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Arthur Haselrig

Sir Arthur Haselrig, 2nd Baronet (1601 – 7 January 1661) was a leader of the Parliamentary opposition to Charles I and one of the Five Members whose attempted arrest sparked the 1642–1646 First English Civil War. He held various military and political posts during the 1639–1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms but became an opponent of Oliver Cromwell during the Protectorate. In 1660, his actions inadvertently helped restore Charles II to the throne; unlike many senior Parliamentary leaders, his life was spared but he was confined to the Tower of London, where he died on 7 January 1661.

Sir Arthur Haselrig
Sir Arthur Haselrig, Second Baronet
Member of the English Council of State
In office
May 1659 – October 1659
MonarchCommonwealth of England 1653–1660
Preceded byHenry Lawrence
Succeeded byCommittee of Safety
Lord President of the English Council of State
In office
January 1652 – February 1652
Preceded byBulstrode Whitelocke
Succeeded byPhilip Sidney and Lord Lisle
MP for Leicester
In office
1653 – 1659 (banned from sitting 1655–1658)
Governor of Newcastle
In office
December 1647 – 1652
MP for Leicestershire
In office
1640–1653
Personal details
Bornca 1601
Noseley Hall, Leicestershire
Died7 January 1661(1661-01-07) (aged 60)
Tower of London
NationalityEnglish
Spouse(s)Frances Elmes (1624–1632)
Dorothy Greville (1634–1650)
ChildrenSir Thomas Hesilrige (1625–1680)
Sir Robert Heselrige (1640–1713)
Katherine Fenwick, later Katherine Babington (1635–1670);
Parent(s)Sir Thomas Hesilrige (died 1632)
Frances Gorges

Life

Haselrig was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Hesilrige, 1st Baronet (alternative spellings "Heselrig" and "Haselrigge"), of Noseley Hall, Noseley, Leicestershire, and of Frances Gorges, daughter of Sir William Gorges, of Alderton, Northamptonshire.[1] From an early age he imbibed strong puritanical principles and showed a special antagonism towards Archbishop Laud.[2]

Short and Long Parliaments

In April 1640, Haselrig was elected Member of Parliament for Leicestershire in the Short Parliament He was re-elected MP for Leicestershire for the Long Parliament in November 1640.[3] He was heavily involved in the Act of Attainder against Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, the Root and Branch Bill and the Militia Bill of 7 December 1641.[4] Charles I tried to arrest him for treason on 3 January 1642, along with John Hampden, Denzil Holles, John Pym and William Strode. However the so-called "Five Members", together with the peer Edward Montagu, 2nd Earl of Manchester who was also due to be arrested, were tipped off by Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex. The king marched with his guards into the House of Commons chamber only to find that the Five Members had fled.

Civil War

Haselrig was very active in the First English Civil War on the Parliamentarian side. He raised a troop of horse for the Earl of Essex and fought at the Battle of Edgehill. He was a commander in the West under William Waller, being nicknamed his fidus Achates, and led his cuirassiers, who were known as the London lobsters.[4] He and his troops distinguished themselves at the Battle of Lansdowne on 5 July 1643, where his men defeated Sir Beville Grenville's Pikemen, although the battle is traditionally seen as indecisive. At the Battle of Roundway Down, on 13 July, Haselrig's force met a Royalist cavalry charge at the halt and after a brief clash, retreated in disorder, the Parliamentarian army losing the battle to Lord Wilmot. Haselrig was shot three times at Roundway Down, with the bullets apparently bouncing off his armour. After firing a pistol at Haselrig's helmeted head at close range without any effect Richard Atkyns described how he attacked him with his sword, but it too caused no visible damage; Haselrig was under attack from several people and succumbed only when Atkyns attacked his unarmoured horse. After the death of his horse Haselrig tried to surrender, but as he fumbled with his sword, which was tied to his wrist, he was rescued. He suffered only minor wounds from his ordeal.[5] This incident was related to Charles I and elicited one of his rare attempts at humour. The king said that if Haselrig had been as well supplied as he was fortified he could have withstood a siege.

