AGE OF 38 YEARES AND THREE
    MONTHS

    Family/Spouse: Robert Coles. Robert was born in of Leigh, Worcestershire, England; died in Nov 1600. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Family/Spouse: Francis Gill. Francis was born in of London, England; died in 1605. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Elizabeth married Wymond Bradbury about 1605. Wymond (son of William Bradbury and Anne Edon) was born before 16 May 1574; was christened on 16 May 1574 in Newport Pond, Essex, England; died about 1649 in Whitechapel, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. Capt. Thomas Bradbury  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 28 Feb 1611; was christened on 28 Feb 1611 in Wicken Bonhunt, Essex, England; died on 16 Mar 1695 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts.


Generation: 7

  1. 22.  Joseph Bolles Descendancy chart to this point (17.Thomas6, 11.Anne5, 8.Lionel4, 5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) was born before 19 Feb 1608; was christened on 19 Feb 1608 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, England; died before 29 Nov 1678 in Wells, York, Maine.

    Notes:

    One of TSW's eight "gateway ancestors," and one of DGH's four. One of the few 17th-century immigrants of armigerous descent who appears to have been fully aware of it. Arms: Azure three standing bowls silver in each a swine's head erect gold a mullet for difference. Crest: A buck's head sable collared attired and eared gold erased gules and charged on the neck with a pallet between two roundles silver. According to the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire (citation details below), although he appears to have served in the usual variety of public offices, he was also cited several times for public drunkenness -- which is entirely consonant with aristocratic forebears.

    Joseph married Mary Howell before 1641. Mary (daughter of Morgan Howell) died after 25 Feb 1691 in Portsmouth, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 26. Samuel Bowles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Mar 1646.
    2. 27. Joseph Bolles  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Mar 1654 in Wells, York, Maine; died on 25 Sep 1683.

  2. 23.  Mildred Reade Descendancy chart to this point (20.George6, 14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born in Williamsburg, Virginia; died after 4 Jan 1695.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 4 Jan 1694

    Mildred married Augustine Warner before 1671. Augustine (son of Col. Augustine Warner and Mary Towneley) was born on 3 Jun 1642 in York County, Virginia; died on 19 Jun 1681. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 28. Mildred Warner  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1671; died between 24 Jan 1701 and 30 Jan 1701; was buried on 30 Jan 1701 in St. Nicholas, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England.

  3. 24.  Elizabeth Reade Descendancy chart to this point (20.George6, 14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1)

    Family/Spouse: Capt. Thomas Chisman. Thomas (son of Edmund Chisman and Mary) was born about 1652; died between 25 Jan 1710 and 18 Jul 1715. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. Thomas Chisman  Descendancy chart to this point died on 11 Dec 1722.

  4. 25.  Capt. Thomas Bradbury Descendancy chart to this point (21.Elizabeth6, 16.William5, 10.Anne4, 7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born before 28 Feb 1611; was christened on 28 Feb 1611 in Wicken Bonhunt, Essex, England; died on 16 Mar 1695 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Arrived in 1635; first at York, Maine, then in Salisbury by 1640. He was initially a business agent for Ferdinando Gorges, to whom it has been said he was related. Obviously the beneficiary of a fine education, he held many public offices in his long life, and numerous samples of his excellent handwriting have survived to the present day.

    Over time he has had several descents from the Plantagenet kings attributed to him, but most of them have been disproved. (The exception is a descent from Edward I for which Marshall K. Kirk made a very persuasive but not conclusive case in "A Probable Royal Descent for Thomas Bradbury of Salisbury, Massachusetts", NEHGR 161:27, 2007.) Nevertheless, Thomas Bradbury's proven ancestry extends far back into the Middle Ages. One of his great-uncles was an Archbishop of Canterbury; a 3XG-uncle, also named Thomas Bradbury, was a mayor of London. As Marshall K. Kirk wrote, "Unlike most immigrants to seventeenth-century New England, Thomas Bradbury's ancestry rates an entire book. Given his social standing as a member of the gentry and his business dealings with Sir Fernando Gorges, it would stand to reason that a royal descent from a Plantagenet king should be provable for Thomas Bradbury. Many of his siblings and aunts and uncles married people with such descent."

