ADDITIONAL INDEX
TO
DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1064-5,
VOLS. LXXXIV., LXXXV., AND LXXXVIII.
The preTious Index contains references to all the personal names in the Visitation,
and the present Index gwes references to the place-names in the Visitation,
and to persons and places in the Life of Dugdale.
Abraham, IXXXT. 92, 174.
Anglesey, Ixxxiv., 6.
Abram, Ixxxiv, 92, 93.
Adderley, IXXXT. 114.
Adderlev Sir C IxxxTiii 21.
Anington, IxxxTiii. 273.
Anneley, IxxxiT. 12.
Adlingtoii, IxxxiT. 1, 59 ; IXXXT. 120 ;
251, 311, 321.
2'i'J,
IxxxTiii. 245, 246, 342.
Antwerp, IxxxiT. 86.
Adswood, IXXXT. 196.
Agdon, Ixxxiv. 66.
Apley, IIXXT. 214.
Appleby, IXXXT. 141.
Agecroft (Adgecroft), IxxxiT. 102; IXXXT.
Appleton, IxxxTiii. 342.
125,148,186; Ixxxviii. 317.
Archer (— ), IxxxTiii. 15.
Alborough, IXXXT. 146.
Archer, Sir Symon, Ixxxviii. 7.
Aldcliffe, IXXXXIT. 84.
Ardwick, IxxxiT. 34; IxxxTiii. 239.
Aldersey, IxxxTiii. 320.
Arley, IXIXT. 143, 220; Ixxxriii.
243,
Alkar (Alcar), IXXXT. 205 j IxxxTiii. 344.
284.
Alkington, IXXXT. 146.
Arncliff, Ixxxviii. 267.
Alkrington (Alkrinton), IXXXT. 152, 186,
Arundel, Lord, IxxxTiii. 8.
213 ; Ixxxviii. 303.
Ascham, IXXXT. 141.
Allerton, IXXXT. 118 ; IxxxTiii. 290.
Ashall, IxxxiT. 5, 7.
Alston, IxxxiT. 97 ; IXXXT. 153.
Ashes, Ixxxiv. 63.
Altam, IXXXT. 125, 144.
Asheton Elizabeth, IxxxTiii. 25.
Altham, IxxxiT, 23, 66 ; IXIXT. 164 ;
William, IxxxTiii. 25.
1 xiTiii. 295-7.
Ashley, IxxxiT. 28.
Althorpe, IxxxTiii. 283, 289.
Ashmole, Elias, Ixxxviii. 7.
Alton, Ixxx-riii. 280.
Ashtley, IxxxTiii. 333.
Amounderness, IxxxiT. 6.
Asheton, IxxxiT. 17, 34, 53, 72.
Ancliffe, IxxxTiii. 306.
Ashtoti, IxxxTiii. 238, 276.
Ancotes, IXXXT. 213.
Botham, IxxxiT. 24.
Anderton, IXXXIT. 4, 5, 6, 79; IxxxTiii.
Eliz., IxxxTiii. 9.
336.
AndoTer, IxxxiT. 53.
Hall, IxxxiT. 6 ; IxxxTiii. 279.
in-Makerfield, IxxxiT. 13.
2 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Ashton, Sir Ralph, Ixxxviii. 29.
Barkisland, Ixxxviii. 314.
under-Lyne (Asheton-under-Lyne),
Barley, Ixxxiv. 89 ; Ixxxviii. 273.
Ixxxiv, 13, 16 ; Ixxxviii. 340.
Barlow, Ixxxiv. 28; Ixxxv. 207, 218;
Ashurst (Ashhurst), Ixxxiv. 9, 50 ; Ixxxv.
Ixxxviii. 282, 298.
156 ; Ixxxviii. 26, 234.
Barnbow, Ixxxv. 155.
Henry, Ixxxviii. 26.
Barnes Houses, Ixxxv. 137.
Ashwortb, Ixxxiv. 10, 14, 22, 61 ; Ixxxv.
Barnet, Ixxxv. 107.
125, 126, 148, 158.
Barningham, Ixxxviii. 307.
Aspenhall, Ixxxv. 177.
Barnside(Barneside), Ixxxv. 171 ; Ixxxviii.
Aspull (Asple), Ixxxiv. 1, 54, 87 j Ixxxviii.
242, 245.
228, 264, 272, 305-6, 309, 313, 314.
Barnsley, Ixxxiv. 61.
Assheton, lixxviii. 316.
Bartherton, Ixxxviii. 317.
Sir Ealph (Baphe), Ixxxviii. 4,
Barton, Ixxxv. 135, 179, 207; Ixxxviii.
271, 272, 276-7, 286, 300, 316, 317,
Asterley, Ixxxviii. 273.
340.
Asthuret, Ixxxv. 174.
Barwick, Ixxxiv. 31.
Astley, Ixxxiv. 72 ; Ixxxv. 122, 145 ;
Bashall, Ixxxiv. 14, 48 ; Ixxxviii. 263, 288,
IxxXTiii. 246, 250, 258, 302, 319, 327.
297, 308.
Aston, Ixxiir. 7.
Batley, Ixxxv. 156, 159 ; Ixxxviii. 231.
Atham, Ixxxv. 151.
Beamsley, Ixxxv. 210.
Atherton, Ixxxiv. 20, 21, 43, 50, 64, 85 ;
Beardworth, Ixxxv. 157.
Ixxxviii. 248.
Beaumanor, Ixxxv. 138.
Aughton, Ixxxiv. 23, 47 ; Ixxxv. 129, 134,
Beaumaris, Ixxxiv. 55.
137, 155, 203, 206, 209 ; Ixxxviii. 278,
287, 295, 333, 337.
BeconsaU, Ixxxiv. 4, 49.
Bedford, Lane., Ixxxiv. 43.
Averland, Ixxxv. 160.
Bedford, Ixxxv. 191 ; Ixxxviii. 270, 319,
Ayneaworth, Ixxxv. 196 j Ixxxviii. 239.
335.
Beeston, Ixxxv. 112 ; Ixxxviii. 340.
Bachford, Ixxxv. 181.
Belfast, Ixxxiv. 55 ; Ixxxviii. 237.
Baddeley, Ixxxviii. 29.
Belfield, Ixxxiv. 22, 50, 65, 74.
Balderson, Ixxxiv. 19.
Belloport, Ixxxiv. 33.
Baldreston, Ixxxv. 184.
Belsey, Ixxxiv. 31.
Bamforlong (Bamfordlong), Ixxxv. 163,
Bentcliffe, Ixxxviii. 320.
175 j Ixxxviii. 276.
Bentley, Ixxxv. 146.
Bamford, Ixxxiv. 22, 65 ; Ixxxv. 195-6 ;
Bentons, Ixxxv. 207.
Ixxxviii. 303.
Berington, Ixxxv. 129.
Banaster Hall, lixxv. 142.
Bernoldswick, Ixxxviii. 268.
Banbury, Ixxxviii. 11.
Berry, Ixxxviii. 239.
Banchey-in-Little Harwood, Ixxxv. 178.
Berwick, Ixxxv. 205.
Bandfurlong, Ixxxv. 118.
Bandinel, Rev. Bulkeley, Ixxxviii. 19.
Besley, Ixxxviii. 34.
Betton, Ixxxv. 135.
Banister Hall, Ixxxviii. '825.
Bank (Banke), Ixxxiv. 6, 23, 64 ; Ixxxv.
Bewsey (Beusey), Ixxxiv. 21, 26, 42.
(Beawsey,Beausey),lxxxv.l65,201;
107, 114, 221 ; lixxviii. 292, 341.
Ixxxviii. 278, 316.
Bank Hall, Ixxxiv. 15; Ixxxv. 215;
Beyford Place, Ixxxv. 111.
Ixxxviii. 244.
Bickerstaff (Bickerstaffe), Ixxxv. 129, 134,
Bankehouse, Burnley, Ixxxiv. 48.
154 ; Ixxxviii. 284, 288, 300.
Banke House, Ixxxviii. 228.
Bickersteth, Ixxxiv. 64.
Banke-Newton, Ixxxiv. 26.
Biddulph, Ixxxviii. 29, 235.
Bank-top, Ixxxviii. 312.
Bidstone, Ixxxviii. 227.
Barcroft, Ixxxiv. 27 ; Ixxxviii. 228, 249.
Biggin Orange, Ixxxviii. 320.
Bardsey, Ixxxv. 160.
Baghall, Ixxxv. 174.
Biggins, Ixxxiv. 69.
Billing (BilliDge), IxxxiT. 26, 30; IxxxT.
Barkesland, Ixxxiv. 65.
202.
INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 3
Billington, IxxxTiii. 325.
Bothomes, IXXXT. 182.
Bilslmrowe, IXXXT. 114.
Bought Gap, Ixxxviii. 309.
Birche, IxxxiT. 32, 33, 34.
Bin-he Hall, Ixxxviii. 244, 247.
Boughton, Ixxxv. 179.
Boulton-le-Moores, IXXXT. 133.
Birchley, IXXXIT. 5.
Bowers House, IxxxiT. 58.
Bispham, Ixxxviii. 306.
Bowland, Forest of luxviii. 1.
Blackburn (Blakcburne, Blakeburn,Black-
Bowyer, Sir John, Ixxxviii. 29.
borne), Ixxxiv. vi, x, 19, 22, 27, 35, 48 ;
Bracewell, Ixxxviii. 263, 265.
Ixxxv. 121, 178, 188 ; Ixxxviii. 3, 259,
Braddill, Ixxxiv. 47.
269.
Bradford, Ixxxviii. 271, 314.
Blackburnshire, Forest of, Ixxxviii. 1.
Bradkirke, Ixxxv. 191 ; Ixxxviii. 227.
Black Hall, Ixxxviii. 333.
Bradleigh, Ixxxv. 180.
Blackledge, Aubrey, IxxxTiii. 8.
Blackrod, Ixxxviii. 342.
Bradshaw, Ixxxiv. 9, 21, 50, 65, 104;
Ixxxv. 125 ; Ixxxviii. 295, 312.
Blackroyd, Ixxxv. 211.
Bradwell, Ixxxv. 169.
Blainscoe (Blninsco, Blanscough), IXXXIT.
Bramhall, Ixxxiv. 14, 76.
35; IXXXT. 155! IxxxTiii. 341.
Bramham, Ixxxviii. 242.
Blakelow, IXXXT. 124.
Brandlesholme (Brandlesham), Ixxxiv. 4,
Blakenye, IXXXT. 191.
18; IXXXT. 124-6, 139, 140, 150;
Blakey, Ixxxiv. 47 ; IxxxTiii. 308.
Ixxxviii. 326.
Blnisdale, forest of, Ixxxiv. vi.
Brancllesome Hall, Ixxxviii. 248.
Blease, IXXXT. 170.
Braswell, Ixxxviii. 225.
Blew Hall, IxxxiT. 79.
Bratliwavt, Ixxxiv. 94.
Blindhurst, Ixxxviii. 313.
Braybrook, IxxxTiii. 253.
Blorcheath, IXXXT. 205.
Brayton, IxxxTiii. 266.
Blount, Thomas, luiviii. 36.
Bredsall Park, IXXIT. 214.
Blyndhurst, IXXXT. 137.
Brettargheshoidt, Ixxxiv. 57.
Blythe Hall, IxxxiT. iii ; IxxxTiii. 7, 36.
Bridge Hall, Ixxxv. 149 ; Ixxxviii. 258.
manor of, IxxxTiii. 7.
Bridgenorth, Ixxxiv. vi; IXXXT. 214.
Boghhegrvt, IXXXT. 220.
Bold (Bolde, Bould), Ixxxiv. 21, 41, 43,
Bridg-Trafford, Ixxxv. 122.
Brightmet, Ixxxv. 222.
100; IXXXT. 109, 165, 189, 206, 218,
liriu'lilivell, Ixxxv. 207.
220, 223 ; Ixxxviii. 264.
Brindle, Ixxxviii. 308.
Bolden, IXXXT. 137-
Brinshop, Ixxxiv. 25.
Bollen, IxxxiT. 54.
Brin-kij., Ixxxviii. 246.
Bolton (Boulton), Ixxxiv, ix, 23, 36, 51,
Bristol (Bristoll), Ixxxiv. 10, 34, 53;
57,93,104; Ixxxv. 149, 211; Ixxxviii.
Ixxxv. 221.
269, 296.
Broad-Oake (Broadoak), Ixxxv. 222, 238.
iuxta-le-Sands, Ixxxiv. 88.
Brockhole (Brockall), Ixxxiv. 9, 11, 12, 24.
le-Moors, Ixxxviii. 251, 283.
Broc.khall, Ixxxviii. 273.
Bolyne, luxviii. 316.
Brome, IxxxiT. 69.
Bonisal, IxxxTiii. 233.
Bromehouse, Ixxxviii. 234.
Booth, Ixxxiv. 44 ; Ixxxviii. 248, 254.
Bromhall, Ixxxiv. 96.
Mrs. Frances, Ixxxviii. 31.
Bromshall, Ixxxiv. 21.
Sir John, Ixxxviii. 31.
Brookes Ixxxviii. 227.
Boothe Banke, Ixxxviii. 233.
Brougham, Ixxxv. 198.
Bootlies, Ixxxiv. 13, 15.
Broughton, Ixxxiv. 2 ; Ixxxv. 128, 137, 170,
Booths, Ixxxviii. 339.
186 ; Ixxxviii. 255, 285, 305, 312, 324.
Boroughbridge, Ixxxviii. 267.
Hall, Ixxxviii. 285.
Berwick, luxv. 151 ; Ixxxviii. 235, 330.
— Tower, Ixxxv. 160, 173.
Hall, Ixxxviii. 292, 330.
Brouseholme, Ixxxiv. 10.
Boslow, Ixxxviii. 229.
Brown, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 35.
Bosworth, Ixxxv. 199.
Broxton, Ixxxiv. 1.
Bothall Castle, Ixxxiv. 31.
Bruch (Brugh), Ixxxiv. 3, 26 ; IXXXT. 181.
4 INDEX TO DXJGDALE'S VISITATION or LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Bruinford, Ixxxiv. 95.
Carlton, Ixxxv. 119, 210; Ixxxviii. 263,
Brundhill (Brindell), IXXXT. 118.
312.
Bruyn-Stapleford, Ixxxiv. 57; IXXXT. 121.
Bryning, IxxxiT. 49 ; IXXXT. 184.
Carneford, Ixxxiv. 89.
Carr, Ixxxiv. 47, 48, 67 ; Ixxxviii. 266, 271,
Bryn (Brinne, Brynne, Brynn), IxxxiT. 14,
298, 309.
42 ; IXXXT. 86, 116, 207 ; Ixxxviii. 236,
Hall, Ixxxviii. 272, 309.
316, 340.
Cartmel Fells (Cartmele Fell), IXXXT. 170 ;
Bubnell, IXXXT. 162.
Ixxxviii. 254.
Buckley, IXXXIT. 60, 61.
Cartmell, Ixxxiv. 89.
Bucknall, IxxxTiii. 241.
Castleton, Ixxxiv. 31, 104.
Buckshaw, IxxxiT. 33 ; IxxxTiii. 247, 328.
Caterall, IxxxiT. 21.
Budwortli, Great, Ixxxiv. 77; IXXXT. 196;
Catherall, Ixxxviii. 252, 264, 308.
Ixxxviii. 29, 31.
Catlow, Ixxxviii. 310.
Bullock, High, IXXXT. 111.
Bullough, High, Ixxxviii. 258, 262.
Catterall, Ixxxiv. 47, 71 ; Ixxxv. 128.
Chadderton (Chaderton, Chaterton, Chat-
Burblethwayt, IxxxiT. 55 ; IXXXT. 160.
terton), Ixxxiv. 2, 18, 50 ; Ixxxv. 125,
Burgh, IXXXIT. 6, 79; Ixxxv. 109, 200;
126, 166, 224 ; Ixxxviii. 291, 294, 303,
(Burghe), IxxxTiii. 244, 245, 294.
Burne, Ixxxiv. 15; Ixxxviii. 236, 302, 332.
315.
Chaddock, Ixxxiv. 72 ; Ixxxviii. 3P3.
Burnet, Gilbert, Ixxxviii. 36.
Chadgley, Ixxxv. 128.
Burnley, Ixxxiv. 48 ; IxxxTiii. 307, 31(1,
Chadsley, Ixxxv. 137.
322.
Clmlwi'ek, Ixxxiv. 73, 76.
Burnelev, IXXXT. 128.
Chaigliley, Ixxxiv. 58.
Buruside, Ixxxviii. 331.
Chamber (Charnbre), Ixxxiv. 58; Ixxxv.
Surras, Ixxxiv. 103.
149.
Burton, Ixxxviii. 225.
Cliarleton, Ixxxviii. 274.
William, Ixxxviii. 7.
341.
Wood, IxxxiT. 56.
Richard, Ixxxv. 155 ; Ixxxviii. 261.
Bury, IxxxiT. 84 ; Ixxxv. 126 ; Ixxxviii. 248.
Chusleton-co-Oxford, Ixxxiv. 26.
Hatlev, Ixxxiv. 61.
Cl atburn (Chatburne), Ixxxviii. 1, 3, 314.
Buthouse, I'xxxiv. 34.
Cheam, Ixxxviii. 327.
Butley, Ixxxviii. 233.
Hall Ixxxviii. 233.
Chortle, Ixxxiv. 18 ; Ixxxviii. 315.
Chesham, IXXXT. 151.
Butterworth, Ixxxv. 115.
Clieshumbovs, Ixxxv. Ill, 208.
Byrom (Birom), Ixxxiv. 24, 42, 56, 66, 93 ;
Ixxxv. 150.
Chesne, Andrew du, Ixxxviii. 14.
Chester, Ixxxiv. 1, 43, 54, 90, 102 ; Ixxxv.
144, 146, 186, 199, 204, 223, 231-2;
Ixxxviii. 29, 30, 242, 271.
Caldwick, Ixxxviii. 302.
Chesterfield, Ixxxv. 145.
Caley, John, Ixxxviii. 19.
Chetham, Ixxxiv. 75 ; IXXXT. 185.
Calgarth, Ixxxiv. 69.
Chetwynd, Walter, Ixxxviu. 29.
Calverlev, Ixxxiv. 2.
Chiuhester, IXXXT. 108 ; Ixxxviii. 229.
Cambridge, Ixxxviii. 250, 321.
Childwall, IxxxTiii. 245.
Camden, William, Ixxxviii. 7.
Chingle Hall, IxxxTiii. 323.
Camerton, Ixxxiv. 58.
Chippendale, Ixxxviii. 265.
Campsfield, Ixxxiv. 12.
Canterbury, Ixxxviii. 17.
Chipping (Chippin), Ixxxiv. vi; IXXXT.
137; Ixxxviii. 324, 326.
Capenhurst, Ixxxviii. 285.
Chirke, Ixxxviii. 30, 32.
Capeston, Ixxxv. 194.
Chisenhall, Ixxxiv. 57, 78-9 ; Ixxxv. 183 ;
Capleside, Ixxxv. 160.
Ixxxviii. 244.
Carresbrooke, Ixxxv. 169.
Cholmley, — , Ixxxviii. 29.
Carke, Ixxxviii. 241.
Cholmondeley, Ixxxviii. 29.
Carlisle, Ixxxv. 164.
Lord, Ixxxviii. 29, 31, 32.
INDEX TO DUGDALK'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 5
Chomley, — , lixxviii. 30.
Cottom (Cottam, Cotham), Ixxxv. 153 ;
Chorley, Ixxxiv. ix, 22, 37, 56, 59, 80, 81,
Ixxxviii. 265, 324.
91, 98; Ixxxv. 120, 122, 14i, 157;
Cotton, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 16.
Ixxxviii. 278, 293, 294, 342.
Cougbton, Ixxxviii. 241.
Chorlton, Ixxxv. 131, 182.
Coventry, Ixxxv. 208 ; Ixxxviii. 243, 245.
Hall, Ixxxv. 133.
• Grammar School of, Ixxxviii. 6.
Chowbent, Ixxxiv. 21.
Cowley Hill, Ixxxviii. 243.
Churches, destruction of, Ixxxiv. xii.
Cratnptou, Ixxxv. 215.
Churchtown, Ixxxiv. 58.
Cranford, Ixxxv. 154.
Clapham, Ixxxviii. 267.
Craven, Ixxxiv. 26.
Clarendon, Lord, Ixxxviii. 22, 36.
Crawlev, Ixxxiv. 56.
Clark,- 1 1 ill, Ixxxiv. 89.
Crawshaw, Ixxxv. 145, 183 ; Ixkxviii. 296,
Claughton (Cloughton), Ixxxiv. 47, 48,
342.
64 ; Ixxxviii. 273.
Crewe, Ixxxiv. 14.
in Amonderness, Ixxxv. 153.
Crew-wood, Ixxxiv. 57.
Clayton, Ixxxiv. 6, 23, 58, 85, 97 ; Ixxxv.
Crimbles, Ixxxiv. 55.
196 ; Ixxxviii. 271, 275, 311, 337, 341.
Crocketts, Ixxxv. 144.
in the Moors, Ixxxv. 127, 128.
Crompton, Ixxxv. 162. ; Ixxxviii. 227.
Clecworth, Ixxxviii. 296.
Croniwell-botham (bothom), Ixxxv. 171 ;
151), 156 ; Ixxxviii. 240.
Crooke, Ixxxiv. 71, 85 ; Ixxxv. 107, 121.
Hall, Ixxxviii. 25.
New, Ixxxiv. 85.
Clegswood (Cleggs Woof1), Ixxxiv. 27;
Old, Ixxxiv. 85.
Ixxxviii. 228.
Crosby (Crosbye), Ixxxiv. 37, 38, 52, 69 ;
Clerk Hill, Ixxxviii. 326.
Ixxxv. 120, 203, 220.
Clifton (Clyfton), Ixxxiv. 86, 87 ; Ixxxv.
149 ; Ixxxviii. 239, 276.
Crosbv, Little, Ixxxv. 189, 205.
Crosshall (Crosse Hall), Ixxxiv. 81 ; Ixxxv.
Clitheroe, Ixxxviii. 2, 3, 4, 310.
roval grammar school of, Ixxxviii. 4.
135, 190. ; Ixxxviii. 250, 282, 288, 337.
Croston, Ixxxiv. 11, 12, 63 ; Ixxxv. 163 ;
Clopton, Ixxxviii. 33.
Ixxxviii. 291.
Clough, Ixxxviii. 249.
Crowton, Ixxxv. 165.
Cockerham (Cockeram), Ixxxiv. vi, 55,
Croxton (Euxton), Ixxxiv. 6. 62, 80;
100 ; Ixxxviii. 286.
Ixxxv. 136, 169; Ixxxviii. 247, 250,
Cockersand Abbey, Ixxxiv. vi.
329, 341.
Cockshutt, Ixxxv. 145.
Crue, Ixxxv. 206.
Codnor, Ixxxviii. 281.
Crumpsall (Crompsall, Crumpshall),
Coldcotes, Ixxxiv. 89.
Ixxxiv. 75, 77 ; Ixxxv, 224.
Colesbach, Ixxxviii. 261.
Crundell, Ixxxiv. 39.
Coleshill, Ixxxviii. 21.
Cuerdale, Ixxxiv. 10; Ixxxv. 148, 205!
Colne, Ixxxiv. 50.
Ixxxviii. 248, 272, 309.
Coney Hatch, Ixxxiv. 15
Cuerden, Ixxxiv. 13 ; Ixxxviii. 245.
Conished (Conyshed Coningshed), Ixxxiv.
99 ; Ixxxv. 169, 195 ; Ixxxviii. 254.
Cuerdley, Ixxxv. 132.
Culcheth, Ixxxiv. 52, 81, 91, 92 ; Ixxxv.
Constable Burton, Ixxxviii. 252.
122, 145 ; Ixxxviii. 319. 342.
Conswich, Ixxxiv. 58.
Cunscough, Ixxxv. 197 ; Ixxxviii. 300,
Cophall, Ixxxviii. 294.
328, 337.
Coppull, Ixxxv. 134, 136.
Cunswick, Ixxxviii. 289.
Corby, Ixxxv. 117.
Castle, Ixxxviii. 236.
Curzon, Assheton, viscount of, Ixxxviii.
37.
Cordell, Sir William, Ixxxviii. 5.
Dorothy, viscountess of, Ixxxviii. 37.
Cornbury, Ixxxv. 164.
Elizabeth, Ixxxviii. 37.
Cornwall, Ixxxviii. 282.
Cote (Coat), Ixxxiv. 63, 88 j Ixxxv. 119.
Dallam Tower, Ixxxv. 169.
Cotsbache, Ixxxiv. 51.
Ualton, Ixxxv. 155 ; Ixxxviii. 270.
T)ATT"
6 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Dam House (Damm House), Ixxxv. 211
Dugdale, James, Ixxxyiii. 1, 2, 3, 4.
Ixxxviii. 287.
Jane, Ixxxviii. 37.
Dantsey, Ixxxviii. 327.
John, Ixxxviii. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 37.
Darcy Lever, Ixxxiv. 8, 51, 53; Ixxxv
Letter to High Bailiff of Salford,
188, 196.
Ixxxiv. iii.
Barley, Ixxxir. 11 ; Ixxxv. 151, 152.
Nicholas, Ixxxviii. 2.
Darspury, Ixxxv. 180.
Sir William, Life of, Ixxxviii 1.
Darwen, Lower (Lower Darwent), Ixxxv
William, Ixxxviii. 2.
157.
William Stratford, Ixxxviii. 37.
Davenport, Ixxxv. 125.
Dukenfield (Dokenfield, Duckenfield),
Deane, Ixxxviii. 237.
Ixxxiv. 9, 17, 18, 22, 100 ; Ixxxv. 146,
Delamere, Lord, Ixxxviii. 31.
161 ; Ixxxviii. 235, 240, 261, 288.
Delves, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 29.
Dunchurch, Ixxxviii. 6.
Dene, Ixxxv. 166.
Duudalk, Ixxxv. 172.
Denton, Ixxxv. 146, 147, 161, 162
Dunham Massy, Ixxxviii. 317.
Ixxxviii. 236.
Dunkenhalgh (Dunkenhagh, Dunken-
Derby, Ixxxiv. 85 ; Ixxxv. 203, 218.
halghe, Dunkeldhaugh), Ixxxiv. x, 83 ;
James, earl of, Ixxxiv. vi.
Ixxxv. 207 ; Ixxxviii. 264, 278, 288, 327.
Lord, Ixxxviii. 25.
Dunkyrk, Ixxxiv. 87.
West, Ixxxv. 130, 162, 168 ; Ixxxviii.
276, 290, 300.
Derresbury, Ixxxiv. 41.
Dunnesthorp, Ixxxiv. 48.
Dunnishope (Dunishops), Ixxxviii. 249,
251.
Derwent, Lower, Ixxxv. 178.
Dunnow, Ixxxiv. 48 ; Ixxxviii. 264.
Devereux, Sir G-., Ixxxviii. 21.
Dunstaple, Ixxxv. 112.
Deynehouse, Ixxxviii. 337.
Didgbury, Ixxxiv. 96.
Dilworth, Ixxxviii. 328.
Durhom, Old, Ixxxviii. 272.
Durton, Ixxxv. 137.
Dutton, Ixxxviii. 274, 277, 284, 310.
Dimpley, Ixxxviii. 248.
Dinkley, Ixxxv. 166 ; Ixxxviii. 325.
Duxbury, Ixxxiv. 10 ; Ixxxv. 107, 122, 13S,
223 ; Ixxxviii, 272, 291, 293.
Ditton, Ixxxiv. 70, 71, 81 j Ixxxv. 132,
, )
155, 172, 177 ; Ixxxviii. 248.
Earnley, Ixxxviii, 249, 251.
Doblane House, Uxxiv. 34.
Eastham. (Eston), Ixxxviii. 31.
Docker, Ixxxiv. 46, 69.
Easthwart, Ixxxviii. 254.
Doddington, Ixxxviii. 29.
Easton of the Hill, Ixxxv. 210.
Dodsworth, Cassandra, Ixxxyiii. 9.
Eccles, Ixxxiv. 68.
Margaretta, Ixxxviii. 9.
Eccleston, Ixxxiv. 30, 36, 39, 63, 64, 69.
Marie, Ixxxviii. 9.
70, 79, 86, 98, 101 ; Ixxxv. 123, 135.
Mathew, Ixxxviii. 8, 9.
146, 147, 172, 177, 189, 194 ; Ixxxviii.
• Roger, Ixxxviii. 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16,
245, 275, 286, 301, 302, 319, 333, 337.
17, 18, 19.
Edelingtou, Ixxxiv. 9.
Dodsworthe, Radi, Ixxxviii. 9.
Edenfield, Ixxxviii. 239.
Dodworth, Ixxxviii. 233.
Edge, Ixxxv. 146.
Doway, Flanders, Ixxxv. 128.
Downham, Ixxxviii. 273.
Egberth, Ixxxv. 108, 132.
Elford, Ixxxviii. 280, 281.
Drakelow, Ixxxir. 28.
Ellhall, Ixxxviii. 257.
Driby, Ixxxv. 206.
Dryden, John, Ixxxviii. 36.
Ellis. Sir Henry, Ixxxviii. 19.
Elslake, Ixxxviii. 228.
Drylesden, Ixxxiv. 17.
Elston, Ixxxv. 106.
Dublin, Ixxxiv. 50; Ixxxv. 137, 143;
Elton, Ixxxv. 132, 149 ; Ixxxviii. 239.
Ixxxviii. 244, 257.
Eltonhead, Ixxxiv. 103 ; Ixxxv. 194.
Dugdale, Christopher, Ixxxviii. 3.
Elverton, Ixxxviii. 236.
Dugdale Stratford, Ixxxviii. 37.
Erlam, Ixxxiv. 72.
Henry, Ixxxviii. 2.
Eshold, see Ashall.
— Jacobo, Ixxxviii. 2.
Esholt, Ixxxviii. 308.
INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Evesham (Evesholme), Ixxxiv. 60.
Galthorpe, Ixxxiv. 84.
Everingham, Ixxxviii. 264.
Gambleside, Ixxxiv. 35.
Ewood lEawood), Ixxxiv. 73 ; Ixxxv. 140,
Garrett (Garret, Garratt) Ixxxiv. 39;
201.
Ixxxv. 155, 214; Ixxxviii. 286, 296, 301.
Exton, Ixxxiv. 55 ; Ixxxv. 183.
Garrett's in Tildesley, Ixxxiv. 49.
trough, Ixxxv. 164.
Garstang, Ixxxiv. vi, 36, 62 ; Ixxxviii. 273,
Extwisle, Ixxxviii. 228, 249, 308.
333.
Eynsham, Ixxxviii. 282.
School, Ixxxviii. 4.
Garswood, Ixxxiv. 86.
Gartsyde, Ixxxv. 115.
Fairbank, IXXXT. 170.
Gaseoyne, Richard, Ixxxviii. 9.
Fairehurst (Fayrehurst), Ixxxv. 136,216.
Gawsworth, Ixxxviii. 319.
Fairfax, Dr. Henry, Ixxxviii. 8.
Lord, Ixxxviii. 8.
Gawthrop (Gawthropp, Gawthorp, Gaw-
thorpe), Ixxxiv. 10; Ixxxv. 128; Ixxxviii.
Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 3, 13.
271, 272, 309, 313.
Fairock House, Ixxxviii. 324.
Gaytonby, Ixxxiv. 35.
Fairsnape (Fairesnape), Ixxxiv. 36, 46,
Geast Richard, Ixxxviii. 37.
87 ; Ixxxviii. 234, 275, 298.
Farnworth (Farneworth), Ixxxiv. 71 ;
Giggleswick, Ixxxviii. 256.
Gilling, Ixxxviii. 250.
Ixxxv. 129, 158, 177 ; Ixxxviii. 339,
Gilpin, — , Ixxxir. vi.
340.
Gilsdon, Ixxxiv. 78.
Farrington (Farington), Ixxxiv. 6j Ixxxv.
Gisburne, Ixxxv. 171, 213 ; Ixxxviii. 309.
105.
Gloucester, Ixxxv. 163.
Fazakerley, Ixxxv. 108.
Glusburne, Ixxxviii. 228.
Felkirk, Ixxxviii. 305.
Fenistreet, Ixxxv. 132.
Fessantford (Fezantford), Ixxxv. 128;
Goldsbury, Ixxxviii. 255.
Goosnargh (Goosenargh, Gosenargh, Gos-
nargh), Ixxxiv. 36; Ixxxv. 137 ; Ixxxviii.
Ixxxviii. 306, 311, 313.
226
ffleetwoode, Margerie, Ixxxviii. 8.
Gorsuch, Ixxxv. 123.
Fisher, Sir Clement, Ixxxviii. 21.
Gorsych, Ixxxiv. 28.
Fishwiok (Fishwioke,) Ixxxv. 105, 128,
Gorton, Ixxxv. 224.
168 ; Ixxxviii. 259, 323, 328.
Gossehaugh in Furnesse, Ixxxiv. 3.
Fitton, Ixxxviii. 283, 316.
Gothurst, Ixxxviii. 283.
Flemby, Ixxxv. 169.
Gough. — , Ixxxviii. 16.
Flint, Ixxxviii. 282, 288.
Gouldbourn, Ixxxviii. 276.
Floddeu, Ixxxv. 170.
Forneby, Ixxxv. 204.
Grange, The, Ixxxiv. 79.
Grantham, Ixxxiv. 9.
Forton, Ixxxviii. 233.
Granville, Dean, Ixxxviii. 36.
Fournesse Abbey, Ixxxviii. 236.
Grapynell, Ixxxiv. 42.
Fox Denton, Ixxxiv. 68.
Grasstanley, Ixxxviii. 265.
Foxhole Bank, Ixxxviii. 249.
Foxholes, Ixxxiv. 74, 104 ; Ixxxv. 151.
Grathwayte (Grathwayt), Ixxxviii. 241,
254, 255.
Foxstones, Ixxxiv. 27.
Frennys, Ixxxviii. 339.
Freshfield, Ixxxv. 221.
Gravelin (Graveling), Ixxxiv. 52, 87;
Ixxxviii. 302.
Graymaynes, Ixxxiv. 3.
Frickleton (Frekelton), Ixxxv. 137 j
Grayrigg, Ixxxv. 119.
Ixxxviii. 257.
Gray, Thomas, Ixxxiv. ix.
Frierhead, Ixxxv. 171.
Great Limber, Ixxxiv. 27.
Frodsham, Ixxxiv. 93.
Green, Ixxxiv. 80.
Fuller, — , Ixxxiv. x, xii.
Fulwood (Fullwood), Ixxxiv. 21, 30, 39,
Greenacre, Ixxxviii. 264, 319.
Greenaeres, John, Ixxxviii. 4.
85 ; Ixxxv. 173, 188.
Greenehide in Pendle, Ixxxiv. 89
Furnesse (Furness), Ixxxiv. 3; kxxv. 117
Greene Wax, Ixxxv. 139.
141, 207.
Greenfield, Ixxxviii. 306.
DATE
8 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Green Gore, Ixxxviii. 249.
Greenhead, Ixxxv. 157, 160 ; Ixxxviii. 141.
Haslington (Haselington), Ixxxv. 137,
188 ; Ixxxviii. 319.
Greenwich, Ixxxiv. 50.
Hatton, Ixxxiv. 20.
Grenehalghe, Ixxxv. 124.
Grimeston-Garth, Ixxxiv. 64.
Lady, Ixxxviii. 14.
Lord, Ixxxviii. 10.
Grimsall, Ixxxviii. 264.
Sir Christopher, Ixxxviii. 10, 11.
Grisedale, IXXXT. 160.
Haughton, Ixxxv. 205, 208.
Grislehurst (Gristelhurst, Grisslehurst,
Haunton, Ixxxiv. 87.
Gristlehurst, Grizlehurst), Ixxxiv. 66 ;
Haversham, Ixxxv. 121.
Ixxxv. 126, 139, 140, 149, 150; Ixxxviii.
Hall, Ixxxv. 160.
274.
Hawarden, Ixxxv. 146, 162.
Grobv, Ixxxviii. 280.
HawHn, Ixxxviii. 285.
Grosvenor, Richard Earl, Ixxxviii. 37.
Hawkley, Ixxxiv. 59 ; Ixxxv. 200, 201 j
Ixxxviii. 245, 336.
Habergham, Ixxxviii. 305, 313.
Haworth, Ixxxiv. 61.
Hackensall (Hakensall), Ixxxiv. 64;
Hawkswell, Ixxxviii. 321.
Ixxxviii. Ill, 113, 114.
Hawksworth, Ixxxviii. 325.
Hacking, Ixxxviii. 305, 327.
Hayhurst, Ixxxviii. 310.
Hadendam, Ixxxiv. 103.
Hayley, Ixxxiv. 74.
Hadley, Ixxxv. 164.
Haymer, Ixxxv. 115.
Hagerston, Ixxxiv. 23, 37, 64.
Haigh (Hagh, Haglic, Haighe), Ixxxiv.
Hayton (Haighton), Ixxxiv. 70 ; Ixxxviii.
322, 337.
5, 7, 12, 37, 52, 91 ; Ixxxv. 194, 220 ;
Healey, Ixxxviii. 324.
Ixxxviii. 231, 291, 293.
Heape, Ixxxv. 139.
Hales (Hale), Ixxxiv. 64; Ixxxv. 165.
in Lomax, Ixxxv. 140.
Halewood, Ixxxv. 130, 177.
Heath, Ixxxviii. 249.
Halifax, Ixxxiv. 84 ; Ixxxv. 133, 196 ;
Charnoek, Ixxxviii. 258, 261, 262.
Ixxxviii. 322.
Heaton, Ixxxiv. 58 ; Ixxxv. 146, 166, 204 ;
Halsall (Halshall), Ixxxiv. 20, 86 ; Ixxxv.
Ixxxviii. 236.
129, 134, 137 ; Ixxxviii. 290.
Halstead, High, Ixxxv. 128.
Heber, Bishop, Ixxxviii. 10.
Helagh, Ixxxviii. 322.
Halton, Ixxxiv. 64, 69 ; Ixxxviii. 286.
Helbeck, Ixxxviii. 225.
Hamborough, Ixxxv. 138.
Heley, Ixxxiv. 61 ; Ixxxv. 120.
Hamer, Ixxxiv. 61.
Hall Ixxxiv. 104.
Hamerton, Ixxxviii. 263.
Hemsworth, Ixxxv. 171, 177.
Hamper, -, Ixxxviii. 2, 25.
Henley, Ixxxviii. 340.
Haptou, Ixxxviii. 295, 308, 313.
Henshaw, Ixxxviii. 233.
Harbottle, Ixxxviii. 273.
Herbert, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 18.
Harden, Ixxxv. 162.
Hesanford, Ixxxviii. 228.
Harding, Ixxxviii. 273.
Hesketh, Ixxxv. 135.
Hargreve, Ixxxv. 157.
Harleston, Ixxxv. 115.
Holeroft, Ixxxviii. 8.
Jane, Ixxxviii. 9.
Harlow, Ixxxviii. 294.
Robert, Ixxxviii. 8.
Harock Hill, Ixxxv. 216.
Sir Thomas. Ixxxiv. vii.
Harrick, Ixxxviii. 243.
Heskyn (Heaken), Ixxxiv. 89, 98 ; Ixxxv.
Harrock, Ixxxiv. 83, 85 ; Ixxxviii. 247.
219.
Harrockford, Ixxxviii. 250.
Hessam Moore, Ixxxv. 154.
Harrogate, Ixxxviii. 307.
Hethenhead, Ixxxviii. 319.
Harrop Edge, in Matley, Ixxxv. 162.
Heton, Ixxxv. 185.
Harthill, Ixxxv. 142.
Heversham Hall, Ixxxviii. 241.
Harwood, Ixxxv. 128 ; Ixxxviii. 249.
Hey, Ixxxiv. 56.
Great, Ixxxiv. 84 ; Ixxxv. 135.
Heyford, Ixxxviii. 236.
Little, Ixxxiv. 35, 83, 84, 85 ; Ixxxviii.
Heyhouse, Ixxxviii. 309.
249, 272.
Heyside, Ixxxviii. 260.
INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 9
Heyton, Ixxxv. 162.
Hevwood, IXXXT. 126, 139, 140; Ixxxviii.
Hopkinson, — , Ixxxviii. 15, 39.
John, IxxxiT. Titf
261, 340.
Hopwood, IXXXT. 148, 152; IxxxTiii. 253,
Hide, Ixxxviii. 244.
305, 319.
Higham, Lower, Ixxxviii. 296.
High Ash (High Ashes), Ixxxv. 152;
Cleydon, IXXXIT. 29.
Hornby Castle (Horneby Castle), IXXXIT.
Ixxxviii. 253.
21 ; IXXXT. 127; IxxxTiii. 263, 289.
Bullock, IXXXT. 149.
Charles, Ixxxiv. xiii.
Leigh, Ixxxiv. 28, 70 ; Ixxxv. 165.
RBT. Greorge, IxxxTiii. 39.
The, IXXXT. 114.
Horsley, IXXXT. 220.
Highfield, Ixxxiv. 47.
Hoi-ton, IxxxiT. 88.
Hall, IXXXT. 211.
Hothersall, IXXXT. 153 ; IxxxTiii. 324.
Highton-Hey (Highton High), IXXXT. 202,
223.
Hough-End, Ixxxv. 214.
Houghton, Ixxxviii. 307.
Highwide, IxxxTiii. 309.
Tower, Ixxxiv. 97 ; IXXXT. 135, 154.
Hill, The, IxxxiT. 39.
198 ; Ixxxviii. 235, 246.
Gate, IXXXT. 213, 214.
West, IxxxTiii. 335.
Hilton, Ixxxiv. 94 ; IXXXT. 141, 171.
Houghwick, IXXXT. 135.
Hindley (Hinley), Ixxxiv. 43, 54, 100;
Houlden, IXXXT. 133.
IxxxTiii. 319.
HoTingliam, IXXXT. 139, 140; IxxxTiii.
Hockbridge, IXXXIT. 36.
340.
Hodgwiek, IxxxTiii. 325.
Howley, IxxxTiii. 231.
Hoghton, IxxxTiii. 277.
Howorth, IxxxiT. Tiii, 9j IXXXT. 156,
Tower, IxxxTiii. 264, 284, 296, 309,
157.
327.
Dr. Radclifle, IxxxTiii. 26.
Holburne, IXXXT. 159.
Holcroft(Holcrofte), IXXXIT. 33,90 ; Ixxxv.
Dr. Theophilus, IXXXIT. Tiii ; Ixxxviii.
25, 26.
140 ; Ixxxviii. 246, £91, 319, 326, 340,
, Letter from, Ixxxviii. 24.
342.
Edmund, Ixxxviii. 25.
Holden, IXXXT. 144, 157 j Ixxxviii. 248,
Hall, Ixxxviii. 24, 25.
251, 312.
(Little), IXXXT. 149.
Holdernesse, IXXXT. 125.
Robert, IxxxTiii. 26.
Hole, IxxxTiii. 268.
Hay, IxxxiT. 36.
Holford, IXXXT. 146 ; IxxxTiii. 29.
Hulme, IXXXT. 124, 158.
Holkar (Holker), IXXXIT. 10, 100 ; IXXXT.
Hulton, Ixxxv. 156, 159, 198, 211.
154, 176, 198, 235, 302, 332.
Humbleton, Ixxxiv. 71.
Holland, IXXXIT. 11.
Huncote (Huneotes), IXXXIT. 35, 84;
Hollins (Hollyns), IXXXT. 137; IXXXTUI.
Ixxxviii. 341.
227, 249, 296.
Hundersfield, IXXXIT. 101.
Holloway, IxxxTiii. 269.
Hundow, IXXXT. 160.
Holme, IxxxiT. 68 ; IxxxTiii. 306.
Hunnington, Ixxxiv. 87.
Eandle, IxxxTiii. 23, 24, 26, 27, 28,
Huntbach, John, Ixxxviii. 6.
29, 30, 31, 32.
Margery, Ixxxviii. 6.
Holmes, The, IXXXT. Ill, 135.
Hunter — , IxxxTiii. 32.
Chapel, IxxxTiii. 29.
Holmeswood, IXXXT. 135.
Huntroyd (Huntroyde), IXXXIT. 24 ;
Ixxxviii. 296, 301.
Holt, IXXXIT. 33; IXXXT. 179; Ixxxviii.
Hurst, Ixxxv. 145 ; Ixxxviii. 303, 342.
281.
Hurstwood, Ixxxv. 128; Ixxxviii. 249,
Hondford (Honford), IXXXIT. 28 ; IXXXT.
305, 311.
146 ; Ixxxviii. 316, 317.
Hustede, Ixxxv. 186.
Hoogh, The, IXXXT. 214.
Hutt, Ixxxiv. 42 ; Ixxxv. 165, 203.
Hooton, IXXXT. 207 ; IxxxTiii. 280, 285.
Hutton Grange, IxxxTiii. 8, 9, 225, 259.
Hope, IXXXIT. 53.
John, IXXXT. 160.
Carr, Ixxxviii. 252.
Huxley, Ixxxviii. 275.
DATE
10 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION or LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Huyton Hey (Hyton Hey), Ixxxv. 123,
Kirkland (Kyrkland, Kirkeland), Ixxxir.
203.
63,88; Ixxxv. Ill, 114, 190; Ixxxviii.
(Hyton), Ixxxiv. 59 j Ixxxv. 130,
286, 302, 319, 334.
142.
Kirkleys (Kirklees), Ixxxiv. 71 ; Ixxxv.
211.
Ilsding, Ixxxviii. 246.
Knapton, Ixxxv. 191.
lace, Ixxxiv. 42, 66, 93 ; Ixxxv. 163, 193,
Knaresbro', Ixxxviii. 341.
201 ; Ixxxviii. 258, 275.
Knocking, Ixxxviii. 281, 282.
Blundell, Ixxxiv. 38, 39, 85, 101 ;
Knowles, Thomas, Ixxxviii. 9.
Ixxxv. 194 ; Ixxxviii. 301, 302.
Knowsley (Knowlesley), Ixxxiv. viii. 57,
Ingestrie, Ixxxviii. 29.
Irelam (Irlam), Ixxxy. 122, 175, 177;
70; Ixxxviii. 245.
Kuerden (Keuerden), Ixxxiv. 23, 62, 82 ;
Ixxxviii. 276.
Ixxxv. 168.
Dr., Ixxxiv. viii ; Ixxxviii. 31, 35.
Jackhouse, Ixxxviii. 249.
Kyllington, Ixxxv. 198.
Jacob, Giles, Ixxxviii. 19.
Johnston, Dr. Nathaniel, Ixxxiv. viii.
Lachford, Ixxxiv. 36.
Lamplugh, Ixxxv. 169.