At the Battle of Cheriton, his men defeated Sir Henry Bard's cavalry charge, seriously weakening Ralph Hopton's army in the west. This battle was a turning point in the war and the king's secretary Sir Edward Walker said that after Cheriton, instead of an offensive war they were forced to make a defensive war.

Governor of Newcastle

Haselrig supported Oliver Cromwell in his dispute with the Earl of Manchester and the Earl of Essex. When the Self-denying Ordinance was approved by Parliament he gave up his commission and became one of the leaders of the Independent party in Parliament. On 30 December 1647 he was appointed governor of Newcastle upon Tyne, which he successfully defended, besides defeating the Royalists on 2 July 1648 and regaining Tynemouth. In October he accompanied Cromwell to Scotland, and gave him valuable support in the Scottish expedition in 1650.[2] Between 1647 and 1650 Haselrig and his son brought a large amount of property in the north east which included the manors of Bishop Auckland, Middleham, Easingwoodborough and Wolsingham at a total cost of over £22,500.[1]

Parliamentary career under Cromwell

Haselrig approved of the king's execution but declined to act as a judge at his trial. He was one of the leading men in the Commonwealth, but he was antagonised by Cromwell's expulsion of the Rump Parliament, and he opposed the Protectorate refusing to pay taxes.[2] Haselrig considered Cromwell to be a traitor to the cause after this as he was a staunch republican and opposed to all rule by a single person whether by hereditary succession or military might. Edmund Ludlow, one of his opponents admitted "to do him justice .. I must acknowledge that I am under no manner of doubt concerning the rectitude and sincerity of his intentions. For he made it his buseness to prevent arbitrary power wherever he knew it to be affected, and to keep the sword subserviant to the civil magistrate".

In 1654, Haselrig was elected MP for Leicester in the First Protectorate Parliament and in 1656 for the Second Protectorate Parliament,[3] but he was excluded from them both. He refused a seat, offered to him by Cromwell, in the Protectorate House of Lords.[4]

Parliament against Lambert

On Cromwell's death Haselrig refused support to Richard Cromwell, and was instrumental in his downfall. He was elected MP for Leicester for the Third Protectorate Parliament in 1659[3] and became one of the most influential men in both the Council of State and Parliament. He tried to keep a republican parliamentary administration, "to keep the sword subservient to the civil magistrate".[2] He opposed the schemes of John Lambert who was resisting parliamentary control over the military. In one altercation Lambert complained that the army was being held at ransom; Haselrig replied that "You are only at the mercy of Parliament who are your friends" to which Lambert replied "I know not why they should not be at our mercy as well as we at theirs." Anger at the independence of the army resulted in nine leading officers, including Lambert, being cashiered. Lambert reacted by calling out the army and blocking all routes to Parliament, and putting guards upon its doors.

After Lambert had halted Parliament, Haselrig decided to restore Parliament. The strength of the army in London called for another location, and for a variety of reasons Portsmouth was chosen. Portsmouth had strong naval traditions and had always maintained independence from the army; it benefited from defensible fortifications on its land side and the support of Admiral John Lawson ensured that the city would not fall easily to a protracted siege. Haselrig knew the area well having campaigned around Hampshire during the civil war. The newly appointed Governor Nathaniel Whetham was a republican who had declared that his men would support him. Whetham was a friend of General George Monck in Scotland who had the best forces in Britain at his disposal and who had declared himself for Parliament in October. On 4 December 1659 Haselrig met with his allies in the Red Lion Inn having arrived at 4 in the afternoon. By the next day a declaration was posted calling for citizens to "restore Parliament to their former freedom, being the peoples indubitable and undoubted birthright". Hurst Castle and the Isle of Wight soon declared for Parliament. The military government, which was now named the Committee of Safety, despatched a force hoping that pro-army members would open the gates. However the Commander of the Army Colonel Nathaniel Rich entered into negotiations and his men decided to join Haselrig. Word soon spread and soon Hull and Plymouth were recorded to be going the same way. The army council, unsure of support of its troops, restored the Rump Parliament by 26 December. On 29 December Haselrig marched to London and attended Parliament still in his riding clothes. Haselrig was at the height of his power as the major figure in a restored republic and was appointed to the Council of State on 2 January 1660. On 11 February he became a commissioner for the army.

