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Francis Willoughby, 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham

Francis Willoughby, 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham (baptised 1614; died 23 July 1666 O.S., 2 August 1666 N.S.) was an English peer of the House of Lords.[1]

Francis Willoughby, 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham
Governor of Barbados
In office
1650–1651
Preceded byPhilip Bell
Succeeded byGeorge Ayscue
In office
1663–1666
Preceded byHumphrey Walrond (acting)
Succeeded byHenry Willoughby (acting)
Personal details
Bornc. 1605
Died23 July 1666 (1666-07-24) (aged 51)
NationalityEnglish
OccupationPeer
Known forGovernor of Barbados

He succeeded to the title on 14 October 1617 on the death in infancy of his elder brother Henry Willoughby, 4th Lord Willoughby of Parham. Francis Willoughby was the second son of William Willoughby, 3rd Lord Willoughby of Parham The young and unexpected death of his elder brother Henry made Francis successor to the hereditary peerage and seat in the House of Lords, the upper house of Parliament.[2] Francis Willoughby was an early supporter of the Parliamentarian cause during the English Civil War but later became a Royalist. He twice served as governor of English colonies in the Caribbean. Francis Willoughby died without male heirs of his body and the title passed to his younger brother William Willoughby, 6th Lord Willoughby of Parham, the third son of William Willoughby, 3rd Lord Willoughby of Parham.

Background Edit

Francis Willoughby was born in perhaps late 1613 (since he was baptised in 1614) to William Willoughby, 3rd Baron Willoughby of Parham and Frances Manners, daughter of John Manners, 4th Earl of Rutland of Nottingham at Parham in Suffolk.[3] His father died in 1617, and the barony was held by his older brother Henry for one year until he too died barely five years old,[3] at which point Francis inherited the seat in the House of Lords and with it the family title.

As tensions between the king and Parliament grew in the 1630s, he found himself opposed to Charles I over the levying of ship money. His loyalty was further strained by the Bishops' Wars, in which he was reluctant to fight the Scots.

Parliamentary Commander Edit

When the king in 1642 issued his Commission of Array to form a loyal army, Willoughby rejected his summons and instead took command of a horse regiment under the Parliamentary commander, the Earl of Essex. By January 1643, he was made commander-in-chief of Lincolnshire.

On 16 July of the same year, he led his soldiers in a surprise attack on Gainsborough where he seized the town. Facing a counterattack, Willoughby's soldiers fought along with those under Oliver Cromwell to hold off an advancing Royalist force of superior strength. The main body of the Parliamentary army withdrew to Boston with only two dead.

That September, Willoughby was a subordinate commander under the Earl of Manchester and Cromwell. He fought at the Battle of Winceby and accepted the surrender of Bolingbroke Castle in November.

Willoughby's relations with the Parliamentarians began to fray in 1644. In March he joined with Sir John Meldrum in the assault on Newark, the failure of which has been partially attributed to Willoughby's supposed unwillingness to take orders from Meldrum. Willoughby quarrelled with Manchester and was forced to make an apology to the House of Lords as a result. Furthermore, Cromwell himself saw fit to complain about the conduct of Willoughby's soldiers.

In the next few years, Willoughby became the leader of the Presbyterian force within Parliament, opposed the formation of the New Model Army and was elected as speaker of the House of Lords in July 1647. However, when the Parliamentary army took London in September, Willoughby was imprisoned along with six other peers and held for four months at which point he was released without charge, fleeing to the Netherlands to join the Royalists.

Royalist Supporter Edit

Now espousing the Royalist cause, Willoughby was promoted to Vice Admiral under the Duke of York, an appointment that may have been designed to engender sympathy among Scots and Presbyterians. He was also assigned a command in the 1648 invasion of England under the Prince of Wales. He later surrendered his naval command to Prince Rupert of the Rhine. When Parliament confiscated his estates, he travelled to the Caribbean.

He was appointed Governor of Barbados by Charles II. He arrived at Barbados and took up the appointment in May 1650 and attempted to negotiate the strained politics of that island, which also experienced a division between Royalists and Parliamentarians. During this time he also sent a small colonizing party led by Major Anthony Rowse to Suriname, which established a colony there. Fort Willoughby, which had been an abandoned French outpost, was expanded at the present-day site of the city of Paramaribo).

On 25 October 1651, a seven-ship force under Commodore George Ayscue arrived off Barbados, demanding that the island submit "for the use of the Parliament of England". Willoughby's reply (tellingly addressed to "His Majesty's ship Rainbow") was unyielding, declaring that he knew "no supreme authority over Englishmen but the King". With some 400 horsemen and 6,000 militia, he was prepared to resist any attempt at coercion.