Keele, Ixxxiv. 100.
Lancaster, lixxiv. vi, ix, 3, 9, 18, 24, 31,
Kceton, Ixxxviii. 327.
43, 88 ; Ixxxviii. 234.
Keighley, Ixxxviii. 256.
Kelsey, North, Ixxxiv. 66.
Henry, Earl of, Ixxxiv. vi.
Lanckton, Ixxxiv. 44.
Kendal (Kendall), Ixxxiv. ix. 58.
Langley, Ixxxv. 203, 206.
Kenilworth (Kennelworth), Ixxxiv. 96.
Kenion, Ixxxviii. 270.
Langton, Ixxxviii. 276.
Langtree, Ixxxviii. 245, 288, 343, 344.
Kenniscough, Ixxxv. 215.
Larbreek (Larbreke, Larebreke), IXXXT.
Hevenhead, Ixxxv. 215.
190, 204; Ixxxviii. 272.
Kensington, Ixxxiv. 26.
Lathom (Lathome, Latlmm), luxiv. 71 ;
Kentwick, Ixxxviii. 254.
Ixxxv. Ill, 135, 209; Ixxxviii. 281,
Kenwicke, Ixxxv. 135.
318, 336.
Kerden (Kyrden), Ixxxv. 167.
Lathwayte, Ixxxviii. 254.
Kerraond, Ixxxv. 150.
Laughe, Ixxxiv. 7.
Kersall, Ixxxiv. 17, 102 ; Ixxxv. 173, 185,
Lawklaml, Ixxxviii. 264, 313.
186, 187 ; Ixxxviii. 248, 285.
Lawton, Ixxxiv. 56, 66; Ixxxviii. 276.
Kersley, Ixxxv. 158.
Layhog, Ixxxviii. 270.
Kidsnape, Ixxxv. 219.
Lavton, Ixxxiv. 64; Ixxxv. 113 ; Ixxxviii.
Kighley, Ixxxviii. 264, 340.
244.
Kildwick, Ixxxv. 157.
Leaver, Ixxxiv. 23.
Killington, Ixxxviii. 332.
Lee, Ixxxv. 154 ; Ixxxviii. 298.
Kinderton, Ixxxiv. 15.
Leeds, Ixxxiv. 19, 22; Ixxxv. 156, 169;
King, — , Ixxxviii. 22.
Ixxxviii. 253.
Gregory, Ixxxiv. iv ; Ixxxviii. 30, 31.
King's Bromley, Ixxxiv. 66.
Lees, Ixxxv. 125.
Leigh, Ixxxiv. 60, 61, 72 ; Ixxxv. 109, 118,
Kingston-upon-Hull, Ixxxv. 169.
121, 145 ; Ixxxviii. 238, 247, 276.
Kinnerton, Ixxxiv. 90.
Kirkby (Kirby, Kirkeby), Ixxxiv. 6, 15,
Colonel Egerton, Ixxxviii. 39.
Dr. Charles, Ixxxiv. viii.
98, 99 ; Ixxxv. 109, 169 j Ixxxviii. 10,
High, Ixxxv. 179.
238.
Leighton, lixxiv. 69, 94; Ixxxv. 106, 198
Kendall, Ixxxv. 141.
Ixxxviii. 245.
Lonsdale, Ixxxiv. 69.
Leigh, West, Ixxxiv. 56 ; Ixxxviii. 319.
Malham Dale, Ixxxviu. 322.
Leke, Ixxxiv. 69.
Kirkedale, Ixxxv. 197.
Leland, Uxaiv. 4 ; lixxv. 109, 110, 164,
Kirkham, Ixxxv. Ill, 191.
192.
INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 11
Lentford, lixxviii. 298.
Lcntwood, Ixxxiv. 84.
Lentworth, Ixxxiv. 83.
Lever, Ixxxiv. 10, 47 ; Ixxxv. 149, 186 ;
Ixxxviii. 235, 306.
Darcy, see Darcy Lever.
Great, Ixxxiv. 10.
Little, Ixxxiv. 8 ; Ixxxviii. 342.
Leversedge, Ixxxv. 205 ; Ixxxviii. 305.
Leybourne, Ixxxv. 174, 195.
Leycester, Sir Peter, Ixxxiv. viii, ij
Ixxxviii. 29, 30, 31.
Lower Higham, Ixxxiv. 6.
— • Place, Ixxxv. 140, 217.
Lowick, Ixxxiv. 3.
Lowther, Ixxxv. 169.
Lullingstone Hall, Ixxxviii. 288.
Lum (Lumb), Ixxxiv. 65 ; Ixxxviii. 251.
Lyme (Lime, Lim), Ixxxiv. 43; Ixxxv.
122, 176, 179, 181, 182 ; Ixxxviii. 271.
Lytham (Litham, Lithom), Ixxxiv. 36, 59,
86, 87; Ixxxv. 116, 155, 194, 206, 218.
MackerHeld, rxxxviii. 276.
Lickhurst, Over, Ixxxv. 137.
Lidiat(Lyddiat,Lydyat,Lydgate,Lydiat),
Ixxxv. 130, 134, 189, 202, 215, 220;
Ixxxviii. 287.
Light Oakes, Ixxxviii. 256.
Lincoln, Ixxxviii. 253.
Lindley Ixxxiv 4
Maghull, Ixxxiv. 59; Ixxxv. 109, 129, 192.
Mainwaring, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 29, 30.
Maire, Ixxxv. 172.
Malbreck, Ixxxiv. 87.
Malpas, Ixxxv. 179.
Malsestiall, Ixxxviii. 228.
Linton, Ixxxiv. 76.
Lisco, Ixxxiv. 64.
Lisle, — , Ixxxviii. 21.
Litherland, Ixxxviii. 343.
Littleton, Ixxxviii. 312, 314.
Littlewood, Ixxxiv. 11, 12.
Littlewoolton, Ixxxiv. 80.
Liverpool (Leverpool, Leverpoole), Ixxxiv.
23, 59, 80; Ixxxv. 174; Ixxxviii. 257,
329.
Liversedge, Ixxxviii. 252.
Livesey [sic], Livesay, Ixxxiv. 19, 40,
17, 22, 28, 29, 33, 34, 44, 45, 54, 67, 74,
77, 90, 102 ; Ixxxv. 112, 133, 138, 139,
140, 144, 157, 158, 166, 186, 187, 188,
199, 213, 214, 224; Ixxxviii. 24, 28, 29,
242, 253, 316, 317, 319, 338.
Man, Isle of, Ixxxv. 139, 140, 221 ; Ixxxviii.
227, 229, 281, 282, 323.
Manley, Ixxxv. 165.
Mannour, The (The Manor), Ixxxiv. 7 ;
Ixxxv. 146, 207 ; Ixxxviii. 236.
Mansfield, Ixxxiv. 31.
Manzer Hall, Ixxxv. 141.
328.
Llhawennv, Ixxxv. 220.
Lodge, the, Ixxxviii. 306.
London, Ixxxiv. viii, 1, 9, 10, 25, 26, 31,
43, 44, 50, 53, 64, 69, 73, 75, 77, 85,
87, 88, 99 ; Ixxxv. 131, 164, 165, 172,
173, 178, 180, 188, 191, 192, 193, 196,
213, 217, 220 ; Ixxxviii. 26, 34, 226,
230, 243, 249, 250, 251, 272, 307, 321,
3*8, 330, 337.
Longley, Ixxxv. 146.
Longriclge, Ixxxv. 128.
Longton, Rogerus, Ixxxviii. 9.
Longworth, Ixxxv. 159, 171, 190.
Lostock, Ixxxiv. 5, 7, 56 ; hxxv. 120, 180,
220 ; Ixxxviii. 236, 252, 269, 270, 302,
335, 336.
Lough Rigg, Ixxxviii. 241.
Louth, Ixxxv. 210.
Loveley, Ixxxviii. 326.
Lowe, The, Ixxxv. 174, 194 ; IxxxTiii. 278.
Markland Mill, Ixxxiv. 13.
Marple, Ixxxv. 217 ; Ixxxviii. 242.
Marston,' Ixxxiv. 49.
Moor, Ixxxv. 216 ; Ixxxviii. 307.
Martholme, lixxv. 135.
Marton, Ixxxv. Ill ; Ixxxviii. 258.
Mascy, Ixxxviii. 316.
Mawdesley (Maudesley), Ixxxiv. 22, 99,
Ixxxv. 193, 195, 211, 216; lixxviii. 226,
245.
Maxfield, Ixxxv. 182.
Maynes, Ixxxv. 136, 216 ; Ixxxviii. 331,
Meadows, Ixxxviii. 247.
Meales, Ixxxiv. 11.
Meare, Ixxxv. 107, 132.
Mearley (Meareley, Mereley), Ixxxviii.
271, 299, 328.
Little, Ixxxviii. 271, 328.
Meer, lixxviii. 337.
DATE.
12 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Meerscough, Ixxxiv. 24.
Melling (Mellinge), Ixxxiv. 30, 45 ; lixxv.
Mosborow (Mosborrow, Mossborough),
Ixxxiv. 59, 86 j Ixxxv. 202.
108, 109, 129, 192, 202 ; Ixxxviii. 300.
Mosley, Ixxxiv. 56.
Wood, Ixxxv. 206.
Moston, Ixxxv. 133, 187.
Meols, North (North Meles, Meoles),
Moston Hall, Ixxxiv. 104.
Ixxxiv. 56 ; Ixxxv. 112 ; Ixxxviii. 329.
Mote Hall, Ixxxv. 215.
Merbury, Ixxxviii. 29.
Moulbrock, Ixxxv. 202.
Merryburgh, Ixxxviii. 236.
Mouldesworth, Ixxxv. 143.
Merscough, Ixxxiv. 39, 58.
Mowbreck (Mowbrick, Mowbreeke) IXXXT.
Mexbrough, Ixxxiv. 61.
136, 206, 220 ; Ixxxviii. 298.
Mich Crosbie, Ixxxiv. 70.
Muneaster, Ixxxiv. 39 ; Ixxxv. 110.
Mickledale, Ixxxiv. 57.
Musbery, Ixxxv. 144.
Miokleheacl, Ixxxv. 132.
Myle-End, Ixxxv. 213.
Miokley, Ixjxviii. 250.
Mytton, Ixxxv. 128.
Middleforth, Ixxxv. 219.
Middleton, Ixxxiv. 14, 15, 21, 23, 36, 44,
Nackbank, Ixxxv. 152.
77 ; Ixxxv. 110, 125, 148, 152, 154, 177,
Naworth Castle, Ixxxviii. 292.
185, 194, 198 ; Ixxxviii. 25, 29, 245,
Neatby, Ixxxv. 216; Ixxxviii. 324, 327,
246, 273, 278, 303.
328:
Hall, Ixxxiv. 88.
in Gosenargh, Ixxxv. 135.
New Bigging, Ixxxviii. 241.
Newbould-Dacy, Ixxxv. 172.
Sir F., Ixxxviii. 30.
Newbury, Ixxxiv. 94.
Sir T., Ixxxviii. 30, 32.
Newbye, Ixxxv. 191.
Westmoreland, Ixxxiv. 12.
New Hall, Ixxxiv. 10, 44, 59 ; Ixxxv. 126,
Midhop (Midhope), Ixxxviii. 234, 332.
135. 144, 186, 203, 218 j Ixxxviii. 8,
Milham, Ixxxv. 198.
239, 241, 248, 249.
Milhouse, Ixxxv. 222.
Newhouse, Ixxxviii. 326.
Milkwall, Ixxxviii. 338.
Newman Hall, Ixxxviii. 298.
Millington, Ixxxviii. 233.
Newsam, Ixxxv. 197.
Millrigge, Ixxxv. 141.
Newsted, Ixxxiv. 21.
Millum Castle, Ixxxv. 169 ; Ixxxviii. 231.
Newton, Ixxxiv. 9, 36, 56, 66 ; Ixxxv. 118,
Millwood, Ixxxv. 141.
177, 217, 221 ; Ixxxviii. 247, 276, 277,
Milton, — , Ixxxviii. 35.
282, 289.
Minshull, Ixxxv. 122.
Newton in Makerfleld, Ixxxv. 118.
Mirescough, Ixxxviii. 331.
Nether Peover Church, Ixxxviii. 29.
Mitford, Rev. John, Ixxxviii. 32, 33.
Nethertown (Netherton), Ixxxiv. 47;
Mitton, Ixxxiv. 47 ; Ixxxviii. 251, 264.
Ixxxv. 204.
Little, Ixxxviii. 267, 272.
Nether Whitaere, Ixxxviii. 244.
Moberley, Ixxxiv. 51, 53.
Nethorpe, Ixxxv. 112.
Molbreck, Ixxxv. 113 ; Ixxxviii. 331, 332.
Nocton, Ixxxviii. 306-7.
Molesworth, Ixxxviii. £32.
Norburv (Norburie), Ixxxv. 159, 161, 181;
Molyneux, Lord, Ixxxviii. 25.
Ixxxv'iii. 244, 246.
Monoaster, Ixxxiv. 52 ; Ixxxviii. 231.
North Kilvington, Ixxxiv. 28.
Monkeshall, Ixxxiv. 33 ; Ixxxv. 133, 144.
Meles, Ixxxiv. 42.
Hiles, Ixxxir. viii, 15.
Norton, Ixxxiv. 33, 42 ; Ixxxv. 179, 183.
Moor Hall, Ixxxviii. 287, 324, 325.
Priory, Ixxxviii. 256.
Moorside in Preston, Ixxxv. 153.
Norwich, Ixxxviii. 314.
Moreside, Ixxxviii. 241.
Nubury, Ixxxiv. 93.
Morley, Ixxxiv. 21.
Nuthurst, Ixxxiv. 33, 73, 76, 77; lixxviii.
Morleys (Morleis), Ixxxiv. 5, 7, 86 ; Ixxxv.
253, 303.
176 j Ixxxviii. 286, 302, 317, 332.
Morton, Ixxxv. 216.
Oakenhead, Ixxxviii. 313.
Corbet, Ixxxv. 114.
Oakenrode, IXXXT. 115.
Okenbottom, Ixxxv. 158.
Pentcloin Castle, Ixxxiv. 7.
Oldham, Ixxxv. 224.
Pentrey Madock, Ixxxv. 146.
Oldroyd, Ixxxviii. 322.
Penwortham, Ixxxiv. 13, 15 ; IXXXT. 107,
Openshaw, Ixxxiv. 34.
110, 220 ; Ixxxviii. 8, 231, 318.
Ordsall, Ixxxv. 206; Ixxxviii. 265, 291,
305, 306, 316, 317.
Orford (Orforde, Ordford), Ixxxiv. 36, 56,
87.
Peover, Ixxxviii. 284.
Perbold, Ixxxv. 176, 195.
Perry Hall, Staff., Ixxxiv. 5.
Peterborough, Earl of, Ixxxviii. 33.
Ormerode (Ormerod, Ormeroyd), Ixxxiv.
27 ; Ixxxviii. 311, 312.
Pever, Ixxxviii. 317, 319.
Phesantford (Pheasant Forde) Ixxxv.
Ormskirk(0rmeskirke,0rmskirke),lxxxiv.
vii, ix, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 21, 23, 30,
37, 45, 80; IXXXT. 209.
135, 136.
Philip9on, Marg., Ixxxviii. 9.
Piccope Bank, Ixxxv. 157.
Orrell, Ixxxiv. 30 ; Ixxxv. 201 ; Ixxxviii.
Bev. Or. J., Ixxxviii. 8.
319.
Pickton, Ixxxv. 190.
Osbaldeston, Ixxxiv. 19, 101; lixxviii.
Pike House, Ixxxiv. 27.
225, 226, 277, 281, 298.
Pillaton Hall, kxxv. 150.
Edw., Ixxxviii. 9.
Pilling, Ixxxiv. 12 ; Ixxxviii. 306.
Ossington, Ixxxv. 188.
Hall, Ixxxiv. 24.
Outrington, Ixxxviii. 230.
Oxford, Ixxxiv. 19 ; Ixxxviii. 7.
Platt, Ixxxviii. 338.
Plessington, Ixxxiv. 22.
Plowden, Ixxxv. 194.
Padjam, Ixxxviii. 323.
Plumpton(Plompton),lxxxv.l70;lxxxviii.
Paploe, Ixxxv. 114.
241, 254, 255, 263, 307, 341.
Parbold, Ixxxciii. 267, 302, 332.
in Furnesse, Ixxxv. 160.
Paris, Ixxxiv. 8H.
Podington, Ixxxviii. 318.
Park (The Parke), Ixxxviii. 245, 340.
Pomfret, Ixxxviii. 240.
Hall, Ixxxv. 155; Ixxxviii, 226, 301,
Pontalgh (Pontaugh), Ixxxv. 148 ; Ixxxviii.
306, 341.
250, 282, 312.
Parkhead (Parkehead), Ixxxiv. 47; Ixxxv.
Pontefract, Ixxxiv. viii.
157, 166 ; Ixxxviii. 338.
Pool-bank, Ixxxv. 160.
Park Hill (Parke Hill), Ixxxviii. 228, 308.
Poole, Ixxxv. 122 ; Ixxxviii. 31, 293, 302.
Partin»ton, Ixxxv. 186.
Paulet, Lord Giles, Ixxxviii. 5.
in- Win-all, Ixxxiv. 91.
William, Ixxxviii. 5,' 6.
Poolton, Ixxxiv. 6 ; Ixxxv. 136 ; Ixxxviii.
Pawtagh, Ixxxiv. 4.
331.
Patshull, Ixxxiv. 19.
Portfleld, Ixxxiv. 58 ; Ixxxviii. 251, 299,
Paynesley, Ixxxv. 220.
307, 309.
Peastoek, Ixxxviii. 283.
Portman, Edward, Baron, Ixxxviii. 37.
Peele, Ixxxv. 122, 159, 164, 168 ; Ixxxviii.
Poulton, Ixxxv. 155, 177 ; Ixxxviii. 275.
245.
Laneeton, Ixxxiv. 10.
Pemberton, Ixxxv. 137,193,200; Ixxxviii.
Powtalgh, Ixxxiv. 6.
336.
Poynton (Pointon), Ixxxiv. 20, 89, 96 ;
Pendlebury, Ixxxviii. 242.
Ixxxv. 146, 206 ; Ixxxviii. 281.
Pendle, Forest of, Ixxxviii. 1.
Frees, Ixxxv. 189.
- — Hall, Ixxxiv. 6 ; Ixxxviii. 296.
Prestbury, Ixxxviii. 234.
Pendleton, Ixxxiv. 53 ; Ixxxv. 133 ;
Prescot (Prescote), Ixxxiv. 57; Ixxxv. 223.
Ixxxviii. 274, 293, 306, 337.
Preston, Ixxxiv. vii, viii, ix, 10, 11, 12, 13,
Penketh, Ixxxv. 139, 140, 145.
19, 24, 25, 33, 40, 46, 49, 82, 97 ; Ixxxv.
Pennesley, Ixxxviii. 318.
106, 110, 112, 118, 137, 142, 143, 164,
Pennington, Ixxxiv. 54; Ixxxv. 197;
Ixxxviii. 231, 238, 240, 276.
167-8, 172, 173, 178, 182, 183, 184, 185,
209, 211, 213 ; Ixxxviii. 230, 234, 237,
Pennyshutts, Ixxxviii. 253.
246, 247, 249, 259, 260, 265, 273, 296,
Penrith, IXXXT. 169 ; Ixxxviii. 255.
323, 324, 325, 327, 329, 334, 341.
DATE.
14 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION or LANCASHIRE, 16G4-5.
Preston on the Hill, lixxviii. 220.
Rochdale (Rachclalo, Racliedale, Roche-
Patrick, Ixxxiv. 69 ; Ixxxviii. 236.
Prcstwich, Ixxxiv. 2 j Ixxxv. 146, Ki6, 186.
Prisall (Preesall), Ixxxiv. 24, 55 ; Ixxxv.
dale), Ixxxiv. 16, 60, 73, 74; Ixxxv. 115,
139, 140, 152 ; Ixxxviii. 24., 25, 234, 240,
256, 805, 335.
111.
Rockley, Ixxxiv. 5.
Puddington, 176, 212.
Kodlmrne, Ixxxviii. 828.
Rodos Hall, Ixxxviii. 248.
Radnoto Bridge, Ixxxv. 205.
Rodham Park, lixxviii. 271.
Radlmm I'ark, Ixxxviii. 227.
Rollrston, Ixxxiv. 66.
Rum [wide, Ixxxiv. 55.
Romsgreavo, Ixxxviii. 257.
RamsfTreve, Ixxxy. 121.
Rosethorne, Ixxxviii. 248.
l{uiiinhi!il, Ixxxv. 114.
Unstuck],., lori'Ht. of, Ixxxviii. 1.
Ratcliffe (Ra.ldillV, Kawcliffo), Ixxxiv. fi,
Rosslmll (RoBhalo), Ixxxiv. 63 ; Ixxxv. Ill ,
21, 64, (i9; Ixxxv. 113, 136, 140, 185,
Ixxxviii. 275, 841.
206 i Ixxxviii. 239, 286, 305, 332.
Resthome, Aliuia, Ixxxviii. 9.
Ruveiwcroft, Ixxxv. 146.
Holcroft, Ixxxviii. 8.
Ravensholm, Ixxxviii. 273.
• Laurence, Ixxxviii. 8.
Rawcliflb, Upper, Ixxxv. 190.
Rovington, Ixxxviii. 258.
Kawli.iff, Ixxxviii. 254.
Rowcll, Ixxxviii. 241.
Ruwmorc, Ixxxv. 138.
KowUwton, Ixxxiv. 65.
UavKill, Ixxxviii. 313.
Rowley, Ixixiv. 22.
Raynford, Ixxxiv. 30.
Rondo (Redo, Rood.-, Read), lixxiv. 23,
Royle, lixxviii. 250, 272, 312, 314.
KulTord, Ixxxiv. vii, 49, 78; Ixxxv. 135;
47,49, 5(i, 06; Ixxxv. 107,151, 221;
Ixxxviii. 257, 273, :ior,-6, sio.
Rcddi»h (Rodditch), Ixxxiv. 28 ; Ixxxviii.
Ixxxviii. 8, 226, 246, 248, 286, 292, 305,
308, 314, 342.
Rnahbrook, Ixxxviii. 282.
233.
Reddivalls (Redivalls), Ixxxiv. 2, 77.
Ituahton Orange, Ixxxiv. 40; IXXXT. 164.
— Spencer, Ixxxiv. 108.
Red-Leigh, Izrxv. 121.
Rmiliworlh, John, lixxiv. viii ; Ixxxviii.
KYcdlcy, Ixxxviii. 322.
Ki-cdlow, Ixxxviii. 810.
Rydalo, Ixxxiv. 8.
RPO, l»lo of, Ixxxiv. 96.
Kyton, Ixxxiv. 17.
Ueveno, Ixixiv. 52.
IfcviiiKton, Ixxxiv. 78.
Salford, Ixxxiv. 67, 68, 96; Ixxxv. 183.
Ribblcton, Ixxxv. 106, 198.
138, 182, 213 ; Ixxxviii. 231, 294, 338.
Ribohestcr, Ixxxiv. 19 ; Ixxxviii. 298.
Richmond, Ixxxv. 206.
Salslniry (Salehiiry, Snlo»!)tiry), Ixxxiv.
28, 83, 84; Ixxxv. 218; Ixxxviii. 225,
lii.1,,1 (Hid.ilc), Ixxxv. 169,220.
297-8, 305, 831.
Bidding, Ixxxv. 191 ; Ixxxviii. 241.
Riddlnsden (Ridlesden), Ixxxv. 128-
Samlenbury (Sam»bnry, gamhlosbiiryl,
Ixxxiv. 91; Ixxxv. 106, 212; Ixxxviii.
Ixxxviii. 308, 312.
22G, 277, 27H, 298, :t()5, :t27, 328, 329.
Ridor, Ixxxv. 191.
Saiidford, Ixxxiv. 17.
Ridge, co Derby, Ixxxiv. 16; Ixxxviii. 242.
Snndham, Ixx iv. 36.
Ridley, Ixxxiv. 102.
HiiiRloy, Ixxxv. 211.
Sankoy, Ixxxviii. 230.
Saughton, Ixxxiv. 21.
Ifipponden, Ixxxiv. 74.
Saureby, lixxv. 163.
RiKl.ton, Ixxxv. 127; Ixxxviii. 341.
Scales, Ixxxiv. 64; Ixxxviii. 298.
Risliton of Ilio SpuHli, Ixxxv. 125.
Scalynl..-, Ixxxviii. 247.
Rinley, Ixxxviii. 216, 320.
Scaresbrick, Ixxxiv. 7, 39,52; Ixxxv. 134.
ltivinf;t.oll, Ixxxv. 1K5.
Scholclicld, Ixxxviii. 256.
Rixton, Ixxxiv. 39, 52, fi6, 101, 103 •
— Hall, Ixxiviii. 266.
Ixxxv. 174, 194 ; Ixxxviii. 336, 340.
Soofleld, Ixxxviii. 240.
Roby, Ixxxv. 218 ; Ixxxriii. 290.
Scolee, Ixxxv. 189.
INDEX TO DUQDALE'S VISITATION or LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 15
Seaseale, Ixixiv. 22.
Seawell, Ixxxviii. 6.
Smithells (Smelhills), Ixxxv. 185, 205;
Ixxxviii. 271, 296.
Sedjjwick, Willmm, Ixxxiiii. 11.
Hmitlifold, Ixxxv. 211.
Scfton(Sephton), Ixxxiv. 1,41,42; lixxv.
Snidle, Ixxxv. 111.
llfi, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 220 ;
Snidale, Ixxxviii. 842.
Ixxxviii. 230, -'(it, 277, 292, 300, 327,
Sodington, Ixxxiv. 5.
837.
Somerford, Ixxxv. 107, 198.
Sellat, Ixxxiv. 46.
Somerstnt, Ixxxviii. 258.
Seton, Ixxxiv. 99.
Somnor, — , Ixxxviii. 18, 15, 17, 20, 36.
Shakerley, Ixxxv. 122; Ixxxviii. 16, 17,
Sondley, Ixxxv. 114.
231, 276.
Soiivlield, Ixxxv. 144.
Sharpies, Ixxxviii. 269.
Sotlieridgo, Ixxxv. 201.
Slmvington, Ixxxv. 155.
SotheworUi, Ixxxiv. 87.
Shaw (Shawe), Ixxxiv. 102 ; Ixxxv. 145,
Southworth, Ixxxviii. 277.
151, 175 ; Ixxxviii. 215, 284, 340.
Spaldington, Ixxxviii. 333.
Shun ell, Ixxxviii. 261.
Sparth, Ixxxv. 106, 128, 142.
Shaw Hall, Ixxxviii. 259.
Spooke (Spoke, Speake, Speak), Ixxxiv.
— Place, Ixxxviii. 261.
37, 43, 52, 86 , Ixxxv. 110, 207, 218,
Sheffield, Ixxxiv. 21 ; Ixxxviii. 298.
220; Ixxxviii. 331.
Sheldon, Ixxxiv. 2.
Spelman, Sir Henry, Ixxxviii. 7, 8, 9.
Archbishop, Ixxiviii. 16, 22.
Ralph, Ixxxviii. 34, 35, 86.
Sprotborough, Ixxxviii. 327.
Sprowslon, Ixxxv. 188.
Shenston, Ixxxiv. 66.
S|.,».ncley, Ixxxv. 114.
Hlienville, Ixxxviii. 246.
Sheploy, Ixxxiv. 16, 17 ; Ixxxv. 162, 186.
Sf-iHoril Ixxxviii 21)'
Sherbourno Hall, Ixxxv. 128.
Staiuburgh Hall,' Ixxxv. 214.
Sherborne Mouse, Ixxxviii. 810.
Stakes, Ixxxiv. 19; Ixxxv. 157; Ixxxviii.
Sheriff Hales, Ixxxviii. 233.
237.
Shevington, Ixixviii. 33C, 348.
Shingle Mall, Ixxxiv. 25.
Stalmin Orange (Stalmyn Orange), Ixxxiv.
Shiphrokp, Ixxxiv. 20.
Stam'uToi Ixxxviii. 302.
Showlay (Showley, Sholay), Ixxxv. 215;
Stauage Poole, Ixxxv. 153.
Ixxxviii. 278, 325, 326, 328.
Shustoko Church, Ixxxviii. 37.
Parish of, Ixxxviii. 7.
Standish, Ixxxiv. 6, 15, 22, 23, 31, 74;
Ixxxv. llfi, 135, 17(5, 1!) 1, 200, 206, 207 ;
Ixxxviii. 214, 2U1, 21)2, 294, 301, 302,
Rectory of, Ixxxviii. 6.
308, 329.
Shuttleworth, Ixxxviii. 312.
Sliuierovd, Ixxxviii. 308.
— Richard, Ixxxviii. 4.
Stanko in Furnesso, Ixxxv. 160.
Sicld.nght, Ixxxv. 157.
Stanlow, Ixxxiv. 68.
Simonstone, Ixxxviii. 250.
Singleton, Ixxxviii. 227.
Stanney, Ixxxv. 122, 220.
Stansaker, Ixxxiv. 63.
Orange, Ixxxv. 183.
Hall, Ixxxviii. 323.
Staple Inn, London, Ixxxiv. 26.
St. Asaph, Ixxxviii. 291.
Sisargh, Ixxxviii. 235.
Staveloy, Ixxxiv. 3.
Skale, Ixxxiv. 65.
Skesmore, Ixxxv. 170.
Staynor Hall, Ixxxviii. 327.
Stayning (Steyuing), Ixxxv. Ill j Ixxxviii.
Skilmersdale, Ixxxviii. 300.
Skipton, Ixxxviii. 296.
Staynton, Ixxxviii. 231.
Skirton, Ixxxviii. 234.
Slaidburiio, Ixxxv. 164.
Si, Nicholas., ThoiiniH/lxxxviii. 3.
HmalMmuKh, Ixxxiv. 74.
Smnllcv, Ixixiv. 75.
Stoekcld, Ixxxviii. 306, 827.
Stockholm, Ixxxviii. 273.
Smethuret, Ixxxv. 196.
Stockport, Ixxxiv. 2 ; IXXXT. 123, 101, 162.
Stone, IxxxiT. ix.
Thornton Hall, Ixxxiv. 48.
Andrew, Ixxxviii. 26.
Thorpe, Ixxxv. 208.
Mary, Ixxxviii. 26.
Thorpensty, Ixxxv. 160.
Stonehedge (Stone Edge), Ixxxviii. 308.
Thorpe, Salvin, Ixxxviii. 253.
314.
Thurcroft, Ixxxiv. 19; IXXXT. 157.
Stoneslacke, Ixxxviii. 228.
Thurland Castle, IXXXT. 119, 120.
Stonyhurst (Stonihurst, Stonnihurst,
Stannihurst, Stanihurst),lxxxiv. 42, 76 ;
Thurnham, Ixxxiv. 94 ; IXXXT. 155, 206.
Thurslington, Ixxxiv. 11.
Ixxxv. 135, 207 ; Ixxxviii. 231, 263, 264,
Thwalte, Ixxxviii. 267.
265, 266, 267, 278, 297, 305, 308, 313,
Thyrland, Ixxxiv. 42.
314, 327.
Tickhill, Ixxxv. 116.
Stowell, Ixxxiv. 43.
Tildesley, Ixxxiv. 49; Ixxxv. 212.
Strangeways, Ixxxiv. 50 ; Ixxxv. 131.
Elizabetha, Ixxxviii. 8.
Stratford-upon-Avon, Ixxxiv. 11.
Titterington, Ixxxviii. 233.
Stretton, Ixxxiv. 37 ; Ixxxviii. 243, 295,
Tockholes, Ixxxiv. 22.
319.
Todhall, Ixxxiv. 44.
Strickland, Little, Ixxxv. 198.
Todhull, Ixxxiv. 84.
Stubbing, Ixxxviii. 228.
Stubley, Ixxxiv. 24 ; IXXXT. 125, 151, 152,
Todmerden (Todmorden), Ixxxiv. 54;
IXXXT. 125 ; IxxxTiii. 240, 295.
221, 222.
Todmorden Hall, Ixxxviii. 256.
Styeford, IxxxiT. 87.
Toft (Tofte), IxxxiT. 50; IXXXT. 174;
Sudeley Castle, Ixxxviii. 283.
Ixxxviii. 317, 340.
Sunderland, Ixxxviii. 226.
Tonge, Ixxxiv. 72, 93; Ixxxv. 145, 177;
Sutton, Ixxxiv. 42 ; Ixxxv. 132, 147, 177,
Ixxxviii. 300, 335.
189, 206, 214 ; Ixxxviii. 229.
Castle, Ixxxviii. 282.
Swathe, Ixxxv. 162.
Hall, Ixxxviii. 303.
Swindell, William, Ixxxviii. 24.
Tong Moor, Ixxxviii. 303.
Swinley, Ixxxv. 163.
Torresholme, Ixxxiv. 58.
Swinton (Swynton), Ixxxiv. 61 ; IXXXT.
112.
Tottington, Ixxxv. 222.
Tottlebank, Ixxxviii. 241.
Swynhed, IXXXT. 175.
Tower, The, Ixxxv. 205.
Towerton Ixxxviii. 269.
Elizabeth, Ixxxviii. 6.
Towneley! Christopher, IXXXIT. viii ;
Mary, Ixxxviii. 6.
William, Ixxxviii. 6.
Ixxxviii. 14.
— B., Ixxxviii. 2.
Symondstone, Ixxxviii. 296.
Townley (Towneley), Ixxxiv. 10, 50 ;
Ixxxviii. 264, 297, 304, 305, 306, 307,
Tabley, Ixxxiv. viii, x, 34, 95 ; Ixxxv. 166,
308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 322.
179, 194 ; Ixxxviii. 29, 31.
Toxteth, Ixxxviii. 243.
Talbot, Anna, Ixxxviii. 9.
Trafford, Ixxxiv. 11, 100; Ixxxviii. 315.
Tansley, Ixxxv. 217.
Treoweu, Ixxxiv. 7.
Tanworth, Ixxxviii. 7.
Trelomer, Ixxxviii. 289.
Tapton, Ixxxv. 217.
Trentham Church, IxxxTiii. 317.
Tarbock, Ixxxv. 220.
Turneleigh, IxxxiT. 41.
Tarlton, Ixxxv. 219.
Turton, IxxxiT. 5, 54, 77; IXXXT. 165,
Tawnton, Ixxxiv. 74.
222; Ixxxviii. 335.
Taylor, Jeremy, Ixxxviii. 10, 21, 35.
Twemlowes, Ixxxviii. 238.
Tearne, Ixxxv. 121.
Twisleton, Ixxxviii. 266.
Teversall, Ixxxv. 135
Twyvel, Ixxxiv. 8.
Thelwall, Ixxxv. 194.
Tyersall, Ixxxviii. 326.
Thiselton, IxxxiT. 36.
Thorneton, IXXXT. 204.
Uftord, Ixxxviii. 278.
Thornham, Ixxxiv. 77.
TTnsworth, IxxxiT. 74.
Thornthwaite, Ixxxiv. 3.
Upton, Ixxxv. 146.
INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5. 17
Urmston (Urmeston), Ixxxiv. 26, 57 ;
Werden (Werdon), Ixxxiv. 23; IXXXT.
Ixxxviii. 273.
107, 110, 221 j Ixxxviii. 237.
Utkinton, Ixxxviii. 317.
Werneth, Ixxxiv. 76, 90.
Uvedale, Thomas, Ixxxviii. 3.
Werewell, hxxviii. 265.
Werrall, Ixxxiv. 93.
Vale Eoyall, Ixxxviii. 30.
Wesham, Ixxxv. 111.
Yemen, — , Ixxxviii. 16, 17.
VN'estby (We=tbye), Ixxxiv. (5, 04, 86, 87,
101 ; Ixxxv. 113, 215, 220; Ixxxviii.
Wudley, Ixxxv. 110.
2T4, 3U2, 331.
Walker, JMrE.hvaril, Ixxxviii. 33.
West Derby, Ixxxiv. 28 ; Ixxxv. 197.
Walley, Alderman, Ixxxviii. 30.
Westflekl, ixxxiv. 64.
Walmislev, — Ixxxiv. x.
Westliall, Ixxxv. H9.
Walsham, North, Ixxxiv. 67.
West Houglitoii (Westhaughton), IxxxiT.
Walsliaw, Ixxxviii. 312.
25; Ixxxv. 145, 180, 183.
Walton, Ixxxiv. 5'J, 82; Ixxxv. 105, 108,
Westleigh (Westley), Ixxxiv. 56, 71, 91,
139, 182, 188, l£-7, 201, 203, 206, 208;
93.
Ixxxviii. 225, 2S4, 305, 323, 325, 329.
Westminster, Ixxxv. 140, 220.
Walton-en-le-Dale, Ixxxv. 163.
Weston, Ixxxiv. 28, 48 ; Ixxxv. 117.
juxta Leverpoole, Ixxxiv. 80.
Westwick, Ixxxviii. 296.
on-tlu-Hill, Ixxxv. 110.
Wlialley (Whalev), Ixxxiv. 10, IS, 43, 47,
super-Montem, Ixxxv. 140.
89 ; Ixxxv. 157 ; Ixxxviii. 1, 3, 267, 271,
Warrlgn-ene in Ribcliester, Ixxxiv. 89.
304.
226, 236.
Wharles, Ixxxv. 155.
WarMslev, Ixxxv. 151.
Wheatcroft, Ixxxviii. 316.
WarforH, Ixxxv. 161.
Whinney Clough, Ixxxv. 137.
Warke, Ixxxv. 214.
\Varminster, Ixxxv. 177.
Wl.inncyheys (Whinney Haigh), Ixxxviii.
257, 321.
Warrington (Warington, Werington),
lixiiv. 30, 57, 65, 67, 74 j Ixxxv. 118,
Whiston, Ixxxiv. 43 ; Ixxxv. 130, 177, 215,
223
121, 122, 132 ; Ixxxviii. 229. 230, 323.
Warr, Thomas, Lord de la, Ixxxiv. vi.
Whitaker, Dr., Ixxxviii. 16, 21, 25, 26.
Whil borne, Ixxxiv. 34.
Wartery, Ixxxv. 197.
Whitcliurch, Ixxxvi'i. 233.
Wanh, Ixxxv. 185.
Whitelial-h, Ixxxiv. 40; Ixxxv. 183.
Warton, Ixxxv. 170, 198.
Wlrtehull, Ixxxviii. 21.
Eev. T., Ixxxviii. 35.
Whitehouae, Ixxxv. 207.
School, Ixxxviii. 8.
Wliiteleigh (Whitlev), Ixxxiv. 15, 24.
Warwick, Ixxxviii. 11.
Whitfield, Ixxxviii. 271.
UVhin«ton, Ixxxiv. 3.
Whitnash, Ixxxv. 140.
Wasperton, Ixxxiv. 61.
Whittingham, Ixxxiv. 25; IxxxviU. 227,
Walerside, Ixxxviii. 310.
259, 2'J5, 322, 333.
\Vatling Street, Ixxxiv. 76.
Whittington, Ixxiiv. 46.
Wayham, Ixxxiv. 9.
Whittle, Ixxxviii. 341.
Waynflete, Ixxxviii. 229.
Whittlebury Forest, Ixxxiv. 52.
Wearden. Ixxxviii. 255.
Whittle-in-le-Woorls, Ixxxviii. 247.
Weardley, Ixxxviii. 302, 318.
Widilrington, Sir Thomas, Ixxxviii. 18.
Weasle, Ixxxviii. 320.
Widnea (Widenesse), Ixxxiv. 91; Ixxxv.
Weaver, Ixxxviii. 281.
132.
Wedaere (Weddaker, Weddacre), Ixxxiv.
Wigan, Ixxxiv. 12, 26, 95 ; Ixxxv. 193,
58, 64; Ixxxv. 113, 114; Ixxxviii. 234,
195, 201 ; Ixxxviii. 232, 319.
302.
Wooclhouses, Ixxxv. 193.
Welch Whittle, Ixxxv. 164.
Wight, Isle of, Ixxxiv. 59.
Wem, Ixxxv. 220.
Wilmslow, Ixxxv. 125 ; Ixxxviii. 316, 317.
Wennington, Ixxxir. 35.
Wimsley, Ixxxiv. 96.
18 INDEX TO DUGDALE'S VISITATION OF LANCASHIRE, 1664-5.
Winchester, Ixxxiv. 73.
Woodie, Ixxxiv. 96.
Marquess of, Ixxxviii. 5.
Woodsora, Ixxxiv. 15.
Woolfall Ixxxv 130 • Ixxxviii 337
Windlehouse, Ixxxviii. 314.
Woolfield, Ixxxv. 206.
Windleshaw, Ixxxv. 174.
Woolton, Little, Ixxxv. 130.
Windsor Castle, Ixxxviii. 34.
Wootton Wawer, Ixiiiv. 7.
Winkley (Winckley), Ixxxv. 157, 171;
Worcester, Ixxxv. 154.
Ixxxviii. 334.
Workington, Ixxxiv. 69.
Winmerley, luiviii. 263.
Wormleighton, Ixxxviii. 279.
Winnington, Ixxxv. 210.
Wormley, Ixxxiv. 103.
Winstauley, Ixxxiv. 26 ; Ixxxv. 181 ;
Wornhill, Ixxxv. 125.
Ixixviii. 232.
Worsall, luiviii. 235, 330.
Winterbottom, Ixxxviii. 233.
Worsley, lixxv. 179.
Wintersall, Ixxxviii. 327.
Booths, Ixxxviii. 339.
Winwick, Ixxxiv. 65; Ixxxv. 132; Ixxxviii.
Worsthorn, Ixxxviii. 311.
276, 282.
Worstone, Ixixviii. 267,
Wistastou (Wisaston), Ixxxv. 146, 199.
Worth. Ixxxiv. 100.
Wiston, Ixxxv. 191.
Wiswall (Wiswell), Ixxxiv. 48; Ixxxv. 136.
Worthington, Ixxxiv. 13 ; Ixxxviii 841
343, 344.
166, 219 ; Ixixviii. 309.
Dr John, luiviii. 15.
Witcham, Ixxxiv. 3.
Wotton Waven, Ixxxviii. 327.
Witchford, Ixxxviii. 271.
Wrexham, Ixiiiv. 21.
Witherslack, Ixxxiv. 69.
Wellington, Ixxxiv. 33 ; linviii. 338.
Wrightington (Wrightinton, Writington
Writinton), Ixxxiv. 79, 98 ; Ixxiv. 169
Witliiii>haw, Ixxxiv. 16.
183, 216 ; Ixxxviii. 234, 247, 300.
Witton, Ixxxiv. 22.
Wyndenes (Widnes), Ixxxiv. 42.
Wnlliiirc, Ixxxviii. 291.
Wyersdale, Ixxxv. 137.
Wolfliouse, lixxviii. 263, 265.
Wygan, luxviii. 291.
Wolloon, Ixxiiv. 1.
Wyng, Ixnv. 207.
Wolstenholme, Ixxxiv. 50.
Wynkley, luiviii. 240.
291.
Wysall, IXIXT. 107.
Wood, lixxv. 130, 164, 216 ; 1
— Anthony a, Ixxxviii. 3, 5, 15, 17, 18,
33-6.
Woodcock, Thomas, Ixxxviii. 4.
Woodhouse, lixxviii. 253.
Yeelison, Ixxxviii. 228.
York, lixxiv. 25; Ixxxv. 187; Ixxxviii.
r
CHET. Soc. VOL. LXXXVIII.
Dugdale's Vifitation of the County
Palatine of Lancafter in 1664-5.
Large Paper. 23 Copies printed.
REMAINS
HISTORICAL & LITERARY
CONNECTED WITH THE PALATINE COUNTIES OF
LANCASTER AND CHESTER.
PUBLISHED BY
THE CHETHAM SOCIETY.
VOL. LXXXVIII.
PRINTED FOR THE CHETHAM SOCIETY,
M.DCCC.LXXIII.
'
Dfl
COUNCIL FOR 1872-7:
JAMES CROSSLEY, ESQ., F.S.A., PRES
REV. F. R. RAINES, M.A., F.S.A., Ho
WILLIAM BEAMONT, ESQ.
THE VERY REV. GEORGE HULL BOWERS, D.D., DEA
RICHARD COPLEY CHRISTIE, ESQ., M.A., CHANCEU.OF
REV. THOMAS CORSER, M.A., F.S.A.
W. A. HULTON, ESQ.
THOMAS JONES, ESQ., B.A., F.S.A.
WILLIAM LANGTON, ESQ.
COLONEL EGERTON LEIGH.
REV. JOHN HOWARD MARSDEN, B.D., F.R.G.S., CA
REV. JAMES RAINE, M.A., CANON OF YORK.
ARTHUR H. HF.YWOOD, ESQ., TREASURER.
R. HENRY WOOD, ESQ., F.S.A., HON. SECKF.TAKY.
THE
VISITATION
OF THE
COUNTY PALATINE OF LANCASTER,
MADE IN THE YEAR
1664-5,
BY SIR WILLIAM DUGDALE, KNIGHT,
NORROY, AFTERWARDS GARTER, KING OF ARMS.
EDITED BY
THE REV. F. R. RAINES, M.A., F.S.A.
VICAR OF MILNROW, HON. CANON OF MANCHESTER,
AND RURAL DEAN.
PART III.
4,
PRINTED FOR THE CHETHAM SOCIETY.
M.DCCCLXXIIL
LIFE OF SIR WILLIAM DUGDALE.
LANCASHIRE had the honour to be the birth-
place and home of the immediate ancestors of sir
William Dugdale, who in the introduction to his History
of Warwickshire* has recorded the fact ; but the learned
herald was not descended from one of our great families
of whom it may be said with truth that they lose them-
selves in the ages which are past, but who are still remem-
bered by deeds that will not die.
John Dugdale, of Chatburn near Clitheroe, was fre-
quently a juryman of the court of the abbot and convent
of Whalley held for the exempt jurisdiction of the royal
forests of Bowland, Pendle, Rossendale and Blackburn-
shire,2 and occupied lands belonging to the abbey between
the years 1515 and 1 534. He was probably the father of
John Dugdale jun. of Chatburn who was living in the year
1538, and a relative of James Dugdale who is named in
1 Preface, last page. Fol. 1653.
3 MS. Visit, of the exempt jurisdic. abb. and conv. of B. V. M.
Whalley, A.D. 1500-38, a folio volume in Stonyhurst college library.
b
2 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
a Compotus of Whalley abbey, a payment being made
— " Jacobo Dugdale, usque Lychfield pro R. Towneley,
xvid," who appears to have gone to the ecclesiastical court
on business.3 Mr. Hamper thinks that this man might
have been the grandfather of sir William Dugdale,4 but
he overlooked the important fact that James Dugdale was
a monk of the abbey, and that his name did not occur in
the later Compotus of 1521 but in the earlier one of 1478,
which would not agree with Mr. Hamper's computation
of dates.5
The name often occurs in connection with the abbey,
which possessed lands and considerable messuage pro-
perty in Clitheroe and the surrounding hamlets at the dis-
solution of the house. In the year 1538 a minute survey
of its possessions was made by the crown,6 and amongst the
abbey tenants at will, in that year, are not fewer than six
persons of the name of Dugdale, all being of the peasant
or agricultural class. John Dugdale sen. and John Dug-
dale jun. were small holders, as well as Nicholas and
Henry Dugdale. " Mr. William Dugdale senr and Mr.