Monck and the Restoration

However Monck had begun to march south from Coldstream on 1 January. Lambert moved to face Monck but knowing the strength of Monck's forces and the doubtful loyalty of his own troops avoided engagement. Monck avoided answering questions as to his intentions and by 3 February entered London. Haselrig, trusting to his assurance of fidelity to the "Good Old Cause" consented to the retirement of his regiment from London.[2] The Rump Parliament was dissolved and Haselrig found himself marginalised by the unfolding events. A new Convention Parliament came in on 31 April and by 8 May Charles II was proclaimed King. Haselrig petitioned for a pardon, claiming he had not supported the overthrow of Charles I and had supported the Commonwealth only to avoid bloodshed.[6]

Despite Monck's guarantee of a pardon, Haselrig was targeted by the Royalist Silius Titus, who was also responsible for disinterring the bodies of Cromwell, Bradshaw and Ireton and having them ritually executed at Tyburn. His life was spared but he was imprisoned in the Tower of London where he died on 7 January 1661.[7]

Character

Clarendon described Haselrig as "an absurd, bold man." He was rash, "hare-brained," and devoid of tact and had little claim to the title of a statesman, but his energy in the field and in parliament was often of great value to the parliamentary cause. He exposed himself to considerable obloquy by his exactions and appropriations of confiscated landed property, though the accusation brought against him by John Lilburne was examined by a parliamentary committee and adjudged to be false.[2]

Family

Haselrig married firstly Frances Elmes, daughter of Thomas Elmes of Lilford Hall, Northamptonshire, by whom he had two sons and two daughters. He married secondly Dorothy Greville, sister of Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke, by whom he had three sons and five daughters.[1]

Authorities

  1. Firth, Charles Harding (1891). "Hesilrige, Arthur". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 26. London: Smith, Elder & Co., and authorities there quoted; Early History of the Family of Hesilrige, by WGD Fletcher;
  2. Cat. of State Papers Domestic, 1631–1664, where there are a large number of important references, as also in Hist. manuscripts, Comm. Series Manuscripts of Earl Cooper, Duke of Leeds and Duke of Portland;
  3. also SR Gardiner, Hist. of England Hist. of the Great Civil War and Commonwealth;
  4. Clarendon's History State Papers and Cal. of State Papers, John Langton Sanford's Studies of the Great Rebellion. His life is written by Noble in the House of Cromwell,

Notes

  1. ^ a b c The English baronetage: containing a genealogical and historical ..., Volume 1 By Arthur Collins
  2. ^ a b c d e f   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hesilrige, Sir Arthur". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 406–407.
  3. ^ a b c Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ... London. pp. 229–239.
  4. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ Philip Haythornthwaite, The English Civil War, An Illustrated History, Blandford Press (1983) ISBN 1-85409-323-1, p. 49.
  6. ^ "Charles II - volume 1: May 29-31, 1660 Pages 1-16 Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles II, 1660-1. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1860". British History Online. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  7. ^ Jordan, Don, Walsh, Michael (2012). The King's Revenge: Charles II and the Greatest Manhunt in British History (2013 ed.). Abacus. p. 244. ISBN 978-0349123769.

References

Parliament of England
Preceded by
Parliament suspended since 1629
Member of Parliament for Leicestershire
1640–1653
With: Lord Grey of Ruthyn 1640
Henry Smith 1640–1653
Succeeded by
Henry Danvers
Edward Smith
John Prat
Preceded by
Not represented in Barebones Parliament
Member of Parliament for Leicester
1654–1659
With: William Stanley
Succeeded by
Baronetage of England
Preceded by Baronet
(of Noseley Hall)
1629–1661
Succeeded by
Arthur Hesilrige