Over the next month, Barbados was blockaded. In early December, with the Royalist cause defeated in England, Ayscue began a series of raids against fortifications on the island and was reinforced by a group of thirteen ships bound for Virginia. On 17 December a force of more than 1,000 Barbadian militia was defeated by one of Ayscue's detachments. Governor Willoughby attempted to stem the spread of Parliamentary sympathies by hanging two of the returning militia soldiers and prohibiting the reading of documents from the blockading fleet. The Royalists held out for several more weeks until one of Willoughby's own commanders declared himself for Parliament. A battle was averted by a week of rain, after which Willoughby, perhaps having seen the hopelessness of his cause, sought negotiations. He was replaced as governor but Barbados and the Royalists there were not punished. Additionally, Willoughby's properties in England were restored. He returned to them in August 1652.

Later years Edit

While he was twice imprisoned during The Protectorate for involvement in Royalist intrigues, Willoughby survived the Cromwell years and after the Restoration in 1660 he was again appointed to a governorship in the Caribbean, administering the colonies at Saint Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, and Antigua.

In June 1664 he organised an expedition from Barbados against the small French garrison at Saint Lucia, expelling it under the pretext that a half-Carib native had effectively "sold" it to England and establishing a short-lived English colony there.

During the Second Anglo-Dutch War, Willoughby organised Barbados' defences and managed to repel a Dutch fleet led by Michiel de Ruyter in April 1665. Three months later Willoughby engaged in another expedition, sailing to the Dutch island of Tobago. Finding a force under the English privateer Robert Searle already looting the settlement there, he put a stop to the destruction and installed a garrison of fifty men to maintain order.

His last act on behalf of the English crown came in July 1666 when, having learned of the recent French seizure of Saint Kitts, he formed a relief force of two Royal Navy frigates, twelve other large vessels (including commandeered merchant ships), a fire ship, and a ketch, bearing over 1,000 men. He planned to proceed north to Nevis, Montserrat, and Antigua to gather further reinforcements before descending on the French. Leaving Barbados on 28 July (18 July O.S.), his force prowled off Martinique and then Guadeloupe, where he sent a frigate to assault the harbour and capture two merchant vessels on 2 August. This success could not be exploited however as that night most of his force was destroyed by a strong hurricane, including the flagship Hope, from which Willoughby did not emerge.

Marriage and issue Edit

On 16 November 1628 Willoughby married Elizabeth Cecil (1606–1661), the daughter of the soldier Edward Cecil, 1st Viscount Wimbledon and Theodosia Noel.

Francis Willoughby and Elizabeth Cecil had four children:

  1. Diana, married 21 May 1645 Heneage Finch, 3rd Earl of Winchilsea
  2. Frances Willoughby (1625 – September 1680) married William Brereton, 3rd Baron Brereton
  3. Elizabeth Willoughby (born about 1633 – 1 August 1695) married 28 October 1662 Richard Jones, 1st Earl of Ranelagh
  4. William Willoughby (born about 1635); died young and unmarried in his father's lifetime

Legacy Edit

Willoughby died on 2 August 1666 (23 July O.S.), at sea on board his ship Hope, in a hurricane off Guadeloupe.

In his will, he left extensive holdings in Barbados, Antigua, and Suriname to his children and his nephew Henry Willoughby as well as smaller grants of currency or sugar to various associates and servants. He named his daughter Elizabeth as his executrix.[4]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Burke 1831, p. 576
  2. ^ Burke 1831, p. 577
  3. ^ a b Dictionary of National Biography: Willoughby, Francis, fifth Baron Willoughby of Parham (1613?-1666); Volume: Whichcord - Zuylestein (Vol 21); Ancestry.com. Dictionary of National Biography, Volumes 1-22 database on-line. Provo, UT, US: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010.
    Original source: Firth, Charles Harding (1885–1900). "Willoughby, Francis" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  4. ^ Sainsbury, W. Noel. "America and West Indies: July 1666 Pages 392-402 Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies: Volume 5, 1661-1668. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1880". British History Online. Retrieved 13 August 2020.

References Edit

  • Burke, John (1831), A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage of England, Ireland and Scotland, London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley.

Further reading Edit

  • Portraits of Francis Willoughby at the National Portrait Gallery
  • "Francis Willoughby" at Tudor Place[unreliable source]
  • Biography of Francis, Lord Willoughby of Parham 31 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
  • The Civil War in Lincolnshire 11 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
  • Marley, David F. Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World, 1492 to the Present. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 1998. ISBN 0-87436-837-5
  • Peacock, Edward. The Army Lists of the Roundheads and Cavaliers: Containing the Names of the Officers in the Royal and Parliamentary Armies of 1642. London: Chatto & Windus, 1874. googlebooks.com. Retrieved 30 September 2007
  • Staff writer (12 September 2005). . Barbados Advocate. Archived from the original on 24 December 2005. Retrieved 4 June 2010.
  • familysearch.org