William Dugdale junr" 7 were connected with the abbey
in some way not stated, but from their mode of descrip-
tion were probably in a somewhat less humble position ;
3 Whitaker's Whalley, p. 96. 3rd ed. ; and Whalley Coucher Book,
vol. iv. p. 1217.
4 Life, Diary and Correspondence of sir William Dugdale, by William
Hamper esq., p. 5, Note, 4to, 1827.
5 Whitaker's Whalley, p. 96.
6 Coucher Book, p. 1217. 7 Ibid.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 3
whilst Christopher and John Dugdale of Chatburn were
ordinary tenants.
James Dugdale of Clitheroe, the grandfather of sir
William, is styled by Anthony a Wood a " gentleman ;" 8
and the grandson, with pardonable vanity, has described
him as descended " ex antiqua ejusdem cognom. familia."
He is also said to have borne coat armour, but by what
right is not named. It was however so similar to the
heraldic bearing of a family of the name of Uvedale that
Wood, with marvellous puerility, conjectured that Dug-
dale was a corruption of De Uvedale ; and he also states
that sir William Dugdale seemed to be of the same
opinion, although he paid little regard to his own family
and knew nothing of his ancestors,9 which may be fairly
assumed to be a strong proof of their obscurity. He was
however wishful to be thought a member of an ancient
house, of which, unfortunately, there are no records.
There were at the commencement of the sixteenth
century two contemporaneous families within the ancient
parish of Whalley bearing the respective surnames of
Uvedale10 and Dugdale, and as they are said to have
8 MS. 8560, Ashmolean library ; Hamper's Life, p. 5. Note. See his
epitaph, Appendix, p. 515.
9 Wood's MS. 8560.
10 The Uvedales long continued at Chatburn. Thomas Uvedale was
constable of Chatburn in 1643 and paid 3/. <)S. gd., being a month's pay
charged on that township, assessed by the deputy lieutenant throughout
the hundred of Blackburn, to be paid to sir Thomas Fairfax, or to his
treasurer, Thomas St. Nicholas, for his service in Cheshire. (Lane. MSS.)
The name seems to be now unknown.
4 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
borne the same arms, with a difference, although they
did not appear at any of the Lancashire Heraldic Vi-
sitations, the probability seems to be that, if they were
entitled to such a distinction, the Dugdales had acquired
the arms of their neighbours by marriage, and adopted
them as their own. Still the proof is wanting, and it
must have been patent to a shrewd man like Wood that
the fact laid on the surface. The Dugdales, Uvedales,
and another Clitheroe family named Bleasdale, were all
apparently of the class of husbandmen, and hardly reached
the rank of yeomen.
James, the grandfather" of sir William, with whom the
pedigree commences," lived at Clitheroe, and married
— daughter of Thomas Woodcock of that place, and
had issue an only son John, who was born in the year
1552, and doubtless educated at the royal grammar
school of Clitheroe, then recently founded by queen
Mary, as it is recorded that he was " adorned with such
erudition as his native place could afford."" His con-
nection with the university of Oxford is not very accu-
11 Ant. a Wood, Fasti Oxon., ed. Bliss, pt. ii. col. 13.
12 Wood's Life of Dugdale, MS. 8560, Ashmolean library; Hamper's
Life, p. 6, Note. On the 2nd May 1622 Mr. William Dugdale was one
of the governors of Clitheroe school and unable to write (being a marks-
man). He was probably not " one of the three antient governors " who
had been condemned by sir Raphe Assheton, Richard Shuttleworth and
John Greenacres esquires ; gentlemen who are described by their elders
to bishop Bridgeman, the visitor of the school, as " young men of little
experience, but of great forwardness and wealth." (Lane. MSS., vol.
xxxi. p. 478-79.) Mr. John Dugdale was master of Garstang school in
1629, and probably earlier. (Ibid.)
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 5
rately stated by his son, and differs from the account
given by Anthony a Wood. Sir William has recorded
that his father had been a private tutor in lord Giles
Paulet's family, had received his chief education in St.
John's college, Oxford, where he studied civil law, and
that he took the degree of master of arts,'3 and remained
at Oxford as tutor to William Paulet, a grandson of the
marquess of Winchester.
Anthony a Wood with his usual minuteness and scru-
pulous exactness has recorded — perhaps not without a
touch of vindictiveness, for he had at the moment a
grudge against sir William — that John Dugdale, " a very
sober and prudent person," accompanied several of his
pupils to Oxford immediately after Christmas is82,14 and
that on the gth of February 1582-83 his young scholar
Paulet was matriculated of St. John's college. He had
now, according to Wood, no official connection with any
of his former pupils, but having a kinsman, William Dug-
dale, clerk or servant to sir William Cordell, master of
the rolls, and also at that time bursar and steward of St.
John's, the young schoolmaster, for such he had probably
been whilst in the country, was induced himself, being
then in his thirtieth year, to matriculate of St. John's col-
lege. Wood says that here he studied civil law, wore the
gown of a civilian, but left the university, after fourteen
years' residence, without any degree either in law or arts.
" So stated on his monument in Shustoke church (Hamper's Life,
Appendix, p. 515).
14 Dugdale's Life, MS. 8560, lately in the Ashm. now in the Bodl.
6 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
He had however succeeded his kinsman, of whom nothing
more is known, both as bursar and steward of the college.
On leaving Oxford he " sold what he had in Lanca-
shire " 's and closed his connection with the county. He
purchased a lease, of Mr. Paulet, of' the impropriate
rectory of Shustoke in Warwickshire and settled there.
About the year 1596 he married Elizabeth, daughter of
Arthur Swynfyn esq. of Dunchurch, by whom he had
issue a daughter Mary, and one son William, the future
historian of his native county. John Dugdale died on
the 24th July 1624, aged 72, having been described by
his son, two years before, as being "aged, very infirm
and suffering from a dead palsy in his limbs." His wife
died before him.
William Dugdale, born at Shustoke on the 1 2th Septem-
ber 1605, was educated at the grammar school of Co-
ventry, which he left when about fifteen years of age, and
afterwards studied civil law and history under his father's
immediate direction. The law of primogeniture and
entail and of succession to territorial wealth and dignities,
or the great old hereditary laws of England which had
kept society together, and made the country what it is,
had been the first subjects mastered by the stripling, and
they seem to have given a bias to his views and also to
his future studies and investigations. He married on the
1 7th March 1622-23, when only in his eighteenth year, at
the special request of his father, Margery, second daugh-
ter of John Huntbach of Seawell in the county of Staf-
15 Life, p. 7 : " selling his lands in Lancashire" (Kippis' Biog. Diet.,
vol. v. p. 479).
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 7
ford, gent., by whom he had issue six sons and twelve
daughters who do not appear to have been any hindrance
to the prosecuting of his favourite pursuits, and none of
whom married individuals of family or note except one
daughter, who became the wife of Elias Ashmole, the
founder of the museum at Oxford. The year after his
father's death he purchased the hall and small manor of
Blythe in the parish of Shustoke, which from this time
he made his ordinary place of abode. Here he improved
the house, cultivated the estate, lived as a country gen-
tleman, and ended his days.
His natural inclination leading him to the study of
antiquities, shortly after his settling at Blythe hall, he
became acquainted with his learned neighbour, Mr. Wil-
liam Burton the historian of Leicestershire, who encour-
aged his studies and promoted his views. At this early
period of his life he also formed an intimate acquaintance
with sir Symon Archer of Tanworth in Warwickshire,
who had made some topographical collections for a his-
tory of the county, which about the year 1630 he placed
in Mr. Dugdale's hands. He also introduced his young
and zealous fellow antiquary to the principal county
families, who urged him to proceed with the history; and
from this time he continued to accumulate materials for
that purpose. Sir Symon Archer also took an oppor-
tunity of introducing him to the notice of sir Henry
Spelman, then a very old man but well disposed to foster
the talents and studies of his new acquaintance. He
suggested that Dugdale was a very fit person, as Cam-
8 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
den had been, to serve the king in the office of arms, and
appears to have voluntarily recommended him to the
notice of lord Arundel, at that time the earl marshal.
The recommendation of such a man as Spelman could
not fail of being attended with success. But this was
not Dugdale's only obligation to the great scholar. He
was the first to mention to the young antiquary a name
which he had not before heard, and which was destined
to be, in after years, closely associated with his own.
This was Roger Dodsworth.
Dodsworth'6 was at that time an indefatigable student
16 Roger Dodsworth was the son of Matthew Dodsworth esq., chan-
cellor of York, and was born on the 24th July 1585. He was partly
educated at Warton school in North Lancashire, (Gastrell's Notitia, vol. ii.
pt. iii. p. 561), and married Holcroft, daughter of Robert Hesketh of
Rufford esq., and widow of Laurence Rosthorne of New hall esq. He
died in August 1654, probably at Hutton Grange, and was buried at
Rufford. (Wood's Fasti Oxon., Bliss, pt. ii. col. 24 ; Dugdale's Lane.
Visit, p. 135.) Dr. Henry Fairfax (nephew of lord Fairfax) dean of Nor-
wich, bequeathed in 1673 one hundred and twenty-two volumes of Dods-
worth's own writing, and other manuscripts and paper books, amounting
in the whole to one hundred and sixty-two volumes, to the Bodleian
library, Oxford, where they are now kept. All the information contained
in them relating to the county palatine of Lancaster has been transcribed
by the Rev. G. J. Piccope, M.A., and the several volumes are now de-
posited in the Chetham library with Mr. Piccope's other MS. collections.
The following are extracted from the parish register of Penwortham :
Marriage at Penwortham.
1611. Sept. 1 6. Rogerus Dodsworth gener. et Hucrofte Rosthorne.
Baptisms.
1612. Julii 28. Elinora fil. Radi (sic) Dodsworth gener. Hutton
Grange. Spons. Aubrey Blackledge gen. Margerie ffleetwoode
& Elizabetha Tildesley generosaa.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 9
of Yorkshire antiquities, especially in connection with the
foundation of monasteries in the north of England, and
sir Henry Spelman urged Dugdale to unite with Dods-
worth in arranging and completing his laborious and ex-
tensive collections. The two antiquaries were in the
vigour of life, Dodsworth being five and forty and Dug-
dale twenty years younger, and both of them hard stu-
dents. They concurred in sir Henry Spelman's views,
and decided to prosecute together the labour of obtaining
such materials as were still necessary for enlarging and
completing the undertaking which both had, indepen-
dently, projected.
Dugdale became acquainted about this time with other
intelligent antiquaries, by whom he was much encouraged.
It was probably through Dodsworth that he was brought
under the notice of Mr. Richard Gascoyne, a wealthy
Yorkshire gentleman, especially well skilled in genealogy,
1613. Aug. 26. Hulcroft fil. Racti Dodsworthe de Hutton Grange.
Spons. Matthew Dodsworth gener. Anna Talbot & Alicia Ros-
thorne generos.
1615. Janii. 2. Marie fil. Rogeri Dodsworthe de Hutton Grange.
Spons. Edw. Osbaldeston & Jane Hesketh gen.
1616. Feb. 28. Margaretta fil. Radi Dodsworth de Hutton grange.
Spons. Rogerus Longton gen. Eliz. Ashton & Marg. Philipson
gener.
1619. Apr. 25. Cassandra fil. Rogi Dodsworth de Hutton grange.
Burials.
1617. Sep. 15. Buryed filia Radi Dodsworth de Hutton
grange gener.
1631. 18 Oct. Thomas Knowles fam. Mri Rogeri Dodsworth de
Hutton Grange.
c
io Life of Sir William Dugdale.
who introduced him to sir Christopher afterwards lord
Hatton of Kirkby in Northamptonshire. This nobleman
was an accomplished scholar, an intelligent antiquary and
a loyal son of the Church of England, and will always be
remembered as the personal friend of bishop Jeremy
Taylor and the Mecsenas of literary men. He became a
substantial patron of the young student, both as a suffer-
ing loyalist and also that his study of antiquities might
be continued. There does not however appear to be
sufficient evidence for bishop Heber's statement that it
was at Hatton's suggestion and with his assistance that
Dugdale first undertook his Monasticon^ The national
records in all the great public offices were soon rendered
accessible to him, and at this time Roger Dodsworth was
assisting him in his daily researches.
In September 1638 Dugdale was created by the earl
marshal Blanch Lyon, and in the following year Rouge
Croix Pursuivant, which gave him rooms in the College
of arms and, with some other advantages, 2O/. a year
out of the king's exchequer.
From this time he chiefly lived in London, in order
that he might devote all his time and labour to the ex-
amination and abstracting of the public records.
The turbulent state of the country alarmed all thought-
ful men, who saw that a civil war was impending with its
17 Life of Bishop Jeremy Taylor, vol. i. p. xxv., Eden's ed. 1859. See
also Wood's At/ten., vol. ii., Fasti, p. 92, and Dugdale's dedication pre-
fixed to the Antiquities of Warwickshire.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 1 1
inevitable horrors, and in the summer of 1641 Dugdale,
encouraged by sir Christopher Hatton, and with the
assistance of Mr. William Sedgwick a skilful arms painter,
carefully copied all the monumental epitaphs and armorial
bearings, both in stone and glass, in St. Paul's cathedral
and Westminster abbey, and afterwards did the same in
many of the principal cathedrals and churches in Eng-
land, and thus providentially preserved them for future
and better times.'8
In 1642 the king was in the north and, being con-
strained to continue there, was surrounded by many loyal
noblemen and gentlemen. On the ist of June Dugdale,
as a pursuivant, was summoned away from his laborious
historical and antiquarian investigations and required to
repair to the king at York. He remained in his majesty's
service during the various vicissitudes of the miserable
war, and was sent with messages, from time to time, to
the rebel chiefs at Banbury, Warwick and elsewhere.
His strong royalist principles led him to discharge his
official duties with great energy and zeal, and the king
probably had not a more loyal and devoted subject in his
service than the young herald. Nor did he, owing to the
impecuniosity of his royal master, receive the wages which
he had so well earned. It appears that he had stipulated
to receive thirteen shillings and fourpence per day, and
eightpence per mile for travelling expenses for himself
and man servant, but payment was not made.'9 On
18 Life, p. 14, Hamper. 19 Ibid. p. 19, Note.
1 2 Life of Sir JVilliam Dugdale.
taking up his abode with the king at Oxford, as some
acknowledgment of his useful and ill-requited services,
he was admitted master of arts on the ist of November
1642,*° a literary distinction which he knew well how to
value, and, in his case, properly conferred. He had left
his wife and children, his home and friends, a fair com-
petency and a good position, behind him, for scenes with
which he was unfamiliar, and for duties which he had not
before discharged. He was soon recognized as a par-
tisan of the king, and his estate in Warwickshire was
sequestered by the parliament. He still remained at
Oxford and continued to note in his brief diary, which
has been published,11 the chief events which occurred,
not only in the city until its surrender to the parliament,
but in various parts of the kingdom during the continu-
ance of the war.
In these troubled years, his habits of study remained
unchanged, and the moral lustre of his character was
undimmed. Historical investigations were made, and
ancient records, perhaps too hastily, examined in the
Bodleian and in the various college libraries, not only
in connection with Dodsworth's great undertaking, but
also with his own Baronage, the first genealogical his-
tory of our nobility," and other works, his devotion to
the royal cause continuing unabated. These abundant
~° Life, p. 20, Hamper.
21 From the year 1642 to 1686, by W. Hamper esq., F.S.A., 410,
1827.
22 Granger's Biog. Hist., vol. iii. p. 115.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 13
stores of information were always ready for illustration
and proof. At this time, no doubt, he paid attention to
the old German and Saxon languages, and seems to have
acquired some knowledge of the Teutonic, Danish and
Icelandic. With the aid of such scholars as he met at
Oxford, and especially of Somner the first Saxon linguist
of his day, this might have been expected.*3 The Celtic
and Norman languages and their liegers, chronicles and
records were familiar to him. The archaeology of names
and places, and his analytical investigations of their origin
generally indicate sound knowledge of the subject.
On the 1 6th April 1644 he was created Chester
herald.14
In June 1646 the garrison of Oxford surrendered, and
Dugdale repairing to London, made his composition
at Goldsmith's hall. The poor scholar was fined for his
royalty i86/. — to him a large sum, and not easily raised,
so that his privations at this time were great if not ex-
treme. Here he again met with his friend Dodsworth,
whose principles were similar to his own, although the
near relative of John Rushworth and of Thomas lord
Fairfax, both resolute parliamentarians. Whilst he in-
formed Dodsworth how much he had added, by drudgery
at his task and almost unmatched perseverance, to his
own materials for the projected Monasticon, he learnt
23 Somner even expresses his own great obligations to Dugdale at the
end of his Dictionarium Saxonico-Latiiw-Anglicum, fol. Oxon. 1659.
Hamper's Life, p. 37, Note.
™ Life, p. 21.
14 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
from the Yorkshire antiquary that numerous large chests
of original evidences relating to the Yorkshire monas-
teries, which had been deposited in St. Mary's tower at
York, had been carefully transcribed by himself and
Christopher Towneley, the learned attorney, of Moor-
hiles near Colne in Lancashire, before that fortification
had been blown up and its literary treasures destroyed.*5
In May 1648 Dugdale accompanied lady Hatton, the
wife of his patron, to France, to join her husband who
had found it necessary to leave England and was living
in exile. He eagerly availed himself of the opportunity,
which extended over several months, of consulting the
historical MS. collections, placed at his service, of the
learned Andrew du Chesne, relating to the French and
Norman monasteries and the alien priories in England,
which had been cells or filial dependencies of the great
continental abbeys.16 Of the information thus obtained
Dugdale made a copious use in his great work.
As a proof of Dodsworth's almost incredible industry,
certainly not inferior to his colleague's, he has himself
stated in a letter, dated 24th May 1650, that he was
engaged in making transcripts in the tower " from eight
in the morning until nine in the evening, and never stir'd
off the place to eat one bitt of bread."17 We do not feel
at all surprised to read, in the next sentence, " I am so
weary that I can do nothing. I am tyred and sleepy,
26 Diary of Dugdale, p. 93, Note. 26 Life, p. 23.
27 Corresp., pp. 236-37.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 15
and can write no more." Anthony a Wood, at the time
he was " standing silent," in the sharp remembrance of
some of Mr. Sheldon s lost MSS?* hereafter mentioned,
has recorded that a " very different course" was adopted
by Dugdale, probably referring to his copious and gene-
rous libations*9 and not to his literary labours, for in 1658
Dr. John Worthington, the famous Manchester scholar
and master of Jesus college, Cambridge, speaks of Dug-
dale's " indefatigable and unexpressible industry," 5° and
Wood himself afterwards mentions this as one of the
historian's characteristics.
We are unable to apportion their respective parts of
the Monasticon to each writer, but there appears to be a
general opinion that Dodsworth was the chief collector of
the materials,31 although the merit of the undertaking, a
considerable amount of information, the arrangement of
the matter and the correction of the press, are justly due
to Dugdale, whom we now know endured an incalculable
amount of labour with untiring perseverance for many
years, along with his friend, in order that all available
sources of information might be explored and exhausted.
At last the tedious, difficult and expensive work was con-
28 Corresp., pp. 236-37. 29 Ibid. p. 332. 30 Ibid. p. 332.
31 There is sufficient proof that Dugdale had great literary and anti-
quarian aid from friends in all his works, and without it his labours often
would have been unsuccessful, and his information incomplete. In his
Warwickshire, his assistants were Burton and Archer; in his Monasti-
con, Dodsworth, Somner and Hopkinson ; in his Baronage, Anthony
a Wood ; in his History of Saint Paul's, archbishop Sheldon.
1 6 Life of Sir- William Dugdale.
sidefed by Dodsworth to be ready for the press, the re-
sult and the reward of their united studies. Writing to
Mr. Vernon of Shakerley, a fellow-antiquary, on the 2Qth
January 1652-53, Dugdale names that he had been eight
or nine months in London entirely occupied with the
Monasticon, at that time in the press, and says : " Soe
great a task have I had to bring Mr. Dodsworth's con-
fused collections into any order, and to perfect the 'copy'
from the tower and sir Thomas Cotton's library."31 Great
injustice has been done to the memory and labour of
Dugdale by Dr. Whitaker and Mr. Gough, who attribute
the whole merit of the undertaking to Dodsworth. Dr.
Whitaker says, that as Dodsworth unfortunately died in
Lancashire in August 1654, before one-tenth part of the
impression of the Monasticon was worked off, an oppor-
tunity presented itself, which Dugdale had not the forti-
tude to resist, of associating his own name with that of
the real compiler.3' And Mr. Gough has asserted in still
stronger language, without adducing any proof, that the
two first volumes of the Monasticon, though published
under Dodsworth's and Dugdale's names conjointly, were
both collected and written totally by the former.34 It
may be safely affirmed that Whitaker's assertion is halt-
ing and inconclusive, and that Gough's assertion is bold
and baseless.
32 Corresp., p. 266. 33 Hist, of Richmondshire, vol. i. p. 299.
34 Brit. Topograph., vol. ii. p. 395. Chalmers repeats the statement,
Kog. Diet., voce DUGDALE.
Life of Sir William Dttgdale. 17
Dugdale was not frugal of praise nor indisposed to
award to his friend the great merit due to him in this
undertaking. Addressing Mr. Vernon of Shakerley, on
the 2nd August 1651, he observed: "Mr. Dodsworth's
work of Monastery Foundations is ready for the press, if
the times were still as they have been, to vend it, in case
it were printed,"35 although Dugdale found it necessary
afterwards to qualify the opinion which he had too hastily
expressed, as he found it unfit for publication. He
also mentions in no parsimonious terms the great share
Dodsworth had in the work, and the names of the two
antiquaries very properly appeared on the title-page —
" Per Rogerum Dodsworth, Eborac. Gulielmus Dugdale,
Warwic. A.D. 1655." Folio.
There is no evidence that Dugdale assumed, or at-
tempted to assume, more than he was fairly entitled to in
this great undertaking.
Somner, the accomplished Saxon scholar and the histo-
rian of Canterbury, who was equally the personal friend
and coadjutor of the two historians, and who had assisted '
them both in their labours, writing to Dugdale on the
roth November 1654, in a somewhat querulous tone, still
felt bound to state : " I am persuaded, if not the greater,
yet the better part of the collection is yours ; " 3& whilst
Anthony a Wood says, that Dodsworth was a man of
wonderful industry but less judgment, collecting and
transcribing, but never published anything.37 Nothing
35 Dugdale's Corresf., p. 264. 36 Ibid. p. 282.
37 Wood's Fasti. ,
1 8 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
seems to exist to invalidate these statements, and it may
safely be assumed that Dugdale was not the utterly un-
scrupulous and shamelessly selfish man which he has, on
insufficient evidence, been described.
The first volume of this great national work, next in
importance to Domesday Book, was financially a failure.
The booksellers had undervalued the undertaking, and
the terms offered by them were so contemptible, that the
money would barely have paid for the transcripts. In this
dilemma the two historians determined to borrow several
sums of money and themselves to defray the expense of
printing and publishing.'8 Five years elapsed before the
greater part of the copies was disposed of, nor had Dug-
dale money to proceed with the second volume until the
first had been sold, as he took upon himself the entire
expense of paper and printing, and the risk of sale.
Twelve years afterwards the third volume appeared, with
some valuable additions by Anthony a Wood and sir
Thomas Herbert, and Dugdale's name alone appeared
on the title-page. For this volume he received the sum
of 5O/. and twenty copies. As a proof of Dugdale's
honourable dealing with the family of Dodsworth and of
the relative interest which each had in the work, it ap-
38 Dodsworth pawned six Lieger books to sir Thomas Widdrington,
which are supposed to have been deposited as a security for money ad-
vanced towards defraying the expence of printing the Monasticon. (Dug-
dale's Diary, p. 125, Note.) " Mr. Dodsworth and Mr. Dugdale joyned
together and hyred severall sums of money to defray the cost and ex-
pence thereof" — the Monasticon. (Life of Dugdale, p. 24.)
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 19
pears that in the year 1674, twenty years after Dods-
worth's death, the widow of Dodsworth's son shared the
profits of the sale due from the publisher, Mrs. Dods-
worth receiving 35/. IQS. and Dugdale 42/., so that the
share of the profits, probably like the labours of the two
historians, had been nearly the same.'9 Without at all
depreciating the work of Dodsworth, it is clear that his
friend was better able than himself to formulate docu-
ments, to generalise facts, and to analyse historical evi-
dence. He planned and executed with considerable
method not only the Monasticon but other works pos-
sessing a large and comprehensive amount of information
both original and acquired, being a clever practical man
of business without having any of the higher qualities
of genius. It would however require a great effort of
genius and an exuberant fancy to extract poetry from old
charters and legal documents, unless it were such poetry
as the muse of Giles Jacob gent., the great legal anti-
quary, produced.
It may be stated that though subsequent editions of
this noble work have from time to time appeared, yet
that which has superseded them all is the edition in six
folio volumes, enriched by a large accession of original
materials and important corrections of former errors, by
John Caley esq., F.S.A., sir Henry Ellis, secretary to the
Society of Antiquaries and keeper of the manuscripts in
the British museum, and the rev. Bulkeley Bandinel,
39 Hamper's Life of Dugdale, p. 137.
20 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
D.D., keeper of the Bodleian library, Oxford, fol. 1817-
Before the Restoration he had written his History of
Warwickshire, which had employed him nearly thirty
years and had been his first literary undertaking, and it
was published in 1656 in folio. The great celebrity
which he had attained by his first publication not only
in England but on the Continent, had paved the way
for a favourable reception of his next work, — a work
which has always taken the highest place in this class
of historical literature, as we find in it the copious and
diversified historical matter of Nichols and Surtees, but
neither the lucid arrangement of Baker, nor the acute cri-
ticism of Hunter, nor the incomparable style of Whitaker.
Such a history required a tenacious memory, an exact and
comprehensive acquaintance with details, and a power of
balancing probabilities under various circumstances ; and
these qualifications Dugdale possessed. His skill is dis-
played in disposing of his materials and bringing them
together in a clear, consecutive and consistent narrative
form, and his accuracy in adducing all his authorities. The
learned Somner, in a letter to the author, described it, at
40 This new edition of the Monasticon was published in fifty-four parts,
1817-30, at a cost of \$\l. \$s. in imperial folio; large paper, proofs,
2837. IQS. ; and a re-issue in 1846, eight volumes folio, 3i/. IQS. The
new edition contained two hundred and forty-one views of ecclesiastical
edifices, monasteries, abbeys, &c., and the cost of the drawings and en-
graving of the plates alone amounted to six thousand guineas. (Allibone.
See Notes and Queries, 4th series, vol. ix. p. 506, vol. x. p. 18.)
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 21
the time of its publication, as "so copious and well-stored
for the matter, so curious and well-contrived for the forme
— a piece indeed, without all flattery I speak it, to whose
composure an industrious hand and an ingenious head,
have both so well concurred as to render it, in one word,
a master-piece. You have drawn the bridge after you and
left it impossible for any man to follow you."4' And
Jeremy Taylor, whom Dugdale had met at Oxford in
1642, acknowledging the present of a copy from the au-
thor, September 22nd 1656, observed : " I confesse I was
greedy to see and to read ye booke ; and if I had knowne
so much of it as now I doe I should have been more
greedy of it ; for if I have any skill in any thing it is by
very much the best of any thing that ever I saw in that
kind."4* And in our century Dr. Whitaker has observed,
that " there are works which scrupulous accuracy united
with stubborn integrity, has elevated to the rank of legal
evidence. Such is Dugdale's Warwickshire" '45
Although Dugdale witnessed the sun of Royalism set
in the deepest gloom at Whitehall he lived to see and to
rejoice in its rise with almost unparalleled splendour at
the Restoration44 and keep in the ascendancy during the
remainder of his life. On the i8th June 1660 he was
advanced to the honour of Norroy King at Arms, and he
41 Corresp., p. 309. « Hcber's Life (Eden's ed.), vol. i. p. Iviii.
43 Hist, of Craven. Advertisement.
44 " 1660. May 10. I proclaymed the King in Coleshill : there being
present Sr Cl.fement] Fisher, Sr G. Devereux, Sr C. Adderley, Mr Lisle,
and divers other gentlemen," &c. (Diary, p. 105.)
22 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
had done much to justify his elevation to so important a
position. His long official experience in his profession
of arms, his acquaintance with genealogy and heraldic
nomenclature, with antiquarian literature and documentary
evidence, as well as his clear judgment in the determina-
tion of difficult and intricate questions of descent, which
were sure to come under his notice, had already secured
him a distinguished literary name, and no one seemed to
have been trained for the office like himself, and there-
fore any other appointment would have been detrimental
to the College of arms. Nor had his devoted loyalty and
fine patriotic spirit been forgotten by the light-hearted
and ungrateful king whose cause, as well as that of the
kingdom, Dugdale had served so well.
In 1662 he published his History of Embanking and
Draining the Great Level. In 1666 appeared his Origi-
nes Juridiciales, being a history of the law courts with
biographical notices of their great officers. In the same
year he methodized and published at the solicitation of
archbishop Sheldon and the earl of Clarendon two vo-
lumes of sir Henry Spelman's Collection of the Provincial
Councils in England and also his Glossary, and these
are only some of the more important of his publications.
The College of arms had its " deputies " in various
parts of the country, and Mr. King, the late able and
excellent York herald, was of opinion that some commis-
sion was officially granted to them. The powers were
probably not minutely defined, which occasionally led to
the paramount claims of the earl marshal and his supe-
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 23
rior officers not being strictly regarded. This seems to
have been the case with the Holmes' of Chester, whose
hereditary love of genealogy and long connection with
the College of arms led them to be looked upon as the
great heralds of the north, and they appear to have ex-
ercised an authority and to have enjoyed a reputation
hardly inferior to that of the college itself. As early as
the year 1644, when Dugdale was himself a subordinate
herald in the college, he confronted Holme the Chester
arms painter45 and destroyed his work, erected, we may
suppose not without some authority, in one of the
churches of that city. Holme, at the instigation of the
family by whom he had been employed, re-erected the
condemned atchievement in the same church. The civil
wars at that time found other work for Dugdale, and the
Puritans disregarding what they deemed puerile vanities,
Holme, who was a royalist, went on in his heraldic career
unchecked by any authority. But the times changed,
"the noble science" revived, and the heralds it was
found, had lost none of their ancient power, whilst Nor-
roy, now known as a learned historian, was pleasantly
basking in the sunshine of court favour. The visitation
of Lancashire and Cheshire had brought again to his
46 This was Randle Holme the third and best of the antiquaries of
that name, and the author of The Academic of Armourie, fol. 1688, a
book now scarce and little known, but full of curious information con-
nected with heraldry and antiquarian lore. The voluminous MS. collec-
tions of the four Randle Holmes, relating principally to Cheshire and
Lancashire, are preserved in the British museum.
24 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
actual notice the inconvenient proceedings of his old
adversary the Chester arms painter. Norroy received
about the 3Oth May 1665 a letter from his antiquarian
friend Theophilus Howorth of Howorth hall near Roch-
dale esq., who was at that time following his profession
as a physician in Manchester, and who seems to have
been well disposed to favour the herald in the vindica-
tion of his rights as well as in his pursuit of power and
emolument, furnishing him with information to the pre-
judice of Randle Holme,46 whom he described as " not
46 " Dr. Howorth to Mr. Dugdale.
Sr The youth Will" Swindell wholy employes his time in write-
inge, and I have here sent you what he writ yesterday, and shall each
fourteene dayes send you new ones. Sr I desire you let nothinge be
done to the prejudice of the noble person that onely transgressed by mis-
guidance, nor my name bee mentioned in the business ; and thereby you
may doe yourselfe right and I receive no injury by informeing you, that
Holme of Chester hath lately done so much work at a funerall solemnity
as hee received for his part 4O/. and marshalled the business himselfe :
the spurs, gantlet, sword, coat, banners, hearse, and horse in black, led,
and mourners to attend the solemnity and hearse were all there, at a
B'" funerall. I onely give you this notice that if hee have invaded your
right you may doe what you thinke good to prevent future insolent intru-
sion of p'sons not legally qualifyed to marshall such solemnityes. Sr I
wish you a continuall health and long life, that you may go on in per-
fecting those things that are for the honr of our nation and reviveing
those antiquityes which without timely inquiry and search would inevi-
tably perish. I shall as a faithfull and reall frend serve you in any
thinge in the power of
Y1 reall affectionate frend and servant,
Manchester, May the 30^, — 65. T. HOWORTH.
For William Dugdale Esq" Norroy Kinge of Armes,
at the Herald's Office, neere St. Paul's, London." (Corresp., p. 364.)
Life of Sir William Diigdale. 25
legally qualifyed" to marshal funerals especially the im-
posing pageant at the funeral of sir Ralph Assheton of
Middleton bart. to which he referred. And yet Randle
Holme, in a letter addressed to Dugdale on the nth
Theophilus Howorth was the fourth son but eventually heir of Ed-
mund Howorth of Howorth hall near Rochdale gent., and of his wife
Elizabeth, daughter of William Asheton of Clegg hall esq. He was
baptised at Rochdale on the 2nd January 1613-14, educated at the
grammar school, Rochdale, and entered of Magdalen college, Cam-
bridge, but whether he graduated at the usual time is unknown. He
became M.D. and July 1661, and on the 8th July 1669 was incorporated
in the university of Oxford. (Wood's Fasti, p. 850.) He gave to
Brasenose college a large silver tankard, with an inscription and his
arms engraven upon it, yet remaining in the college. He was the faith-
ful Argus of Dugdale in Lancashire, and an intimate personal friend and
correspondent, although this is the only letter printed by Mr. Hamper in
the Correspondence, and he had been unable to discover who the Doctor
was. A large collection of his antiquarian and family papers have been
abstracted in the Lane. MSS., vol. xi. pp. 1-151. Dr. Howorth was a
painstaking antiquary, and one of the most loyal and devoted subjects
of the king during the civil war. At the Restoration his loyalty was
recognized in an elaborate and carefully written testimonial attested by
the autograph signatures of lord Derby, lord Molyneux, and more than
a score of the most opulent and distinguished heads of families in Lanca-
shire and Cheshire ; and the king placed him in the commission of the
peace for the palatinate and specially granted him an augmentation to his
arms in commemoration of his patriotism.
It is worthy of note that he had in his muniment room original deeds
and evidences of his ancestors in unbroken succession from the time of
Henry II. to his own, and all these were examined and abstracted by
Dugdale ; and a pedigree written on vellum of marvellous size with richly
emblazoned arms and vouchers in the margin, deduced and authenti-
cated by the autograph and official seal of Dugdale, still exists and had
been examined by Dr. Whitaker ( Whalley, Add., p. 544, 3rd ed.), but is
unknown in the College of arms. In 1613 and 1664-5 a f£w meagre
e
26 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
December 1661, described himself as "a friend to the
court" of heralds, and as one whose position entitled
him to ask a favour, as he " was endeavouring to ad-
vance the credit of the office.47 The merits of Randle
Holme and his great services were all overlooked by
Dugdale. There can be but one opinion that he was a
skilled herald, a good genealogist, and possessed of a
vast treasure house of archaeological knowledge. He and
several of his ancestors had been engaged almost a cen-
tury in the same pursuits which had rendered Dugdale
so distinguished, and without the Wodenotes, Cookes and
Holmes, heraldry and genealogy would hardly have been
in Cheshire, and in the presence of that fact all questions
descents only were recorded at the Visitations. The most remarkable
feature in the history of Dr. Howorth is his magnificent claim that his
house was the parent stock of the ducal house of Howard ; and the
claim was allowed and received, as Dr. Whitaker says, by " the capa-
cious faith of Dugdale," and attested under his own hand, " without a
shadow of proof " ! In the Baronage, published ten years after this fatal
admission, Dugdale is ominously silent on the subject of the Rochdale
Howards.
Dr. Howorth succeeded in 1657 to the small family estate on the death
of his young nephew, Robert Howorth esq., a barrister of Gray's inn,
unmarried. The Doctor married Mary, daughter of Henry Ashurst of
Ashurst esq., and widow of Andrew Stone, citizen and merchant tailor of
London, by whom he had a son and a daughter, who survived to matu-
rity, and the family became extinct in the direct male line on the death
of the rev. Dr. Radcliffe Howorth, grandson of Theophilus, in 1768.
Dr. Theophilus Howorth died at Manchester on the gth April and
was buried in the Collegiate church on the i2th of the same month,
1671, aged 57 years. (Register £ook.} His short will is dated 3151
March 1671, and was proved at Chester. (Lane. MSS., vol. xi. p. 151.)
47 Corresf., p. 358.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 27
of fees, banners and penons become to posterity of
secondary importance. The rights of the college ought
certainly to have been guarded, and its rules, if rules it
had, properly administered. Nor does there seem to
have been any maladministration of them on the part of
Randle Holme. If it may be doubted that there was
an absence of legally constituted authority, there were
at least efficiency and ability. His popularity in Lanca-
shire and Cheshire was great, his management good, and
his fees probably large ; but then it was contended by
Dugdale that official etiquette was molested and pre-
cedent invaded. No indulgence could be shown such a
man, no sympathy with his labours expressed, and his
assumed delegated powers were utterly ignored. He
might be a good officer, but he was not a good official of
the heralds' college. He had a ruler and he was to feel
his power. Dugdale interfered, perhaps not wrongly but
meanly, and his conduct to his subordinate was not of the
chivalrous character, but clearly influenced by mercenary
or at least by monetary motives. He made no secret of
his hostility to a brother antiquary and fellow-herald, and
determined to prosecute him in the law courts. Randle
Holme's sole basis of his justification of marshalling
funerals, preparing pedigrees, emblazoning arms and col-
lecting, registering and preserving antiquarian and his-
torical materials, was the commission which he and his
forefathers had received from preceding heralds. Dug-
dale argued that the " deputies " were not the officers
of the college but of individual heralds, and that their
28 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
powers might be withdrawn, but assuredly ceased with
the officers who conferred them. There was probably
a difference of opinion among the lawyers on the sub-
ject, and an action at law was commenced against Holme,
not in Cheshire where the popular feeling in his favour
was strongly pronounced, but in the county of Stafford
where the jury would be at least uninfluenced by per-
sonal considerations. We may conclude that the writ
to remove the venu was the act of Dugdale, whose
opposition was resolute throughout the whole business.
The opposition to any heraldic supremacy, not only in
the northern counties but elsewhere, had been growing
during the civil war and had not subsided with the-
return of the monarchy and constitution ; but it might
have been foreseen that the prerogatives of the College
of arms would not be foregone by its officers, and that
the holders of such privileges would not be deprived of
their rights by a court of law. Dugdale gained a verdict,
and if Randle Holme afterwards wished to participate in
the benefits of the court of chivalry, he would be com-
pelled to do so on terms to be dictated by, I fear, his
jealous rival.
The King of arms, arrayed in his robes, wig and
gloves, now proceeded to wield his sceptre in his north-
ern and decaying realm, with all due promptitude and
efficiency, in the very presence of his vanquished brother
and subject.
It is recorded that on the gth April 1667, the year be-
fore he obtained his verdict, he rode to Manchester, and
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 29
the next day went to Middleton and " pulled down the
atchievements hung up by Holme of Chester at the
funeral of Sir Raphe Ashton Kl and Be 2 May 1665,
and returned to Manchester that night."48 And on the
very day after his triumph at the assize at Stafford he
posted direct to Holmes Chapel in Cheshire, and on the
1 4th he "puld down the atchievements hung up in
Nether Peover church for Mr. Cholmley of Holford, and
those in Budworth for Merbury of Merbury, and rode
that night to Sr Peter Leycester's at Tabley."49 Dug-
dale's verdict seems to have inspired him with the icono-
clastic spirit of the more extreme Puritans. Two days
after these exploits he proceeded on horseback, like a
knight errant, to Biddulph in Staffordshire, to the dis-
comfort of Ran die Holme, and there pulled down the
atchievement hung up for sir John Bowyer and his lady.s°
Nor was his zeal against the Chester antiquary extin-
guished yet. On the 4th of August in the same year, we
find him at Ingestrie with his steady friend and fellow
, Walter Chetwynd esq., but he had important
duties to discharge, for Randle Holme's work had not
yet been broken down in that place " with axes and ham-
mers." Dugdale's stay was brief as he was on his way
to Chester, and remaining one night with sir Thomas
Delves at Doddington and another with sir Thomas
Mainwaring at Baddeley, he proceeded to Cholmondeley
castle and remained the guest of lord Cholmondeley for
48 Diary, p. 126. *9 Ibid. p. 128. 60 Ibid. p. 129.
30 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
a few days.5' No doubt the old herald of Chester heard
with some dismay of the near approach of his resolute
and formidable foe, who sought by every means, except
courtesy and conciliation, to make the gentry of the
North acquainted with his proceedings. On the nth
August 1669 Norroy appeared at Chester, and found
that his former acts had been persistently disregarded,
his office again invaded, and his authority treated with
contempt. His old personal friends sir Peter Leyces-
ter and sir Thomas Mainwaring were, as he well knew,
formidable literary antagonists, but never proceeded to
the extremities which marked the professional animosity
of himself and Randle Holme. The latter braved all the
risks of legal punishments and penalties, which had been
severe and exemplary, and the former continued bent on
his destruction. He records: At Chester, "where I
pulld down those achievements wch Holmes the paynter
had set up again in Sl John's church for alderman Walley,
wch I took down in A° 1644. And that night I rode to
Chirke in Flintshire [sir T. Middleton's house] wth Mr
Chomley of Vale Royall, to view what was hung up by
Holmes ye paynter, at Sr F. Middleton's funerall."5* In
a letter of this date, addressed to his personal friend,
Mr. Gregory King, and which had been brought rather
unnecessarily under Dugdale's notice, Holme had said
that Norroy's proceedings would be of no advantage to
him (Norroy), for that he (Holme) would work any thing
51 Diary, p. 129. w Ibid,
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 31
that gentlemen should set him to do, and that they would
order their own concerns, as for example, Mrs. Frances
Booth's funeral was set out. by sir John Booth without
consultation of the heralds.53 Gentlemen did not bear
supposed injuries patiently, although they were powerless
to avenge the King of the Province, but wished to act
independently of him.
In the year following Dugdale was again in Cheshire.
1670, August 1 6th, he was with sir Peter Leycester at
Tabley, and the next day at lord Delamere's ; but the
great object of his visit was not accomplished until he
arrived on the i8th at Budworth, where he pulled down
and defaced those atchievements "which Holme the
paynter of Chester had hung up again for Mr Marbury
wch I puld down once before." 54 On that night he rode to
lord Cholmondeley's house, and on the iQth he went to
Eston (Eastham ?) in Wyrrall, where he pulled down and
defaced two penons "which Holmes had hung up in the
church for Mr Poole of Poole ; and that night lodg'd at
Chester." Having stayed two or three days with lord
63 Diary, p. 130. Randle Holme's brother-in-law was the industrious
Dr.' Richard Keurden the antiquary, who lies buried in Leyland church-
yard, and both of them were the intimate friends of Gregory King the
herald, who in January 1669 visited Holme at Chester. (Harl. MS.
2042 ; Baines' Hist. Lane., vol. i. p. 210.) Gregory King was Dugdale's
clerk, and accompanied him in his Visitation of Lancashire. ( Visit.
Lane. 1664-5, Introd. p. iv.) He was an admirable heraldic artist, but
was badly paid by Dugdale. (Diary, p. 126.) King's subsequent great
marriage but mesalliance perhaps brought him more honour than hap-
piness.
54 Diary, p. 132.
32 Life of Sir William Dtigdale.
Cholmondeley he went on the 22nd to Chirke, where
he "puld down and defaced divers penons and other
atchievements hung by Holmes for Sr Thomas Middleton
and his son." "
It must be admitted that the old families stood nobly
by their colours until Dugdale hauled them down, and
even after the outrage, when his back was turned, they
nailed them up again. Nor does it appear that the Staf-
ford verdict had satisfactorily settled the point in dispute,
for if Holme was crushed, the gentry do not seem to have
been convinced that either he or they had exceeded their
powers, and consequently they still continued to exercise
them. All this was in accordance with the spirit of the
time, which was as much to blame as either of the dis-
putants. Men were self-willed and outspoken, and hated
moderate measures. In the midst of these annoyances
he continued his literary labours, and after the toil of
thirty years published, in the year 1675-76, his great
work entitled The Baronage of England ; of which Mr.
Hunter observes that it is "a work abounding in the
most valuable information, and far less inaccurate than a
first attempt of the kind might reasonably be expected,
where one object was to recal many half-perished names,
and to arrange them in exact genealogical order, a work
of which none can comprehend the nicety and difficulty
but those who have actually made the experiment."56
Mr. Mitford says that Gray seldom closed his laborious
56 Ibid. p. 133. s« Hist, of Hallamshire, p. 30.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 33
inquiries till he had exhausted the means of further
investigation, and that to him even " the genealogical
researches of Dugdale were incomplete."57 In the second
edition he was materially assisted in the corrections and
additions by Anthony a Wood.
On the 2Oth February 1676-77 sir Edward Walker,
Garter, died. Dugdale had paid him a visit in his illness
a few months previously at Clopton, near Stratford-upon-
Avon,58 and would not forget that Garter ha^l--be^rPftis
predecessor in all his various gra^datiotrs~"m the college.
There was a sharp contest onjtffe subject of the appoint-
ment to the vacant place bel^een the king and the earl
marshal and his deputy, tly king claiming the nomination
as sovereign of the mosj^noble order of the Garter, and
the earl in right ofjffs^ hereditary office as chief of the
college and acceding to ancient precedent. Both the
royal and thlTftoble disputant had their own friends in
view, and it is humiliating to have to record that although
Dugdale was obviously the one man living who was the
best fitted for the office and had earned it in many ways,
he was almost accidentally appointed, not in recognition
of past services, but merely as a third party to terminate
the dispute of the rival claimants to the patronage. On
the 3rd April 1677 he was nominated, and on the 24th
May was created, Garter by the earl of Peterborough,
deputy earl marshal,59 and on the 25th he received the
57 Corresp. of Gray and Mason, with Notes by the Rev. John Mitford,
p. xx. pref. 1853, 8vo.