arthur, haselrig, baronet, 1601, january, 1661, leader, parliamentary, opposition, charles, five, members, whose, attempted, arrest, sparked, 1642, 1646, first, english, civil, held, various, military, political, posts, during, 1639, 1651, wars, three, kingdom. Sir Arthur Haselrig 2nd Baronet 1601 7 January 1661 was a leader of the Parliamentary opposition to Charles I and one of the Five Members whose attempted arrest sparked the 1642 1646 First English Civil War He held various military and political posts during the 1639 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms but became an opponent of Oliver Cromwell during the Protectorate In 1660 his actions inadvertently helped restore Charles II to the throne unlike many senior Parliamentary leaders his life was spared but he was confined to the Tower of London where he died on 7 January 1661 Sir Arthur HaselrigSir Arthur Haselrig Second BaronetMember of the English Council of StateIn office May 1659 October 1659MonarchCommonwealth of England 1653 1660Preceded byHenry LawrenceSucceeded byCommittee of SafetyLord President of the English Council of StateIn office January 1652 February 1652Preceded byBulstrode WhitelockeSucceeded byPhilip Sidney and Lord LisleMP for LeicesterIn office 1653 1659 banned from sitting 1655 1658 Governor of NewcastleIn office December 1647 1652MP for LeicestershireIn office 1640 1653Personal detailsBornca 1601Noseley Hall LeicestershireDied7 January 1661 1661 01 07 aged 60 Tower of LondonNationalityEnglishSpouse s Frances Elmes 1624 1632 Dorothy Greville 1634 1650 ChildrenSir Thomas Hesilrige 1625 1680 Sir Robert Heselrige 1640 1713 Katherine Fenwick later Katherine Babington 1635 1670 Parent s Sir Thomas Hesilrige died 1632 Frances Gorges Contents 1 Life 2 Short and Long Parliaments 3 Civil War 4 Governor of Newcastle 5 Parliamentary career under Cromwell 6 Parliament against Lambert 7 Monck and the Restoration 8 Character 9 Family 10 Authorities 11 Notes 12 ReferencesLife EditHaselrig was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Hesilrige 1st Baronet alternative spellings Heselrig and Haselrigge of Noseley Hall Noseley Leicestershire and of Frances Gorges daughter of Sir William Gorges of Alderton Northamptonshire 1 From an early age he imbibed strong puritanical principles and showed a special antagonism towards Archbishop Laud 2 Short and Long Parliaments EditIn April 1640 Haselrig was elected Member of Parliament for Leicestershire in the Short Parliament He was re elected MP for Leicestershire for the Long Parliament in November 1640 3 He was heavily involved in the Act of Attainder against Thomas Wentworth Earl of Strafford the Root and Branch Bill and the Militia Bill of 7 December 1641 4 Charles I tried to arrest him for treason on 3 January 1642 along with John Hampden Denzil Holles John Pym and William Strode However the so called Five Members together with the peer Edward Montagu 2nd Earl of Manchester who was also due to be arrested were tipped off by Robert Devereux 3rd Earl of Essex The king marched with his guards into the House of Commons chamber only to find that the Five Members had fled Civil War EditHaselrig was very active in the First English Civil War on the Parliamentarian side He raised a troop of horse for the Earl of Essex and fought at the Battle of Edgehill He was a commander in the West under William Waller being nicknamed his fidus Achates and led his cuirassiers who were known as the London lobsters 4 He and his troops distinguished themselves at the Battle of Lansdowne on 5 July 1643 where his men defeated Sir Beville Grenville s Pikemen although the battle is traditionally seen as indecisive At the Battle of Roundway Down on 13 July Haselrig s force met a Royalist cavalry charge at the halt and after a brief clash retreated in disorder the Parliamentarian army losing the battle to Lord Wilmot Haselrig was shot three times at Roundway Down with the bullets apparently bouncing off his armour After firing a pistol at Haselrig s helmeted head at close range without any effect Richard Atkyns described how he attacked him with his sword but it too caused no visible damage Haselrig was under attack from several people and succumbed only when Atkyns attacked his unarmoured horse After the death of his horse Haselrig tried to surrender but as he fumbled with his sword which was tied to his wrist he was rescued He suffered only minor wounds from his ordeal 5 This incident was related to Charles I and elicited one of his rare attempts at humour The king said that if Haselrig had been as well supplied as he was fortified he could have