    John Brooks Threlfall's The Ancestry of Thomas Bradbury (1611-1695) and His Wife Mary (Perkins) Bradbury (1615-1700) of Salisbury, Massachusetts, of which we have the second of three editions, traces for him a descent from Charlemagne through the Marmions of Checkingden, Oxfordshire, which seems to us sufficiently well-argued. But whether or not this descent is valid, the sheer number and variety of Thomas Bradbury's proven medieval forebears seems to us to earn him the title of "gateway ancestor" for his descendant JDM.

    Thomas married Mary Perkins about 1636. Mary (daughter of John Perkins and Judith Gater) was born before 3 Sep 1615; was christened on 3 Sep 1615 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England; died on 20 Dec 1700 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 30. Mary Bradbury  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Mar 1643 in Salisbury, Merrimack, New Hampshire; died on 29 May 1724.


Generation: 8

  1. 26.  Samuel Bowles Descendancy chart to this point (22.Joseph7, 17.Thomas6, 11.Anne5, 8.Lionel4, 5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) was born on 12 Mar 1646.

    Notes:

    Samuel Bowles and his wife Mary Dyer fled Maine during the wars with Native Americans that took place in 1689, and removed to Braintree where they had relatives.

    Family/Spouse: Mary Dyer. Mary (daughter of William Dyer) was born in Sheepscot, Maine; died before 1723. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 31. Experience Bowles  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 4 Sep 1692; was christened on 4 Sep 1692 in Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts.

  2. 27.  Joseph Bolles Descendancy chart to this point (22.Joseph7, 17.Thomas6, 11.Anne5, 8.Lionel4, 5.Anne3, 2.Lionel2, 1.Thomas1) was born on 15 Mar 1654 in Wells, York, Maine; died on 25 Sep 1683.

    Family/Spouse: Mary Call. Mary (daughter of Philip Call and Mary) died on 4 Oct 1737 in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in Highland Cemetery, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 32. Joseph Bolles  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts.

  3. 28.  Mildred Warner Descendancy chart to this point (23.Mildred7, 20.George6, 14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) was born about 1671; died between 24 Jan 1701 and 30 Jan 1701; was buried on 30 Jan 1701 in St. Nicholas, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 26 Mar 1701
    • Buried: 26 Mar 1701, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England

    Mildred married Lawrence Washington about 1690. Lawrence (son of Col. John Washington and Anne Pope) was born in Sep 1659 in Westmoreland County, Virginia; died between 11 Mar 1698 and 30 Apr 1698. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 33. Col. Augustine Washington  Descendancy chart to this point was born between Aug 1693 and Apr 1694; died on 12 Apr 1743 in Ferry Farm, King George, Virginia.

  4. 29.  Thomas Chisman Descendancy chart to this point (24.Elizabeth7, 20.George6, 14.Mildred5, 9.Frances4, 6.Edward3, 3.Robert2, 1.Thomas1) died on 11 Dec 1722.

    Family/Spouse: Anne. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 34. Edmund Chisman  Descendancy chart to this point died between 29 May 1735 and 18 Aug 1735.

  5. 30.  Mary Bradbury Descendancy chart to this point (25.Thomas7, 21.Elizabeth6, 16.William5, 10.Anne4, 7.Katherine3, 4.Jane2, 1.Thomas1) was born on 17 Mar 1643 in Salisbury, Merrimack, New Hampshire; died on 29 May 1724.

    Mary married John Stanyan on 15 Dec 1663 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire. John (son of Anthony Stanyan and Mary) was born on 16 Jul 1642 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was christened on 24 Jul 1642 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 27 Sep 1718. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 35. Ann Stanyan  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Feb 1678; died before 1718.