58 Diary, p. 138. S9 Corresp,, p. 407.
34 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
accolade of knighthood, the king himself according to
ancient custom putting the badge of the order about his
neck.60
He found the Garter's tower or official residence at
Windsor castle in a dilapidated condition, and expended
about 4OO/. in the repairs of the house the year after his
appointment.61 His income was ioo/. a year, which he
received out of the customs of the port of London, and
the expences connected with his new office amounted in
the first year to more than one half of his annual salary.61
He had however obtained a position which must have
been peculiarly gratifying to him, although the evening of
life had arrived and his sun was about to set. He was
now 72, and it might seem that he was somewhat reluc-
tant to accept the honour which was forced upon him by
others, fearing that the small emoluments of the office
and his own very moderate estate would scarcely enable
him to support the dignity of knighthood.6'
In 1684 he lost his old antiquarian friend, Ralph Shel-
don of Besley in Worcestershire esq., who bequeathed all
his manuscript pedigrees and other papers (not written
with his own hand) to the heralds' office, and Anthony a
Wood was consulted by the family on the carrying out of
the bequest. Dugdale roundly charged old Anthony
with dishonourably keeping back some of the valuable
manuscripts which Mr. Sheldon had designed for the
heralds, and the bitter and sarcastic remarks of Wood,
60 Diary, p. 139. 61 Wood, Ashmolean MS. 8492. Hamper.
62 Diary, p. 140. 63 Corrcsp., p. 408.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 35
smarting under the charge, must have been peculiarly
offensive to Dugdale. Some at least of Dugdale's sus-
picions were not without foundation, whilst part of the
information he had received was inaccurate. Dugdale
had deliberately accused Dr. Kuerden, the Lancashire
antiquary, with having improperly retained in his posses-
sion four of Mr. Sheldon's manuscripts, but, as Anthony
wrote in his friend's vindication and his own, "to do ye
man right," he had only two, and Dugdale was simply
requested to obtain possession of them.64 And yet, when
it might have been supposed that the quarrel between
the two impatient authors had extinguished their friend-
ship for ever, Wood, in the same fierce letter, without
the expression of a kind or genial word, desired Dugdale
to. send him full replies to nine special biographical
queries, which information he wished to use in his incom-
parable A thence^ It seems probable that the violent
ebullition of his anger was over, and that he thought his
old friend would not be very eager to retaliate. Can it
be truly said,
" Nor rough nor barren are the winding ways
Of hoar antiquity, but strown with flowers ? " M
He ranked amongst his personal friends, as might have
been expected, some of the greatest men of letters of the
century. He corresponded with bishop Jeremy Taylor
and sir Thomas Brown ; and if he did not know Milton it
might either arise from the unsettled state of the time, or
64 Corresp., p. 452. « Ibid. p. 455.
66 Rev. T. Warton B.D. : Ode written on a blank leaf of the Monasticon.
36 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
more probably from their opposite religious and political
views. His friends were also Clarendon, the lord keeper
Bridgeman (of whom he had as good an opinion as of his
wife a bad one), Thomas Blount the author of the curious
work on Tenures and the Law Dictionary, Somner the
author of the Saxon Dictionary, the publication of which
Dugdale promoted, Wood, Sheldon, bishop Gilbert Bur-
net a whig, and dean Granville a tory. The last named
conscientious divine, addressing Dugdale on the 3rd No-
vember 1683, observes that he had found him "to be,
what is very hard to find even among the clergy, I mean,
a true Churchman, a lover of order and exact conformity,
not allowing any liberty to exalt private prudence above
the Church's. A loyal and learned man, an eminent
champion for our Common Prayer Book, and true to the
king and constitution."67 Dryden and the "magnificent
Dorset," as Macaulay calls him, do not seem to have
been amongst his friends.
Sir William Dugdale died on the loth February 1685-6
at Blythe hall, in his eighty-first year, after a few days'
illness occasioned by a cold contracted by tarrying too
long in the moist meadows near his house ;68 or as An-
thony a Wood writes, " by attending too much to his
worldly concerns ;" ** although his means were small and
the proportions of his household very moderate. His
remains were deposited in a stone coffin in a little vault
67 Remains of Dr. Granville, dean of Durham, Surtees soc.; Dugdale's
Corrtsp., p. 428.
68 Life of Dugdale, p. 41. Anstis. 69 Wood's Fasti.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 37
which in the year 1676 he had himself prepared in the
chancel of Shustoke church ; and where his wife, to whom
he had been married nearly fifty-nine years, had been
buried in 1681, at the age of 75. He died in the ex-
treme of life in the full possession and perfection of his
matured intellectual faculties, and had conducted, only a
few months before his decease, a work through the press,
so that he had died, like an old knight, in harness, the ink
in his pen scarcely dry, and the last proof just corrected.
The inscription on his tomb was written by himself, and
in writing it he must have sorrowfully felt that the " pomp
of heraldry," as well as the other " glories of our state,"
as one of his contemporaries expressed it, were " sha-
dows, not substantial things." His son John succeeded
to the inheritance, was connected with the College of
arms, became Norroy and was knighted in 1685-86, and
dying in the year 1 700 left a son William and a grandson
John. At the death of the latter in 1749, unmarried, the
estate passed by will to his nephew Richard Geast, eldest
son of Richard Geast esq. by his sister Jane Dugdale,
and to his heirs male. This gentleman assumed the sur-
name and arms of Dugdale in 1799, and died in 1806.
He was succeeded by his son, Dugdale Stratford Dug-
dale esq. M.P. for the county of Warwick, who dying in
1836 left issue by his first wife, the hon. Elizabeth Cur-
zon, daughter of Assheton viscount Curzon and Dorothy,
sister of Richard earl Grosvenor, an only son, William
Stratford Dugdale esq. M.P., who married in 1827 a
sister of Edward first baron Portman.
38 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
On the 1 5th May 1667 Dugdale has recorded that he
delivered to the office of arms " a fair copy " of his Visi-
tation of Lancashire,70 in a volume bound up in russet
70 In Salford Hundred these appeared and
entred their descents
[1664-5] :
Alkrington Mr Robert Lever
John Lightbound Esq
Bentcliffe Mr John Valentine
Mr Will: Birom
Barton Mr George Legh An cotes
Nich: Moseley Esq
— Sorrocold Nuthurst
Mr Sam: Sandford
Bradshaw John Bradshaw Esq Middleton
Sr Raph Ashton Bt
Barlow Tho: Barlow Esq Moston
Mr James Lightbowne
Sr Edw. Mosley Oldham
Mr Josuah Cudworth
Birch Mr Tho: Birch
Mr Oldham now living
Mr Raph Worsley
in Manchester
Castleton John Newton Wardley
Roger Downes Esq
Strangways Mr John Hartley Shaw
Leonard Egerton Esq
Chetham Mr Edw: Chetham
Mr Starkey
Denton Mr Holland Rachdale
Gabraell Gartside
Elton Tho: Greenhalgh Esq
Mr James Scofeld
Hulton Will: Hulton Esq
Mr Alexander Buter-
Peele Mr Roger Kenion
worth
Hopwood Mr John Hopwood
Mr Buckley
Stubley Rob:HoltofStubley
MrChadwickofHealey
Esq
Mr Sam: Hamer
Broughton Mr Ferdinando Stanley Salford
Mr Jonathan Chadwick
Wardley Roger Downes Esq
Mr John Byrom
Irelam Mr Tho: Lathom Shepley
Mr Rob: Ashton
Heape Mr Will: Bamford Salford
Mr Edw: Davenport
Kersley Mr Will: Hulme Turton
George Chetham Esq
Longworth Mr Tho: Lacy Todmerden
Mr Charles Ratcliffe
Lostock Francis Anderton Esq
Mr Stansfeld
Darcy Lever Mr Rob: Lever Tawnton
Mr John Chadwick
Manchester Mr Tho: Beck Hough
Sr Edw: Moseley Bt
Mr Ric: Herrick Trafford
Sr Cecill Trafford Bt
Mr Theoph: Howorth
Dugdale's autograph MS. penes me.
Life of Sir William Dugdale. 39
leather and clasp.7' And on the 3Oth June 1669 he
records that he delivered to the same guardians the first
copies of all his Visitations, in four volumes.71 These
Visitation books, as they are called, contain the pedigrees
of the gentry, signed generally by some member of the
family and attested by the herald. They were compiled
under the authority of a commission granted by writ of
privy seal to the Kings of arms, the earliest of which is
dated in 1528 and the last in 1686. These warrants
were issued about every twenty-five years, but there was
no fixed or settled time.7' The Lancashire Visitation
book of Dugdale of 1664-65 contains about two hundred
and seventy pedigrees in the tabular form, occupying
more than three hundred and twenty pages, besides nu-
merous sketchings of arms, as there is scarcely a pedigree
without a shield of arms attached.
It is necessary to state that all the pedigrees here
printed are carefully and accurately transcribed, from the
letter A down to the letter S, from sir William Dugdale's
MS. in the College of arms, and that the expense of ob-
taining these official copies is a formidable item in the
accounts of the CHETHAM SOCIETY, although the rev.
George Hornby B. D. and colonel Egerton Leigh liberally
contributed lol. towards the expense. The few remain-
ing pedigrees succeeding the letter S have been taken
from a copy of Dugdale's Visitation, with occasional addi-
tions by his personal friend Hopkinson, the Yorkshire
n Diary, p. 127. 72 Diary, p. 131.
7a Moule's Bibl. Heraldica, p-559.
40 Life of Sir William Dugdale.
antiquary, which, on being compared with the original,
appears as nearly as possible identical with it, except
that it is not in a tabular form. It is somewhat remark-
able that no exact copy of Dugdale's Lancashire Visita-
tion is known to exist except in the College of arms.
It would be unjust indiscriminately to discredit the
arduous labours and to impugn the genealogical veracity
of the heralds of the seventeenth century, but their pedi-
grees ought most assuredly to be received with great
caution, and few of them to be regarded as indisputably
correct unless tested by documentary evidence. It was
never intended that the Tabard should protect the errors
or sanction the mistakes even of Dugdale.
F. R. R.
ADDENDA.
Page 25 Note, add — Dr. Howorth was born ryth December 1613,
went to Cambridge in 1630, was created M.A. 1637, and elected a fel-
low of Magdalen college. He was admitted M.D. 2nd July 1661 and
chosen a fellow of the College of physicians in London in the same
year.
" And straight before him lay a dusty heap
Of ancient legers, books of evidence,
Old blazon'd pedigrees and antique rolls,
(Which made the son full oft beget the father,
And give to maiden ladies fruitful issue,)
Torn parish registers, probates and testaments —
From which, with cunning art and sage contrivance,
He fairly culled divers pedigrees .
he knows
The reverence due to hoar antiquity,
Nor DUGDALE scorns, nor CAMDEN'S learned page."
R. Surtees, Esq.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 225
of 2Ds6alDeston.
. — Argent, a mascle sable, bet
pellets
- On a horse argent, caparisoned, sable, a man in
on his sinister arm an escocheon of the arms.
holding in his dexter hand a sword, proper, and bearing
Sir Edward Osbaldeston=Mary, dau. and
of Osbaldeston, ob. circa sole heir of
1636. Francis Faring-
ton of Hutton
Grange, co. Lan-
caster, esq.
Frances,dau.=
of Sir Rich-
ard Tempest
of Brasswell,
co. Ebor.,
knt, second
wife.
=i John=
Osbal-
deston,
ob.circa
1633-
=Jane, dau.
of Anthony
Mounson
of Burton,
co. Lincoln,
first wife.
2 Alexander
Osbaldeston
of Osbaldes-
ton, co. Lan-
caster, esq.,
set. 62 an.
13 Sept.
1664.
=Anne, dau. 3 I
of Sir John r
Talbot of * C
Salesbury,
co. Lan- 5 E
caster, knt. ma
Jan
of.
glet
rancis.
utbert,
ccel.
.obert,
-ried
e, dau.
. . Sin-
on, and
ow of
Charn-
=
i Anne,
wife of
Thomas
Blanken-
sopofHel-
beck, co.
WestnH
2 Maude,
wife of
Thomas
Osbaldes-
ton of
Walton,
co. Lan-
caster.
Edward, Mary,
died died
young. unmar-
ried.
1 |
i John,
ob. inf.
2 Edward,
set. 12 an.
1664.
1 1 1
3 Alexander.
4 Michaell.
5 James.
Mil! wid
i Mary.
2 Katherine. ley_:
3 Margaret.
4 Anne. p
5 Joane.
dward.
2 Alexander.
Blakeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
Alexander Osbaldeston.
226 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Ds&alDeston of %unnerlanD.
Srmtf. — Argent, a mascle, sable, between three pellets,
(EfErft. — As Osbaldeston of Osbaldeston, p. 225.
.ton, gules.
Ellen, dau. of=
Thomas Til-
desley of
Wardley, co.
Lancaster,
second wife.
=Sir Alexander
Osbaldeston
of Osbaldes-
ton, co. Lan-
caster, knt.
=Anne, dau. of
Sir Richard
Southworth
of Sambles-
bury, knt.,
first wife.
1
Richard Osbaldeston=
of Sunderland, co.
Lancaster.
John Osbaldeston
of Osbaldeston, esq.
T
Alexander Osbaldeston=
of Sunderland.
John Osbaldeston=Catherine, dau.
of Sunderland, ob.
circa 1622.
of George Roger-
ley of Parke hall
in Blackrode, co.
Lancaster.
i Alexander Osbaldeston,=Holcroft, dau. of
of Sunderland, aet. 56
an. 20 Sept. 1664.
Robert Hesketh
of Rufford, co.
Lancaster.
2 John Osbaldeston Margaret,
of the city of London.
John Osbaldeston,=Anne, dau. of
i Catherine,
1 1 1
2 Jane.
1 1 i
5 Anne.
aet. 30 an. 20 Sept.
1664.
Richard Blake-
burne of Goose-
wife of Thomas
Sutton of Maw-
3 Margaret.
6 Dorothy
nargh, co. Lan-
caster.
desley, co. Lan-
caster.
4 Elizabeth.
7 Mary.
Alexander, i Anne. 2 Margaret,
aet. 3 an.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664.
John Osbaldeston.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 227
of
— Argent, a chevron, gules, between three mullets, sable, on a chief azure three stags' heads, caboshed,
— A stag's head, couped, or.
William Parker=. . . dau. of
of Bradkirke, Robert Shaw
co. Lancaster, of Crompton,
ob. circa 1612. co. Lancaster.
Alice, dau. o£=John Parker=Margaret, dau.
Richard Ma-
son of Hol-
land, CO.
Lancaster,
first wife.
of Bradkirke,
ob. 1649.
and coheir of of Bidstone, co. of Whittingham,
Anthony Par- Cest. co. Lancaster.
ker of Radham
Park, co. Ebor.
I
4 Christopher =
Parker of
Bradkirke, in
the commis-
sion of the
peace, set. 36
an. 15 Sept.
1664.
I
=Catherine, Jennet
dau. of
Raphe Laud
of . . . co.
Norf.
i William=Helen,dau. 2 Richard
Parker, of William Parker, mar-
ob. v.p. Beesley of ried Eliz:
Brookes, dau. of John
co. Lan- Garret of
caster. Singleton,
co. Lancas-
Margaret, 3 Anthony,
wife of ob. unmar-
John ried.
Christian
of the
Isle of
Man.
i William, Alice,
set. 28 an.
15 Sept.
1664.
2 Richard.
r'T
John.
i Anthony,
jet. 7 an.
15 Sept.
1664.
2 John. 3 William. i Margaret.
2 Mary.
3 Jane.
Garstang, 15 Sept. 1664.
228 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
jJ. — None recorded.
Robert Parker =Jane, dau. of
of Extwisle.
Evan Haydock
of Hesanford,
gent. .
I
John Parker=
of Extwisle,
died 2 1 Jany.
1634.
1
=Margaret, dau. Margaret. = Henry Walton,
of Lawrence of Marsden,
Townley of gent.
Barnside, co.
Lancaster, esq.
John Parker,=Elizabeth,
Willia
ob. 23 April
1655-
dau. of
Cuthbert
Holdsworth
Parker,
married
. . . Bent-
Nicholas,
ob. ccel.
of Stubbing.
ley of
Charles.
Stone-
slacke.
Francis.
i Jane, wife of 2 Ellen, wife of
Edward Tern- Charles Banaster
pestofYeeli- ofParkehill,gent.
son in Craven, ^
co. Ebor., gent. I
Nicholas Robert Parker,=
Parker, son and heir,
1664. ob. 24 Oct.
1636.
=Mary, eldest dau. and
coheir of Nicholas
Scarburgh of Glusburne,
esq., buried 20 August
1638. Her second
husband was Thomas
Barcroft of Barcroft,
living 1664.
of Yeehson, son
and heir, 1664.
John Parker—Jane, dau. of i Jane, wife 2 Mary,
of Extwisle, Henry Foster of John buried
son and heir, of Hampshire, Horsfall of 9 June
;et. 30 an. relict of Francis Malseshall, 1638.
13 Sept. MalhamofEls- co. Ebor.
1664. lake, co. Ebor.,
esq.
1 i
2 Isabel, 4 Elizabeth,
baptized wife of Thomas
i Nov. BelfieldofCleggs
1631. Wood; after-
wards of John
Halstead of
Banke House.
5 Dorothy,
buried 18
NoV. 1650
Robert Parker,
jet. i year 1664.
Blakeburne, 73 Sept. 1664.
Jo: Parker.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 229
IPatten of Harrington.
. — Lozengy, ermine and sable, a canton, gules.
Richard Patten=
of Waynflete, I
co. Lincoln.
i William Patten,
ats Waynflete,
provost of Eaton
college, and
bishop of Win-
chester, ob. 1486.
2 John Patten,
dean of Chi-
chester.
3 Richard Patten
of Boslow, co.
Derb.
Humfrey Patten
of Warrington,
co. Lancaster,
1536.
Thomas Patten=Julian, dau.
of Warrington.
of Richard
Marshall of
Warrington,
1560.
1
i Thomas Patten
of Warrington.
Susan, dau.=
of Robert
Drinkwater.
= Ellen, dau. 2 John. Ellen. Alice. Elizab
of George
Biggies of
Warrington.
61 |
th. Dorcas. Margare
-i Thomas =
Patten of
Warring-
ton, ob.
circa
1654.
=Alice, dau. Anne, dau
of Thomas of Nicholas
Taylor of Croft of
Preston on Sutton.
the Hill.
=2 John
Patten
of War-
rington.
=Margaret, 3 Anthony
dau. of Patten of
Richard the Isle of
Mather. Man.
1
Thomas=
Patten. <
Thomas.
Ellen, dau.
)f John
Vliddleton
Ellen. Caesar
Patten.
ob. s.p. i
John. Anthony.
1
Thomas.
230 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Ditgdale, 1664-5.
i Thomas=
Patten of
Warring-
-Mary, dau.
of John
Leigh of
2 Willi
Patten,
mercha
im Mary, dau.=
a of James
nt. Archer of
i
=4 William=Margery, dau.
Patten of of Thomas
Preston, Banaster of
Ellen.
Marga
ton, set. 28,
Outrington
Preston,
co. Lan- Preston, co.
1665.
second
caster. Lancaster, first
wife.
(Arms, wife.
1
1 |
with a can-
i Thomas,
2 John.
Elizabeth.
ton, or.)
.
Martha,
heir, set. 3
1 |
1
an. 1665.
OD. int.
Elizabeth, Jennet,
Ellen, v
wife of John wife of
of John
Ryley of Thomas
Anderto
1
3 Peter,
4 John.
1 |
i Susan,
1 1 i
3 Mary.
Preston. Couper of
Preston.
citizen c
London
a student
at Brase-
5 Robert.
wife of
4 Bridget.
nose coll.,
Oxford.
row of
Sankey,
co. Lan-
5 Rachel. i Thomas 4 Henry 5 William
6 Elizabeth Patten, tet. Patten of Patten of
All died in' *9 an. 1665. Elverton, Preston.
1 1 1
Marga
Jane.
caster.
infancy. 2 Christopher, co- South-
Margei
2 Ellen,
wife of
John Cot-
ton of
died young. ampton,
clerk.
3 Anthony,
died at Lon-
Mary,
died
young.
Preston,
don.
co. Lan-
caster.
Ormeskirke, 8 April 1665.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 23T
IPennington of ipennington.
Quarterly : I. Or, five fusils conjoined in fess, azure ; 2. Argent, a cross moline, sable ; 3. Argent, three bars,
gules, on a cinton of the second, a cinquefoil of the first ; 4. Argent, a lion rampant, vert.
t
Joseph Pennington= Isabel, dau. of
of Pennington, co. Avery Copley
Lancaster, and of Batley, co.
Moncaster, co. Ebor., widow
Cumberland, esq., of Sir ...
ob. circa 1640. Savile of How-
ley, co. Ebor.,
knt.
1 1
William Pennington=Katherine, dau. Bridget, wife of
of Pennington and of Richard Sher- Sir William
Moncaster, esq., ob. bourne of Stani- Huddleston of
in August 1652. hurst, co. Lan- Millum castle,
caster, esq. co. Cumberland,
knt.
i Joseph^
Penning-
=Margaret,
dau. of
2 Alan 3 Richard 4William. i Isabel. 2Catherine, 3 Elizabeth,
Pennington, Pennington wife of Sir wife of Sir
4 Bridget,
wife of
ton of
John
doctor of of Salford, Jeffrey Sha- RogerBrad-
Thomas
Penning-
Fleet-
physic in the an utter kerley of shaugh of
Hever of
ton and
wood of
cityofChes- bafister-at- Shakerley, the Hagh,
Staynton,
Moncas-
Penwor-
ter, 1664. law. co. Lancas- co. Lancas-
co. Ebor.,
ter, esq.,
tham, co.
ter, knt. ter. knt.
esq.
ob. 1659.
Lancaster,
esq.
William Pennington
of Pennington and
Moncaster, esq., set.
9 an. 1 6 March 1664.
Lancaster, 16 March 1664.
232 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Pennington of
tied in fess, azure, a canton, gules.
Robert Pennington,
recorder of Wigan,
co. Lancaster.
"
. . . dau. of= i Robert =Elianor, dau. 2 Joseph =Catherine,dau. 3 John.
. . . Winstan-
Pennington
af Richard Pennington
of Peter Platt
ley,ayounger
son of Win-
of Wigan,
ob. circa
Jtten of of Wigan.
Molesworth,
of Wigan.
stanley of
1622.
co. Cest.
Winstanley,
co. Lancas-
ter, first wife.
Alice,
Nicholas
1 1 I 1 1 1
=Jane,dau. Jane, i Elizabeth.
died un-
married.
Pennington
of Wigan,
of Gilbert wife of ...
Barrow William
set. 47 an.
of Wigan. Ricroft 3 Anne.
23 Septem-
ber 1664.
erf Ches- 4 Grace
5 Clare.
i Ellas,
2 Hugh.
xt. 20 an.
23 Sept.
1664.
Ormeskirke, 23 &/A 1664.
Nicholas Pennington.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 233
of
Quarterly: I. Ermine, three lozenges conjoined in fess, sable, Pigot; 2. Argent, two bendlets, sable, Kay;
3. Gules, on a fess, or, between three ostrich feathers, argent, as many escallops, sable, Parkinson; 4. As I.
A wolf's head erased, sable.
-
John Pigot.=
of Butley,
co. Cest,
ob.4Hen.8.
i Robert Pigot 2 George Pigot=Catherine, dau.
of Butley, esq. of Bonisal in of Henry Hen-
=jr Butley, co. Cest. shaw of Hen-
A shaw, co. Cest,
married in 4
Heny Pigot =Dousabell, dau.
of Bonisall. of John Milling-
ton of Millington,
co. Cest., esq.,
married in 30
H. 8.
i Thomas ]
of Bonisall
Cest, ob. c
1630.
II 1 1 II
Digot=Joane, dau. 2 George. i Catheri ic, 2 Margaret, 3 Elizabeth.
co. and coheir Fflw-,rH wife of Hu8h wife of John A Filer,
irca of Richard ? ,w ard. Gandy of Bradburne of * Ellen.
KayofDod- B°thob.s.p. Boothye Banke> Winterbottom, Both dl.ed
worth, co. co. Cest, yeo- co. Cest.
Ebor., esq., man.
married in
23 Eliz.
Thomas=Jane,
Pigot of of Ge
Bonisall, Redd
ast.84an. of Re
1 9 Sept. ditch,
1664. Lane
dau. 2 Raphe. 5 Francis 6 Richard 7 Henry John =Judith, Jane and
orge TJrian of Whit- of Titter- of Sheriff Pigot dau. of Joane,ob.
itch ^ church, ington, Hales, ofFor- John unmar-
d- 4 Edward, co. Salop, co. Cest co. Salop. ton,co. Daven- ried.
co. All died =f Staf- port of
ister. coel. A ford. Butley
Hall,
co. Cest
234 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
i George Pigot=
of Preston, co.
Lancaster, aet,
53 an. 19 Sept.
1664.
=Elizabeth, dau.
and coheir of
Robert Parkin-
son of'Faire-
snape, co. Lan-
caster, gent.
Joane, wife
of James
Remshaw
of Brome-
house in
Lim, co.
Cest.
i Thomas=
Pigot of
Prestbury,
co. Lancas-
ter.
=Catherine,
dau. of ...
Crowker of
Prestbury,
co. Lancas-
ter.
2 Henry^
Pigot,
vicar of
Rache-
dale, co.
Lancas-
ter, aet.
36 an.
1664.
=Elizabeth,
dau. of
Thomas
Fife of
Weddaker,
co. Lancas-
ter.
1
i George 2 Robert, i Mary.
Pigot, aet. aet. 10,
14 an. 19 1664.
Sept.
1664.
2 Lucie.
1 i
Margaret, i Thomas
aet. 2 an. aet. 8 an.
1664. 1664.
2 Henry. Judith.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
George Pigot.
Henry Pigot.
Lancaster, 6 April 1665.
Porter of Lancaster.
tntS. — Sable, three bells, argent, a cantc
Henry Porter=Elizabeth, dau. of
of Lancaster, James Banaster of
clerk. Writington, co.
Lancaster.
James Porter=Elizabeth, dau. and
of Lancaster,
ob. 1613
heir of William Trench-
more of Skirton, co.
Lancaster.
Henry Porter=Anne, eldest
of Lancaster, dau. of Henry
esq., justice of
peaceforcoun-
Ashhurst of
Ashhurst, co.
Lancaster, esq.
Henry Porter,=Margaret, youngest
, 29 an. 6
April 1665.
dau. of Bryan Tay-
lor of Midhop, co.
Westmerland.
Henry, aet. 3 an. i Anne. 2 Isabel.
Henry Porte,
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 235
Preston of
armS. — Quarterly : First and fourth, argent, t
second and third, argent, on a chevc
vo bars, gules, on a cant
ron, sable, three crosses-crc
jn of the second
sslets of the first,
a cinquefoil, o
, Preston :
CrcSt. — On a tower, argent, a stork rising, 'argent, beaked, or.
. . . dau. of— .George
Preston^
=Eliz;
ibeth,
SirThomas
of Hoik
ar, co.
dau.
of
Strickland
Lancaster, esq.,
Raufe Ash-
of Sisargh,
ob. 5 April
ton of Lever,
co. West-
1640.
esq.,
first
merland,
wife.
second
wife.
Gcc
I |
rge, i Anne, v
'ife of
1
i Thomas Preston=Catherine,
1
Christopher,
i Frances,
1
2 Anne,
die.
1 un- Sir Georg
e Mid-
of Holkar,
high
dau. of
Sir
died unmar-
wife of
died un-
mai
ried. dleton, kr
it, and
sheriff of c
ounty
Gilbert
ried.
Robert
married.
bart.
Lancaster,
set
Hought
Dn
Duckenfield
2 Margaret, wife
of Francis Bid-
dulph of Bid-
dulph, co. Staff.
63 an. 1 6 Sept.
1664.
of Houghton
Tower, co.
Lancaster,
knt. and bart
of Ducken-
field, CO.
Cest.
3 Elizabeth, wife
of ... Sare of
George Preston, 2
Thomas, 3 Gi'
bert,
Worsall, co.
set. 1 8 an. 166
4. set 16 an. xt. i
3 an.
Ebor.; aft
snvards
of Nathai
del
West of I
orwick,
co. Lanca
ster,
esq.
Lancaster, 16 Sept. 1664.
Thomas Preston.
236 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Preston of tfre ogannour.
StrmS. — Argent, two bars, gules, on a canton of the second a cinquefoil, or.
Thomas Preston=Anne, dau. of
of Preston-Pa- . . . Westby
trick, co. West- of Burne, co.
merland. Lancaster, esq.
John Preston=Frances, dau.
of Preston- of Richard
Patrick and Holland of
of the abbey Denton and
Fournesse Heaton, co.
(called the Lancaster,
Mannour), esq.
co. Lancas-
ter, esq., ob.
circa 1640.
i Sir John Preston=Jane, dau. and i Margaret, wife of
of Preston-Patrick at length sole Sir Francis Howard
and of the Man- heir of Thomas of Corby castle, co.
nour, baronet, ob. Morgan of Cumb., knt.
-X^L
«°.;r 2«~
3 Elizabeth, wife of
Francis Downes of
Wardley, co. Lan-
caster, esq.
f ~ ~~l 1
i Sir John 2 Thomas, Elizabeth, dau. =Sir Thomas =Mary, dau. of i Jane,
Preston, ob. inf. of Peter de Preston of Sir Carrill ob. infans.
bart., ob. Planzye of the the Man- Molineux of
coel. 1661. French nation, nour, bart., Sephton, co.
first wife ; ob. set. 2 1 an. Lancaster,
s.p. 1 6 March bart. and vis-
1664. count Moli-
neux of Merry-
burgh in Ire-
land, second
wife.
Lancaster, 16 March 1664.
i I
2 Anne, wife of
William Gerard,
son and heir
apparent of Sir
William Gerard
of Brynne, co.
Lancaster, bart.
3 Elizabeth, wife
of William Stour-
ton, son and heir
apparent to Lord
Stourton.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 237
Preston of l^reston.
. — Quarterly : I. Or, on a chief, gules, three crescents of the first ; 2. Per pale, indented, or and gules, a bordure.
azure, charged with fleurs-de-lis, or ; 3. Gules, a saltire, argent, between four leopards' faces, or ; 4. Azure,
a lion rampant, argent, a bordure, ermine.
. — A wolf, passant, proper.
Preston=Anne, dau. of
of Preston, co.
Lancaster, ob.
circa 1638.
Thomas Far-
rington of Wer-
don, co. Lan-
caster.
i Henry=Anne, dau. 2 William,
Preston
of Pres-
ton, esq.,
ob. circa
1654.
William Preston i Elizabeth,
of Preston, esq., wife of John
set. 1 8 an. 19 Werden of
Sept 1664. Preston, co.
Lancaster.
Elizabeth,
of ... Lan- ob. coel.
wife of ...
of Dr. Tay- of .
. Stal>
caster of
Astley of
lour of Bel-
Ranehill.co.
Stakes.
fast in Ire-
Lancaster.
land.
3 Margaret,
wife to
Raphe Tun-
stall.
4 Isabel,
wife of
Lawrence
Duxbury
of Deane,
co. Lan-
caster.
4 Mabell.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664
238 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Eatcliffe of leigb.
. — Argent, two bendiets engrailed, sable,
guk
Richard Ratcliffe=
of Leigh, co.
Lancaster.
. . . dau. of=:Thomas Ratcliffe=
. . . Jolley, of Leigh, co. Lan-
first wife. caster, ob. circa
| 1640.
— 2 Richard. 3 John.
i Alexander Ratcliffe=Jane, dau. of 2 Thomas Ratcliffe. i Anne,
of Leigh, co. Lancas- James Soro-
ter, ob. circa 1647. cold of Pen-
nington, co.
Lancaster.
1
wife of
Robert Sline-
head of Ash-
ton in Maker-
field.
i Thomas, 2 Alexander=Alice, dau. of
ob. s.j). Ratcliffe of William Pho-
Leigh, aet. sakerley of
31 an. 23 Kirkeby, co.
Sept. 1664. Lancaster.
I j
i Elizabeth, 2 Elianor,
wife of John wife of
Potter of Richard
Ashton. Smethurst
of Broad-
oak, CO.
Lancaster.
i
3 Anne,
wife of
John Booth
of Twem-
lowes, co.
Cest.
I |
i Alexander, 2 Thomas,
3 William, 4 John,
Ormeskirke, 23 Sept. 1664.
Alex. Raddiffe.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 239
ffia&cliffe of iRaticltffe.
Argent, two bendlets engrailed, sable.
A bull's head erased, sable, gorged with
al coronet therefrom a line, or.
Robert Radcliffe=Margaret, dau.
of Radcliffe, co. of ... Slade
Lancaster. of Clifton, co.
Lancaster.
Robert Ratcliffe=Susan, dau. of Helen,
of Ratcliffe, ob. Edward Ros-
circa 1613. thorneofNew-
hall, co. Lan-
caster.
Edward Ratcliffe=Al ce, dau. of i Alice, 2 Margaret,
of Ratcliffe, aet. Richard Sy- wife of wife of
60 an. 1 1 March monds of Robert John Open-
1 664. Elton, co. Elton of shaw of Rat-
Lancaster. Edenfield. cliffe.
3 Hellen.
wife of
Richard
Lomax of
Berry, co.
Lancaster
i Edward Ratcliffe, =Sarah, dau. of 2 Robert. Anne, wife of
aet. 38 an. 1 1 March Samuel Birch T, John Aspen-
1 664. of Ardwick, i , <H™^f' na" °^ Aynes-
co. Lancaster. ,1.e, worth, co. Lan-
1 1 1 ! 1
i Edward, 2 Robert. 3 John. 4 Samuel. Sarah,
st. 1 1 an.
1664.
Manchester, n March 1664. Edward*
240 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Eancliffe of Conmertien.
3rmff. - Quarterly : First and fourth, argent, a bend engrailed, sable ; se
garbs, argent.
Vi rest. — A bull's head, erased, per pale, sable and argent, gorged with
and and third, vert, a cheveron between three
ducal coronet, counterchanged, therefrom a
second
wife.
Charles Radcliffe=
of Todmerden, co.
Lancaster, esq.
Henry Radcliffe=
of Todmerden.
Joshua Radcliffe=
of Todmerden.
= i Savile Radcliffe=. . . dau. of 2 Thomas,
of Todmerden, ob. . . . Ashton died un-
29 Sept. 1652. ofClegg. co. married.
Lancaster,
first wife.
Charles i Alice, 2 Susan, 3 Anne, 4 Dorothy. Joshua —Margaret, Margaret,
Radcliffe. wife of wife to wife of Radcliffe dau. of wife of
James Michael . . . Wynk- 5 Judith, of Tod- Robert ...West
Scofield Butter- ley of merden, Ducken- ofPomfret,
of Sco- worth of Wynkley. esq., ob. field of co. York.
field, co. Rach- 1644. Ducken-
Lancas- dale. field, co.
ter. Cest.
i Thomas, 2 Joshua Radcliffe= Catherine, dau. of
ob. juv. of Todmerden, Richard Bradshaw
esq., set. 20 an. of Pennington, co.
9 Sept. 1664. Lancaster.
Manchester, 9 Sept. 1664.
Joshua Radcliffe.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 241
Eatolwson of CarRe.
Quarterly : I. Gules, two bars gemels, between three escallops, argent; 2. Or, five fusils conjoined in fess,
sable ; 3. Argent, fretty, gules, a chief, sable ; 4. As No. I.
A duck proper, holding in its beak an escallop, argent.
John Rawlinson=
of Greenhead in
Furnesse Fells,
co. Lancaster,
tpe Hen. VII.
William Rawlinson=. . . dau. of ...
of Greenhead, tpe I Benson of Lough
Hen. VIII. I Rigg.
i John Rawlinson=. . . dau. of John Sawrey _
of Greenhead. of Grathwayte, co. Lan- of Tottlebank in
caster.
William Rawlinson
Tottlebank i
Furnesse-Fells.
William Rawlinson=Margaret, dau. and
of Greenhead, ob.
circa 1603.
heir of William Pen-
nington of Cough-
ton, co. Lancaster.
2 John Rawlinson
of the Ridding, co.
Lancaster.
Thomas. =Esther, dau. of Adam
Sandys of Graythwaite,
and widow of John
Sawrey of Plumpton.
William Rawlinson=Marearet, sole dau. 2 Frar
of Greenhead, ob.
circa 1619.
of Walter Curwen
sreside in
lele, co. Lan-
of Walter Curwe
of Moreside in
j Cartm '
3 Adam.
Citizens of
London.
4 Robert Rawlinson i Anne.
£^gton,co. 2Margaret.
i Robert Rawlinson-_=Jane, eldest dau.
of Carke in Cartmele, '
co. Lancaster, esq.,
justice of the peace
and quorum for county
Lancaster, and of Oyer
and Terminer for sd
county, and vice-
chamberlain of Ches-
ter ; and heir by his
mother to the said
Walter Curwen, aet.
54 an. 6th April 1665.
of Thomas Wil-
son of Hever-
sham hall, co.
Westmerland,
esq.
2 William
Rawlinson
of Bucknall
co. Oxon.
Elizabeth, wife
of John Swen-
son of Newhall,
co. Lancaster ;
afterwards of
George Huttou
of Thorpensty,
co. Lancaster.
Margaret,
wife of
William
Moore of
Rowell,
co. West-
merland.
i Curwen Rawlinson, 2 William, a student i Anne, wife of
aet. 23 an. 6 April 1665. of S' John's college, Christopher
Cambridge. Crakenthorpe of
New Bigging, co.
Westmerland, esq.
Lancaster, 6 April 1665.
2 Elizabeth. 5 Dorothy.
3 Catherine. 6 Jane.
4 Hellen.
Robert Rawlinson.
242 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of ogancfrester.
2lrmg. — Argent, two ravens in pale, sable
Avery Ridge =. . . dau. of . .
of Marple, co
Cest.,a younger
son of Robert
RidgeofRidge,
co.Salop,gent,
ob. circa 1560.
Hubbard of Mar-
pie, co. Cest.
Raphe Ridge=. . . dau. of . .
of Marple, co. Marshland of
Cest., gent, Marbury, co.
ob.circai6io. Cest.
Robert Ridge=Helen, dau. of
of Marple, esq.,
aet. 77 an. i "
Mar. 1664.
. . . Shepheard
of Asple, co.
Lancaster.
2 William.
3 John.
i Margaret, wife of
William Allen of
. . . near Disley,
co. Cest.
2 Elizabeth,
wife of
ThomasOld-
ham of Pen-
dlebury, co.
Lancaster.
3 Anne, wife of
William Field
of Bramham,
co. Cest.
i Roger,
ob. s.p.
2 Samuel,
slain in the
service of K.
Charles the
first, under
the command
of Richard,
lord Moli-
neux, at Bris-
tol.
3 Jonathan Ridge
of Manchester, set.
42 an. 1 6 March
1664.
Jane, dau. of
William Cooke
of Manchester.
4 John Ridge.
married the
widow of
Samuel Smith
of Chester.
i Samuel, 2 Jonathan, 3 John,
set. 12 an. set. 8 an. set. 3 an.
Hesther.
2 Jane,
ob. inf.
Mary.
4 Hannah.
Lancaster, 16 March 1664.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 243
of ^arricfe.
. — Argent, on a cross flory, azure, five mullets, or.
. — A goat's head erased, sable, horned, or.
Nicholas Rigby=Elianor, dau. of
of Harrick, co.
Lancaster, ob.
1629.
Thomas Starkey
of Stretton, co.
Cest, esq.
Phebe, dau. of=i Nicholas Rigby= Alice, dau. of
2 Alexander, i Anne, wife of
2 Frances, wife of
William Fox of
Toxteth, co.
of Harrick, ob. Peter Warbur
Jan. 1661. ton of Arley,
3 John.
. . . Kirby,
citizen of Lon-
Hugh Brookes,
citizen of Coven-
Lancaster, first
co. Cest., esq.
4 Thomas.
don.
try.
wife.
second wife.
All died ur
-
married.
1 I
i Nicholas Rigby=Hannah, dau. 2 John.
i Rebecca,
2 Mary, wife of
1
3 Elianor,
set.' 37 an. 22
of William
died unmar-
Michaall Briscoe
died young.
Sept. 1664.
Harper of
ried.
of Toxteth, co.
Cowley hill,
Lancaster.
co. Lancaster.
Nicholas, i Phebe.
ob. inf.
all
ary. 3 Elizabeth. 4 Hannah. 5 Elianor.
Ormeskirke, 22 Sept. 1664.
Nich: Rigbye.
244 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of Lapton.
9 nn*. — Bendy at SOL >—*«-«*•«, age*, and azure, at m chid; sabfe, three rntjurfnH^, or.
Crrtt. — A gear's had, sibfe, bezantee, bamd and ifm-M, or.
Alexander Rigby=Catherine, dau. of
of Burgh and Lay- Sir Edward Braba-
ton. ob. circa zon of Xether \Vhit-
1650. acre, co. Warw.t knL
i Edward Rigby=Mary, dan. of 2 Thomas Rigby. 3 \\llliain i Mary, 2 Elizabeth, 3 Jane, wife of
of Layton, co. " I Edward Hide residing in Dub- Rigby, a wife of John wife of Ed- Paul Lathom,
Lancaster, esq.. of Norbory Hn. parson of merchant Moore of wardChisen- clerk, rector of
ob. v.p. and Hide, co. S" Marj-'s church Bankehall, hall of Chis- Standish, co.
Cest. esq. there. co. Lancas- enhalL co. Lancaster.
i Alexander Rigby=Anne. dau. of : Edward. 5 Robert. i Mary. 2 Dorothy.
of Lavton. eso.. an. ThomasBirche \\-iv f. p- h *A
. T.. T , ,. ^ « imam 6 Richard.
3= an. 2c sept. ot Birche halL •*
1664. near Manches- 4 Hamlet
ter, co. Lan-
caster.
Edward, 2 Alexander, i Man-. 2 Alice. 3 Anne. 4 Elianor.
.-
20 Sept
1664.
Preston. 20 Sept. 1664. Al. Rigin.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 245
of
— Argent, on a cross 8017, sable, fiv
. — A goat's head erased, or.
John Rigby.=
Adam Rigby.=Alice, dau. of
. . . Middleton
of Leighton.
John Rigby.=Jane, dau. of
I Gilbert Moli-
neux, son to
... Molineux
of Hawkley,
co. Lancaster.
2 Alexander Rigby=Jane, dau. of Ellen, wife of
of Burgh, co. Lan- j . . . Lathwayte. Hugh Forth,
caster.
t
i William,
died young.
2 Alexander=
Rigby.
= Alice, dau. of
Leonard Ashawe
of Shaw, co. Lan-
caster, first wife.
= Isabel, dau.
and coheir of
John Cuer-
denofCuer-
3 Adam,
rector of
Eccleston
juxta Cros-
i Ellen,
wife of
William
Bayley of
2 Mary,
wife of
James
Tompsoi
den, co.
ton, co. Lan-
Adlington
of Lang-
Lancaster,
caster, ob.
co. Lan-
tree, CO.
ob. s.p.,
s.p.
caster.
Lancas-
second wife.
ter.
Anne, dau. of
John Gobert
of Coventry,
widow of
Thomas Legh
of Adlington.
co. Cest, esq.,
second wife.
Alexander Rigby
of Middleton in
Goosenarth, co.
Lancaster,esquire
of the body to
King James, and
a bencher of
Gray's Inn ; ob.
in August 1650.
:Lucie, dau. of 2 Leonard, 3 Joseph Rigby 4 George Dorothy,
Sir Urian Legh died young, of Aspull, co. Rigby of wife of
of 4dlin"ton Lancaster, mar- Peele in Robert
co. Cest., knt, ried Margaret, Hulton, Mawdesley
first ^-ifg. dau. of Gabraell married of Mawdes-
Haighton of Beatrix, ley.
Knowsley, co. dau. of
Lancaster. - . . Hil-
ton of the
Parke.
Joanna,
wife of
Gabriel
Houghton
of Child-
Hellen.
246 yisitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Margaret, =
dau. of
Thomas
Legh of
Adling-
ton,
second
wife.
=Elizabeth,dau.=
of Sir William
Herrys of
Shenville, co.
Essex, first
wife.
Alexander,
Lucie,
=i Alexander
Rigby of
Middleton,
co. Lancas-
ter, set. 45
an. 19 Sept.
1664.
died
young.
=Margaret, 2 Urian
dau. of Sir ob. coal.
Gilbert
Houghton
ofHough-
tonTower,
co. Lan-
caster,
knt. and
bart.,third
wife.
3 Edward=
Rigby of
Preston,
co. Lan-
caster,
barrister-
at-law, KL
37 an. 16
Sept.
1664.
=Alice, dau.
of Sir
Thomas
Wilsford of
Ilsding, co.
Kent.
Lucie, wife of
Robert Hes-
keth of Ruf-
ford, esq.;
afterwards of
John Moli-
neux, son and
heir of Sir
Francis Moli-
neux.
I
Leonard,
died
young.
Thomas, Gilbert, i Margaret, Lucie. i Alexander, 2 Edward, 3 Thomas. Lucie. Elizabeth,
xt 7 an. jet. 2 an. died young, p , . died young.
1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
Mary.
set.
166.
4 Charles.
died young.
of
Irf. — Argent, a tree, sable, with a raven perched thereon.
John Risley.— . . . dau. of
ofRisley,esq. | . . .
Richard Risley=Anne, dau. of Robert
of Risley, ob.
circa 1637.
Hyde of Norbury, co.
Chester, esq.
Elizabeth, dau. of .. .=John Risley,= Eleanor, dau. of Beatrix. = Robert Browne Mary.=Richard
Scrimshireof Norbury, ob.circai639. ... Humphreys of of Brinskip. Whitehead
co. Stafford. . . . co. Derby, s.p. of Astley.
Jo. Risley.
1
Richard,
ob. inf.
John Risley,=
set. 35 an. 24
Sept. 1665.
i
=Margaret, dau. of
John Holcroft of
Holcroft, esq.
Jane. Eleanor.
Martha,
ob. inf.
ohn Risley,
et. 8 an.
sept. 24, 1665.
1
Elizabeth.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Diigdale, 1664-5. 247
Robinson of TBucfesfmto in Curton.
William Robinson=Elizabeth. dau. of
of Wrightington.
Nicholas Rigby of
Harrock, gent.
Edward Robinson=. . . dau. of
of Euxton.
Mr. ...
Southerne.
Richard Robinson,=Margaret, dau. of
ob. 1658. Mr. Adam Hol-
land of Newton,
near Manchester.
Br dget. -William Martin
of Meadows in
Melling.
1
Anne,= Andrew
Waterworth
of Whittle-
in-le-Woods.