withstood a siege At the Battle of Cheriton his men defeated Sir Henry Bard s cavalry charge seriously weakening Ralph Hopton s army in the west This battle was a turning point in the war and the king s secretary Sir Edward Walker said that after Cheriton instead of an offensive war they were forced to make a defensive war Governor of Newcastle EditHaselrig supported Oliver Cromwell in his dispute with the Earl of Manchester and the Earl of Essex When the Self denying Ordinance was approved by Parliament he gave up his commission and became one of the leaders of the Independent party in Parliament On 30 December 1647 he was appointed governor of Newcastle upon Tyne which he successfully defended besides defeating the Royalists on 2 July 1648 and regaining Tynemouth In October he accompanied Cromwell to Scotland and gave him valuable support in the Scottish expedition in 1650 2 Between 1647 and 1650 Haselrig and his son brought a large amount of property in the north east which included the manors of Bishop Auckland Middleham Easingwoodborough and Wolsingham at a total cost of over 22 500 1 Parliamentary career under Cromwell EditHaselrig approved of the king s execution but declined to act as a judge at his trial He was one of the leading men in the Commonwealth but he was antagonised by Cromwell s expulsion of the Rump Parliament and he opposed the Protectorate refusing to pay taxes 2 Haselrig considered Cromwell to be a traitor to the cause after this as he was a staunch republican and opposed to all rule by a single person whether by hereditary succession or military might Edmund Ludlow one of his opponents admitted to do him justice I must acknowledge that I am under no manner of doubt concerning the rectitude and sincerity of his intentions For he made it his buseness to prevent arbitrary power wherever he knew it to be affected and to keep the sword subserviant to the civil magistrate In 1654 Haselrig was elected MP for Leicester in the First Protectorate Parliament and in 1656 for the Second Protectorate Parliament 3 but he was excluded from them both He refused a seat offered to him by Cromwell in the Protectorate House of Lords 4 Parliament against Lambert EditOn Cromwell s death Haselrig refused support to Richard Cromwell and was instrumental in his downfall He was elected MP for Leicester for the Third Protectorate Parliament in 1659 3 and became one of the most influential men in both the Council of State and Parliament He tried to keep a republican parliamentary administration to keep the sword subservient to the civil magistrate 2 He opposed the schemes of John Lambert who was resisting parliamentary control over the military In one altercation Lambert complained that the army was being held at ransom Haselrig replied that You are only at the mercy of Parliament who are your friends to which Lambert replied I know not why they should not be at our mercy as well as we at theirs Anger at the independence of the army resulted in nine leading officers including Lambert being cashiered Lambert reacted by calling out the army and blocking all routes to Parliament and putting guards upon its doors After Lambert had halted Parliament Haselrig decided to restore Parliament The strength of the army in London called for another location and for a variety of reasons Portsmouth was chosen Portsmouth had strong naval traditions and had always maintained independence from the army it benefited from defensible fortifications on its land side and the support of Admiral John Lawson ensured that the city would not fall easily to a protracted siege Haselrig knew the area well having campaigned around Hampshire during the civil war The newly appointed Governor Nathaniel Whetham was a republican who had declared that his men would support him Whetham was a friend of General George Monck in Scotland who had the best forces in Britain at his disposal and who had declared himself for Parliament in October On 4 December 1659 Haselrig met with his allies in the Red Lion Inn having arrived at 4 in the afternoon By the next day a declaration was posted calling for citizens to restore Parliament to their former freedom being the peoples indubitable and undoubted birthright Hurst Castle and the Isle of Wight soon declared for Parliament The military government which was now named the Committee of Safety despatched a force hoping that pro army members would open the gates However the Commander of the Army Colonel Nathaniel Rich entered into negotiations and his men decided to join Haselrig Word soon spread and soon Hull and Plymouth were recorded to be going the same way