Edward Robinson=Hellen, dau. of
Richard Robinson, =Elizabeth, dau. of Margaret.
of Buckshaw in
Euxton, set. 55 an.
Sept. 20, 1665.
John Browne
of Scalyate.
set. 51 an. Sept. 20,
1665.
John
of Le
Pennington
igh.
I
John Robinson = Alice, dau. of
of Preston, set. Thomas Birch
29 an. Sept. 20, of Birch hall, .]
1665. esq.
Edward. =Anne, dau. of
Robert Robin-
son of Whit-
ton.
Margaret
= Edward
Parr of
Wood in
Eccleston.
Bridget.
Lucy.
Anne.
Jennet.
248 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of JI3eto J£>aH.
tf. — Per fess, azure and gules, a tower, triple-1
t. — A lion passant, or.
Lawrence Rosethorne=
of Rosethorne or New
Edward Rosethorne=. . . dau. of .
or Rawsthorne, esq.,
ob. circa 1622.
Ditchford of
Ditton.
Lawrence =Holcroft, =Mr. Roger Edward, =Katharine,
Rosethorne, dau. of. . . Dodsvvorth,
ob. ante Hesketh the indus-
patrem. of Ruf- trious pen-
ford, esq. man and
antiquary,
second vir.
Alice Rosethorne. =Mr. . . . Plessing-
ton of Dimpley.
ob. circa
1653-
dau. of
Robert
Holden of
Holden,esq.
Susan,
married first
Robert Rad-
cliffe, esq.;
second Wil-
liam Rookes
of Rodes
hall, near
Bradford,
co.York,esq.
Alice,
married
John
Booth
of Booth.
Joanna,
married
Geoffrey
Rushton
of Antley.
Mary, dau. of=Ed\vardRosethorne,= Hellen, dau. of
John Grene- 0^1655. Radcliffe Ash-
ilghofBran- ton of Cuer-
dlesome hall, dale, esq., ob.
second wife. s.p., first wife.
Mary, dau. of= Lawrence =Elizabeth,
Rich. Bold of Rosethorne,
Bold, and brother and
widow of John heir, aet. 45
Atherton of an. 23 Sept.
Atherton, 1664.
esq., second
wife.
dau. of
George
Murray,
clerk, of
Bury, first
wife.
Katherine.=William Lever
of Kersall,
gent.
Mary.=Mr. James Murray
of Scotland.
Peter Rosthorne,
set. 2 an. 23 Sept.
1664.
Rachel,
aet. i8an.
Sept. 23,
1664.
Law: Rawsthorne.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 249
Bu0&ton of 3ntlep.
armS. — Argent, a. lion passant, sable, a chief of the last.
CreSt. — On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine, a demi-lion erminois.
Ralph Rushton=Isabel, dau. of
ofAntley. I Ralph Aspden,
I gent.
Nicholas Rushton,= Grace, dau. of Robert Rushton Hugh Rushton George,
vix. 20 Hen. VIII. | . . . Hancock. of Dunishope. of Tackhouse
,
Geoffrey Rushton. =.-Alice, dau. of
. . . Parker of
Extwisle.
Katherine. Alice. Hellen.
Nicholas Rushton. =Anne, dau. of
. . . Cunliffe
Geffrey Rush ton. =Joanna, dau. of
Edward Raws-
thorne of New
hall.
Susan. =William Barcroft
of Barcroft.
Nicholas:
Rushton,
ob. 30
April
,654.
=Susanna, Geoffrey Edward An'ne.= Edmund Alice. =Edmund Susan.= Henry Katherine.
dau. of of Green Rushton, Rishton Cockshutt Heap
Thomas Gore,co. vicar of of Dun- of Har- of Clough.
Green- Lancas- Heath,co. nishope, wood.
wood of ter. Derby. rector of
Foxhole Earnley,
bank. co.Sussex,
1
Geoffrey =
Rushton
=Anne, dau.
of Oliver
Thomas. =
an apo-
=Mary, Katherine. ^John Town- Susan.=JohnClay-
dau. of lev of Hurst- ton of
Alice,
ob.
ofAntley,
Browne
thecary in
W
illiam wood. Little
16156.
esq.,MD.,
of London,
Preston.
Ba
nister Harwood.
and of
widow of
of
Pres-
Preston,
Richard
ton.
ret. 48 an.
Shaw of
20 Sept.
Preston.
.664.
Nicholas Rushton,
L:<
II
ward, Ralph, Susan. Dorothy. Sarah.
set. 1 8 an
20 Sept.
set
1 6. an. ob. young.
1664.
20
Sept.
1664.
Blakeburne, 20 Sept. 1664
Geoffrey Rushton.
250 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
filisfjton of Pontalgfje.
— Argent, a fess crenelle sable
— A demi-lion rampant, ermin
Ralph Rishton.=Anne, dau. of
I Roger Nowell
[of Read, esq.
Roger Rishton.=Anne, dau. of
I Giles Livesey.
Hellen, dau. of— RalphRishton,=E
Rich. Townley vix. 8 Eliz. of
of Royle, ob. H
s.p., first wife. se
izabeth, dau. =. . . dau. of Sir
. . . Parker of James Stanley
arrockford, of Crosshall,
cond wife. third wife, s.p.
William Rishton=Eleanor, dau.
of Mickley. of ... Char-
nock of Ast-
ley.
Nicholas. Henry. Ra
Roger. Geoffrey.
William.
All died s.p.
Iph =Dorothy, William. A
iton. dau. of
George
Talbot.
ine.= William Elizabeth. Mary.
Mercer of
Simon-
stone.
William =. . . dau. of Ralph.
Rishton, William An-
:et. 58 derton of
an. 7 Euxton, esci.
April
1664.
1 1 1
John, Roger. Edward
ob. inf. Rishton
of Lon-
don.
Anne, Margaret, Dorothy,
ob. un- wife of ob. un-
married. JohnBuck married.
ofGilling,
co. York.
William Ralph. John Edward. Dorothy. =John
Rishton Rishton, Barton
of Pon- vicar of of Cam-
talghe.ast. Ley land. bridge.
31 an. 7
April
1664.
! II 1 1 1 1
Anne. Isabel. Margaret.
Alice, Mary,
ob. young. Eleanor
Katherine,
ob. inf.
Blakebnrni, 1 April 1664.
William Rus
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
251
ISis&ton of Dunnis&ope.
. - Argent, a lion passant -guardant, sable, and a chief of the second.
Robert Rishton=Margaret
of Dunnishope,
second son of
Ralph Rishton
of Antley.
dau. of ...
Rawsthorne
of Lumb.
Gilbert Rishton,= Margaret,
vix. 1 8 Eliz. I dau. of. .
William.
Robert Rishton,=Margaret,
ob. 39 Eliz. dau. of. .
Mary.=George Col-
brand of
Mitton.
William Rishton.^Jane, dau. of .Edmund Rishton,=Anne dau of
Lawrence Brown- parson, of Earnley, Geoffrey Rish-
co. Sussex. ' ton of Antley,
married 20
Jac. i.
low of Bolton-le
Moors.
Robert Rishtc
ob. inf.
ary.
Jane. =Thomas
Braddyll
of Port-
field, esq.
Susan.= Ralph Holden
of Holden,
gent.
Anne.= Randolph
Sharpies.
Elizabeth.
252 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
Carr.
— Argent, on a bend cotised, sable, three griffins' heads erased, i
William Sale
of Hope Carr
in the parish
of Leigh, co.
Lancaster.
Gilbert Sale. =
=. . . dau. of
. . . Hilton.
Agnes, dau. of
Mr. Roger
Urmston of
Lostock.
William Sale=Anne, dau. of John. Richard =
of Hope Carr, Sirjohn Nevile Sale,
ob. circa 1 63 9. of Li versedge,
co. York, and
sister and co-
heir of Edmund
Nevile, esq.
1 1 1 1 1
James. Elizabeth,
Roger. £—
Raphe.
Thomas.
Margaret, Jane,
married Mr. married Mr.
Christopher Ellis Allan-
Bradshaw of son of
Bedford. Catherall.
Richard Sale=Philippa, dau. of
of Hope Carr, Christopher Wy-
ast 58 an. 19 vile, son of Sir
Sept. 1664. Marmaduke Wy-
vile of Constable
Burton, co. York,
bart.
John, Gilbert,
ob. s.p. ob. s.p.
Edmund,
ob. s.p.
Gilbert Sale, Richard,
ret. 30 an. 19
Sept. 1664.
John. Anne.
Mary.
Richard Sale.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 253
of ^iffb as&es anD iQut&uwr.
Brian Sandford=Anne, dau. of
of Thorpe Sal-
vin, Tickhill, co.
York.
Jeremiah Dixon
of Leeds.
JohnSandford.=Anne, dau.
of Nicholas
Griffith of
Braybrook,
co. Northants.,
esq.
Miles Sandford=Alice, dau. and Jeremiah. John.
-ofWoodhouse coheir of Wil-
in the parish of
Ashton-under-
Lyne.
iam Halefield.
Robert Sandford=Alice, dau. of
of High Ashes in j Mr. Henry
the same parish. Smith.
John Sandford=Alice, dau. of
of High Ashes.
Mr. Ralphe
.
Sandiford of
Pennyshutts.
Samuel Sandford=Helen, d.
lu. Tohn.=
= Ann, dau. Robert. = Alice. dau.
Edward.
i n
Wil iam.
Anne,
of Nuthurst, set
43, Sept. 20, 1 664.
and coheir
of Mr.
Robert . . .
of Ed-
mund
Hopwood
ofThomas ob. un-
Stirroppof married in
Lincoln. Ireland.
Theophilus.
Daniel.
ob. un-
married
of Man-
chester.
of Hop-
wood, esq.
Charles.
Samuel Sandford, Anne. Mary.
set. 3 an.
Sept. 20,
1664.
Manchester, 20 Sept.
254 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
Si. — Argent, a fess dancette between three cro
t. — A griffin segreant, per fess, or and gules.
George Sandys,:
citizen of Lon-
don.
> crosslets, gules.
Christopher Sandys=. . . dau. of
of Grathwayt. William Ca-
rus.
— i i — — i — — i
Miles. Edwin, Anthony, William,
lord Arch- of Easthwayt. of Conis-
bishop of hed.
York.
Adam Sandys=Katharine, dau.
of Grathwayt. of ... Dalstori
•
of Cumberland,
esq.
— i John Sawrey
of Plumpton ;
2 Thomas
Rawlinson of
Grathwayt.
William Sandys=
of Grathwayt,
ob. circa 1615.
=. . . dau. of Christopher, Esther
Mr. John of Booth in
Stalford of Furness
Westmore- Fells,
land.
Miles Sandys
of Grathwayt
=Elizabeth, dau. of William, Anne. Esther.
William Gilpin of ob. s.p.
ob.circai649-
Kentwick, co.
Westmoreland.
1
Samuel Sandys=
of Grathwayt,
jet. 31 an. 16
March 1664.
=Anne, dau. and
coheir of Mr.
John Swainson
of Cartmel Fells.
William.
Esther. =Rowland
Phillipson
of Rawling,
co. Westm.
1
Elizabeth. = Alan Gilpin
of Lath-
wayte, co.
Westm.
Miles Sandys,
at. 6 an. 1 6
March 1664.
Samuel.
Lancaster, 16 March 1664.
Samuel Sandys
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 255
Satoreg of Plumpton.
- Argent, on a bend engrailed, gules, between six lions rampant of the second, a rose of the field, between two
arrows proper.
John Saurey=. . . dau. of
of Plump-
ton.
Thomas Ca-
ms, one of
the justices
of the king's
bench.
:Dorothy, dau. of
Sir William Hut-
ton of Penrith,
co. Cumb., sister
of Sir Richard
Mutton of Golds-
bury, co. York,
justice of the
common pleas.
Anthony Sawrey=Alice, dau. of John Sawrey.
of Plumpton, esq. , Thomas ffar-
He died circa ' ington of Wear-
1620. I den, esq.
1
John Sawrey=
of Plump-
ton, esq., ob.
1664.
=Esther, dau. of Miles Sawrey.
Adam Sandys
of Grathwayt,
gent; she mar-
ried second
Mr. Tho. Raw-
linson.
Roger Sawrey.
Anthony Sawrey=Anne, dau. of
of Plumpton, aet. I Mr. Knipe of
33 an. 17 March
1664.
Broughton.
John Sawrey
of Plumpton,
set. 9 an. 17
March 1664.
Lancaster, 17 March 1664.
Wil iam.
Esther.
Ant. Sawrey.
256 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
— Argent, a (ess between three bulls' heads couped, gules.
. — A bull's head couped, gules, horned of the same, collared argent.
James Scholefield=
of Scholefield hall
in the parish of
Rachdale.
Cuthbert Scholefield Allexander Scholefield=
of Scholefield, ob. s.p. of Scholefield.
Gerard Scholefield=,Mary, dau. of
of Scholefield, ob. I Mr. ... Lynney
circa 1638. I of Rachdale.
James Scholefield=Alice, dau. of Savile
of Scholefield, esq.,
set. 44 an. March
17, 1664-5.
Radcliffe of Tod-
morden hall, esq.
— T
Radcliffe Scholefield James. Caryl. Alexander. Charles. Alice,
of Scholefield, set. 20
an. March 17, 1664-5.
rr, 17 March 1664. 'fa. Schofield.
Sclater of Lic$t SDakes.
Richard Sclater=. . . dau. of
of Keighley, co.
York.
. . . Jennin£
gent.
John Sclater=Matild, dau. of .
ob. circa
1624.
Shute of Giggleswick,
co. York, gent.
Sir Henry Sclater= Rachel, dau. of
of Light Oakes, co. Thomas Brooke
Lancaster, set. 69 of Norton Priory,
an. Sept. 22, 1664. co. Chester, est
Henry Sclater
of Light Oakes,
;et. 22 an. Sept.
22, 1664.
i 1 1
Thomas. Christopher. Peter.
1
Agnes.
Frances.
Henrv Sclater.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 257
of jFricfeleton.
Srmsi. — Sable, three crescents, argent, between the points of each a mullet, or.
Ctltft. — A dexter hand brandishing a sword, proper.
JohnSharples=. . . dau. of
of Frickleton,
in the parish
of Kirkham.
Mr. Henry
Colbrand of
Frickleton.
ArthurSharples.=Alice, dau. of
Thomas Hough-
ton.
John Sharpies^
of Frickleton.
1
=Anne, dau. of Cuthbert. James
Roger Nowell of Liver-
Elizabeth,
married Mr.
Alice,
married Mr.
of Rede, esq. pool, ob.
Edward
Robert Par-
unmarried.
Lawrence of
kinson of
Ellhall.
Ellhall.
Dorothy, dau. of=George Sharples=Alice, dau.
Mr. Edward
Veale of Whin-
ney Haigh in
Layton.
ind
ofFrfckleton.aet. ' coheir of Edward
43, Sept. 19,
1664.
Houghton of
i Romsgrea
gent.
James Sharpies, Richard Sharpies,
slain in the late settled in Dublin,
civil war.
John Sharpies
of Frickleton,
set. 12 an. 19
Sept. 1664.
George,
set. 10 ar
19 Sept.
1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
George Sharpie.
258 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
Cfrarnocfe.
9rmS. — Argent, a chevron, ermine,
Cfttit. — A falcon, volant, proper.
James Shaw
of Heath
Charnock,
second son
of John
Shaw of
High Bui-
lough.
;Mary, dau.
of . . .
Gerard of
Ince, esq.
John Shaw= Katharine,
of Heath
Charnock.
dau. of ...
Pilkington
of Roving-
ton, gent.
Thomas.
I
Edmund.
Richard, Thomas,
third son.
Thomas Shaw=Alice, dau.
of Heath Char-
nock.
of . . .
Charnock
of Astley.
Robert Shaw
of Heath Char-
Katharine,
married
Mary,
married Mr.
Jane,
married Mr.
nock.
John Breres
of Marlon.
Roger Holte
of Bridge
hall in Bury.
William
Rawsthorne
ofSomerstat.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 259
of Ipreston.
. — Argent, a chevron, ermine, a canton, gules
— A falcon, volant, proper.
William Shaw=Jane, dau.
of Shaw hall
in Leyland.
of Henry
ffarington
of Hutton
Grange, .
gent.
Richard Shaw=
of Preston, ob.
30 July 1629.
William Shaw-_=Joanna, dau. Richard Sha
of Preston, ob. of Richard
22 May 1659. Eaves of
William Shaw= Hannah, dau. Alice,
of Preston,
aet. 30 an. 14
March 1664-
of John Shar-
pies of Black-
borne, gent.
S married 26
anuary 1655
at Preston.l
married
John
Parkinson
of Whit-
tingham.
Mary,
married
Mr. Wil-
liam . . .
of Preston.
William Shav
aet. 5 an. 14
March 1664.
Preston, 14 March 1664.
260
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of !£>ep=siDe.
. — Same as Shaw of Preston.
Richard Shaw, = Anne, dau.
second son of
of. . .
Richard Shaw
Browne,
of Preston.
gent.
Oliver Shaw,
of Heyside
1
=Alice, dau. John. Mary,
of Thomas
Anne
in Oldhani,
Chetham of
ret. 29, 14
Heyside.
March
1664.
Richard Thomas. Joht
Shaw of
Heyside.
'Chester, 14 March 1664.
Oliver S/iaw
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 261
Of
, — Argent
cheveron, ermines.
James Shaw=
of Shaw-
place in
Heath-Char-*
nock, co.
Lancaster,
in the parish
of Standish.
John Shaw-
of Heath-
Charnock.
i Thomas Sha\
of Heath-Char-
nock.
2 Peter, | ob
3 James, ' S-P-
4 Leonard Shaw,=
heir in tayle after
the death of
=. . . dau. of . .
Heywood of
Heywood, co.
Thomas Shaw,
Lancaster.
1
son and heir
of
Robert Shaw=
Robert Shaw
of Heath-
without issue
Charnock,ob.
male.
circa 1637.
i . . . dau. of ... =Peter Shaw=Oseth, dau. of
Thomas Shaw
ofHeath-Char-
nock.
Duckenfield of
Duckenfield,co.
Cest.. first wife.
of Heath-
Charnock,
ob. circa
. . . Dillingham
of Colesbach, co.
Leicester, clerk,
1657.
wido
w of ...
i
Anne,
Thomas Shaw,
Ellington of Shaw-
ell, co. Leicester.
ob. s.p.
died young.
1 1
i Peter Shaw=Jane, dau. of 2 John,
of Heath-Char- Thomas Cooper
nock, aet. 28 of Charnock-
an. 22 Sept. Richard, co. La
n-
1664. ! caster, widow of
1 Joseph Wrang-
Oseth, ham of ... in
«*• 8 the bishoprick
Septimanar., of Durham.
22 Sept
1664
Or/neskirke, 22 Sept. 1664.
262 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of TBull&ag&e.
— Argent, a chevron, ermin
— A falcon, volant, proper.
John Shaw.=Elizabeth,
! dau. of
I Christopher
| Haydock.
Richard Shaw=Elizabeth,
of High Bull-
haghe.
dau. of
John Whal-
ley, son of
Sir John
Whalley.
James Shaw
of Heath-
Charnock.
Lawrence Shaw=Cicely, dau.
of High Bull- of ...
haghe. Wormall. Thomas. Richard.
Richard Shaw-
of High Bull-
haghe.
Ro
of
hag
1 1 1
=Mary, dau. of John. George. James.
Mr. Thomas
Bradshaw.
Anne.=James Fielding
of Strete.
I 1 i 1
)ert Shaw Edward Shaw. Anne. Jane
High Bull-
h.
Elizabeth.
Penelope.
Margaret.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664 5. 263
of ^tannifwrst.
— Argent, a lion rampant-guardant, vert.
— A unicorn's head, argent, crined and armed,
Sir Richard Sherborne.=. . . dau. and heir
lofHenryCarlton
of Carlton in
Craven.
Richard Sherborne.— Alice, dau. and
heir of Robert
Heppall.
Sir John Sherborne=. . . dau. of Sir
of Stonnihurst.
William Plump-
ton of Plump-
ton, co. York.
Robert Sherborne.=. . . dau. of Sir
j Thomas Tem-
| pest of Brace-
I well in Craven.
Sir Robert Sherborne.=. . . dau. of Sir
James Haryng-
ton of Hornby
castle.
Sir Richard Sherborne. =. . . dau. of Sir
[John Stanley.
Robert Sherborne.=. . . dau. of Richard
Hamerton of Ham-
erton in Bowland,
co. York, esq.
Robert Sherborne.=. . . dau. of Sir
Richard Rad-
clyffe of Win-
merley.
Sir Richard Sherborne. =Joanna, dau. of Sir Roger Sherborne
| Raphe Langton. of Wolf house.
Hugh Sherborne,=. . . dau. of Sir Thomas
ob. 19 Hen. VIII.
Talbot of Bashall, co.
York.
264 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Thomas Sherborne.=Joanna, dau. of Sir John
I Towneley of Towneley.
. . . dau. of . . .=Sir Richard Sherborne=Matilda, dau. of Sir ThomasSherborne.=. . . dau. of Thomas
Wood, second of Stannihurst, knt. Richard Bold of Catherall of Ca-
wife. Bold. therall and Mitton.
Sher- of Henry dau.of wife of married
Richard Isabel, Grace, Catharine,==Richard=Ann, dau.=Anne, Anne, Elizabeth, Margaret,
Sherborne married married dau. of
of Dun- ...South- William Charles,
now, near worth.son Hoghton lordStour-
Sladeburn, ofSirJohn of Grims- ton.
co. York. South- sail,
worth.
borne of Kighleyof
Stann
hurst,
esq.
Kighle>
widow (
eyo'f
Thomas
Hoghton
of Hogh-
ton tower,
esq., s.p.,
second
wife.
Hoi- Fleet-
den of wood
Green- ofStaf-
fords.,
esq.
Ed-
wards of
Wales.
married
Lawrence
Townley
of Barn-
side.
acre,
third
wife,
s.p.
Henry Sherborne=
of Stonnihurst,
esq., ob. 1629.
=Anne, dau. of
. . . lord Dacre.
Richard Sherborne, =
brother and heir.
^Elizabeth, dau. oL
Sir Richard Moly-
neux of Sefton,
bart, first wife.
=. . . dau. of Thomas
Walmisley of Dun-
kenhalgh, esq.,
second wife.
Issue died
in infancy.
A daughter
ob. inf.
Richard Sherborne=Isabel, dau. of
of Stannihurst, esq., ! John Ingleby
a;t. 36 an. Sept. i, i of Lawkland,
1664. esq.
I
Thomas. Eleanor, Anne.=Sir Marmaduke
ob. s.p. Constable of
Everingham, co.
York, bart.
Richard,
xt. 12 an.
Sept. i, 1664.
Elizabeth.
Nicholas.
Blakeburne, i Sept. 1664.
Rich. Sherburne.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of KHolffjouse.
SlrmjS. — Argent, a lion rampant, vert.
Crr£t. — A unicorn's head, argent.
Roger Sherborne=Isabel, dau. and
of Wolfhouse,
second son of
heir of John
Knoll of Chip-
RobertSherborne pen-dale and
of Stannihurst, Wolfhouse.
nupt. circa 5 Hen, :
VII.
Robert Sherborne=
of Wolfhouse, vix. [
38 Hen. VIII.
Roger Sherborne=Grace, dau. of
of Wolfhouse. j Thomas Sherborne
of Stanihurst, esq.
Edmund.
Robert
I
Sherborne=Anne, dau.
Ml III
of Charles. Luke.
Matild.,
Mar>
of Wolfhouse.
ssScT ™- «—•
married
Thomas
York.
Roger. Richard. Wilkinson.
Roger Sherborne=Elizabeth,
ofWolf house.vix. dau.ofMr.
Alexander.
Richard. =. . . dau. of John.=
Tho. Den-
I
=Mary, dau. Mary,
of . . . Green married
1
Anne,
married
27 Eliz.
Haydock
man of
ofWerewell,
.
James
of Cot-
Ordsall,
co. Cest.
Richard- Parker
tarn.
near Ret-
son of
of Gras-
ford, co.
Stirzaker. Stanley.
Notts.
1
Robert = Isabel,
1
Henry,
William,
1
John Sherborne =Elizabeth,
1
Thomas,
1
Robert =Dorothy,
Sher-
dau. of
ob. s.p.
ob. s.p.
of Wolfhouse. dau. of
ob. s.p.
Sher-
dau. of
borne
William
He sold Wolf- Mr. ...
borne
Sir Ed-
ofWolf-
Grim-
house to his Wall of
ofWolf.
ward
house.
sargh.
uncle, John Preston.
house.
Mansfield,
Sherborne.
co. Bucks.
Grace.
Anne
1 |
Edward Sherborne Mary.
Katherine.
of Wolfhous
e, son
and heir app.
266 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Ditgdale, 1664-5.
of Ctoisleton.
9rnIJ;f. — Argent, a lion rampant, vert, charged on the shoulder with a cross potent, or.
Thomas Sherborne,=. . . dau. of
second son of Sir I ... Edmond-
Richard Sherborne | son.
of Stanihurst, by
Dame Mabel Bold.
Richard Sherborne=Margaret, Thomas. Robert, Matild. Jane.
of Twisleton,
dau. of
George
Talbot of
Carr.
rector of
Brayton.
Thomas James, Anne, Juliana. =John Morley,
Sherborne, ob. s.p. a nun. gent.
living 1664.
Rlakeburne, i Sept. 1664
Thomas Shcrbnrne.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of Little agitton.
tf. — First and fourth, argent, a lion rampant, vert, quartering, second and third, azure, three mascles,
Robert Sherborne,=Dorothy, dau. and= Richard Braddyll
second son of I coheir of Mr. of Whalley, second
Thomas Sherborne ! Thomas Catherall vir.
of Stanihurst, 9 Eliz. of Little Mitton.
Reader of Gray's
Inn, ob. 14 Eliz.
Margaret, dau. of=
Francis Tunstall
of Arncliff.
Thomas Sherborne=Isabel, dau. of Robert. Jane.= Robert Greneacn
of Little Mitton. . . . Banastre of of Worstone.
Clapham.
Robert Sherborne=
of Little Mitton,
ob. 1657.
Jane, dau. =Thor
of Mr. of Li
Justice
Reeves of
Thwaite,
ob. s.p.
1 ! 1
=Katherine, dau. Thomas,
of Richard La- r> • v, A
thorn of Parbold. Rlchard
Matthew,
ob. s.p.
Anne. Jane, married
Daniel Smith-
son of Borough-
bridge, co. York
Dorothy. Titus.
Bartholomew. Joanna.
Christopher. Elizabeth
Charles.
Katherine, Mary,
married
Thomas
King of
Ekeshaw.
Frances, Doroth
married Mr.
George Har-
rison of Lan-
caster.
Elizabeth.=John
Shuttle-
worth,
gent.
las Sherborne =Katherine, dau.
ttle Mitton. of John Jones,
widow of Mr.
Edward Jones
of Glumendi in
Clannois in
Yale, co. Den-
bigh, ob. s.p.
Richard =Frances,
Sher- dau. of
borne of Mr. Chris-
Little topher
Mitton, Towneley
brother ob. s.p.
and heir.
Blakeburne, i Sept. 1664.
268 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
§>fmrrocfe of Walton.
Ralph Sharrock=
of Walton-in-le- '
Dale, lieutenant
of foot under Sir
John South-
worth at the
taking of Leith,
tpe Edw. VI.
Ralph Sharrock,=Joanna, dau. of
ob. anno 1626. ... Chorley of
Walton-in-le- Dale.
William Sharrock,
ob. s.p.
Richard Sharrock,
ob. anno 1643.
;Katherine,
dau. of
Leonard
Sergeant.
Isabel.
Jane, dau. of=Ralph Sharrock= Elizabeth,
ThomasHud- of Walton-in-le- dau. of Mr.
son of Ber- Dale, aet. 54 an. Robert Jack-
noldsvvick,co. 20 Sept. 1664. son of Hole,
York, gent. and widow
of John
Cooper, s.p.
Richard Sharrock,
set. 22 an. 20 Sept.
1664.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
— Sable, three crescents, argent, between the poin
. — A dexter hand, brandishing a sword, proper.
of each a mullet, or.
John Sharples=
of Sharpies i
Bolton-le-
Moors.
Richard Sharpies. =Elizabeth,
I dau. of
' Robert
j Bolton of
I Bolton.
Margaret, =AlexanderSharples,=
dau.ofMr. alias Ward.
=Anne, dau. Jane, Margaret, Elizabeth,
of Richard married Mr. Ed. married
William
Urmston Ri
chard Sha
rples Roger
Norris of
of Lostock, K
rkham. ofr
rower- Taylor of
Bolton,
second wife.
ton
Holloway.
s.p.. first
wife.
Richard Sharples,=Helen, dau. Elizabeth,
1
Agnes,
Cicely. Jane
alias Ward.
I of Mr. Lau- married
married
j rence Brown- Robert
William
! low. Sharpies of
Sweetlove.
Blackborne.
Alexander Sharpies.
Margaret.
2jo Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
^fwttletoortb of IBeDforD.
Hugh Shuttleworth=Hellen, dau. of
of Bedford.
Roger Urmston
of Lostock.
Richard Shuttleworth,=Hellen, dau. Roger. =Elizabeth,
ob. ci
rca 1620. . of Jc
hn Smith dau. of
of.
Hugh Stir-
ropp of Bed-
| ford.
Jane, dau. of=
James Parr
of Ken ion.
=Richard-
Shuttle-
worth,
1 1 1
=Mary, dau. Thomas. Elizabeth. Margaret, John Shuttleworth,
of James T , married aet. 56 an. 23 Sept.
Holland of J William 1664.
ob. at
Dalton, Micha
-1. Wilkinson
Dublin
second wife.
of Lay-
circa
hog.
1657.
Richard Shuttleworth,=Frances, dau.
ob. circa 1650. and coheir of
Richard Urms-
ton.
John. Edward. Henry.
Richard
Shuttleworth,
set. 22 an. Sept.
23. 1664.
John.
Manchester, 23 Sept. 1664.
John Shuttleii'orth.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Aiga*, three wwn's
Abor
sable, threaded, or.
-:: =
rtxth^Ennbeth,
of Gawthorp, vis. 3 dan. of
Edw. VI.
Mereleyof
Merelev.
Nicholas 3mttlewonh=Hdlen. dan.
of Christo-
pher Parker
of Rodham
park. co. York.
Henry.
Hel!en.=. . . Cun-
liffe.
^. .- =N •-.: ->
Talbot
Henry Shuttleworth. H»^h ShuttIeworth.=Anne, dao. Richard.
ob. s.p- ob. 50 Eliz. of Thomas ob. sp-
Grimshaw
of Clayton,
esq.
Ben A: :
:' i.y
Sir Richard=Mary. dan. of
Laurence.
Thomas=Anne. dau.
Heilen.=Christopher
Shuttleworth Sir Peter Leigh
rector of
Shuttle- of Richard
Xowell of
ofGawthorp. of Lyme. co.
\ruchlbrd.
worth. Lever. She
Little Mear
Reader of Chester, and
co. War-
married
lev.
Gray's Inn, widow of Rob.
wick.
:_":'-.:•
25 Eliz.; Barton of
Wood, and
serjeant-at- SmitheDs, esq.
third Mr.
law, 16 Eliz.;
UnderhflL
chief justice
of Chester;
ob. s-p.
Judith. dau.= Richaid =Fleetwood. dan. Nicholas.
of Jeremiah Shuttle- and heir of Rich-
Thorpe of worth of ard Barton of
Bradford. Gawthorp, Barton, esq.. be-
co. York. esq., aet. toothed to Rich-
second wife. 77 an. 19 ard, lord Moly-
Sept. neux in his non-
1664- ^^ Dut divor-
ced, first wife.
a b
Ugitred, Ann. Hellen. Euzabeth.
a barrister married married married Sir
of Lin- TamesAn- Sir Ralph Matthew
coln'slnn. derton of Assheton Whitfield of
Cbrton. of^-hal- Whitfield, co.
ley. bart. Northumb.
272 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
1
Richard=Jane, dau. of Nicholas=Margaret,
Shuttle- . . . Kirke of Shuttle- dau. of
worth of London. worth. Thomas
Gaw- Standish
thorp, of Dux-
ob. 21 bury, esq.
Jan.
1650. 1
Richard.
Nicholas. Ughtred.
Richard =Margaret, Nicholas. Fleetwood.
Shuttle- dau. of
worth of John Tem-
Gaw- pest of Old
thorp, Durham,
set. 20 esq.
an. 19
Sept.
1664.
Ughtred=Jane, Margaret,= Barton =Margaret, John =Elizabeth,
Shuttle- dau. of dau. of Shuttle- dau. of Shuttle- dau. of
worth. Radclyffe . . . Walk- worth. . . . Clay- worth. Richard
Asheton er of Bar- ton of Sherborne
ofCuer- ton. Little of Little
dale, esq. Harwood. Mitton.
Edward=Alice, dau.
Shuttle- and heir of
worth. John Wood-
house of
Larbreck.
Fleetwood,
a daughter.
William Thomas Margaret, John Asheton= Anne =Richard Eleanor.
Shuttle- Shuttle- married of Cuerdale, Shuttle- Townley
worth, a worth, un- Nicholas esq., i vir. worth. of Barn-
captain married. Townley side and
for the of Royle, Carr hall,
parlia- esq. 2 vir.
ment,
slain at
Lancas-
ter.
Klakeburnc, 19 Sept. 1664.
Ric. Shiitikworih.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 273
of 3sterlep.
{ring. — Argent, three weaver's shuttles, sable.
George Shuttleworth==
of As
terley, near
Whalley, co. Lancas-
ter.
Anne,
dau. ofWWffl
am Shuttleworth=Anne, c
au. of
RogerNowell
Robert Elston
of Re
le.
of Broc
khall,
widow c
f
Robert
HodR-
kinson of Pres-
ton.
Gilbert,
Anne,
1
Hellen.= Henry
George =Jennet, dau.
1 I 1
Mary, Martha. Richard.
ob. s.p.
married
Mank-
Shuttle-
am
1
eir of
married
John
nowles
worth of
Th
m
las
Richard
Swingle-
of Barl
ey
Aster-
Di.
le
vorth
Cotes of
hurst of
in Pen
ile
ley.
of
DC
wn-
Harbottle
Harding.
forest.
har
widow
co. York.
of John Bul-
locke of
Ra
ve
ns-
hoi
m
William -.=Margaret,
Gilbert^-
Jane, da
u.
1 II 1 II 1
George, Richard. Agnes, Anne. Mary, Jane,
Shuttle-
worth of
dau. of
Richard
Shuttle-
worth.
of . . .
Harling of
a mer- „, married married ob. young,
chant at lnomas- Robert Richard
Aster-
Ellison of
Garstan
g-
Stock-
Hiltor
i of Wadding-
ley, ob.
Anington.
She mar
holm.
Middl
e- ton of
1664.
ried secc
nd
ton.
Urmston.
Thomas
Brockta
11
of Claugh-
ton.
George, George Shuttleworth
William.
I
Thomas.
M M
Rebecca. Sarah.
ob. set. (a second George).
1 6 an.
Martha. Jennet.
274
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Singleton of
— Argent, three chevronells, gules, between as many martlets, sable.
Robert Singleton.=Hellen, dau. of
f. . . Westby of
Westby.
George Singleton=Mary, dau. of
of Steyning, wcb he
bought of SirTho.
Holte of Grizle-
hurst, ob. 5 Edw.
VJ.
. . . Osbaldeston.
William Singleton=
of Steyning, ob. 3
and 4 Phil, and
Mary.
=Alice, dau. and
heir of Thomas
ffarington.
Hugh.*
=Mary, sister Richard.
a"^vc°heir Laurence.
of William
Charleton of
Charleton.
Margaret,
married Mr
Laurence
Charleton.
—
William,
ob. s.p.
Thomas= Alice, dai
Single- of James
ton, ob. Massey.
5 Eliz.,
s.p.
John Singleton=Thomasine, dau. of George.=Mary, dau. Richard. Hellen.
of Steyning,
ob. 2 Aug. 31
Eliz.
Roger Anderton,
esq. Her second
husband was Tho.
Button of Button,
esq., and her third
husband Sir An-
thony St. John.
By Button she had
Eleanor, dau. and
heir, married first
Gilbert, lord Gerard,
and had issue, But-
ton, lord Gerard,
who died before his
mother ; second
Robert Needham,
viscount Kilmurrey.
and heir of
John Hough-
ton of Pen-
dleton. She
married second
Mr. Livesey.
Margaret.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
275
• 1 — — I 1
Alice, Elizabeth, Thon
married Henry married James Singl
Birkenhead of Massey, Strange- ton.
Huxley, co. wick, s.p.
Chester.
_J |
Henry. Elizabeth, Thomas Singleton,=
married Mr. esq. He was slain
James Strange- at Newbury fight,
ways. for the king.
' |
ias=Cicely, dau. George.
e- 1 of William
1 Gerard of
1 Ince, esq.
Anne.=Robert
Parkinson
of Fair-
snape.
=Dorothy, dau.
of James An-
derton of Clay-
ton, esq.
1 1 1
John, Mary.
ob- S'P- Grace.
Alice, Anne,
married married
John Richard
Lecconby Barber of
ofEccles- Moorhouse
ton. in Poulton.
i j
John Singleton =Jane, dau. of Thomas,
of Steyning, ast. EdmundFleet-
29 an. Sept. 20, woodofRoss-
1664. hall, esq.
George. James. Anne. Mary. Dorothy.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664.
John Single/a
276 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
ij>orocolti of 'Barton.
armS. — Per chevron, argent and
Cf«it. — On the top of a tower, or
able, in chief t
a fleur-de-lis,
< fleurs-de-lis, ;
George Sorocold=Jane, dau. of
of Barton, near
Manchester.
. . . Ashton
of Bamford-
long.
James Sorocold=
of Barton and
Lawton, ob.
anno 1622.
=Alice, dau. and
heir of Mr.
James Croft of
Pennington.
Ralph =Hellen,
of Gould- dau. of
bourn. . . .
Parr of
Newton.
1
Jane. =John
Kerfoot
of Win-
wick.
1
James Sorocold=
of Lawton, ob.
=Hellen, dau.
of Thomas
George=
Soro-
^Elizabeth, John,
dau. and
Elizabeth,
married
1
Jane,
married
Alice,
married
anno 1630.
Irlam of Ir-
cold of
heir of
Robert
Alex.
Robert
lam, by Hel-
Ashton
Edward
Watmough
Radclyffe
Mercer
len his wife,
inMac-
Birchall of
of Langton.
of Leigh.
of West
dau. and
kerfield.
Ashton.
Derby.
heir of John
Barton of
j
Barton, esq.
James.
Thomas Sorocold=Elizabeth, John Sorocold.
of Barton, ast. 40
;m. 17 March
dau. of
Peter
Shakerley
of Shaker-
ley, esq.
Holland
of Clifton.
Thomas Sorocold,
ret. 15 an. 17
March 1664.
Manchester, 17 March 1664.
Thomas Sorocold.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 277
of
,
, — I. Sable, a chevron between three cross-crosslets, argent, Southworth; 2. Argent, a chevron between three
cross-crosslets, sable, Samlesbury.
, — A bull's head erased, sable, the horns argent, tipped of the first.
Gilbert Southworth=
of Southworth, vix.
19 Ed. II.
Sir Gilbert Southworth,=:
vix. 6 Ed. III.
:. . . dau. and heir
of Nicholas
D'Euyas of
Samlesbury.
Sir John Southworth, = Margaret,
vix. circa 3 Hen. V.
dau. of
Sir Rich.
Hoghton
of Hogh-
ton.
Sir Thomas Southworth.==Jane, dau. of
John Booth
of Barton.
Richard Southworth.=Elizabeth, dau. John.
of Richard
Molyneux of
Sefton.
Sir Christopher Southworth,—Isabel, dau. Juliana
Anne,
knighted on his expedition
to Scotland.
Elizabeth, Margaret, Emma,
and heir of married married married married married
John But- Sir Rich- Sir Tho. Tho. Sere- Richard ...
ardTowne- Molyneux. ven, esq. Vernon. Cholmley.
ley.
ton, of But-
ton, CO.
Chester.
Sir John Southworth, =Hellen, dau. of
Hen.
Sir Richard
Langton of
i
Christopher.
Edward.
Alice,
married
Sir Alex.
1
Margaret,
married Mr.
William
Osbaldeston
of Osbaldes-
Hoghton.
ton.
278 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Sir Thomas Southworth,=Margaret, dau. of
ob. circa 29 Hen. VIII. Thomas Butler
of Bewsey.
James Southworth.
Sir John Southworth,=
ob. 30 Eliz. as per
Inq.
=Mary, dau. of Elizabeth,
Sir Richard married
Assheton of Robert
Middleton. Harington,
esq.
Ciceley,
married
John
Culcheth,
esq.
Katherine,
married first
Tho. Clifton,
esq., second
John West-
Dorothy,
married
John Rush-
ton of Dun-
kenhalghe,
by, esq.
gent.
1 1 1 1 .11
Thomas=Rosamond, John. Gilbert.
Anne,
— i i — ^n
Jane. Mary, Stanley.
Margaret,
South-
dau. of John •
married
married
married
worth,
Lister.
Robert
George
Bartholo-
esq.
Christopher.
Singleton, Talbot.
mew Hes-
gent.
keth of
Aughton,
gent.
1 1 1
JohnSouthworth,=Jane, dau. of Sir Thomas.
rr "
Richard.
Christopher. Bridget.
Hellen,
ob. 12 Jac. I. Richard Sher- w-ir
borne of Stanni-
Nicholas.
Edward.
married
Mr. William
hurst.
Dewhurst.
Thomas Southworth,=Anne, dau. of John. Elizabeth.— Thomas
ob. ii Car. I. Sir Thomas Langton
Tildesley of of Lowe,
Ufford. esq.
John Southworth=
of Samlesbury,
set. 57 an. 13
Sept. 1664.
I 1 1
^Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas. Elizabeth, Jane,
Tho. Langton of married married
Lowe, esq. Richard Timothy
Walmsley Somner
of Showlay. of Chorley.
John Southworth, Thomas. Richard.
FTi ill M
Jane. Isabel. Bridget.
i6643 a"' ^ S?Pt Edward. Christopher.
Elizabeth. Rosamund. Mary.
William.
Anne. Hellen.
Blakeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
John Southworth.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 279
Spencer of asbton
Quarterly, argent and gules,
escallops of the first.
the second and third quarte
all on a bend, sable, thr
Williaiti Lord Spencer=Penelope, dau. of
of Wormleighton, co.
Warwick, ob. 1636.
Henry, lord Spen-
cer, created earl of
Sunderland by K.
Charles I., of
blessed memory.
William Spencer=rElizabeth, dau. of Henry Spencer, Robert Spencer, Richard Spencer,
of Ashton hall,
third son, set. 34
an. 1 6 Sept. 1664.
Button, lord Gerard first son.
of Gerard's Brom-
ley, co. Safford.
second son.
fourth son.
I I I I I l"l
Seven
daughters.
William Spencer
of Ashton hall,
set. 9 an. 16
Sept. 1664.
Thomas.
John.
Robert.
Penelope.
Lancaster, 16 Sept. 1664.
280 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
, SEarls of Der&p.
'3rm£. — Argent, on a bend azure, three bucks' heads cabossed, or.
Crrit. — On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine, an eagle's wings endorsed, or, supporting an infant
swaddled gules, banded of the third.
3>UjpJtl0rterrf. — Dext
the last.
#S0tt0. — San
Their Arms q
dle, proper,
griffin, sinister a buck, both or, and ducally collared and chained, azure, the buck attired of
Changer ma Verite.
rtered as follows, 1651. — I. Stanley: Argent, on a bend, azure, three bucks' heads, cabossed, or.
Audley : Gules, a fret, or. 3. Lathome: On a chief indented, azure, dancette three plates.
4. Man: Gules, three legs armed in a triangle, argent, garnished and spurred, or. 5. Gowshull: Or
and gules, barry of six pieces, a canton ermine. 6. Albany: Gules, a lion rampant, or. 7. Warren :
Cheque/, or and azure. 8. Strange: Gules, two lions passant, argent. 9. Woodvile: Argent, a fess,
and a canton, gules. to. Mohun: Or, a cross engrailed, sable. n. Somerset: Gules, a maunch, ermine.
12. Montalt: Azure, a lion rampant, argent. 13. Suffolk: France and England quarterly, in a bordure, or
and azure. 14. Brandon : Barry of ten pieces, argent and gules ; over all a lion rampant, or, crowned per
pale, of the first and second. 15. Bruen: Vert, a cross moline, or. 16. Rockley : Lozengee, gules
and ermine.
William Stanlegh.=Joanna, dau. of
. . Bamvile.
Sir Thomas Stanley. = Margaret, dau.
and heir of ...
Hooton in
Cheshire.
William Stanley,
settled at Hoo-
ton.
John Stanley,^
second son of
Sir Thomas,
settled at El-
ford, co. Staf-
ford.
Sir Thomas Stanley=Anne, dau. of
of Elford. i Sir Robert
Acton.
Sir John Stanley:
of Elford.
Isabel, dau. and
coheir of Lord
Verdun of Alton,
co. Stafford,
widow of William,
lord Ferrers of
Groby.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dtigdale, 1664-5.
Sir John Stanley=Isabel, dau. and
of Elford.
heir of Sir Thomas
Lathom of Lathom,
co. Lancaster.
Sir Thomas Stanley,=Joanna, dau. of Sir
lord Stanley of La-
thom, chamberlain to
K. Hen. VI., and
knight of the garter.
Robert Gowshull,
by Elizabeth his
wife, dau. of ...
Duncalf of Norfolk.
Sir John Stanley..=Elizabeth, dau.
I and heir of Sir
John Haryng-
ton.
Isabel Stanley.=John Warren
of Poynton
in Cheshire.
1
Eleanor, =Sir Thomas=
= Margaret, dau.
Sir William John
= Elizabeth,
Elizabeth,
1
Margaret,
dau. of t Stanley, lord
and he
rof John,
Stanley,lord Stanley
dau. of
married
married
Richard ' Stanley of
duke c
f Somer-
of Holt in
Thomas
first . . .
first Wm.
Nevile,
the Isle of
set, wi
dow of
Wales, and
Weaver of
Molyneux;
Trout-
earl of Man, stew-
Edward de Had-
K.G.
Weaver,
second,
beck,esq.;
Salis-
ard of the
ham (r
alf-bro-
esq.
Thomas le
second,
bury.
household
therto
Hen.VL),
Strange,
Sir John
to K. Edw.
earl of
Rich-
esq.
Butler;
IV., K.G.,
mond,
and mo-
third, lord
and created
ther of
Hen. VII.
Grey of
earl of Der-
Her second hus-
Codnor.
by i Henry
band was Henry
VII. He
Staffer
d, son of
died in the
Hump
irey.duke
year 1504.
of Buckingham,
s.p.
Sir George=Joanna,
Stanley, dau. and
lordStrange heir of
Edw
Stan
lord
III i
ard Richard. James
Si- Thon,,, gj**
Alice.
Anne.
Margaret.=Sir John
Osbaldes-
ton of
of Knock- John,lord
teag
e, William. bishop
Katherine.
Osbaldes-
ing. He Strange of
died A.D. Knock-
andK.G. Allobsp of Ely.
All ob.
ton.
1487 be- ing.
young.
fore his
father. He
was K.G.
282 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Thomas=
Stanley,
I |
=Anne, dau. of John. James
Edward, lord Stanley
Elizabeth.^ Edward
Stanley
Jane. = Ralph He!
Rishton
lord
Hastings, sis- of Cross-
of Flint,
of Pon-
Stanley
ter to George, hall.
esq.
talgh,
and
earl of Hunt-
esq.
Strange,
ingdon. She
and the
married
Isle of
second,
Man,(«V)
John Rad-
and earl
clyffe, lord
of Der-
Fitzwalter,
by.
father of
Robert, earl
of Sussex.
1
John Dorothy,=
Stanley, dau. of
1
=Edward Stanley ,=
lord Stanley of
1 |
=Margaret, =Mary, dau. Henry, Marga
dau. of of Sir ob. inf.
lord Thomas
Lathom, Strange
Ellis Bar-
George
Strange, Howard,
of Knocking and
low of
Cotton ol
died be- duke of
the Isle of Man,
Barlow,
Cheshire,
fore his Norfolk.
third earl of
esq.,
s.p.
father.
Derby. He ob.
second
14 Eliz. anno
wife.
I572-
Hellen.=Thomas
Langton,
baron of
Newton.
George Katharine.:
Stanle
ob
inley,
. inf.
:Sir Thomas Johnjermyn=
Knevett. of Rush-
brook, CO.
Suffolk, esq.,
i vir.
Radclyffe,
lord Egre-
mont,Bot-
tereuxand
Burnell,
earl of
Sussex.
Margaret = Sir Richard
Stanley. Poynts,2vir.
Henry =
Stanley,
=Margaret, Sir Edward
dau. of Stanley of
1 |
SirThomas=Margaret, George,=Anne=SirRichard
Stanley of dau. and lord Stan- Arundell of
Elizabeth,
married Henry
succeed-
Henry Clif- Eynsham,
Winwick, heir of Sir Stour- ley. Cornwall,
Parker, lord
ed in all
ford, earl co. Oxford.
co. Lancas- George ton, i 2 vir.
Morley.
his fa-
of Cumber-
ter. Vernonof vir.
Mary, married
ther's
honours,
land, by
Eleanor his
... CO.
Derby.
Edward, lord
otanora.
fourth
wife, dau. of
1
earl of
Charles Bran-
Sir Edward Stanley=Lucy, dau. of
Jane, married
Derby.
Heob.
don duke of
Suffolk and
of Tonge castle, co.
Salop, Winwick and
Thomas Per-
cy, earl of
Edward, lord
Dudley.
anno
Maryqueen of
Eynsham, K.B. at
Northumber-
1593.
France, sister
the coronation of
land.
tokingHenry
K. Jac. I.
VIII.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 283
1
o- rr
„ 1 ..
Ferdinand:=Alice, dau. of =Sir Thomas Egerton, William Stanley,=
Stanley, Sir John Spen- lord Ellesmere, vis- brother and heir
v eiicua.=oir iveii-
=Elizabeth,eldest Stanley, elmDigby
dau. of Edward dau.and ofFitton,
fifth earl of cerofAl- count Brackley, and of Ferdinand,
Vere, earl of Ox- heir.
Peastock
Derby. thorpe, co. lord high chancellor was knight of
Northants. of England, 2 vir. the garter ; sixth
ford, by Anne his
wife, dau. of Wil-
and Got-
hurst,knt.
earl of Derby.
liam Cecil, lord
Burghley, and
lord treasurer of
Anne=i Grey Frances=John Eger- Elizabeth— .Henry
England.
Stan- Brydges, Stanley, ton, earl of Stanley, Hastings,
ley, lordChan- dau.and Bridgewater, dau. and lordHast-
dau. dois of coheir. baron of coheir. ings and
and Sudeley Ellesmere earl of
co- castle. and viscount Hunting-
heir. 2 Mervyn Brackley. don.
Touchett,
lord Aud-
ley, earl of
Castle-
haven in
Ireland.
James Stanley,=
seventh earl of
=Henrietta Sir Robert=Elizabeth, Elizabeth, Sir Henry=Anne.=Sir Robert
de la Tre- Stanley, dau. of ob. inf. Portman, Carr, 2 vir.
Elizabeth
and a son.
Derby, K.B. at
mouille, K.B. at the Sir Arthur i vir.
ob. inf.
the coronation
of K. Charles I.
dau. of corona- Gorges.
Henry, tion of K.
Katherine,
The blood-
prince of Charles I.
ob. young,
thirsty regi-
cidesbeheaded
Thours in
France.
buried in
Westmins-
THIS NOBLE
ter abbey.
MARTYR at his
own town of
Bolton-le-
Moors in this
county, 1 5th
October 1651.
Charles Stanley. Mary Stanley. = Richard, viscount Katharine. Amelia. Soph
ia.
Molyneux in Ire-
land.
284 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of TBicfcerstaffe.
- Argent, on a bend azure, three bucks' heads cabossed, or.
- On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine, an eagle with expanded wings, or, preying on an infant proper, in a
cradle, or, swaddled gules, banded or.
Cicely, dau. of=
Rich. Tarleton
of Walton.
=Peter Stanley,=
second son of
Sir William
Stanley of Stan-
ley, Hooton
and Stourton,
by Ann his wife,
dau. of Sir
=Elizabeth, dau.
and heir of
James Scans-
brick of Bicker-
staffe.
Margaret, =He
James Haring- dau. and son ofSir James
ton heir. Stanley.
Katharine, dau.=Sir Edward Stanley ,=Isabel, dau. William Stanley. Anne.
Alice.
of Sir Raphe
Manwaringe of
Peover, co.
Chester, first
wife.
created a baronet
26 June, 3 Ch. I.
nd coheir
ofPeterWar-
burton of
Arley, co.
Chester,
second wife.
Frances.
Elizabeth.
SirThomas=Mary,dau.of John. Francis.=.-Elizabeth, Henry
Stanley, Peter Eger- ' dau. of Stan
irt, ob. ton of Shaw, . . . But- ley
1653. esq. She ton of
married Button,
secondly Sir esq
Gilbert
Hoghton of
Hoghton
tower, knt.
Sir Edward Stanley,
bart, set. 20 an.
23 Sept. 1664.
Elizabeth.
Isal
.Mary, Peter= Margaret,
dau.of Stan- dau. of
Ham- ley. Peter
let Egerton
Crop- of Shaw,
per.
Edward.
Ormeskirke, 23 Sept. 1664.
Edu: Stanley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 285
of
t. — Stanley, with bend sinister.
Henry Stanley,=Jane, dau.
earl of Derby. ^ of ...
Halsall.
Henry Stanley =Joanna, dau. of
of Broughton . . . Browne of
hall, ob. 1640. Capenhurst, co.
Chester, widow
of Sir Robert
Stanley of Hoo-
ton.
Alice, dau. of=Ferdinando=Ursula, dau. of
WilliamLever
of Kersall.
Stanley of
Broughton,
aet.44an.20
Sept. 1664.
John Jones of
Hawkin, co.
Flint.
Elizabeth, Mary. Alice. Joanna,
set. loan. 20
Sept. 1664.
Arabella. Ursula. Anne. Grace.
Manchester, 20 Sept. 1664.
Ferd. Stanley.
288 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
§>tanlep of Cross
— Argent, on a bend azure, three bucks' heads cabossed,
Sir James Stanley:
of Cross hall,
third son of Sir
George Stanley,
lord Strange.
:Ann, sister of
Sir Percival
Hart of Lul-
lingstone hall,
co. Kent, and
widow of
Edmund
Talbot of
Bashall.
SirGeorge=Isabel, Henry=Margaret, Ann.=
Stanley.
He was
marshal!
inlreland.
dati. of
Ducken-
field of
Ducken-
field, co.
Chester,
esq.
Stan-
ley.
dau. and
heir of
Peter
Stanley of
Bicker-
staffe, esq.
rRalph Margaret. = Ed ward
Rishton Stanley
of Dun- of Flint,
kenhalgh.
Eleanor.=Gilbert
Langtree
of Lang-
tree.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of ^ornbp Castle.
. — Argent, on a bend azure, three bucks' heads cabossed, or, a crescent for differenc
Anne, dau. and=Sir Edward Stanley,= Elizabeth, dau. of
coheir of Sir
John Haring-
ton of Hornby
castle.
second son of Thomas Vai_
Thomas, first earl of of Trelomer, esq.
Derby. He was
K.G., and created
lord Monteagle 6
Henry VIII.
Thomas Stanley,-
lord Monteagle.
=Mary, dau. and Elizabeth Stanley.=Sir Thomas Langton.
coheir of Charles baron of Newton.
Brandon, duke of
Suffolk, by Anne
his second wife,
dau. of Sir An-
thony Browne,
governor of
Calais.
1 1
Charles,
ob. s.p.
Anne,dau.=
ofThomas
=William=Anne,dau. Elizabeth, William =Margaret.= Mr. John Anne.=Sir]orm
Stanley, of John wife of Sutton. Taylard. Clifton.
Frances,
Preston,
esq., wid-
lord Spencer of Richard esq.
Mon- Althorpe, Zouch,
o . s.p.
ow of Sir
tegle
s.p., se- esq.
John Ley-
cond wife.
bourne of
She mar-
Cuns-
ried se-
wick, co.
cond, Hen-
Westmer-
ry Comp-
land, first
ton, lord
wife.
Compton,
and had
Elizabet
1-= Edward
Henry,
Stanley,
Parker,
third
sole dau
lord Mor-
lord Sack-
and heir-
ley.
vile, earl
ess.
of Dorset.
290 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of fcftest Derbp.
. — Sable, three standing dishes, argent.
Ralphe Standish=. . . dau. of
of West Derby, i . . . Halsall
I of Halsall.
Edward Standish.=. . . dau. of
. . . Long-
worth of
West Derby.
George Standish.=Ann, dau. of
James Allibond
of Allerton.
John.
R:rWf1
Both ob.
unmarried.
Anne. = William Smith
of West Derby.
James Standish=Dorothy, dau. Edward, Hellen.
of West Derby,
aet. 37 an. ?
April 1664.
of Henry Car-
ter of Roby,
gent.
ob. un-
married.
Elizabeth,
ob. un-
married.
George Standish
of West Derby,
set. 9 an. 8 April
1664.
Ralphe,
set. i an.
8 April
1664.
Christiana.
Alice.^John Mercer
of West Derby.
Ormeskirke, 8 April 1664.
James Standish.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 29J
of
. — Sable, three standing dishes, argent.
Cr tit. — An owl with a rat in its talons, proper.
dish=]
"I'
Alexander Standish=Eustathia,
of Standish, ob. 23 | dau. of
Henry VI.
Ralph Standish. =Margery, dau.
and coheir of
Richard Rad-
cliffe of
Chaderton, esq.
She married
second, Thomas
Radclyffe, esq.
Henry Standish,
bishop of St.
Asaph.
Sir Alexander=Sybil, dau. of
Standish, ob
24 Hen. VII.
John Standish,
D.D., parson,
of Wygan.
Ralphe Standish,=Hellen, dau. Katherine.=Thomas Stan-
ob. 3 1 Hen. VIII. and coheir dish of Dux-
of Sir James bury, esq.
Haryngton
of Wolfage.
Alexander=Anne, dau. of Anne,
Standish, Sir William married
ob. 38 Molyneux. John Hol-
Hen.VIII. croft of
Holcroft
1 I
Agnes, Jane,
married married
Thomas Roger
Asheton of Bradshaigh
Croston. of Haghe.
Edward Standish.=Hellen, dau. of Alice. Jane.
Sir William
Radclyffe of
Ordsal .
1 |
Agnes. Isabel!. Eleanor.
Margaret.
Alexander Standish.=Elizabeth, dau. and
heir of Adam Hay-
warden of Wolstan,
gent
292 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Ralph Standish
ofStandish,
sheriff of the
county loCar. I.
He ob. 1656.
=Bridget, dau. John,
of Sir Richard -,,
Molyneux of Thomas"
Sephton, bart. Alexander.
Margaret, Hellen,
married married
Robert Hes- Henry
keth, second Banastre
brother of of Bank,
Thomas esq.
Hesketh of
Rufford,and
afterwards
his heir.
Edward Standish=
of Standish, esq.,
aet. 47 an. 22
Sept. 1664.
Elizabeth, dau. Alexander
of Sir Francis Standish,
Howard, second colonel of
son of William horse for
lord Howard of king Ch. I.
Naworth castle,
co. Cumberland.
Frances, Elizabeth
married Sir Standish.
Thomas Til- ob. un-
desley, slain married,
in the Civil
war, near
Wigan, for
the king.
William Standish^Cicely, dau. and Bridget
of Standish, set. heir of Sir Robert
26 an. 22 Sept. Bindloss of Bor-
1664. wick hall in War-
ton, co. Lancas-
ter.
Mary. Elizabeth.
Edward, William,
ob. inf. ob. inf.
Ormeskirke, 22 Sept. 1664.
Edward Siandish.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 293
of Durburg.
. — Azure, three standing dishes, argent.
. — A cock, argent.
Christopher Standish=
of Duxbury, second
son of ... Standish
of Standish.
Sir ... Standish
of Duxbury,
knighted 5 Hen.
VI., and slain in
France. His
will dated 1435,
wherein he
makes his bro-
ther James his
heir.
James Standish=Alice, dau.
of Duxbury. • of ...
Sir Christopher=Alice, dau. of
Standish. William Poole
of Poole, co.
Chester.
. . . Barnes
of Waltham
forest, co.
Herts.
Thomas Standish=
of Duxbury.
=Katharine,
dau. of Sir
Alexander
Standish of
Standish.
Mai
mar
Will
Unu
Oft
1
ilda, Anne,
•ied married
am ... Shack-
shagh erley.
aighe.
Margaret,
married
Ralph
Holden.
James Standish=
of Duxbury.
=Elizabeth, dau. Elizabeth,
and heir of John
Butler of Raw-
cliffe, esq.
= i Rowland Edwards
of London, merchant.
2 ... Fuller of
London.
3 Thomas Moore
of London, merchant.
Alice. =
— i 1 1
Thomas Standish =Margaret, Christopher. Anne,
of Duxbury. dau. and coheir married
Clemence,
married
of Thomas
Randolph
John Yates
Houghton of
Eaton.
of Chorley.
Pendleton.
294 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
§>tanni0& of
fi. — Sable, three standing dishes, argent.
t. — An owl with a rat in his talons, proper.
Thurston Standish,=. . . dau. of ...
second son of Sir
Alexander Standish
of Standish.
Hilton of Chat-
tertonin Standish.
Laurence Standish^. . . dau. of
of Burghe.
. . . Standish
of Harlow.
Thurston Standish. =Mary, dau. of
. . Dickinson
of Cophall.
Laurence Standish. =,Elizabeth, dau. of
George Byrom of
Salford near Man-
chester, gent.
1
Thurston Standish=
of Burghe, 8 April
1664.
=Elizabeth, dau. Alexander. John. Jane,
of Thomas An- married
derton of Chor- George
ley, gent. Colbrand
Laurence Standish, Thomas. Dorothy. Anne. Alice.
8 April 1664.
Ormeskirke, 8 April 1664.
Thurston Standish.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 295
of
Slrnttf. — Argent, a stork sable, membered gules, a mullet for cadency.
<£r«it. — A stork's head erased, per pale, argent and sable, holding in the beak gules, a snake, vert.
Henry Starky,=HelIen, dau. of
ob. 1639.
Alice, dau. of=
Thomas Whit-
tingham of
Whittingham,
esq., first wife.
=Edward Starky=
or Starkey, set.
46 an. 23 Sept.
1664.
=Jane, dau. of
Richard
Letherbury of
Aughton,
second wife.
Henry.
Margaret,
married
Mr. ...
Sale of...
co. Chester.
1
Jane,
married
Mr. Ro-
bert Charles
of Aughton.
Samuel. Joseph.
Aughton Starkey,
set. 21, 23 Sept.
1664.
Henry. John.
Hellen.
Ormeskirke, 23 Sept. 1664.
Edward Starkey.
296 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
%tarfete of
S. — First and fourth argent, a bend
azure, in chief three tortoises v
x storks, proper, Starkie; second and third argent, two bars
ngrailed, sable, Parr.
ClTS't. — A stork, proper
Edmund Starkie=Elizabeth, dau. and heir
of Symondstone. | of John Symondstone.
James Starkie,=Jane, dau. of ... Tem-
vix. 3 Henry 1 pest. She married
VIII. __ | secondly Roger Nowell.
Laurence Starkie,=Alice, dau. of
sheriff of Lanca-
shire 1524, ob.
Edward VI.
Reginald At-
kinson of Skip-
ton, co. York.
Edmund Starkie=Anne, dau. of ...
of Huntroyde. Hancock of Lower
Higham in Pendle.
Thomas. James.
1
Nicholas=Anne, dau. and heir
William,
John, James, Florence
Anne,=
1
= Richard Laurence
Starkie,
of John Parr of
second son,
settled third „_,,._
mar-
Hodgkiri-
ob. Aug.
Cleeworth. Shem
3J-
married
in Ire- son. Hellen'
ried
son of
1618.
ried second, Tht
rs-
Frances,dau.
land.
May 2
Preston.
tan Barton of
of John
1585-
Smithells.
Whitaker of
Symonstone.
Edmund.
John Starkie= Margaret, dau.
Edmund, Anne.=Thomas Dyke of
ofHuntroyde,
of Thomas
born in
Westwick,
near
sheriff of Lan-
Leigh.
1582.
Ripon, co
York.
cashire QCh.I.
Katharine,=NicholasStarkie,=Grace, dau. of Piers,aDutch=. . . dau. Edmund, Mary,
dau. of
Lambert
Tildesley
of Garratt.
slain with gun-
powderatHogh-
ton tower in the
Civil warini642.
James Murga- merchant, of ... in baptized 4 married married
troyd of Hollins, afterwards of the low Sept. 15 99. Richard Mr. Thos.
in the vicarage of Pendle hall. coun- He ob. Banastre of Tildesley
Halifax,co.York. tries. 1657. Altham.esq. ofGarratt.
Anne,' John Starkie=
ob. inf. ofHuntroyde,
aet. 76 an. 13
Sept. 1664.
=Alice
Alex:
Norr
ton.
1
mder of Robert Hammond Laurence. Dorothy.
sofBol- of Crawshaw, near
Colne.
John Starkie,
at. 26 an. 13
Sept. 1664.
Blakdwnc, 13 Sept. 1664
Nicholas.
Alexande
Mary.
John Starkie.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 297
Calbot of
. — Argent, three lions salient, purpur
Cr JjSt. — A talbot passant, sable.
William Talbot,:
descended from
the Talbots of
Bashall, co.
York.
John Talbot,
vix. 4 Aug.
1414.
Isabel, dau. and
coheir of Sir Ri-
chardMauleverer
by Sybil his wife,
dau. and sole heir
of Sir Robert
Clitheroe of Sale-
bury.
Isabel Talbot
married second,
Sir William
Haryngton.
Sir John Talbot = Joanna, dau. of
of Salebury. Sir John Rad-
clyffe.
Sir John Talbot =Anne, dau. of
Sir Raphe
Assheton.
Ralphe Talbot.
a captain at
Callis in France.
John Talbot.=Isabel, dau. of
Sir Richard
Towneley of
Towneley.
Anne, dau. of=John Talbot,=Anne, dau. of
Hugh Sher
bourne of
Stannyhurst,
esq., ob. s.p.
ob. 30 August j Richard Ban-
1551. astreofAltham,
esq.
298 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Alice, dau. of=John Talbot,=Mary, dau. of
Sir Alexander
Osbaldeston of
Osbaldeston,
married at Rib-
chester. Ob.
25 Hen. VIIL,
s.p.
ob. 1589.
Mr. . . . Moore
of Sheffield, co.
York.
Thomas Talbot,
clerk of the tower
records. A noted
antiquarian.
1580.
Robert Talbot,=Elizabeth, John Talbot=Mary, dau. George.
rn before
image.
dau. of Sir of Salebury,
Richard ob. antepatr.
of Sir John
Southworth
Hoghton
of Samles-
of Lee.
bury.
Mary. =John
Asshe-
ton, esq:
Frances. =Mr. Peter
Barley.
John. Robert.
George. Thomas.
Sir John Talbot,
of Salebury, na-
tus 1582.
=Mary, dau. of
Sir Alexander
Barlow of Bar-
low.
Mary.=Thomas Singleton
of Scales, esq.
Margaret,=John =
dau. of Tal-
Thomas bot of
Westbyof Sale-
Mow- bury,
breck, aet-56
esq., first an. 13
wife. Sept.
1664.'
-Dorothy, George.=Anne, Marj
dau. of dau. of
James Mr. Ro-
Wilford bert Par-
of New- kinson
man hall, of Fair-
co. Essex. snape.
aret.= Thomas
Clayton
of Lent-
ford.
Alexander. Mary.
Thomas,
ob. inf.
Anne,
married
Alexan-
der Os-
baldes-
ton of
Osbal-
deston,
esq.
John, Margaret, John, Dorothy,
ob. ob. young. ob. young. set. 14 an.
young. 13 Sept.
Blackeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
John Talbot.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 299
Calfcot of Carr.
SlrniJi. — Argent, three lions '.
Stephen Talbot=
of Carr.
George Talbot=
of Carr, vix.
16 Hen. VII.
Nicholas Talbot=Anne, dau. and
of Carr, vix. i
Edw. VI.
heir of Ewan
Browne.
George Talbot,=Anne, dau. of
ob. 1629, set.
83-
Mr. Roger
Nowell of
Meareley.
John Talbot.=Dorothy, dau.
of Edward
Braddyll of
Portfield.
Edward Talbot=Mabel, dau.
of Carr.
of Laurence
Carleton.
George Talbot.
3oo Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Catlocfe of Cunscougb.
. — Azure, a bend cotised, or, in chief a dolphin naiant, argent.
John Tatlock=
of Guns-
cough.
Richard Tatlock.
Arthura, dau.
of Mr. Arthur
Sergeant of
Melling.
John Tatlockr=. . . dau. of
of Cunscogh,
ret. 44 an.
23 Sept. 1 664.
Mr. Robert
Mercer of
West Derby.
Alice.= Mr. William
Byrom of
Sephton.
Katharine, = Mr. Nicholas
Hoskins of
Wrightington.
Anne. = Mr. William
Chadwick of
Bickerstaff.
Eve. = Daniel Sephton
of Skilmersdale.
Mary.=Cuthbert Halsall
of Barton.
Eliza
th.=William
Small-
sagh of
Skilmers-
dale.
Ormeskirkc, 23 Sept. 1664.
John Tatlock.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3O1
of <Z5arret.
Argent, a chevron, gules, between three rush hills, proper.
Laurence Tildesley=Margaret, dau. of
of Garret, ob. 1597.
. . . Standish of
Standish, esq.,
by Anne his wife,
dau. of Sir William
Molyneux.
Richard Tildesley,=Katherine, dau.
esq., ob. ante patr. of George Roger-
ley, gent.
. . . dau. of=Lambert Tildesley=Hellen, dau.
of Garret. I of ... Smith.
Lambert Tildesley,=Dorothy, dau. George Thomas. Giles. Guy. Hel
ob. 10 Tac. I. of Robert Tildesley
Blundell of of Park
Ince Blundell, hall.
esq.
ler,
Katherine.
Thomas Tildesley.=Elizabeth, dau.
of John Starkie
of Huntroyde,
Lambert,
ob. s.p.
Elizabeth,
ob. 1650.
Katherine.=Nicholas
Starkie of
Huntroyde.
M ary. =Th omas
Stanley of
Eccleston.
Thomas Stanley=Frances, dau
of Eccleston, set.
37 an. Sept. 19,
1664.
of Sir Thomas
Tildesley.
Richard,
set. 3 an.
Sept. 19,
1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
Thomas Stanley.
302 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
CilUeslep of s^orlegs.
— Argent, three rush hills, with dog dales, proper.
Edward Tildesley=Ann, dau. and
of Weardley.
heir of William
Leyland of
Morleys.
Thomass
Tildes-
ley of
Mor-
leys, ob.
ante
patr.
Elizabeth,
dau. of
Christo-
pher An-
derton of
Lostock.
Thurstan= Mary,dau.
Tildesley of Robert
of Stan- Charnock
acre. of Astley.
William =Alice,dau. Anne,
Tildes- of ... married
ley of Butler of Mr. Wal-
Astley. Kirkland. ter Rig-
maden of
Wedacre.
Jane.
Margaret,
married
James
Anderton
of Los-
tock, esq.
Edward Tildesley=
of Morleys, ob.
circa 1618.
Sir Tho
slain at
^Elizabeth, dau. of
Christopher Pres-
ton of Holkar,
esq. She married
second, Thomas
Lathom of Par-
bold, esq.; third,
Thomas Westby
of Burne, esq.
Dorothy,
married
John
Poole of
Poole, esq.
Elizabeth,
lady abbess
of Graveling
in Flanders.
Anne,
married
Sir Cuth-
bert Clif-
ton of
Westby.
mas Tildesley,=
Wigan 1651,
=Frances, dau. of
Ralph Standish
Edward,
ob. young.
being major-general to
the earl of Derby.
of Standish, esq.
Edward Tildesley=
of Morleys, esq.,
aet. 29 an. 20 Sept.
1664.
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
=Anne, dau. of Thomas Ralphe. Bridget, Elizabeth. Frances, Anne. Mary.
Sir Thomas Tildesley, married married r>ornti,v
Fleetwood of set. 22, 20 Henry Thomas
Caldwick, co. Sept. Blundell Stanley Margaret,
Stafford. 1664. of Ince ofEccles- ob. inf.
Blundell, ton.
esq.
Thomas Tildesley Edward. Frances.
of Morleys, act. 7
an. 20 Sept. 1664.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664
Edward Tyldesley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3°3
Conge of Conp.
. — Azure, a bend argent, cotised or, between six :
Christopher Tonge=Jane, dau. of
of Tonge hall in I William Bam-
Prestwich, co. Lan- | ford of Barn-
caster, ob. circa : ford, gent.
1596.
1
1
1
Richard Tonge =
of Tonge.
=Anne, dau. of
Mr. Thomas
Sarah, =Assheton =Anne,dau.
dau.of Tonge. of Mr.
Mary,
married
Winifred,
married
Chetham of
Mr.
Abraham
John
Mr. Wil-
Nuthurst
Wm.
Taylor of
Leigh of
liam Hoi-
Tay-
Chatter-
Alkring-
croft of
lor of
ton.
ton, gent.
Hurst.
Mid-
dle-
ton.
Jonathan Tonge=Sarah, dau. of Sarah. Elizabeth. Jane.=Thomas
of Tonge, set. Mr. Edward Chaddock
28 an. 1 1 March , Whitehead of of Chad-
1664. i Tong Moor. dock.
Richard Tonge Anne,
of Tonge, set. 6
an. 1 1 March
1664.
Manchester, n March 1664.
Jonathan To>
304 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Cotonelep of Cofomelep.
arm«. — Argent, a fess and three mullets in chief, sable.
CfCtft. — A sparrow hawk proper, jessed and belled, or.
Geoffrey Towneley, Richard Townley.=
dean of Whalley.
Peter Townley.=
Richard Townley.=
Agnes.=-John Hargreves. Ciceley.=John,
son of
Gilbert
dela
Leigh.
Gilbert d'la Leigh. =
John d'la Leigh.=
Thomas d'la Leigh,
held a third part of
Townley, and ob.
46 Edvv. III.
Margaret. =William Mulmore,
alias Midlemore,
of Holme, 15 Ed.
II.
Katharine, dau. —Gilbert d'la Leigh, = Alice, dau.
of Richard de alias Towneley, ob. of . . .
Balderstone,cir- 2 Ric. II.
caioEd.III.,s.p.
Richard d'la Leigh, =Helen, dau. Laurence.
alias Towneley.
Isabel, dau. of= John Towneley =Elizabeth, relict Robert, Henry.
William Rix-
ton.
of Towneley, ob. of \Vm. Rygmaden, 2 1 Rich,
circa i Hen. IV. ob.sHen. IV., s.p. II.
Alice. ^Edmund, son and
heir of Sir Thomas
Dacre.soEdw. III.
Richard Towneley=Alice, dau.
of Towneley, ob. | of ...
circa 33 Hen. VI. |
Matilda.=William, son and
heir of Sir John
le Fleming.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 305
Isabel, dau. of=^John Towneley=Isabel, dau. of
Nicholas But- of Towneley.
lerofRawcliffe,
married circa
6 Hen. VI.,
but divorced.
Richard Sher-
burne of
Stannihurst,
married circa
23 Hen. VI.
Sir Richard=Jane,dau. Laurence
Towneley,
ob. 22 Edw.
IV.
of Rich.
South-
worth of
Samles-
bury,esq.
Townley,
settled at
Barnside,
nearColne. Royle
family.
Nicholas = Elizabeth, Henry Bernard Grace. =Roger
Towneley, widow of Towneley. Towneley, Nowell
from William LL.D., of Reade.
am the Tempest of parson, of
Broughton
in Craven,
co. York.
Felkirk.
, =Sir John=An
Isabel
dau. of Towne-
Sir ley, ob.
Charles circa 32
Pilking- Henry
ton, 20 VIII.
Edw.
IV.
She ob.
s.p.
dau. of
Rafe
Catterall.
She married
second, Sir
William
Radclyffe
ofOrdsall,
knt.
Charles. John, Sir John= Isabel. =John Thomas = Grace. =Mr.Thurs-
third Talbot Hop- Hesketh ton Hall.
son, of of Sales- wood of Ruf-
Hurst- bury. of ford,esq.
wood. Hop-
wood,
esq.
=Richard:
} Towne-
ley.
Elizabeth,
dau. of
Henry Fol-
jambe of
Walton, co.
Derby, esq.
Charles=Elizabeth,
Towne- dau. of
Mr. ...
Kay of
Rachdale,
widow of
John
Nowell,
esq.
I
John.
ley, ob
3 1 Hen.
VIII.,
second
son.
Hellen,
married
Sir Ro-
bert
Nevile of
Lever-
sedge, co.
York,
circa 22
Hen. VII.
Grace,
married
first, Sir
Robert
Hesketh
of Ruf-
ford;
second,
Laurence
Haberg-
ham of
Haberg-
ham.
Jane,
married
first,
Thomas
Sherburne,
esq.. 17
Hen. VIII.;
second, Mr.
Ralph
Shuttle-
worth of
Hacking.
Elizabeth,
married
Mr
Cooke of
London.
306 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
a b
Hellen,=Thomas=Lucy,
dau. of Towne- dau. of
William,=Jane.=Mr. . . . Margaret.=Thomas Elmira.=Evan
son of Kitchen Hough- Haydock
ley. Laurence Roger of Pilling.
Hough- Towneley Dalton
ton of of Fezant-
Pendle- ford.
ton of of Barn-
of Bisp-
ton.
Green- side.
ham.
field.
Divor-
ced.
*
Sir Ri'chard=
Towneley,
=Frances, dau.
of Christopher
Hellen.=Robert, Anne.=Mr. William
son of Barcrofte
Bennet.=Roger Grace.=Hugh
Nowell Hal-
ob. i & 2
Wimbyshe of
Henry of the
of Reade, sted.
Phil, and
Nocton, co.
Banister Lodge.
esq.
Mary.
Lincoln, and
of Park
heir to her
hall, mar-
brother Tho-
ried 9
masWimbyshe,
Eliz.
esq. She mar-
ried second,
Alexander
Radclyffe of
Ordsall.
•
John,
Chr
1
stopher,
Charles,
MaryTowneley,=John Towneley,
ob. youn
5. ob.
^oung.
ob. young.
dau. and heir.
son and heir of
Charles Towne-
ley, second son
of Sir John
Towneley.
R ichard== J an e, dau.
n
John.
Christopher==Theodora,
I i
Frances, Anne.=William
i 1 i
Margaret.
Towne-
ley of
Towne-
of Ralph
Assheton
of Lever,
Charles,
ob. young
Towneley
dau. of
. . . Ton-
stall of
ob. s.p. Middle-
ton of
Stockeld,
Elizabeth.
Frances.
ley, ob.
3 Car. I.
ob. 9 Car.
I. 1634.
Aucliffe,
esq.
co. York,
esq.
All died
1628.
young.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dngdale, 1664-5. 307
Richard
Thomas
* Charles =Mary,
1 1
John,
Christo-= Alice,
Francis, Anne,=John,
Towneley
ob.youn
\. Towneley
dau. of
born
pher
dau. of
born 4 mar-
son and
of Town e-
ofTowne-
Sir
1600,
Towne-
John
Jac. I. ried
heir of
ley, natus
ley, bro-
Francis
ob.
ley.
Brad-
Aug.
SirEdw.
41 Eliz.
ther and
Trappes
young
dyll of
1626
, Plump-
ob. 1 2Car.
heir of
Birnand
Port-
ob.
ton of
I. 1635,
Richard,
ofHarro-
John,
field,
1643
Plump-
unmar-
. married
gate, co.
1602
near
ton, near
ried.
circa 1 62 7.
York.
ob inl
Whal-
Kn ares-
He was
ley.
borough,
slain at
co. York.
Marston
Moor in
the king's
cause.
Richard Towneley=
of Towneley, esq.,
set. 37 an. 30
=Mary, dau. of John.
Clement Pas-
ton of Bar-
1
Mary. =Sir Philip
Constable
ofHough-
Katherine. Anne,
died in
London,
Charles.
Francis.
May 1664
ningham, co.
ton, co.
and was
Norfolk.
Lincoln.
buried at
St. Giles'
in the
Fields,
1650.
1 1
Clement Richard, John,
Charles,
Thoma
s. Mar'y."
Towneley, ob. you ig. ob.
inf.,
set. 6 an.
aet. Q ai
. 30 and
buryed
30 May
'
May 1664. at I
Surnley.
1664.
Dorothy.
BornatNoc-
Frances.
ton, co.
Lincoln
Margaret.
Richard Towneley.
308 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Cotonlep of
. — Argent, a fess sable, three mullets in chief of the second.
Laurence Townley,=
second son of John
Towneley and his
wife Isabel Sher-
burne, vix. 14 Edw.
IV.
Henry Townley,=. . . dau.
vix. 3 Hen. VIII. of . . .
Bernard
Townley.
Isabel.=Robert Banastre
of Park hill.
Jane.=Symon Blakey
of Blakey.
Laurence Townley.=Hellen, natural dau.
of Thomas Hesketh
of Rufford, esq.
Robert Townley.
Henry ==Anne, Ro
— i — — n —
Dert. Laurence.=Mary, Charles.
1 I
Lucy, Elizabeth,
Margaret, Alice, married
Townley.
eldest
d
au. p.
married married
married Richard Lacy
dau.
g
nd .K-icnaru.
Thomas first, Mr.
John Par- of Cromwell-
and co-
heir of
Townley, JohnTal-
<er of bothom, co.
heir of
H
Ir.John
natural bot, natu-
Extwisle. York, esq.
Thomas
Catherall
of Gather-
all, esq.
Hartley
of Stone
Edge.
son of ral son of
Sir John Thomas
Townley Talbot of
of Town- Bashall;
ley. second,
Anne, married
Robert Rish-
worth of Rid-
dlesden, co.
York.
Standish
Hellen,
of Stan-
married Mr.
dish.
Henry Thomp-
son of Esholt,
co. York.
MINI 1
John. Laurence=Mary, dau. Jo
m.=Hellen, dai
. Tho'mas,=Elizabeth, Robert =Mary,dau.
Townley
of Sir Ri-
and heir of
settled at dau. of
Townley, of Mr. ...
1 homas. seventh
chard Sher-
Thomas
Oaken- John
tenth son. Mackin-
Henry. son.
bourne of
Rishworth
head. Wade c
f son, clerk,
Charles.
Stannihurst.
of Stane-
Hapton
rector of
royd, gent.
Brindle.
Robert.
Henry.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3°9
Henry, Richard =Alice, dau. of Anne, married
Mary, married
1
Jane,
ob. young. Townle
y John Braddyll Henry, third
first, Thomas
married
of Ban
i- of Portfield, son of Thomas
Hartley of Wis-
John
side an
d esq. She mar- Hoghton of
wall ; second,
Holliday
Carr,
ried secondly Hoghton tower,
Laurence Ro-
of Hey-
esq., ob. Christopher, esq.
berts of Bought
house.
circa
younger bro-
Gap.
1630,3.
). therof Richard
Towneley of
Towneley, esq.
Robert Richard Townley,=i Alice, dau. of
1
Laurence
Anne, marr
Townley, h
eir of his cousin
Francis Paslew
and Margaret,
first, Rober
a twin. I
achard Townley
of Wiswall, s.p.
twins, ob. inf.
Hargreaves
o
: Barnside, by
2 Anne, dau. of
second, Mr
d
evise. Slain at a
Richard Shuttle-
John Har-
b
ull baiting at Gis-
worth of Gaw-
greaves of
burne in Craven
thorpe, widow of
Highwide,
ir
1 l6SS-
John, son and
near Colne-
heir of Radclyffe
Assheton of Cuer-
dale, esq.
1
Richard Townley Robert,
1
Robert,
of Barnside and ob. inf.
ob. young.
Carr hall, £et. 14
an. 1664.
3io Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Cotonlep of Dutton.
. — Argent, a fess sable, th
tiullets in chief of the second, with a rose on the fess, proper.
Richard Townley,=Hellen, dan.
descended from [of ...
Townley of Town-
ley.
Robert Townley.=
I
Henry Townley. =Margaret, dai
r.=Margaret,
|-...
Thomas Townley.=Elizabeth, dan.
I of ...
Alice, dau.==Richard Townley =Jane, dau. of
'
of Button.
Roger Winck-
ley, s.p.
Henry Townley=Lucy, dau. of Mr. John. Robert,
of Button, ob. Edmund Sherborne a clerk.
7 Jac. I. i of Sherborne house
in Mitton.
Margaret. = John Holker
of Reade.
Richard To\vnley,=Anne, dau. of Mr. John. Henry. Laurence. Edmund.
ob. 17 Jac. I.
William Browne.
She married second,
Henry Hayhurst of
Hayhurst.
Henry Townley=Alice, dau. and John. Richard. Laurence. Thomas. Susan, married Lucy.
of Button. coheir of Abra- Mr. Henry
ham Colthurst
of Burnley, gent.
Hayhurst, jun.
Catlow.
Richard John Townley.= Elizabeth, Abraham. EllisNutter=Anne. = EllisNutter Margaret. =William
Townley, of Clitheroe. dau. of Mr. T of Water- of Reed- Sagar of
aet. 34 an. Wm. Guy. L ;nce' side in low, 2 vir.
17 March Thomas. Pendle.
1664.
Manchester, 17 March 1664. Richard Townlcy.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 31 r
Cotonlep of
— Argent, a fess sable, three mullets in chief of the second.
Sir Richard Townley=
of Townley.
John Townley, =
third son of Sir
Richard, vix.
15 Hen. VIII.
Bernard Townley=Agnes, dau. and
of Hurstwood,
near Burnley.
coheir of Mr.
George Orme-
royd of Orme-
royd.
Joanna.=Mr. Richard
Shuttleworth.
John Townley.=Eleanor, dau. Richard. Bernard. Agnes.=Mr. Henry
of Mr. Simon Banister.
Haydock of
Fezantford.
John Townley,=Eleanor, dau. Eleanor. ^Christopher
set. 65 an. 3 of Nicholas Jackson of
May 1664. Grymshaw of Worsthorn.
Clayton, esq.
Mary,
died un-
married.
Agnes. =George Jarie.=Mr.
Waite ' Ber
of. ..
co.York.
John Townley ,=Katherine,
baptized 25 dau. of Mr.
August 1631. Geoffrey
Ob. ante patr. Rishton of
1664. Antley.
Bernard. Eleanor.=Mr. John Agnes.=Mr. John
Halsted. Whitaker.
John Townley.
Eleanor,
ob. young.
Eleanor.
John Toumle
312 l/isitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Cotonlep of
• — Argent, a fess sable, charged
let of the first, in chief three mullets of the second.
Lattice, dau.=Nicholas Townley,:
and coheir of third son of John
William Tal- Townley of Town-
bot of Shuttle- ley and his wife Isa-
worth, s.p. bel Sherburne, vix.
14 Edw. IV. He
was executor of his
father.
Elizabeth, dau. of
Richard Catherall,
esq., widow of
Richard Tem-
pest of Brough-
ton, co. York,
esq.
Richard Townley,=Margaret, dau. Nicholas,
vix. 30 Hen. VIII.
chaplain
Clarke of Royle to kins
and Walshaw.
to king
Hen. V]
Nicholas Townley,=Anne, dau. of Sir
ob. Feb. 37 Hen. I Hugh Vaughan,
VIII. (1545), at jknt.
Gray's Inn, where '
he was bencher and
reader 30 Henry
VIII.
Grace. = Gilbert Holden
of Holden, gent.
Hellen.=Raphe Rishton
of Pontalgh.
1
Katherine, dau.— Edmund
of ... Curzon,
Townley
esq., and sister
ofRoyle,
of Sir John Cur-
ob. 41
zon, co. Derby.
Eliz.
Nicholas =
Townley,
1
-Isabel, Francis, Bernard. =Margery,
dau.and of Little- dau. of
Richard,
ob. s.p.
1
Robert.
Town-
=Mary,
dau. of
Blanche,
married
Anne,
married
sheriff of
heir of ton.
John
1660.
ley,
Laurence
Mr. Thomas
Mr. John
Lanca-
shire, 8
John
Wood-
Bradshaw
of Brad-
Thomas,
set. 70
an. 4
Ormerod
of Orme-
Ferrand of
CarUon,
Rishworth
of Rid-
Car. I.
rove of
Bank-top,
shaw. esq.
ob. un-
married.
March
1664.
rod.
near Skip-
ton.
dlesden,
near
nearBurn-
Keighley,
ley.
co. York.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3!3
a b
\ \
Margaret=John Ingle- Nicholas=
Townley, ! by of Lawk- Townley,
born 20 i land, near ast. 40 an.
Sept. 1 Clapham, i4March
1607. co. York. 1664.
Mary, Edmund. =Hellen, dau. of
dau. of Mr. John Ha-
Richard bergham of
Shuttle- Habergham.
worth
Katherine. =Thomas
Farrer.
of Gaw- i
thorpe, Mary.=Symon
esq. Hay-
dock of
Fezant-
ford.
Elizabeth,
married
first, Tho-
mas Wil-
son ;
second,
Thomas
Mank-
nolls.
Isabel
dau.
and
coheir
= Richard Katherine,
Sherburne ob. un-
of Stanni- married,
hurst, esq. dau. and
coheir.
1 ! II
Nicholas, Fleetwood, Fleetwood, Richard,
set. 19 an. ob. young. baptized 16 baptized 16
14 March Jan. 1648. July 1651.
1664.
Edmund,
baptized
August
1652.
March 1664.
Nicholas Tmcnley.
Cotonlep of
. — Argent, a fess sable, three mullets in chief of the i
Henry Townley:
of Barnside.
^Elizabeth, dau. of
Mr. John Wade
of Hapton.
Thomas Townley,
ninth son.
Henry Townley =Margaret, dau. of
of Oakenhead, . . . Parkinson of
gent., s.p. Blindhurst in
Goosnargh.
Hellen, Mary,
married Mr. married Mr.
Thomas Smith William Smith
of Raygill. of Raygill.
3 H Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Coftmlep of §>tone&eDge.
. — Argent, a fess sable, thr
ullets in chief of the
allet for difference.
Laurence Townley=Hellen, dau. of
of Barnside, esq. ] Thomas Hesketh
_ | of Rufford, esq.
Laurence Townley,=Mary, dau. of Mr.
third son. I John Hartley of
I Stonehedge.
Laurence Tow
of Stonehedge.
nley=Jennet, dau. of
j Mr. John Hal-
sted of Windle-
— TI n —
Charles. John.
Henry. Robert.
Thomas.
Elizabeth.
Hellen.
house.
Both ob.
unmarried.
Hellen, dau.=Laurence=Elizabeth, Margaret, Elizabeth, Alice,
Ellen,
1 i
Anne, Mary,
of. ..Wal-
Townley
dau. of Ni- married
married married
married
married married
ton, widow
of Stone
cholas Cal- Thomas
first, Mr. Richard
Thomas
Mr. Sam- Augus-
of Mr. Mi-
chael Wood-
hedge.
vert of Brad- Riley of
ford, second Chat-
Richard Gray of
Halstedof Norwich.
Chat-
burne of
uelHoyle tine War-
of Barkis- ner of
head.
wife, burne.
W indie-
Chat-
land, co. Norwich,
Laurence Robert. Thomas. John. Anne.
house ;
second,
burn e.
York. gent.
Townley.
Christopher
Smith of
Stannihurst,
gent
<armsf. — Argent,
Cofomleg of Littleton.
th a mullet of the first, in chief three mullets of the second.
Edmund Townley =Katherine, dau. of
of Royle, esq. .| . . . Curzon, esq.
I
Francis Townley — Katherine, dau. of
of Littleton, which
lands his kinsman
Mr. Vaughan gave
him.
Mr. . . . Foster,
kinsman of justice
Foster.
Nicholas Townley
of Littleton.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir IVilliam Dugdale, 1664-5. 3J5
Craffori) of Craffbro.
9rmi. — Argent, a griffin segreant, gules.
. — A thrasher proper, his hat and coat per pale, argent and gules, sleeves counterchanged, his breeches and
stockings of the second and third, his flail of the first, on the flail a scroll with this motto, NOW THVS.
Ranulphus,=
a Thane. I
I
Radulphus. =
Robert de Trafford.=
|
Henry de Trafford. .=
Henry de Trafford,=
vix. A.D. 1 200.
Richard de Trafford. =
Henry de Trafford,= Geoffrey,
ob. circa 1250.
ancestor of
Chaderton.
Sir Henry de Traffbrd,:=Margaret, Richard. John,
ob. circa 1288.
dau. of ... a priest.
Sir Henry de Trafford, -.= Richard, John,
ob. 1334. parson, of a priest,
Chedle. called "the
younger."