The army council unsure of support of its troops restored the Rump Parliament by 26 December On 29 December Haselrig marched to London and attended Parliament still in his riding clothes Haselrig was at the height of his power as the major figure in a restored republic and was appointed to the Council of State on 2 January 1660 On 11 February he became a commissioner for the army Monck and the Restoration EditHowever Monck had begun to march south from Coldstream on 1 January Lambert moved to face Monck but knowing the strength of Monck s forces and the doubtful loyalty of his own troops avoided engagement Monck avoided answering questions as to his intentions and by 3 February entered London Haselrig trusting to his assurance of fidelity to the Good Old Cause consented to the retirement of his regiment from London 2 The Rump Parliament was dissolved and Haselrig found himself marginalised by the unfolding events A new Convention Parliament came in on 31 April and by 8 May Charles II was proclaimed King Haselrig petitioned for a pardon claiming he had not supported the overthrow of Charles I and had supported the Commonwealth only to avoid bloodshed 6 Despite Monck s guarantee of a pardon Haselrig was targeted by the Royalist Silius Titus who was also responsible for disinterring the bodies of Cromwell Bradshaw and Ireton and having them ritually executed at Tyburn His life was spared but he was imprisoned in the Tower of London where he died on 7 January 1661 7 Character EditClarendon described Haselrig as an absurd bold man He was rash hare brained and devoid of tact and had little claim to the title of a statesman but his energy in the field and in parliament was often of great value to the parliamentary cause He exposed himself to considerable obloquy by his exactions and appropriations of confiscated landed property though the accusation brought against him by John Lilburne was examined by a parliamentary committee and adjudged to be false 2 Family EditHaselrig married firstly Frances Elmes daughter of Thomas Elmes of Lilford Hall Northamptonshire by whom he had two sons and two daughters He married secondly Dorothy Greville sister of Robert Greville 2nd Baron Brooke by whom he had three sons and five daughters 1 Authorities EditFirth Charles Harding 1891 Hesilrige Arthur In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 26 London Smith Elder amp Co and authorities there quoted Early History of the Family of Hesilrige by WGD Fletcher Cat of State Papers Domestic 1631 1664 where there are a large number of important references as also in Hist manuscripts Comm Series Manuscripts of Earl Cooper Duke of Leeds and Duke of Portland also SR Gardiner Hist of England Hist of the Great Civil War and Commonwealth Clarendon s History State Papers and Cal of State Papers John Langton Sanford s Studies of the Great Rebellion His life is written by Noble in the House of Cromwell Notes Edit a b c The English baronetage containing a genealogical and historical Volume 1 By Arthur Collins a b c d e f One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hesilrige Sir Arthur Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 406 407 a b c Willis Browne 1750 Notitia Parliamentaria Part II A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541 to the Restoration 1660 London pp 229 239 a b c Chisholm 1911 Philip Haythornthwaite The English Civil War An Illustrated History Blandford Press 1983 ISBN 1 85409 323 1 p 49 Charles II volume 1 May 29 31 1660 Pages 1 16 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Charles II 1660 1 Originally published by Her Majesty s Stationery Office London 1860 British History Online Retrieved 13 July 2020 Jordan Don Walsh Michael 2012 The King s Revenge Charles II and the Greatest Manhunt in British History 2013 ed Abacus p 244 ISBN 978 0349123769 References Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1885 1900 Dictionary of National Biography s article about Hesilrige Arthur Parliament of EnglandPreceded byParliament suspended since 1629 Member of Parliament for Leicestershire1640 1653 With Lord Grey of Ruthyn 1640Henry Smith 1640 1653 Succeeded byHenry DanversEdward SmithJohn PratPreceded byNot represented in Barebones Parliament Member of Parliament for Leicester1654 1659 With William Stanley Succeeded byPeter TempleBaronetage of EnglandPreceded byThomas Hesilrige Baronet of Noseley Hall 1629 1661 Succeeded byArthur Hesilrige Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Haselrig amp oldid 1135134631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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