I I | | | i |
John de Trafford,= Richard. Robert. Thomas. Nicholas. Geoffrey. Henry,
ob. ante patr. 1320. I
Henry de Trafford. =
Sir Henry de Trafford,=Agnes, dau.
born 1315, knighted I of . . .
1336, died 1370. I
316 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
1
Sir Henry de Trafford,-
ob. 1386.
-Margery, dau.
of . . . She
married
secondly Sir
Richard Rad-
clyffe of Ord-
sall.
John. Robert. Peter.
Richard. Geoffrey.
Thomas.
Sir Henry de Trafford,=Elizabeth, dau.
ob. circa 1414. of Sir Ralph
Radclyffe of
Ordsall.
John,
" scutifer
literatus."
Joanna.=John Booth
of Barton,
esq.
Henry de Trafford,
ob. 1412, set. 26 an.
= Agnes, dau.
of . . .
Sir Edmund de Trafford,=
brother and heir.
Knighted at the coro-
nation of Henry VI.
Ob. 1457-
I.
-Alice, dau. and Dulcina.
coheir of Sir
William Venables
of Bolyne, heiress
of Mascy and
Fitton.
Sir John de Trafford,=:Elizabeth, Dulcia.= Sir John SirJohn=Joanna.=Alexan- John=Elizabeth.=Peter
ob. 1488. I dau. of Sir Asshe- Byron, derRad-Pil- Leigh,
Thomas ton of \ vir. clyffe, king- esq.
Assheton Asshe- esq., 2 ton,
of Asshe- ton. vir. esq.
ton.
Sir Edmund Trafford,=Elizabeth, dau. of William.
ob.
Sir John Savage,
and widow of
JohnHondford of
Hondford, esq,
Thomas.
Dulcia.=Hugh Bulkley
ofWheatcroft,
near Nampt-
wich.co.Cest,
esq.
Anne.=Mr. Thomas
Radclyffe of
Manchester.
Sir Edmund
Trafford,
ob. circa
'533-
jonnnonaioraoi wicn.co.ces:.,
Hondford, esq. esq.
I i i I I I
=. . . Henry. William=Margery, Margery.=Nicho- Alice.=Thomas, Henry Marga-=Sir
dau. Traf- dau. of las, son son and Traf- ret. Th
of Sir ford. Sir Ralph of Sir heir of ford, Ge
Ralph Longford. Ralph Sir Thos. clerk, of
Long- Long- Butler of rector of Br
ford. ford. Bewsey. Wilms-
ucu of ford,
Sir Thos. clerk,
Butler of rector of
Bewsey. Wilms-
She mar- low.
ried se-
condly
Thomas
Gerard,esq.
.
Gerard
of
Brynn.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3!7
Sir Edmund Trafford,=
born 1 507. Knighted
=Anne, dau. George =Hellen, Thomas,
of Sir Alex- Traf- dau. and „
Hellen, married
Mr. Thos. Wil-
Margaret,
married Sir
by Henry VIII. in
Scotland 1544. Died
6 Eliz. 1563.
ander Rad- ford, heir of f ™' ,
clyffeof ob. s.p. Mr. Wm. ^,tor of
0rdsalL X toT K*
hprh rn *S72-
lett of Mariches-
Elizabeth,
married first,
William
Radclyffe of
Alice,
been, co.
Lincoln. Richard.
George Booth of
Dunham Massy,
married
first, Sir
esq.; second, Mr.
William
James Donne of
Leyland of
Utkinton; third,
Morleys ;
Thomas Fitton,
second, Sir
esq. She was
Uriah Brere-
buried at Trent-
ton of
ham church, co.
Hondford.
Staff.
Ciceley,
married Sir
Robert
Langley of
.
Agecroft.
1
Mary, dau.=Sir Edmund Trafford,=Elizabeth,
Robert. William.
Hellen.=John Griffith
of Lord ob. circa 1592.
Edmund
Ralph Ley-
Alexander. Anthony.
^Chester?"'
Howard,
cester of
Laurence. John.
esq.
third son
Toft, co.
of Thomas,
Chester,
second
widow of Sir
duke of
Randle
Norfolk.
Manwaring
She ob.
of Pever, co.
s.p.
Chester, esq.
Margaret, =Sir Edmund Trafford,=
dau. and ob. circa 18 Jac. I.,
Mildred,
second dau.
Margaret.=Sir Uriah
Leigh of
Elizabeth. =Sir John
Michel, a
coheir of 1620.
of ... Cecil,
Adlington,
master in
John
Booth of
earl of Exe-
ter, and
co. Chester.
Chancery
London.
Barton,
widow of Sir
esq., first
wife.
RalphRead.
318 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
1 1 1
Edmund John,
Trafford. ob. s.
Elizabeth,
3. married
Sir Cecil Trafford;;=Penelope, dau. Ciceley
knighted by king of Sir Hum- Trafford.
Richard, ™C a^ ,
younger son
James at Lathom
in 1617. JEt. 65
an. 1 1 March
phrey Daven-
port, lord chief
baron of the
of ... Fleet-
1664.
exchequer.
wood of
Penwortham,
ob. s.p.
Edmund=Frances, Cecil.
John. William. Penelope,
Mildred,
Trafford,
dau. of H v,
married
married
aet. 3 9 an.
Philip Humphr
ey. Henry. john
William
1 1 March
Draycott
Downes of
Massey of
1664.
of Pen-
Weardley,
Poding-
nesley,co.
esq.
ton, co.
Stafford,
Chester,
esq.
esq.
Edm. Trafford.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 3J9
CJrmston of flBest letgb.
mS. — Sable, a chevron between three spear heads, argent.
. . dau. of=John Urmston=. . . dau. of
. . Ireland of West Leigh, John Holcroft
if SP- psn. of Holcroft,
of ... se-
cond wife.
esq.
esq., first wife.
Ralph. James. Gilbert. Marge
largery,
arriecl
Peter Lang-
ton of Hind-
John Urmston.=Elizabeth, dau. of
Richard Starkey Mr. ...
of Stretton, co. Fitzackerley.
Chester.
Richard Urmston,=Anne, dau. of
vix. temp. Henry 1 Edmund Hopwood
VIII. | of Hopwood, esq.
John.
Anne.=Henry Chatterton
of Manchester.
Richard Urmston, =Katherine, dau. of
Thomas Starkey of
Stretton, co. Ches-
ter, esq.
I III
John Urmston,=Mary, Jon
ob. 1632.
John
Cul-
John Butler=Jane.=Thomas Anne.=Edward Elizabeth.=Thomas
cheth, Peter.
escl- Geoffrey.
William.
Gilbert.
Thwenge
of Has-
lington,
co. York,
gent.
Manwar-
ing of
Pever,co.
Chester.
Fitton of
Gaws-
worth,co.
Chester.
Richard =Alice,dau. John.=Elizabeth, Katherine.=Richard Mary.=John Ja
ne.=James
Urmston,
of Ed ward
Jdau. of
Harrison. Moly-
Whalley
ob. 1659
Eccleston
John
neux,
of Orrell.
set. 69
of Eccles-
South-
alder-
an.
ton, esq.
worth of
man of
Astley.
Wigan.
Elizabeth.=Thomas Ditchfield
of Statham, co. Chester.
John
Mary.
=Robert
Eleanor.
Mr. Richard =
Frances. =Mr. George
Urmston,
ob.young.
Hayton
of West
Elizabeth.
Shuttleworth
of Bedford,
Bradshaw
of Green-
Leigh.
i vir.
acre.
Anne.=Thomas
Mossock
of Hethen-
head.
320 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
flMentine of 18entcliffe.
armS. — Argent, a bend sable, between six cinquefoils, gules.
Thomas Valentine=Dorothy, da
of Bentcliffe. of Ralph
Walton of
Weaste, in
the parish
of Eccles.
John Valentine,=Elizabeth,
rd,
ib. 1624.
dau. of John died un-
Risley of married.
Risley.
Margaret, Dorothy,
married
Mr. ...
Prestwich.
i ~ |
John Valentine=Margaret, Eli/.abet
of Bentcliffe,
aet. 55 an. 10
Sept. 1664.
dau. of
Mr. John
Sleigh of
Biggin
Grange,
co. Derby.
beth, =Mr. .
..—Mr. Edmund
Hunt.
Aldersey
of Aldersey,
co. Chester.
Thomas Valentine, Francis. Edward. John. Robert. Elizabeth,
st. 24 an. 10 Sept. Mary
Jane.
1664.
Manchester, 10 Sept. 1664.
John Valentine
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 321
of
tf. — Argent, on a bend sable, three calves passant, <
t. — A garb, or, enfiled with a ducal coronet, gules.
Francis Veale=
ofWhinney-
heys.
Edward Veale=Hellen, dau.
of Whinney-
and coheir of
heys, esq.
John Massey
Justice of
of Whinney-
peace for the
heys, esq.
county tpe Jac.
and Car.
John Veale=Dorothy, dau.
Francis. Singleton. Hellen,
Anne,
Frances,
of Whinney-
of Matthew
married
married
married
heys, esq.,
Jepson of
Mr. Thomas
Mr. John
Mr. William
aet. 59 an.
Hawkswell,
Heardson of
Austen of
Wombwell
20 Sept.
co. York,
Cambridge.
London.
of London.
1664.
esq.
John Veale,=Sus
Edward.
Hellen.
ast. 29, 20
Sept. 1664.
dau. of
Geoffrey
Rishton
of Antley,
esq.
Jane.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664.
John Veale.
322 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of l^apton.
— Gules, three fleurs-de-lis, stalked and slipped, argent.
. — On a globe of the world, winged proper, an eagle rising,
James Wadsworth=
of Halifax, co.
York.
William Wadsworth. =. . . dau. of Mr.
. . . Sherburne
of Helagh.
John Wadsworth.=. . . dau. of
J William Farrer
of Oldroyd.
. dau. of=Hugh Wadsworth. =. . . dau. of Mr.
William
ffarington,
esq.,ob.s.p.
Robert Jackson
of Reedley, wid-
ow of John Flet-
cher of Burnley.
Robert Wadsworth.=. . . dau. of
Mr. ... Hill
of Kirkby
Malham Dale,
Nicholas.
Hugh Wadsworth.:
co. York.
dau. of Mr.
Gouge.
dau. of Mr..=John Wadsworth.=. . . dau. and . . . dau. of=Nicholas Wadsworth=. . . dau. of Mr.
George Roger-
son, ob. s.p.,
second wife.
heir of John . . . ob. s.p. of Hayton, near Pres- Robert Albin of
Braithwayte. ton, co. Lancaster. Whittingham,
co. Lancaster.
Hugh Wadsworth=
of Haighton.
=Margaret, dau. of Robert, Mr. John=Elizabeth.=Mr. Thomas
Christopher Town- wentbeyond Singleton. Casty.
ley, gent, second sea to study,
son of John Town- 1655.
ley of Townley, esq.
1 1 1
Nicholas Wadsworth, Robert. Christopher,
fflt. 9 an. 19 Sept. 1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
Hugh Wadsworth.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 323
C2MI of Preston ano Cfnngle l£>aH.
9rimi. — Argent, a bend, gules, between three boars' heads couped, sable, armed argent.
CreSt. — A boar's head couped, sable, in the mouth an oak branch erect, stalked and leaved, proper.
Evan Wall=. . . dau. of
of Preston Robert Heton
andChingle of Walton, gent.
hall, son
and heir of
William
Wall.
William Wall-Anne, dau. and
coheir of John
Singleton of
Singleton hall,
gent.
Anthony Wall.=Margaret, dau. of
Mr. Thomas Grice
of Warrington.
William Wall= Joanna, dau. of Thomas. John. Alice. =Thomas Mary
of Preston
Ralph Eaves of
Linacre.
and Chingle
Fishwick.
hall, ob. circa
1625.
Hellen, =William=Anne,
dau. of Wall of
Mr.Wil- Preston
liam and
Suddall, Chingle
alder-
man of
. Preston
She ob.
s.p.
hall.
Anthony, John. Thomas. =Jane,dau. Margaret. Ali'ce.=Mr. Robert
dau. of Mr. ob. un- of Mr. Calcott of
Thomas married. Thomas the Isle of
Duckworth Somnerof Man.
of Padjam. Preston.
Richard Wall,
set. 15 an. 19
Sept. 1664.
Anthony.
Jane.
1
Katherine.
1
Anne.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
William Wall.
324 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William
fe, 1664-5.
of Preston ann egore
— Same as Wall of Chingle Hall.
William Wall=
of Preston,
co. Lancaster.
Evan Wall
of Preston.
I
Laurence Wall=
of More hall.
=Jane, dau.
of Oliver
Toothill of
Healey.
James Wall.=.Isabel, dau. John. Elizabeth,=Evan Wall, =Hellen, dau.
of William
Travers of
Neatby, esq.
dau. of
Mr. John
Aynson of
Preston,
second
wife.
set. 54, 20
Sept. 1664.
of Richard
Shaw of
Preston,
first wife.
Margery,
married
Robert
Haydock
ofCotham.
Anne,
married
first, Mr.
Christopher
Harris of
Fairock
house ;
second, Mr.
Cuthbert
Singleton of
Chipping.
Laurence= Jane, dau. of
married Wall, Mr Wai-
Mr. John alderman ker of Brough-
Hother- of Pres- ton. She mar-
sail of ton. ried secondly
Hother- Mr. Thomas
sail. Starry.
1 ! 1
Thomas Peter. Jane
Wall,
set. 24
an. 20
Sept.
1664.
Laurence.
Elizabeth.
Sarah.
Lowe of
Preston.
Preston, 20 Sept. 1664.
Evan Wall.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 325
of TBamster
. - Same as Walmsley of Showley.
Edward Walmsley=Anne, dau.
of Banister hall, of William
fourth son of Hawks-
Thomas Walms- worth of
ley of Showlay. Hawks-
worth, near
Otley, co.
York, esq.
Thomas Walmesley=Frances,
of Banister hall, dau. of
1 |
Edward Walmsley, =Dorothy, Rosamund,
set. 71 an. 14 dau. of married
Anne, Elizabeth,
married married
esq. Edward
March 1664. Mr.Christo- Thos.Winck-
Richard Roger
Stanley
of Moor
pher Ander- ley of Bil-
tonofHodg- lington.
Craven Hodgkin-
of Dink- son of
hall, esq.
wick, widow
ley. Preston.
of Mr. W.
Walton of
Walton.
Anne Walmsley.=Radcliffe
Houghton.
Preston, 14 March 1664.
Edw. Walmsley.
326 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
OBalmslep of CalDcotes.
Walmsley of She
ullet for difference.
Robert Walmsley=Isabel, dau.
of Caldecotes, [ of Ralph
third son of
Thomas Walmsley
of Showlay.
Parkinson
of Chipping
Elizabeth,,
dau. and
i i
=Thomas Walmsley,=Katherine, Richard Walmsley Eliz
set. 63 an. isth dau. of Mr. of Holcroft.
heir of
Sept. 1664. . . . Hull
Robert
of Brandies-
Grimshaw
holme, CO.
of New-
Chester,
house in
second wife.
Pendle,
first wife.
Elizabeth. =John Parker
of Loveley.
Robert Walmsley,=Anne, dau. Charles. Richard.
set. 35 an. i3th
Sept 1664.
of Tempest
Thornton of
Tyersall,
near Brad-
ford, CO.
York.
Anne.=Mr. William
Crombache
of Clerk hill.
Thomas Walmsley,
aet. 14 an. i3th
Sept. 1664.
Blackeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
Thomas Walmsley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 327
of Dunfeenfmlgbe.
— Gules, on a chief, ermine, two ogresses.
— A lion statant guardant, ducally crowned, gules.
Thomas Walmsley,=Elizabeth, dau. of
vix. 22 Henry VIII. I William Travers
of Neatby, esq.
Thomas Walmsley, =Margaret, d;
ob. 26 Eliz. I ... Livesey.
t, dau. of
y.
Sir Thomas Walmsley,=Anne, dau. and heir
10 Jac. I. Justice of I of Robert Shuttle-
the common pleas. worth of Hacking.
Eleanor, dau. of=ThomasWalmsley=;Mary, dau. of Thomas
Sir John Danvers, ; of Dunkenhalghe,
and sister of Hen- esq., ob.
ry lord Danvers j
of Dantsey.
Hoghton of Hoghton
tower, sister to Sir
Rich. Hoghton, bart.
Sir Thomas.
Walmsley
of Dunken-
halghe, ob.
1636.
Juliana, Elizabeth.=Richard
dau.ofSir Sherburne
Richard of Stanni-
Molyneux hurst, esq.
of Sefton,
bart.
Anne.=J William Middleton Mary, =Charles=. . . . dau.
of Stock eld,co. York. dau. of Walms- of Mr.
2 SirEdwardOsborne Tho- ley of Edward
of Keeton, co. York, mas Stayner Clarke
bart., vice-president Char- hall,near of Win-
of the Council for nock Selby,co. tersall,
the North parts. of Ast- York,a;t. co.
ley,
esq.
56 an. York.
1664.
Richard Walmsley=Mary,dau. William
1 |
=Anne, Hellen.=Sir Godfrey Anne,
1
Juliana.:=Francis.
of Dunkenhalghe,
ofRichard Walmsley
dau. of
Copley of ob. un-
lord Car-
aet. 3 4 an. 13 Sept.
Froman ofSamles-
Mr.James
Sprot- married.
ington of
1664.
ofCheam, bury, co.
Walton
borough, co.
Wotton
co. Sur- Lancas-
of Pres-
York, bart.
Waven,
rey, esq. ter.
ton, widow
co. War-
of Mr.
wick.
[
Edward
Thomas Walmsley
French of
of Dunkenhalghe,
Preston.
agt. 6 an. 13 Sept.
1664.
Blackeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
Richard Walmsley,
328 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of
. — Gules, on a chief, ermine, two hurts.
CffSt . — A lion statant guardant, ducally crowned, gules.
Thomas Walmsley=Elizabeth, dau.
of Showlay, vix.
22 Henry VIII.
of William
Travers of
Neatby, esq.
Thomas Walmsley,=Margaret, dau.
ob. 26 Eliz.
of Mr
Livesey of
Livesey.
Sir Thomas Richard =Margaret, Robert, Edward. Nicholas, Henry, John,
' ' abarris
ter of
Gray's
Inn.
Walmsley,
second
son, ob.
1609.
dau. of third W:ii;am of L
Mr. Wil- son. lam> don
liam
Walmsley
of Fish-
wick.
on- a clerk.
Elizabeth.=Christo-
pher
Nowell of
Little
Mearley.
Richard Walmsley,=Hellen, dau. of Thomas,
Eet. 66 an. 13 Sept. Mr. William ob. un-
1664.
Gerard of Rod-
burne.
narried.
1 i
Richard ^Elizabeth, Gerard
i i i 1 1
Thomas —Elizabeth, William. John =Anne, Margaret. Jennet..
=John
Walmsley,
dau. of
Walmsley.
dau. of
of
dau. of
Sher-
ob. ante
Thomas
Mr.Henry
Buck-
Lau-
burne.
patr.
South-
Mosoke
shaw.
rence
worth of
of Guns-
Breres
Samles-
cough.
of
bury, esq.
Buck-
shaw.
Mr. John NowelU Elizabeth
Walmsley. =Mr. Thomas
Anne, Katherine,
of Mearley, 2 vir.
Cottam of
set. 8 an. aet. 6 an.
Dilworth,
13 Sept. 13 Sept.
i vir.
1664. 1664.
Blackeburne, 13 Sept. 1664.
Rich. Walmsley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 329
CfiJalton of (KHalton.
SlrmS. — Azure, three swans, argent.
James Walton=
of Walton, vix.
26 Hen. VIII.
James W
ralton.=Hellen, dau.
of James
Southworth
of Samles-
bury.
William Walton. =
Richard Walton. ==Margery, dau.
of Mr. Thomas
Breres of Pres-
ton.
James Walton,= Christiana, dau.
ob. s.p. of the Rev. Mr.
William Leigh,
parson, of
Standish.
Richard Walton,= Margaret, dau.
brother and heir, of Mr. William
ob. 1624. WarineofEux-
ton.
John Walton=
of Walton,
super mon-
tem, clerk,
set. 44 an. 24
Sept. 1664.
-Elizabeth, dau.
of the Rev. Mr.
James Starkie,
parson of North
Meoles.
i |
Katharine.
Lydia.
Both ob. inf.
1 |
Mary, Anne,
married married
Mr. Nicho- Mr. John
las Cowper. Sharpies
of Liver-
pool.
Richard Walton, John,
jet. 14 an. 24 set. 12 an.
Sept. 1664. 24 Sept.
1664.
Ormeskirke, 24 Sept. 1664.
Elizabeth. Dorothy.
Margaret. Anne.
Walton.
u v
330 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Cfl3est of TBortotck.
tf. — Argent, a fess dancette, sable.
Thomas West,=. . . dau.
second lord de
la Warr.
of.
Thomas,
lord de
la Warr.
Nathaniel West,=. . . dau.
fifth son.
of . . .
Grevile.
Jane, dau. =Nathaniel West=Elizabeth, dau.
of ... of Berwick hall, of Mr. George
Adams of esq. Preston, and
London. widow of
Robert Sagar
of Worsall, co.
York, esq.
Ciceley West,
aet. 1 6 an.
1 6 Sept. 1664.
Rebecca.
Garstang, 16 Sept. 1664.
N. West.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William
, 1664-5. 33i
of
Siring. — Argent, on a chevron, azure, three cinquefoils pierced of the first.
Crnft. - A martlet, sable, holding in his beak a stalk of wheat with three ears, or.
Thomas Westby=Perpetua, dau.
of Molbreck, in
this county. Ob.
1643.
of Edward
Norris of
Speak, esq.
John Westby, = Dorothy,
John. Francis Westby,=Anne, dau.
William.
Margaret,
Perpetua,
ob. s.p. in dau. of
Eet. 44 an. 10
of Richard
T? .-!.,.„ „ J
married
married
Aug. 1661. Richard
omas. g^ i6g4
Backhouse
.cxlwarci.
John Tal-
Mr. Wm.
Braith-
Slain at
of Mires-
Both ob.
botof
Hesketh
waite of
Preston in
cough.
inf.
Sales-
ofMaynes
Burnside,
behalf of
bury.
and Pool-
co. West-
K. Charles
Anno
ton.
moreland.
I.
Anne,
ob. un-
married.
Thomas Westby,= Bridget, dau
et. 23, 19 Sept.
1664.
of Thomas
Clifton of
Westby, es<
John Westby,
set. 2 an. 19
Sept. 1664.
Preston. 19 Sept. 1664.
Ft: Westby.
33 2 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
of Eatocliffe.
* — Same as Westby of Molbreck.
. . . dau.=Thomas Westby
of ... of Burne and
Molbreck, esq.,
ob. 1643.
s.p.
.Elizabeth, dau..
of Christopher
Preston of Hol-
ker, esq., widow
of Thomas La-
thom of Parbold,
esq., and of Edw.
Tildesley of
Morleys, esq.
George Westby.— Margaret,
of Rawcliffe. i dau. of
\ Thomas
Hesketh
of Maynes
Thomas
Westby,
set. 10 an
19 Sept.
1664.
John
Three daughters.
Charles.
Bernard.
Both officers
in the Life
Guards to ,
King Charles
II.
Preston, 19 Se/>f. 1664
Geo. Westby.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Diigdale, 1664-5. 333
flBfritttngfram of anfuttingfrnm.
rgent, a fe
:>n rampant, gules.
Mary, dau.=Thomas Whittingham=Susan, dau.
and coheir
of Whittingham, set.
of Mr. ...
of Mr.
68 an. 19 Sept. 1664.
Litherland.
Ewan Ed-
mondson
of Eccles-
Diana Whittingham. = Mr. Edward
ton.
Litherland.
Isabel,= Godfrey =^Alice, Richard. =Elizabeth, Alexander. Anne,
Elizabeth, Bndget,
dau. of
Sir
John
Vava-
sour of
Spald-
ington,
co.
York.
Whitting-
ham of
Whit-
tingham,
after-
wards of
Ashtley,
set. 46
an. 19
dau. of
Mr.
Richard
Pope of
Whitting- 1
ham, George. =
second
wife.
dau. of Mr. „ , married Mr.
Richard Kobert> ... Beiiau
Walmsley. unmarned- of Ireland.
Fanny,
. . . dau. of married
Mr. Rob. Edward
Plessington Midgley
of Garstang. of Black
ob. unmar- married
ried. Mr. Nathan
Dale.
Alice,
married
Mr.Edward
Starkey of
Aughton.
Sept.
1664.
nan in
Goosnargh.
i i | . | 1
Thomas John. Richard Margaret.=Mr. Christopher Anne.
Diana,
Whitting- Whittingham, Tipping.
ham. aet. 20 an.
19 Sept. 1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
Thomas Whittingham.
334 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
CBincklep of Preston.
£* — Per pale, argent and gules, an eagle displayed, counterchanged.
proof hereof, I did therefore assign these colours. )
cheth a Scale in Qu. Eliz. time for
Edward Winckley
of Preston, co.
Lancaster, descen-
ded from a younger
son of the house
of Winckley of
Winckley, which
is now extinct.
John Winckley,=Margaret, dau.
clerke,
ton.
of Pres- of Thomas
Butler of Kirke-
land, co. Lan-
caster.
William Winckley,
Fellow of Corpus
Christi college in
Oxford.
Thomas Winckley=. . . dau. of . .
ofPreston,registrar Hodgekinson.
in the Chancery
office at Preston
for the Duchy of
Lancaster. ^Et. ...
an. 8 April 1665.
Preston, 8 April 1665.
John Wmckley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 335
2HooD of Curton.
Richard Wood=Phebe, dau.
of Turton. | of Laurence
Brownlow of
I Tonge.
John Wood.=Anne, dau.
of. . .
Richard Wood,=Elizabeth,dau.
ob. circa 1644. I of Mr. Henry
Riley.
John Wood,=Hellen,
ob. circa
1645.
dau. of Mr.
William
Crompton
of Bedford.
Anne. =Mr. John
Lockyer
of West
Houghton.
Abigail. =Mr. Abel
Ashworth
of Rach-
dale.
John Wood=Hellen,
of Turton,
set 28 an.
1 1 March
1664.
dau. of Mr.
Richard
Lee of
Lostock.
John Wood,
set. ... an.
ii March
1664.
Manchester, n March 1664.
John Wood.
336 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Ditgdale, 1664-5.
of
Hugh Woodward^
of Shevington, I
vix. 22 Hen. VIII. j
Ralph Woodward.=Jane, dau. of Mr.
Richard Moly-
neux of Hawkley,
and widow of Mr.
. . . Arrowsmith.
Alexander Wood ward. = Alice, dau. of
Mr. Roger
| Urmston of
Lostock.
Ralph Woodward=
of Pemberton.
^Margaret, dau.
ofPeterMather
j 1 1
Richard.
A
married
Isabell,
married
Alice, '
married
Elizabeth,
married
of Anderton.
Edward.
Johr
Pres-
John
Robert
Mr. Jose.
William.
ton
>f
Hawkson.
Hesketh.
Matthews
Hoi
and.
of Pem-
berton.
AlexanderWoodward,=Anne, dau. of
Thomas.
!
Ed
Jard.
1 |
Margaret, Jane,
1
Frances,
aet. 64 an. 17 March
1664.
John Penketh
of Rixton.
Peter.
Austin.
married married married
Mr. Edward Mr. Wm. Mr. Seth
William.
Christopher. Assheton. Rigby
Prescot.
Ralph Woodward,=Fleetwood, John.
Mar
?aret.
Elizabeth,
Hellen.
Dorothy.
at. 36 an. 1 7
March 1664.
dau. of Alex- ,-, , ,
anderBreres Edward'
married
William
married
Henry
of Lathome. Alexander.
Fisher.
Lathom.
Ralph Woodward,
John,
Isabel
1
Anne.
Bridget.
ffit. 8 an. 17 March
aet. 2 an.
1664.
17 March
1664.
Manchester, 17 March 1664.
Woodward.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 337
of fRHoolfall.
. — Argent, a bend ermine, between two bendlels, gules.
Thomas Woolfall:
of Woolfall, ob.
circa 1650.
Mary, dau. of
Sir Richard
Molyneux of
Cunscough,
uncle to Sir
Richard Moly-
neux of Seph-
ton, bart.
William Woolfall,=Margaret,
1 I
Thomas ^Christiana,
...=Mr. Peter
Anne.=Robert
ob. ante patr.
dau. of
of Deyne-
dau. of Mr.
Stanley
Holling-
Edward
house in
Thomas
of Moor
ton of
Eccleston
Clayton.
Houghton
hall in
Hayton.
of Eccles-
of Pendle-
Aughton.
ton, esq.
ton.
Richard Woolfall,=
jet. 21, 23 Sept.
1664.
1 i
=Susanna, dau. Mary, Thomas,
of Mr. . . . married of Deyne-
GoodofLon- Mr. Tho. house, aet.
Christiana,
married Mr.
Thomas
Frances. =Mr. John
Cross of
Cross hal
don.
Maccles- 32 an. 20
Lyon of
co. Chest
field of Sept. 1664.
Woolfall.
1
Meer, co.
William Woolfall,
Stafford.
set. i an. 23 Sept.
1664.
Ormeskirkc, 23 Sept. 1664.
Richard Woolfall.
338 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
<K3orslep of
— Argent, on a chief gules, a mural crown, or.
Nicholas Worsley=
of Manchester,
ob. circa 1598.
'worsley,=
Charles
ob. 1641, set. 84.
Elizabeth, dau.
of Mr. Ralph
Gee of Man-
chester.
Isabel,=RalphWorsley=Elizabeth,=Martha,
' dau. of dau. of of With- dau. of
Gervase Mr.George ington. Mr. . .
Walker, Syddall of Brooke
widow of Milkwall,
Mr. John ob. s.p.,
Booth of third wife.
Manches-
ter,second
wife.
dau. of
Mr. Ed-
ward
Massey
ofMan-
chester,
first
wife.
of Platt in
Withington,aet,
72 an. Sept.
1664.
Edward,=Elizabeth, Alice, Ciceley, Joan,
married married married
Mr. Tho. Mr. John Mr. . . .
Bolton of Brown- Gartside.
Salford. sword of
Manches-
ter.
Mary,dau.=Charles Worsley,=Dorothy,
Manches-
active in the war
for O. Cromwell,
and made major-
general for the
county. Ob. vita
patris.
dau. of
Mr. Roger
Kenyon
of Park-
headgear
Whalley.
i
Edward =Mary,
Worsley. dau. of
Mr. Hen-
ry Play-
ford.
George =Mary,
Worsley. dau. of
Ralph Elizabeth,
Worsley, married
Mr. ... clerk. Mr.Joseph
Shelmer- Ottewell.
dine.
Ralph Sarah, Martha,
Worsley ob. a;t. 18
of Platt, young, an.' Sept.
set. 17 an. 1664.
Sept. 1 66 4.
Manchester, 10 Sept. 1664.
Charles,
set. 8 an.
Sept. 1664.
Roger, Dorothy,
ob. inf. ob. inf.
Ralph Worsley.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5. 339
of O&orslej? 'Bootfrs.
. — Argent, a chief, gules.
— A wyvem, vert.
Elias de Workedsley.==
Richard de Workedsley.
Roger de Workesley.=
( I
Richard de Workesley.=
1
Geoffrey de Workesley.=
Richard de Workesley.=
=Henry de Worsley.=. . . dau. of . .
' Schoresworth,
second wife.
Richard de Worsley. =Margaret,
=Robert de Worseley=Ciceley, dau. of Richard,
dau. of
( of Booths.
Robert,
a quo Worsley
of Frennys.
. . . Bramhall. ob. s.p.
zzThomas
Booth.
Geffrey de Worsele>
Mary, dau. of=Sir
Sir Thomas de)
Fitton.
1
.= Alicia,
I 46 E.
III.
Geoffrey=Isabel,
Vorseley. dau. and
coheir of
Sir Tho.
William=
deWors-
ley.
Robert d
Elizabeth, John. Hellen.=
dau. of
John Hil-
ton of
Farnworth.
: Worsley. =Isabel, dau.
of Henry de
Trafford.
Elizabeth,
his coheiress.
1 Lathom,
s.p. She
married
secondly
Sir John
Stanley.
Arthur de Worsley.=Elizabeth, dau. and
I coheir of Sir Geoffrey
I de Worsley.
340 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
Robert de Worseley.=Margaret, dau. of
Thomas Booth of
Robert de Worsley.==Hellen, dau. of
Robert Hilton
of Park, esq.
Robert Worsley.= Alice, dau. and
coheir of Hamon
Massey of Rix-
ton, esq.
=Sir Robert Worsley,=Alice, dau. of
Richard. Robert. Thomas.
vix. 9 Henry VIII.
Thurstan Til-
desley, esq.
Robert Worsley=
of Booths, esq.,
vix. 1591.
=. . . dau. of Sir
Thomas Gerard
of Brynne.
Thomas Worsley=
of Booths, esq.
=Katherine, Robert. Margaret, Elizabeth, Mary,
dau. and heir p,.,, married married married
of Henry Dert Robert William John
Kighley of Henley of Leicester Asheton
Kighley, co. Henley, of Toft, of Ashe-
York, esq. co. Ches- ton-under-
ter. Lyne,esq.
Katherine, Dorothy,
married married
George John
Hilton of Cardinal,
Farn- esq.
worth,esq.
1 1 1
Anne.
Jane.
Frances.
Thomas Worsley,=Elizabeth, dau. of John. Elizabeth. Jane,
ob. ante patr. i Sir John Wood of
j Beeston, near
I Leeds, co. York.
. dau. of=Thomas Worsley=Penelope, John ^Elizabeth, Edmund. Eliz
John Hoi-
croft of
Holcroft,
of Hovingham,
co. York, set
an. Sept. 1664.
dau. of Wors- dau. of
Peter ley. Robert
Egerton Heywood
of Shaw, esq. of Heywood.
ibeth. Jane. = William
Lascelles,
Thomas Worsley,
aet. 15 an. 1664.
John. Margaret.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dngdale, 1664-5. 34 *
of TBteftwco.
^lrnt£* — Argent, three dung forks, sable.
Henry Worthington=. . . dau. of
of Blainsco, esq., a . . . Hay ton.
younger son of Wor-
thington of Worthing-
ton, whose ancestor
married the heiress
of Adam Blainsco
of Blainsco.
Peter Worthington.=. . . dau. and heir of
I Peter Lownde of Preston.
Richard Worthington,=Agnes, dau. of Henry
vix. 20 Henry VIII. I Rishton of Rishton.
Edward.
John.
Margaret.
Jane.=. . . Halsall
of Whittle.
Peter Worthington. =Isabel, dau. of James
I Anderton of Euxton.
Margaret. =Henry Banister
of Banke.
Richard Worthington.=
=Dorothy, dau. of Robert James. Anne, Isabel,
Charnock of Charnock, „,.„. married married
esq. William. Robert Richard
A'lice.
Agne
Thomas. Whalley. Wearden
Ellen
of Clay-
1 1 ton.
Thomas Worthington,=Mary, dau. and heir Dorothy. = Mr. John
ob. circa 1619. of John Allen of Ross Birtwisle
hall, esq. ofHunco'
William Worthington. =
He died suddenly at
Knaresbro' in Yorks.,
20 April 1633.
=HelIen, dau. of
Richard Biddulf
of . . . co. Staf-
ford.
Richard.
Thomas.
Anne.
Mary.
Both died
unmarried.
Thomas Worthington,!
set. 28 an. 19 Sept.
1664.
=Ja
PI
toi
ne, dau. of John
ampton of Plump-
i, co. York, esq.
Mary.=John Houghton
of Park hall, esq
William Worthington, Richard. Mary,
aet. 3 an. 19 Sept. 1664.
Preston, 19 Sept. 1664.
Frances.
Thomas We
342 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
2x3ortf)in0tcin of Cratosfmto.
ftn£. — Argent, three dung forks, sable
ChristopherWorthington=Alice, dau. of
of Crawshaw in Adling- 1 John Holcroft
ton. i of Holcroft.
Laurence Worthington,=Jane, dau. of Gilbert.
ob. April 1606.
. . . Lever of
Little Lever.
Thomas Worthington,=Agnes,dau. James Roger, William, Elizabeth, Hellen, Jane,
ob. Dec. 1626. of John Worthing- of Ruf- of Ad- married married married
Gillibrand ton of ford. lington. Henry George . . . Holme
ofChorley. Snidale. Johnson of Holcroft of Holland.
Appleton. of Hurst
Hellen, dau. of=Laurence Worthington,=Anne, dau. of
Mr. George Eet. 67 an. 8 April | Richard Thomp-
Rogerly of 1665- j son of Culcheth.
Blackrod, ob.
s.p.
Margaret,
married
Mr. George
Naylor.
Alice.
Heller,
Thomas Worthington,
aet. . . . an. 8 April
1665.
1
Agnes,
married
Thomas
Westby
ofChor-
ley.
Dorothy,
married
William
Baines of
Blackrood.
1
Anne.
Ormcskirke, 8 April 1665.
Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdalc, 1664-5. 343
of %f)etrington.
. — Argent, three dung forks, sable.
William Wortbington.=. . . dau. of
. . . Brad-
shaw of
Lither-
land.
Nicholas Worthington.=Jane, dau. of
Richard Lang-
tree of Lang-
tree.
Alexander Worthington. =. Amelia, dau. Augustine. Anne,
and heir of married
Thomas Dux-
bury.
Katharine, Laura,
married first, married
GraCe,
married
Alexander Mr. John Mr. Rob. Mr. Richard
Wood- Kellett; Brockhole. King,
ward of second, Mr.
Shevington. Richard
Dickinson.
Nicholas Worthington.=Agnes, dau.
[ of Thomas
Worthington
of Worthing-
ton, esq.
Issue,
T664.
344 Visitation of Lancashire by Sir William Dugdale, 1664-5.
CStortfnngton of 2Uort&ington.
9rmS. — Argent, three three-grained dung forks, sable.
CrESt. — A goat passant, holding in the mouth an oak branch vert, fructed, or.
Thorn
set. 34
1664.
Thomas Worthington=
of Worthington, esq.
=Dorothy, dau.
of ... Lang-
tree of Lang-
tree.
I
William Worthington,=Margaret,
set. 65 an. 23 Sept. dau. of
1664. Mr. John
Halsey of
Alkar.
1 |
Susan, John.=
ob. un-
married.
1
Agnes.
is Worthington, Edward Worthington. Isabel,
an. 23 Sept.
Anne. Margaret.
Ormeskirke. 23 Sept. 1664.
IV. Worthington.
INDEX.
A braham, 174.
ASHTON OF GREAT LEVER, 10.
/\ Acton, 280.
ASHTON OF MIDDLETON, 14.
Adams, 330.
ASHTON OF PRESTON, 12.
Addison, 82.
ASHTON OF SHEPLEY, 16.
Adkinson, 79.
ADLINGTON OF ADLINGTON, I.
Ashton, 10, 21, 23, 43, 47, 50, 65, 73, 77,
104, no, 125, 126, 139, 140, 150, 152,
Aghton, 42.
Agworth, 178.
Albin, 322.
156, 162, 163, 166, 175, 177, 185, 186,
193. 195, 2°9i 235, 240, 248, 276.
Ashurst, 9, 50.
Alborough, 146.
Ashworth, 70, 74, 335.
Aldersey, 102, 320.
Aspden, 249.
Allanson, 252.
ALLEN OF BROUGHTON, 2.
Aspenhall, 165, 177, 239.
Assheton, 61, 271, 278, 297, 298, 306,
Allen, 2, 242, 341.
Allibond, 290.
309, 316, 336.
ASTLEY OF STAKES, 19.
AMBROSE OF LOWICK, 3.
Astley, 157, 201, 237.
ANDERTON OF ANDERTON, 4,
ANDERTON OF BIRCHLEY, 5.
Aston, 154, 195, 205.
ATHERTON OF ATHERTON, 20.
ANDERTON OF EUXTON, 6.
Atherton, 43, 50, 64, 85, 248.
ANDERTON OF LOSTOCK, 7.
Atkinson, 296.
Anderton, 23, 42, 52, 55, 63, 79, 80, 136,
Atkynson, 43.
169, 220, 230, 236, 250, 271, 274, 275,
Audley, 283.
294, 302, 325, 341.
Andrew, 34.
Austen, 321.
AYNESWORTH OFPLESSINGTON,
ANDREWS OF LITTLE LEVER,
22.
8.
Aynesworth, 22, 133, 183, 196.
Angier, 213.
Aynson, 324.
Appleton, 177.
Aynsworth, 36.
Archer, 230.
Ayscough, 3.
Arden, 204.
Arderne, 146, 162.
T)acchus, 1 60.
Argall, in.
J_) Backhouse, 99, 331.
Arrowsmitli, 336.
Arundell, 282.
Bagshaw, 16.
Baines, 342.
Ashaw, 102.
Balderston, 20.
Ashawe, 39, 245.
Balderstone, 304.
Asheton, 2, 148, 272, 291, 340.
Bales, 131.
ASHHURST OF ASHHURST, 9.
BAMFORD OF BAMFORD, 22.
Ashhurst, 156, 234.
Ashmalle, 16.
Bamford, 33, 65, 195, 196, 303.
Bamvile, 280.
ASHTON OF ASHTON, 13.
BANASTER OF ALTHAM, 24.
ASHTON OF CHATERTON, 18.
BANASTER OF THE BANKE, 23.
ASHTON OF CROSTON, n.
BANASTER OF PRESTON, 25.
346
Index.
Banaster, 66, 158, 164, 220, 221, 228, 230,
BILLINGE OF BILLINGE, 30.
234-
Bindloss, 292.
Banastre, 64, 107, 114, 125, 151, 188,
BINDLOSSE OF BARWICK, 31.
267, 292, 295, 296, 297, 308.
Bancroft, 10, 196.
Banester, 204.
Bindlosse, 151.
BIRCH OF ARDWICK, 34.
Birch, 239, 247.
Banister, 6, 15, 144, 249, 306, 311, 341.
BANKES OF WINSTANLEY, 26.
Birchall, 30, 276.
BIRCHE OF BIRCHE, 32.
Bankes, 109, 181.
Birche, 244.
Barber, 275.
BARCROFT OF BARCROFT, 27.
Barcroft, 40, 228, 249.
Bird, I.
Birkenhead, 165, 275.
Birket, 165.
Barcrofte, 306.
Bardesley, 29.
Birkhead, 171.
BIRTWISLE OF HUNCOTE, 35.
Bardsey, 160.
Birtwisle, 341.
Barker, 36, 177.
Bispham, 26.
Barley, 298.
BARLOW OF BARLOW, 28,
BLACKBURNE OF NEWTON, 36.
Blackburne, 87.
Barlow, 207, 218, 282, 298.
Blackmore, 197.
Barnes, 52, 65, 147, 293.
Bladen, 171.
Barrow, 12, 201, 230, 232.
Blagrove, 196.
Barton, 14, 64, 135, 185, 205, 250, 271,
Blainsco, 341.
276, 286, 296.
Blakeburne, 56, 190, 226.
Bate, 145.
Blakelow, 124.
Bateman, 170.
Blakey, 47, 308.
Bath, 172.
Blakhurst, no.
Bayley, 245.
Baynes, 46.
Blakoe, 137.
Blankensop, 225.
Baxter, 184.
Blennerhasset, 169.
Beaumont, 15.
Blewet, 115.
BECK OF MANCHESTER, 29.
Blount, 5.
Beck, 34, 190.
BLUNDELL OF CROSBY, 37.
Becken, 143.
BLUNDELL OF INCE-BLUNDELL,
Beconsall, 4.
38-
Beesley, 227.
BLUNDELL OF PRESTON, 40.
Bekk/33.
Belfield, 27, 228.
Blundell, 52, 80, 85, 101, 106, 120, 143,
164, 184, 194, 209, 220, 301, 302.
Bell, 162.
Blusher, 112.
Bellau, 333.
BOLD OF BOLD, 41.
Benson, 241.
Bold, 206, 223, 248, 264, 266, 295.
Bentley, 214, 228.
Bolde, 21, loo, 218, 220.
Berington, 129, 215.
Berkeley, 311.
Bolton, 93, 178, 197, 203, 269, 338.
Bond, 190, 208.
Berkinhead, 181.
BOOTH OF BOOTH, 44.
Bernard, 50.
Booth, 96, 162, 181, 238, 248, 277, 316,
Berresford, 146.
317,338, 339, 340.
Berry, 139, 140, 166.
Boothe, 179, 209.
Beswick, 67.
BOOTLE OF MELLING, 45.
Beton, 181.
Bootle, 213.
Bever, 218.
Bordman, 118.
Uuxwicke, 158.
Bossevile, 9.
Biby, 67.
Boteler, 42, 201.
Biddulf, 341.
Bould, 165.
Biddulph, 235.
Bowker, 224.
Billing, 202.
Brabazon, 244.
Index.
34V
BRABYN OF DOCKER, 46.
Brownsell, 9.
Bradburne, 233.
Brownsword, 338.
BRADDILL OF WHALLEY, 47.
Brother-ton, 36.
Braddill, 58.
Bruyn, 57, 121.
Braddyll, 251, 267, 299, 307, 309.
BRADLEY OF BRYNING, 49.
Brydsjes, 283.
BRYERS OF WALTON, 59.
Bradley, 168.
Bryers, 51, 108, in, 201, 203.
Bradshagh, 220, 293.
Bradshaigh, 194, 291.
Buck, 250.
BUCKLEY OF BUCKLEY, 60.
Bradshaugh, 231.
BRADSHAW OF BRADSIIAW, 50.
Buldree, 158.
Bulkeley, 68.
BRADSHAW OF DARCY LEVER,
Bulkley, 205, 316.
5'-
Bullock, 151.
BRADSHAW OF THE HAGH, 52.
Bullocke, 273.
BRADSHAW OF PENDLETON, 53.
Bulmer, 21.
BRADSHAW OF PENNINGTON,54.
Bunbury, 122, 220.
BRADSHAW OF PRISALL, 55.
Burbeck, 141.
Bradshaw, 5, 6, 7, 9, 21, 37, 50, 65, 91,
Burd, 66.
104, 125, 188, 217, 240, 252, 262, 295,
Burgh, 200.
3'2, 319, 343-
Braithwaite, 331.
Burghley, 283.
BURRON OF WARRINGTON, 65.
Braithwayte, 322.
Bramhall, 339.
Bursco, 287.
BUSHELL OF KEUERDEN, 62.
Brandlesome, 124.
Bushell, 13,57, 189, 211, 212.
Brandon, 282, 289.
Buskill, 1 60.
Brekell, in.
Bussey, 208.
Brent, 87.
BUTLER OF KYRKLAND, 63.
Brereley, 115.
BUTLER OF RAWCLIFFE, 64.
Breres, 258, 328, 329, 336.
Butler, 6, 21, 37, 52, 69, 88, in, 206,
Brereton, 28, 146, 179, 317.
220, 278, 281, 286, 293, 302, 305, 316,
BRETHERTON OF HEY, 56.
Breton, 138.
BUTTERWORTH OF BELFIELD,
BRETTARGHE OF BRETTARGHE-
65.
SHOULT, 57.
Butterworth, 22, 50, 74, 115, 149, 217,
Brewer, 105.
140.
Bridgeman, 186
BYROM OF BYROM, 66.
Briercliffe, 196.
BYROM OF MANCHESTER, 67.
Briers, 135.
BYROM OF SALFORD, 68.
Brinley, 204.
Byrom, 24, 42, 56, 133, 150, 294, 300.
Briscoe, 243.
Byron, 14, 20, 21, 207, 316.
Britwisle, 84.
Brocas, 103.
Brock, 146.
C adman, 114.
Caermarden, 39.
Brockhall, 273.
Calcott, 323.
Brockhole, 343.
BROCKHOLES OF CLAYTON, 58.
Calveley, 21.
Calverley, 154.
Brockholes, 47, 48.
Calvert, 55, 100, 286, 314.
Broke, 42.
Campsfield, 12.
Brooke, 33, 107, 179, 183, 201,256, 338.
Cardigan, 87.
Brookes, 243.
Cardinal, 340.
Brough, 189.
Carington, 327.
Broughton, 1 60.
Carleton, 299.
Browne, 21, 25, 61, 116, 162, 246, 247,
Carlton, 263.
249,260,285,289,299, 310.
Carnaby, 31.
Brownlow, 251, 269, 335.
Carr, 2§3.
348
Index.
Carrel, 206.
Christian, 227.
Carrington, 86.
Clapham, 2IO.
Carroll, 207.
Clarke, 67, 312, 327.
Carrus, 84.
Clay, 114.
Carter, 198, 218, 290.
Cartwright, 188.
CARUS OF HALTON, 69.
CLAYTON OF CROOKE, 85.
CLAYTON OF LENTWORTH, 83.
CLAYTON OF LITTLE HARWOOD,
Cams, 64, 88, 198, 254, 255, 286.
84.
Carver, 142.
Clayton, 12, 21, 30, 35, 39, 107, 127, 173.
CASE OF HAYTON, 70.
188, 192, 206, 249, 272, 298.
Case, 213.
Clifford, 282.
Casty, 322.
Caterall, 21, 121.
CLIFTON OF CLIFTON, 86.
Clifton, 6, 59, 64, 101, 116, 137, 194, 206,
Catherall, 264, 267, 308, 312.
218, 220, 278, 289, 302, 331.
CATTERALL OF CROOKE, 71.
Clitheroe, 297.
Catterall, 47, 128, 305.
Clitherow, 79.
Caudrey, 84.
Clyfton, 36.
Cecil, 283, 317.
CHADDOCK OF CHADDOCK, 72.
Cockshutt, 249.
Cokain, 61.
Chaddock, 303.
Chaderton, 126, 315.
Colbrand, 251, 257, 294.
Colburne, 137.
CHADWICK OF CHADWICK, 73.
COLE OF COAT, 88.
CHADWICK OF TAWNTON, 74.
Cole, 63, 119.
Chadwick, 61, 76, 104, 152, 300.
Chambers, 164.
Collyer, 56.
Colthurst, 35, 310.
Chandois, 283.
Colwiche, 165.
Charles, 295.
Coming, 190.
Charleton, 274.
Compton, 289.
Charnley, 137.
Comyn, 208.
Charnock, 31, 107, 250, 258, 302, 327,
Coney, 132, 144.
34'-
Constable, 264, 307.
Chatburne, 47, 314.
Constantine, 17.
Chatterton, 319.
Conway, 103.
Cheetham, 29.
Cheiney, 172.
Conyers, 21.
Cooke, 4, 102, 130, 242, 305
Cheney, in.
Cheneys, 205.
Chesterfield, 154.
CHETHAM OF CHETHAM, 75.
Coope, 24.
COOPER OF CARNEFORI), 89.
Cooper, 98, 261, 268.
Copley, 156, 159,231,327.
CHETHAM OF NUTHURST, 76.
Corbet, 114, 138.
CHETHAM OF TURTON, 77.
Cordell, 191.
Chatham, 33, 73, 162, 185, 260, 303.
Corwen, 64.
Chew, 47.
Cotes, 273.
Cheyney, 208.
Cottam, 328.
Childe, 51.
Cottom, 153.
CHISENIIALL OF CHISENHALL,
Cotton, 33, 208, 230, 282.
78.
Cottum, 136.
Chisenhall, 57, 183, 244.
Couper, 230.
Cholmeley, 146.
Covile, 58.
Cholmley, 277.
Cowper, 329.
CHORLEY OF CHORLEY, 80.
CHORLEY OF CHORLEY, 81.
Coxe, 84.
Crakenthorpe, 241.
CHORLEY OF PRESTON, 82.
Cranmore, 208.
Chorley, 91, 120, 144, 268.
Craven, 325.
Chorlton, 121.
Crispin, 53.
Index.
349
Croft, 170, 229, 276.
DEWHURST OF ALSTON, 97.
Crombache, 326.
Dewhurst, 19, 157, 278.
CROMBOCK OF CLARKE-HILL, 89.
Dicconson, 167, 168.
Crombock, 47, 48, 136, 166.
Dichfield, 172.
Crompton, 149, 162, 185, 222, 335.
Crooke, 97.
Dickenson, 22, 45, 89, 169.
DICKINSON OF WRITINTON,
98.
Cropper, 30, 284.
Dickinson, 294, 343.
Cross, 174, 337.
Digby, 283.
Crosse, 23, 59, 81, 157, 19°.
Diggles, 229.
Crouch, 164.
Dillingham, 261.
Croule, 169-.
Disleworth, 273.
Crowchley, 93.
Ditchfield, 81, 132, 155, 319.
Crowker, 234.
Ditchford, 248.
Crowlher, 213.
Dixon, 253.
Croxton, 146.
Dod, 146.
CUDWORTH OF WERNETH, 90.
DODDING OF CONISHEAD, gc
Cudworth, 76, 125, 128.
Dodding, 169, 195.
Cuerdale, 105.
Dodshon, 3.
Cuerden, 245.
Dodsworth, 135, 248.
CULCHETH OF ABRAM, 92.
Dokenfeild, 161.
CULCHETH OF CULCHETH, 91.
Domville, I7Q.
Culcheth, 52, 81, 122, 132, 278, 319.
Don, 223.
Cuncliffe, 128.
Donne, 204, 317.
Cunliffe, 249, 271.
Dormer, 207.
Currer, 107, 157.
DOWNES OF WARDLEY, 100.
Curwen, 58, 240.
Downes, 113, 182, 236, 318.
Curwyn, 69.
Downham, 54.
Curzon, 312, 314.
Downing, 221.
Cutler, 214.
Downyng, 120.
Draycott, 220, 318.
T~\abridgcourt, 103.
\_J Dacre, 264, 304.
Daivill, 99.
Drinkall, 178.
Drinkwater, 229.
DUCKENFEILD OF HINDLEV,
IOO.
Dale, 105, 333.
Duckenfeild, 43.
Dalston, 254.
DALTON OF THURNHAM, 94-
Duckenfield, 9, 18, 22, 146, 235,
261, 288.
240.
Dalton, 155, 206, 306.
Ducket, 119.
Danby, 69.
Duckworth, 323.
Daniel, 41, 194.
DANIELL OF WIGAN, 95.
Duddell, 82, 128.
Dudley, 282.
Daniell, 180.
Duncalf, 281.
Dant, I.
Dunch, 210.
Dantsey, 102, 1 86.
Durnham, 103.
DAVENPORT OF SALFORD, 96.
Dutton, 20, 205, 274, 277, 284.
Duxbury, 237, 343.
Davenport, 14, 76, 122, 125, 233, 318.
Dyke, 296.
Dawne, 39.
Deane, 34.
Dearden, 73.
Earle, 195.
Eaton, 293.
D'Euyas, 277.
Eaves, 259, 323.
Dene, 31.
Ebourn, 96.
Denman, 265.
Eccles, 97.
Depdale, n.
ECCLESTON OF ECCLESTON,
101.
Derby, earl of, 28, 45, 63, 154.
Derresbury, 41.
Eccleston, 39, 86, 123, 146, 172, I
194, 3'9, 337-
89,
350
Index.
Edge, 112.
Edmondson, 135, 266, 333.
Edwards, 21, 264, 293.
FLEETWOOD OF ROSHALL, in.
Fleetwood, 13, 15, 63, 107, no, 220, 221,
231, 264, 275, 302, 318.
EGERTON OF SHAW, 102.
Fleming, 3, 169, 304.
Egerton, 145, 154, 175, 186, 283, 284, 340.
Elcock, 162, 213, 214.
Fleminge, 220.
Fletcher, 170, 322.
Elderton, 177.
Flower, 197.
Ellington, 261.
Foliambe, 305.
Ellis, 9.
Ford, 163.
Ellison, 273.
Forde, 149.
Elston, 9, n, 12, 24, 144, 273.
Forester, 76.
Eltoft, 31.
Forster, 47.
Elton, 239.
ELTONHEAD OF ELTONHEAD,
Forth, 95, 245.
Foster, 13, in, 228, 314.
103.
Fouleshurst, 14, 206.
Eltonhead, 194.
Entwisell, 151.
Fox, 243.
Foxcroft, 133.
ENTWISLE OF FOXHOLES, 104.
Foxe, 172.
Entwissell, 74.
France, 1 80.
Erneys, 204.
Freeman, 34.
Ersfield, 175.
FRENCH OF PRESTON, 112.
Evias, 168.
French, II, 327.
Ewers, 147.
Frodesham, 132.
Eyres, 26.
Froman, 327.
Eyton. 146.
EYVES OF FISHWICKE, 105.
FYFE-BIJTLER OF WEDACRE, 113.
Eyves, 128.
TTARINGTON OF RIBLETON,
Gamull, 146, 154.
Gandy, 233.
r 106.
Gardner, 54.
FARINGTON OF WERDON, 107.
Garnet, 114, 141, 177, 185.
Farington, 23, no, 198, 219, 221, 225.
Garret, 227.
Farrar, 210, 313.
Garrett, 139, 140.
Farrer, 322.
Garrol, 122.
Farrington, 6, 237.
Faryngton, 168.
Garside, 73. .
GARTSIDE OF ROCHDALE, 115.
ffarington, 255, 259, 274, 322.
FAZAKERLEY OF FAZAKERLEY,
Gartside, 125, 140, 338.
Garway, 220.
108.
Gascoigne, 155.
FAZAKERLEY OF KIRKBY, 109.
Gascoine, 129.
Fazakerley, 59.
Gaskell, 149.
Fennick, 103.
Gaytonby, 35.
Ferrand, 312.
Gee, 338.
Ferrers, 280.
Field, 242.
(;<:Klhorpe, 77.
GERARD OF BRYNNE, 116.
Fielding, 3, 262.
GERARD OF NEWTON, 118.
Fife, 63, 234.
Gerard, 14, 42, 57, 66, 86, 122, 154, 155,
Figes, 114.
193, 201, 207, 236, 258, 274, 275, 279,
Finch, 223.
287, 316, 328, 340.
Fisher, 47, 58, 170, 336.
GERLINGTON OF THURLAND
Fitton, 54, 317, 319, 339.
CASTLE, 119.
Fitzackerley, 319.
Gernet, 204.
Flack, 76.
Gerrard, So.
FLEETWOOD OF PENWORTHAM,
Giffard, 123.
GILLIBRAND OF CHORLEY, 120.
Index.
GILLIBRAND OF PEELE, 122.
Hagerston, 23, 37, 64.
GILLIBRAND OF RAMSGREVE,
Haighton, 71, 211, 245.
121.
Halefield, 253.
Gillibrand, 37, 59, 71, 81, 92, 157, 342.
Halewood, 80.
Gilpin, 254.
Hall, 128, 305.
Girlington, 120.
Halliwell, 216.
Gleare, 70.
Halsale, 42, 86.
Oleaster, 30.
HALSALL OF MELLING, 129.
Gleve, 57.
Halsall, 20, 86, 134, 137, 192, 206, 285,
Gobert, 245.
290, 300, 341.
Golding, 132.
Good, 337.
Halsey, 344.
Halstead, 48, 128, 228.
Goodhand, 150.
Halsted, 22, 306, 311, 314.
Gorges, 283.
Halywell, 27.
GORSUCH OF GORSUCH, 123.
Hamer, 61.
Gorsuch, 101.
Hamerton, 164, 263.
Gorsych, 28.
Hammond, 296.
Gouge, 322.
Hancock, 6, 249, 296.
Gouldsmith, 199.
Hansby, 116.
Gowshull, 281.
Harcourt, 20.
Gradell, 63, 190.
Hardware, 143.
Gray, 214, 314.
Hargreaves, 309.
Green, 9, 265.
Greene, 10, 58.
Greenehalgh, 149.
GREENHALGH OF BRANDLE-
Hargreves, 304.
Harington, 202, 205, 223, 278, 284, 289.
Harling, 273.
Harper, 2, 243.
SOME, 124.
Harrington, 59, 123, 203.
Greenhalgh, 18, 139, 240, 150.
Harris, 324.
Greenhaugh, 4.
Greenwood, 249.
Harrison, 170, 180, 267, 319.
HARRYNGTON OF HUYTON, 130.
Grene, 143.
Harryngton, 127.
Greneacre, 267.
Hart, 288.
Grenehalgh, 248.
HARTLEY OF STRANGEWAYS,
Greseley, 28.
IS*-
Grevile, 330.
Hartley, 50, 89, 141, 308, 309, 314.
Grice, 223, 323.
Harwood, 168.
Griffith, 253, 317.
Haryngton, 263, 281, 291, 297.
Grimeston, 64.
Haselham, 139, 140.
Grimsargh, 265.
Haslam, 73.
Grimshaw, 271, 326.
Hassall, 146.
Gresbroke, 66.
Hastings, 282, 283.
Grey, 281.
Hatton, 57.
Grogan, III.
Haugh, 217.
Grundie, 71.
Haughton, 121.
GRYMESHAWE OF CLAYTON-IN-
Haversham, 121.
THF.-MOORS, 127.
HAWARDEN OF WIDNES, 132.
Grymshagh, 105.
Grymshaw, 311.
Gryse, 132.
Hawarden, 91.
Hawkson, 336.
Hawkworth, 325.
Guy, 310.
Haworth, 61, 222.
Haydock, 128, 135, 136, 184, 205, 208,
Haber, III.
Habergham, 305, 313.
228, 262, 265, 306, 311, 313, 324.
HAVE OF CHORLTON HALL, 133.
Hadham, 281.
Hayes, 209.
Hadock, 153.
Hayhurst, 310.
352
Index.
Haymer, 115.
Holcroft, 42, 90, 140, 246, 291, 303, 319,
Hays, 165.
Hayton, 319, 341.
Haywarden, 291.
Holcr'ofte, 33.
IIOLDEN OF HOLDEN, 144.
Heap, 249.
Holden, 44, 58, 128, 137, 157, 248, 251,
Heape, 224.
Heardson, 321.
264, 293, 312.
Holdsworth, 228.
Heaton, 124.
Holgate, 87.
Helme, 19
Holker, 310.
Henage, 135.
HOLLAND OF HEATON, 146.
Heneage, 87.
HOLLAND OF SUTTON, 147.
Henley, 340.
Holland, 42, 75, 77, 155, 161, 166, 180,
Henshaw, 233.
204, 205, 236, 247, 270, 276.
Heppall, 263.
Holliday, 309.
HESJKETH OF AUGHTON, 134.
HESKETH OF HESKETH, 135.
Hollingcroft, 53.
Hollington, 337.
Hollingworth, 2, 29.
HESKETH OF POOLTON, 136.
HESKETH OF PRESTON, 137.
Holme, 59, 70, 342.
HOLT OF ASHWORTH, 148.
Hesketh, 6, 49, 120, 128, 135, 216, 226,
HOLT OF BRIDGE-HALL, 149.
246, 248, 278, 286, 292, 305, 308, 314,
HOLT OF GRISTLEHURST, 150.
33 ', 332> 336.
HOLT OF STUBLEY, 151.
Heton, 185, 323.
Holt, 10, 14, 22, 24, 31, 61, 66, 104, 125,
Hever, 231.
126, 139, 140, 152, 158, 221, 222.
Hey, 68, 144.
Holte, 258, 274.
Heye, 33, 128.
IIEYRICK OF MANCHESTER, 138.
Hondford, 316.
Hooton, 280.
HEYWOOD OF HEYWOOD, 139.
HOPWOOD OF HOPWOOD, 152.
HEYWOOD OF WALTON-ON-THE-
Hopwood, 148, 253, 305, 319.
HILL, 140.
Hornby, 88.
Heywood, 17, 126, 166, 261, 340.
Homer, 94.
Hickson, 50.
Horsfall, 228.
Hide, 10, 244.
Horton, 65.
Higginson, 80.
Highshine, 211.
Hoskins, 300.
HOTHERSALL OF HOTHERSALL,
Higton, 145.
Hill, 56, 322.
HILTON OF MILLWOOD, 141.
Hothersall, 324.
HOUGHTON OF HOUGHTON
Hilton, 71, 94, 171, 245, 252, 273, 294,
TOWER, 154.
339, 34°-
Houghton, 36, 97, 135, 185, 198, 214,
Ilinchman, 53.
235, 245, 246, 257, 274, 287, 293, 306,
Hinckes, 66.
Hindley, 54.
325, 337, 341-
Houlden, 133.
Hobson, 34.
Howard, 29, 117, 236/282, 292, 317.
Hodgekinson, 334.
Howarden, I.
Hodges, 43, 58.
Howarth, 166.
HODGKINSON OF PRESTON, 142.
Howell, 1 86.
Hodgkinson, 11, 25, 40, 82, 112, 164, 273,
Howie, 1 68.
296, 325.
HOWORTH OF HOWORTH, 156.
Hodgson, 58, 69, 156.
HOWORTH OF THURCROFT, 157.
HOGHTON OF PARK HALL, 155.
Howorth, 9, 19, 25, 144, 159.
Hoghton, 41, 109, 264, 277, 284, 298, 309,
327-
Hoyle, 314.
Hubbard, 242.
Holbroke, 138.
Huddleston, 69, 123, 198, 231.
HOLCROFT OF HOLCROFT, 145.
Hudleston, 169.
Index.
353
Hudson, 190, 268.
Hull, 136, 326.
Kirby, 3, 243.
KIRKBY OF KIRKBY, 169.
HULME OF HULME, 158.
Kirkby, 6, 98, 99.
Htilme, 192.
Kirke, 182, 272.
HULTON OF HULTON, 159.
Kirkham, 269.
Ilulton, 152, 156, 158.
Kitchen, 306.
Humphreys, 246.
Kitchin, n, 12, 24, 190.
Hunt, 93, 320.
Knevett, 282.
Hurlston, 190.
KNIPE OF BROUGHTON, 170.
Hussey, 87.
HUTTON OF THORPENSTY, 160.
Knipe, 55, 114,160,255.
Knoll, 265.
Hutton, 99, 241, 255.
HYDE OF DENTON, 161.
Knowles, 67.
KUERDEN OF PRESTON, 167.
Hyde, 26, 57, 67, 159, 181, 246.
Kuerden, 23.
Hyton, 30.
Kyton, 198.
TNCE OF INCE, 163.
1 Ince, 56.
Ingham, 56, 152.
T abrey. 125, 158.
1 > Lacconby, 136.
LACY OF LONGWORTH, 171.
Ingleby, 107, 264, 313.
Lacy, 308.
Inglefeild, 52.
Lacye, 159.
Inman, 170.
IRELAND OF HUTT, 165.
Lago, 1 66.
Lake, 197.
Ireland, 21, 26, 41, 42, 87, 130, 134, 203,
Lambert, 119, 210.
215, 220, 287, 319.
Irlam, 276.
Lamplugh, 169.
LANCASTER OF RAINHILL, 172.
Lancaster, 41, 121, 189, 201, 237.
Jackson, 24, 56, 156, 162, 168, 268,311,
322.
enison, 116.
Land, 227.
LANGTON OF BROUGHTON
enkinson, no.
TOWER, 173.
ennings, 256.
LANGTON OF LOWE, 174.
ephson, 24.
Langton, 42, 186, 194, 263, 277, 278, 282,
epson, 34, 187, 321.
289, 319.
ermyn, 282.
Langtre, 71.
essop, 21, 159.
Langtree, 288, 343, 344.
odrell, 151.
OHNSON OF PRESTON, 164.
Lascelles, 340.
Lascells, 208.
ohnson, 24, 40, 77, 138, 203, 342.
olley, 238.
Latham, 59, 78, 153.
LATHOM OF PERBOLD, 176
ones, 7, 26, 267, 285.
LATHOM OF WHISTON, 177.
Lathom, 15, 86, 195, 202, 244, 267, 281,
TV'arver, 34.
JS. Kay, 233, 305.
Kaye, 15, 77.
LATHAM oV IRELAM, 175.
Lathwat, 180.
Kellet, 89.
Lathwayte, 245.
Kellett, 343.
Latus, 3.
Kendall, 162.
Laughe, 7.
Kenion, 157.
Laungton, 65.
Kenwick, 177.
LAWE OF PRESTON, 178.
KENYON OF PEELE, 66.
Lawe, 47.
Kenyon, 70, 146, 186, 189, 338.
Kerfoot, 276.
Lawrence, 357.
Lawton, 196.
Kighley, 24, 264, 340.
Lazenby, 131.
King, 217, 267, 343.
Lea, 147.
354
Index.
Lease, 55.
Longworth, 185, 197, 290.
Leconby, 275.
Lee, 335.
Lovesey, 19.
LOWDE OF KIRKHAM, 191.
Leech, .96.
Lees, 44.
LEGH OF PRESTON, 182.
Lowe, 57, 213, 324.
Lownde, 341.
Lowther, 169.
Legh, 26, 245, 246.
Ludlum, I45.
Leicester, 34, 50, 165, 174, 179, 340.
LEIGH OF BARTON, 179
Lydyat, 202.
Lynney, 256.
LEIGH OF BRADLEIGH, 180.
Lyon, 177, 337.
LEIGH OF BRUCH, 181.
Lyster, 171.
LEIGH OF SINGLETON GRANGE,
181
Macclesfield, 337.
Leigh, 15, 22, 28, 43, 60, 61, 79, 96, 116,
Mackinson, 308.
165, 174, 175, 176, 205, 230, 271, 296,
nt, 72.
3°3, 304, 3i6, 317, 329-
Leigh ton, 1 1 6.
Madison, 37.
MAGHULL OF MAGHULL, 192.
Leland, 21.
Maghull, 129, 206.
LEMON OF PRESTON, 184.
Maire, 172.
Lemon, 25, 40, 143.
Male, 58.
Lenney, 74.
Malham, 228.
Letherbury, 295.
LEVER OF KERSALL, 185.
Maney, 116.
Manknolls, 313.
Lever, 8, 17, 51, 102, 152, 173, 187, 196,
Manknowles, 273.
213, 248, 271, 285, 342.
Leybourne, 69, 289.
Manley, 25, 145.
Mansfield, 265.
Leyburne, 58.
Manwaring, 174, 317, 319.
Leycester, 317.
Manwaringe, 284.
Leyland, 168, 196, 205, 302, 317.
Lidbieter, 172.
Markham, 208.
MARKLAND OF WIGAN, 193.
Lightbound, 133, 186.
LIGHTBOWNE OF MANCHESTER,
Markland, 13.
Marland, 1 6.
187.
Marler, 158.
Lightbowne, 199.
Marsden, 212.
Linacre, 132, 323.
Marshall, 229.
Lindley, 4, 187.
Marshe, 67.
Lister, 278.
Marshland, 242.
Litherland, 333.
Marston, 19.
Litten, 232.
Martin, 109, 247.
Littleton, 150.
MASCY OF RIXTON, 194.
LIVESAY OF LIVESAY, 188.
Mascy, 86.
LIVESAY OF SUTTON, 189.
Mason, 227.
Livesay, 129, 157.
Livesey, 77, 84, 85, 250, 274, 327, 328.
Massey, 39, 52, 78, IOI, 103, 174, 176, 212,
274, 275, 318, 321, 338, 340.
Lloyd, 217.
Massie, 125.
Lock, 169.
Mather, 136, 229, 336.
Locker, 93.
Matthews, 336.
Lockyer, 335.
Maudesley,2II.
Loggan, 62.
Mauleverer, 297.
Lomax, 17, 77, 139, 140, 239.
Lomos, 157.
MAWDESLEY OF LEYLAND, 196.
MAWDESLEY OF MAWDESLEY.
Long, I r.
'95-
Longford, 316.
LONGWORTH OF UPPER RAW-
Mawdesley, 99, 245.
Maxey, 169.
CLIFFE, 190.
Maxsey, 216.
Index.
355
May, 138.
Maynard, 214.
Mosse, 198.
MOSSOAKE OF KENNISCOUGH,
Mayo, III.
215.
MEDOWCROFT OF SMETHURST,
Mossock, 319.
Moston, 162.
196.
Mounson, 7, 225.
Meeke, 162.
Moxon, 156.
Menill, 28.
Mulmore, 304.
Menihvaring, 41.
Murgatroyd, 296.
MERCER OF WEST DERBY, 197.
Murray, 248.
Mercer, 250, 276, 290, 300.
Murrey, 84, 169.
Mereley, 271.
Mustell, 42.
Mesure, 126.
MYNSHULL OF MANCHESTER,
Michel, 317.
199.
MIDDLETON OF LEIGHTON, 198.
Middleton, 12, 31, 69, 88,94, i°6, 160, 194,
198, 229, 235, 245, 306, 327.
Midgley, 333.
Naylor, 342.
Neadham, 274.
NELSON OF FAYREHURST, 216.
Midleton, 90.
Nelson, 98, 136, 195, 202.
Mileson, 132, 147.
Netherwood, 22.
Millington, 233.
Nevell, 205.
Milne, 115.
Nevile, 252, 281, 305.
Minshull, 122.
Nevill, 65.
Moberley, 20.
NEWTON OF NEWTON, 217.
MOLINEUX OF HAUGHTON, 208.
Newton, 46, 96, 162.
MOLINEUX OF HAWKLEY, 200.
Nichols, 164.
MOLINEUX OF MELLING, 202.
Noell, 151.
MOLINEUX OF NEW HALL, 203.
MOLINEUX OF SEFTON, 204.
Norfolke, 61.
NORREIS OF MIDDLEFORTH, 119-
Molineux, 30, 41, 42, 59, 66, 108, 116,
NORREIS OF SPEKE, 120.
130, 135, 162, 165, 2l6, 2l8, 220, 221,
236, 242, 245, 246.
Molyneux, 28, 264, 271, 277, 281, 283,
NORRkf'OF^ARLTON, 118.
NORRES OF WEST DERBY, 118.
291, 292, 301, 319, 327, 336, 337.
Monke, 171.
Norres, 43, 207.
Norris, 28, 36, 52, 86, 93, 145, 269, 296,
Moore, 45, 83, 157, 164, 241, 244, 293,
298.
331.
North, 69.
Mordant, 42.
NOWELL OF REDE, 121.
More, 194, 215.
Nowell, 23, 47, 49, 56, 66, 68, 107, 250,
MORECROFT OF ORMESKIRKE,
209.
257, 271, 273, 296, 399, 305, 306, 328.
NUTHALL OF TOTTINGTON, 222.
Morecroft, 13.
Nutter, 89, 128, 310.
Moreton, 206.
Morgan, 117, 236.
/^vGLE OF WHISTON, 223.
Morgell, 43.
MORLEY OF WINNINGTON, 210.
\J Ogle, 43, 130.
Oldfield, !07, I98.
Morley, 35, 47, 128, 266.
Morris, 118.
MORT OF DAMHOUSE, in.
OLDHAM OF MANCHESTER, 224.
Oldham, 242.
Olney, 140.
MORT OF PRESTON, 112.
Openshaw, 239.
Morton, 216.
Orbill, 170.
MOSELEY OF ANCOTES, 113.
Ormerod, 312.
MOSELEY OF THE HOOGH, 114.
Ormerode, 27, 35.
Moseley, 90, 1 86.
Ormeroyd, 311.
Mosoke, 328.
Orrell, I, 5, 7, 54, 165, 201, 222.
356
Index.
Orton, 2.
OSBALDESTON OF OSBALDES-
Pilkinton, 2O, 185.
Pincernse, 204.
TON, 225.
Pinder, 164.
OSBALDESTON OF SUNDER.
Planzye, 236.
LAND, 226.
Platt, 232.
Osbaldeston, 19, 101, 225, 274, 277, 281,
Playford, 338.
298.
Osbalston, 206.
Plessington, 248, 333.
Plowden, 194.
Osborne, 327.
Plumpton, 263, 307, 341.
Ottewell, 338.
Pollard, 295.
Owen, 54.
Poole, 91, 122, 293, 302.
Pooley, 202.
T) aimer, 169.
JT Papworth, 131.
Parham, 103.
PARKER OF BRADKIRKE, 227.
PARKER OF EXTWISLE, 228.
Pope, 333-
Port, 1 16.
PORTER OF LANCASTER, 234.
Porter, 9, 18.
Portman, 283.
Parker, 10, 28, 90, 191, 249, 250, 265,
271, 282, 289, 308, 326.
Parkinson, 36, 46, 64, 87, 114, 137, 234,
Potter, 72, 238.
Powell, 57, 220.
Power, 135.
257,259)275.298,313,326.
Powtrell, 208.
Parr, 247, 270, 276, 296.
Poynts, 282.
Paslew, 309.
Paston, 307.
PATTEN OF WARRINGTON, 229.
Present, II, 206, 336.
PRESTON OF HOLKAR, 235.
PRESTON OF THEIMANNOUR.236
Patten, 25.
PRESTON OF PRESTON, 237.
Paynter, 88.
Preston, 7, 10, 19, 69, 100, 117, 141, 146,
Peacock, 108.
154, 172, 176, 198, 205, 207, 289, 302,
Peake, 122.
Pearson, 160.
33°, 332, 336.
Prestwich, 68, 320.
Peckham, 116.
Prestwiche, 124.
Peele, 1 60.
Prichard, 43.
Pell, 137.
Proctor, 88, 137, 178.
Pemberton, 200.
Puresey, no.
Pen, 53.
Penketh, 336.
Pennant, 174.
RADCLIFFE OF RADCLIFFB;
239-
PENNINGTON OF PENNINGTON,
RADCLIFFE OF TODMERDEN,
231.
PENNINGTON OF WIGAN, 232.
240.
Radcliffe, 10, 54, 125, 203, 205, 206, 248,
Pennington, 39, 52, 99, no, 241, 246.
Pennyman, 21.
156, 291.
Radclyfie, 206, 263, 272, 276, 282, 291,
Percevall, 122.
295,297, 305,306,316, 317.
Percy, 282.
Radleigh, 133.
Perkinson, 121, 219.
Raleigh, I.
Perry, 31.
IMiilil- on, 69.
Ramsden, 146.
RATCLIFFE OF LEIGH, 238.
Phillipson, 254.
Ratcliffe, 21,96, 109, 185, 188, 221.
Phippe, 109.
Ratclyfle, 68.
Phosakerley, 238.
RAWLINSON OF CARKE, 24..
Pickering, 69, 113.
Rawlinson, 160, 254, 255.
PIGOT OF PRESTON, 233.
Rawson, 35, 182.
Pigot, 114.
Rawsthorne, 44, 249, 251, 258.
Pilkington, 78, 121, 124, 134, 258, 305,
Raynall, 135.
316.
Read, 317.
Index. 357
Reddish, 28, 146. | Rushworth, 128.
Redditch, 233. I Rygmaden, 304.
Redyche, 42. 1 Ryland, 93.
Reeves, 267.
Ryley, 230.
Remshaw, 234.
Ryshton, 6, 144.
Reynolds, 30.
Richardson, 24, 92, 265.
Ricroft, 232.
Ridding, 191.
Qackvile, 289.
vj Sagar, 310, 330.
SALE OF HOPE CARR, 252.
Rider, 73, 118.
Sale, 295.
RIDGE OF MANCHESTER, 242.
Salisbury, 230.
RIGBY OF HARRICK, 243.
Salkeld, 68.
RIGBY OF LAYTON, 244.
RIGBY OF MIDDLETON, 245.
Saltonstall, 212.
Salvetti, 218.
Rigby, 6, 26, 33, 71, 79, 85, 87, 135, 146,
'54> 159. 1 66, 169, 195, 247, 336.
Sampson, 114.
Sanders, 70, 99.
Rigg, 198.
SANDFORU OF HIGH ASHES AND
Rigmaden, 58, 302.
NUTHURST, 253.
RISHToVoF DUNNISHOPE, 251.
RISHTON OF PONTALGHE, 250.
Sandford, 17, 141, 152.
Sandiford, 253.
SANDYS OF GRAYTHWAYT, 254.
Rishton,4, 27,48, 84, 105, 125, 127, 249,
Sandys, 241, 255.
251, 282, 288, 311, 312, 321, 341.
Sare, 235.
Rishworth, 308, 312.
Savage, 42, 88, 316.
RISLEY OF RISLEY, 246.
Savile, 23..
Risley, 177, 320.
SAWREY OF PLUMPTON, 255.
Roberts, 27, 309, 317.
ROBINSON OF BUCKSHAW IN
Sawrey, 170, 241, 254.
Sawyer, 214.
EUXTON, 247.
Scarburgh, 228.
Robinson, 1,22,33,51,53,58.
Robynson. 168.
Scaresbrick, 7, 39, 52, 204.
Scarisbrick, 284.
Rockley, 5, 7.
SCHOLEFIELD OF SCHOLEFIELD,
Rodas, I.
256
Roe, 74.
Rogerley, 155,226,301.
Schoresworth, 339.
SCLATER OF LIGHT OAKES, 256.
Rogerly, 342.
Scofield, 144, 240.
Rogerlye, 155.
Scott, 137.
Rogers, 109.
Screven, 277.
Rogerson, 322.
Rolleston, 66.
Scrimshire, 246.
Sedgraves, 137.
Rookes, 248.
Sefton, 42, 204.
Roscowe, 177.
Selby, 207.
Rose, 45.
Selfe, 34.
ROSETHORNE OF NEW HALL,
Sephlon, 300.
248.
Sej-geant, 9, 268, 30x3.
Rosthorn, 186.
Serjeant, 82.
Rosthorne, 65, 126, 135, 144, 239.
Seymour, 207.
Rostorne, 10, 188.
Shaekerley, 293.
Rothwell, 149.
Shacklock, 104, 133.
Rowes, 197.
Shakerley, 122,231, 276.
Royle, 305.
Shakeshaft, 82.
Rufford, 78.
SHARPLES OF FRICKLETON, 257.
Rugge, 206.
SHARPLES OF SHARPLES, 269.
RUSHTON OF ANTLEY, 249.
Rushton, 25, 127, 142, 148, 155, 248, 278.
Sharpies, 251, 259, 269, 329.
SHARROCK OF WALTON, 268.
358
Index.
SHAW OF BULLHAGHE, 262.
SHAW OF HEATH CHARNOCK,
Snapes, 19.
Snede, 100.
258.
Somerscales, 171.
SHAW OF HEY SIDE, 260.
Somerset, 7, 281.
SHAW OF PRESTON, 259.
Somner, 278, 323.
SHAW OF SHAW PLACE, 261.
SOROCOLD OF BARTON, 276.
Shaw, 78, in, 125, 140, 149, 164, 227,
Sorocold, 238.
249, 324.
Sorrocold, 197.
Shelmerdine, 338.
Soudley, 114.
Shenton, 51.
Shepheard, 22, 242.
Southerne, 247.
SOUTHWORTH OF SAMLESBURY,
Shepherd, 224.
277.
Shepley, 16, 129.
SHERBORNE OF LITTLE MITTON,
Southworth, 47, 91, 106, 137, 205, 212,
226, 264, 268, 298, 305, 319, 328, 329.
SHE7RBORNE OF STANNIHURST,
Spateman, 72, 145.
SPENCER OF ASHTON HALL, 279.
SHERBORNE OF TWISLETON,
Spencer, 135, 283, 289.
Spenser, 18, 169
266.
Squibb, 165.
SHERBORNE OF WOLFHOUSE,
Squire,'..*
265.
Stafford, 44, 281,282.
Sherborne, 42, 272, 278, 310.
Stalford, 254.
Sherbourne, 47, 66, 135, 231, 297, 308.
Sherburne, 76, 207, 305, 3 1 2, 3 1 3, 322, •
327, 328-
Sherdley, 105.
Staly, 237.
STANDISH OF BURGHE, 294.
STANDISH OF DUXBURY, 293.
STANDISH OF STANDISH, 291.
Sherington, 26.
STANDISH OF WEST DERBY, 290.
Shute, 156.
Standish, 6, 10, 31, 107, 116, 122, 133,
SHUTTLEWORTH OF ASTERLEY,
135, 176, 189, 194, 200, 206, 207, 223,
SHUTTLEWORTH OF BEDFORD,
272, 301, 302, 308.
Standishe, 23.
SHUTTLEWORTH OF GAW-
Stanfield, 62.
Stanford, 5.
THORP, 271.
Stanhope, 205.
Shuttleworth, 10, 84. 127, 128, 267, 305,
3°9, 3", 3'3» 3'9, 3*7-
STANLEY, EARLS OF DERBY, 280.
STANLEY OF BICKERSTAFFE,
Sim, 1 88. 2»4.
Simons, 207.
STANLEY OF BROUGHTON, 285.
SINGLETON OF STEYNING, 274.
STANLEY OF CROSS HALL, 288.
STANLEY OF ECCLESTON, 286.
Singleton, 25, 64, 1 1 1, 225, 278, 298, 3",
•52'?, 324
STANLEY OF HORNBY CASTLE,
280.
Skillicorne, 189. STANLEY OF MOOR HALL, 287.
Slade, 239. ; Stanley, 63, 64, 69, 134, 135, '54, '79,
Slater, 97. , 186, 189, 205, 207, 250, 263, 280, 282,
Sleigh, 320. : 301, 302, 325, 337, 339.
Slinehead, 238. Stansfield, 144.
Slingard, 48.
Smallsagh, 300.
Starkey, 9, n, 37, 47, 243, 319, 333.
STARKIE OF HUNTROYDE, 296.
Smallwood, 220. ' Starkie, 24, 301, 329.
Smethurst, 222, 238. ; STARKY OF AUGHTON, 295.
Smith, 5, 7, 34, 55, 57, 64, 86, 1 18, 21 1, \ Starry, 324.
242, 253, 270, 290, 301, 313, 314. Stevenson, 89.
Smithson, 267. ! Steward, 1 16.
Snape, 178. Stirrop, 196.
Index.
359
Stirropp, 253, 270.
Thralsall, 137.
Stockley, 57.
Throppe, i.
Stockport, 123.
Stokport, 161.
Stonehaver, 157.
Thwenge, 319.
TILDKSLEY OF GARRET, 301.
TILDESLEY OF MORLEYS, 302.
Stones, 9, 177.
Tildesley, S, 7, =", 39, 63, 86, 176,212,
Stopford, 45.
226, 278, 286, 292, 296, 332, 340.
Stopwood, 162.
Tildsley, 155.
Stourton, 236,264,282.
Tipping, 72, 122, 157, 333.
Strange, 205, 281.
Tollhurst, 128.
Strangevvays, 275.
Strickland, 14, 235.
St. John, 274.
Tomlinson, 106.
Tompson, 5, 7, 16, 112, 245.
TONGE OF TONGE, 303.
Sudall, 142, 178.
Tonge, 72, 93, 145.
Suddall, 233, 323.
Tonstall, 306.
Sumpner, 109.
Toothill, 120, 324.
Sutton, 103, 123, 206, 214, 226, 289.
Topping, 142.
Swainson, 254.
Swartbreke, 1 14.
Touchett, 283.
TOWNELEY OF TOWNELEY, 304.
Swath, 1 80.
Towneley, 48, 128, 264, 267, 277, 297,
Sweetlove, 269.
TOWNLEY OF BARNSIDE, 308.
Swetenham, 162.
Swinglehurst, 273.
TOWNLEY OF BUTTON, 310.
TOWNLEY OF HURSTWOOD, 311.
Swyneson, 160.
Syddall, 338.
Symonds, 239.
TOWNLEY OF OAKENHEAD, 313.
TOWNLEY OF ROYLE, 312.
TOWNLEY OF STONEHEDGE, 314.
Symondstone, 296.
Townley, 10, 50, 171, 228, 249, 250, 264,
Tagler, 93.
TALBOT OF CARR, 299.
272, 297, 322.
TRAFFORD OF TRAFFORD, 315.
TralTord, 11,100,339.
TALBOT OF SALEBURY, 297.
Traford, 122.
Talbot, 10, 14, 28, 47, 48, 83, 84, 225, 250,
263, 266, 271, 278, 288, 305, 308, 312,
Trappes-Eirnand, 307.
Travers, 216,324, 327,328.
331.
Tremouille, 283.
Tale, SO-
Trenchmore, 234.
Tarbock, 220.
Trott, 15.
Tarleton, 108, 284.
Troutbeck, 281.
Tarlton, 132.
Trussell, 73.
TATLOCK OF CUNSCOUGH, 300.
Tukker,'.72.
Tatlock, 197.
Tunstall, 42, 83, 84, 152, 237, 267.
Tatton, 1 6.
Turbervile, 7.
Taybard, 289.
Turner, 12,46, 74, 114, 164.
Taylor, 19, 25, '83, 224, 229, 234, 269,
Turvill, 7.
3°3, 3§2-
Tweng, 204.
Taylour, 237.
Twiford, 135.
Tempest, in, 128, 171, 225, 228, 263,
Twyford, n, 12.
265, 272, 296, 305, 312.
Tetlow, 53.
Thelwall, 194.
Underbill, 271.
Unsworth, .49.
Thompson, 71, 96, 308, 342.
Thorald, 2 10.
Urmeston, 91, 114, 180, 215.
URMSTON OF WEST LEIGH, 319.
Thome, 204.
Urmston, 56, 252, 269, 270, 336.
Thornton, 48, 326.
Urswicke, 205.
Thorpe, 271.
Uxley, 74.
Index.
VALENTINE OF BENTCLIFFE,
320.
Valentine, 80.
aughan, 289, 312, 314.
avasour, 28, 48, 333.
EALE OF WHINNEYHEYS, 321.
eale, 257.
enables, 15, 66, 109, 181, 316.
ere, 283.
ernon, 20, 161, 277, 282.
Villiers, 204.
Waddington, 273.
AYTON, 322.
Wade,
WADSWORTH O
Wadsworth, 162.
Wadyngton, 144.
Waite, 311*
Walkeden 97.
Walker, 17, 74, 191, 272, 324. 338.
WALL OF PRESTON AND CHIN-
GLE HALL, 323.
WALL OF PRESTON AND MORE
HALL, 324.
Wall, 39, ,03, 153, 178,265.
Walley, 203.
Wallworth,2ii.
Walmesley, 82, 89, 142, 207.
Walmisley, ,2,5,264
WALMSLEY OF BANISTER HALL,
WALMSLEY OF CALDCOTES, 326.
WALMSLEY OF DUNKEN-
HALGHE, 327.
WALMSLEY OF SHOWLEY, 328.
Wayte, 174
Wcarden, 341.
Weaver, 281.
Webster, 147, 157,213.
Wells, 1 60.
Wentworth,3i.
Werden, no, 112, 237.
WEST OF BORWIC
ICK, 330.
West, 31, 235, 240
TBY OF MIRESCOUGH, 331
P A \\m TTPTTT? -.,,.
WEST
WESTBY OF RAWCLIFFEr«z
Westby, 87, 1.3, ,36, 220, 236, 274, 278,
298, 3°*. 34i.
Westbye, 202, 206.
Wetherley, 215.
Wetnall, 215.'
Whaley, 168.
Whalley, 84, 262, 3,9, 34,.
Wao
Walthall, 146.
Walthew, 193.
WALTON OF WALTON, 329.
Walton, ir, 59, 80, 112, 118, 168, 183,
228,314,320,325,327.
Warburton, 143, 186, 220, 243. 284.
Warde, 113, 194.
Wardgrcene, 89.
Ware, 107.
Warine, 329.
Warner, 314.
Warren, 20, 89, 96, 146, 206, 281.
Washington, 3.
Wastley, 56.
Watenvorth, 219, 247.
Watmough, 40, 276.
Watmouth, 132-
WUpp;.
Whitaker,296,3ii.
Whitbrooke, 214.
Whitby, 179,223.
White, ,9, 58, 1.2, 1,4.
i Whitehalgh, 40.
I Whitehead, 186, 146, 303.
Whitehed, 122.
Whitfield, 271.
Whitley, 142.
Whitmore, n, 214.
WHITTINGHAM OF WHITTING-
HAM, 333.
Whittingham, 295.
Whytefeld, 32.
Wu'kley, 325.
Widdows, 112.
Wiggins, 74.
Wilbram, 96.
Wilford, 6 1, 298.
Wilkins, 223. ,
Wilkinson, 121, 137, 168, 190, 265, 270.
Willesey, 97.
Willett, 317.
Willoughby, 208.
Wilsford, 246.
Wilson, 75, 160, 169, 170, 241, 313.
Wilton, 9-
Wimbyshe, 306.
WINCKLEY OF PRESTON, 334.
n
Winstanley, 232, 163.
Wodcnot, 182.
Wodfall, 42.
Wolfenden, 60.
Index.
Wolley, 67.
WORTHINGTON OF CRAWSHAW,
Womb well, 321-
WOOD OF TURTON, 335.
WORTHINGTON. OF SHEVING-
Wood, 74, 97, 141, 164, 177, 222, 264, ; TON, 343.
271,340, ' WORTHINGTON OF WORTHING-
Woodfall, 130,287. [ TON, 344.
Woodhead, 314. ! Worthington, 13, 35,67, 79, in, 120, 134,
Woodhouse, 272. ! 145,155,183,209,218,343.
Woodrove, 312.
WOODWARD OF SHEVINGTON,
Wrangham,26i.
Wright, 56, 198.
336.
Wrightington, 22.
Woodward, 131, 343.
WOOLFALL OF WOOLFALL, 337.
Writington, 183.
Writinton, 79, 98.
Woolfield, 206.
Wynkley, 240.
Wormall, 262.
Wyrall, 107.
Wormley, 103.
Wyvile, 252.
Worseley, 67.
WORSLEY OF MANCHESTER, 338.
WORSLEY OF WORSLEY BOOTHS,
Yates 293.
Young, 3.
339-
WOR?rHING2T6N96IF0BLAINSCO,
7 ouch, 289.
141.
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