francis, willoughby, baron, willoughby, parham, baptised, 1614, died, july, 1666, august, 1666, english, peer, house, lords, governor, barbadosin, office, 1650, 1651preceded, byphilip, bellsucceeded, bygeorge, ayscuein, office, 1663, 1666preceded, byhumphrey, . Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham baptised 1614 died 23 July 1666 O S 2 August 1666 N S was an English peer of the House of Lords 1 Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of ParhamGovernor of BarbadosIn office 1650 1651Preceded byPhilip BellSucceeded byGeorge AyscueIn office 1663 1666Preceded byHumphrey Walrond acting Succeeded byHenry Willoughby acting Personal detailsBornc 1605Died23 July 1666 1666 07 24 aged 51 NationalityEnglishOccupationPeerKnown forGovernor of BarbadosHe succeeded to the title on 14 October 1617 on the death in infancy of his elder brother Henry Willoughby 4th Lord Willoughby of Parham Francis Willoughby was the second son of William Willoughby 3rd Lord Willoughby of Parham The young and unexpected death of his elder brother Henry made Francis successor to the hereditary peerage and seat in the House of Lords the upper house of Parliament 2 Francis Willoughby was an early supporter of the Parliamentarian cause during the English Civil War but later became a Royalist He twice served as governor of English colonies in the Caribbean Francis Willoughby died without male heirs of his body and the title passed to his younger brother William Willoughby 6th Lord Willoughby of Parham the third son of William Willoughby 3rd Lord Willoughby of Parham Contents 1 Background 2 Parliamentary Commander 3 Royalist Supporter 4 Later years 5 Marriage and issue 6 Legacy 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingBackground EditFrancis Willoughby was born in perhaps late 1613 since he was baptised in 1614 to William Willoughby 3rd Baron Willoughby of Parham and Frances Manners daughter of John Manners 4th Earl of Rutland of Nottingham at Parham in Suffolk 3 His father died in 1617 and the barony was held by his older brother Henry for one year until he too died barely five years old 3 at which point Francis inherited the seat in the House of Lords and with it the family title As tensions between the king and Parliament grew in the 1630s he found himself opposed to Charles I over the levying of ship money His loyalty was further strained by the Bishops Wars in which he was reluctant to fight the Scots Parliamentary Commander EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message When the king in 1642 issued his Commission of Array to form a loyal army Willoughby rejected his summons and instead took command of a horse regiment under the Parliamentary commander the Earl of Essex By January 1643 he was made commander in chief of Lincolnshire On 16 July of the same year he led his soldiers in a surprise attack on Gainsborough where he seized the town Facing a counterattack Willoughby s soldiers fought along with those under Oliver Cromwell to hold off an advancing Royalist force of superior strength The main body of the Parliamentary army withdrew to Boston with only two dead That September Willoughby was a subordinate commander under the Earl of Manchester and Cromwell He fought at the Battle of Winceby and accepted the surrender of Bolingbroke Castle in November Willoughby s relations with the Parliamentarians began to fray in 1644 In March he joined with Sir John Meldrum in the assault on Newark the failure of which has been partially attributed to Willoughby s supposed unwillingness to take orders from Meldrum Willoughby quarrelled with Manchester and was forced to make an apology to the House of Lords as a result Furthermore Cromwell himself saw fit to complain about the conduct of Willoughby s soldiers In the next few years Willoughby became the leader of the Presbyterian force within Parliament opposed the formation of the New Model Army and was elected as speaker of the House of Lords in July 1647 However when the Parliamentary army took London in September Willoughby was imprisoned along with six other peers and held for four months at which point he was released without charge fleeing to the Netherlands to join the Royalists Royalist Supporter EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Now espousing the Royalist cause Willoughby was promoted to Vice Admiral under the Duke of York an appointment that may have been designed to engender sympathy among Scots and Presbyterians He was also assigned a command in the 1648 invasion of England under the Prince of Wales He later surrendered his naval command to Prince Rupert of the Rhine When Parliament confiscated his estates he travelled to the Caribbean He was appointed Governor of Barbados by Charles II He arrived at Barbados and took up the appointment in May 1650 and attempted to negotiate the strained politics of that island which also experienced a division between Royalists and Parliamentarians During this time he also sent a small colonizing party led by Major Anthony Rowse to Suriname which established a colony there Fort Willoughby which had been an abandoned French outpost was expanded at the present day site of the city of Paramaribo On 25 October 1651 a seven ship force under Commodore George Ayscue arrived off Barbados demanding that the island submit for the use of the Parliament of England Willoughby s reply tellingly addressed to His Majesty s ship Rainbow was unyielding declaring that he knew no supreme authority over Englishmen but the King With some 400 horsemen and 6 000 militia he was prepared to resist any attempt at coercion Over the next month Barbados was blockaded In early December with the Royalist cause defeated in England Ayscue began a series of raids against fortifications on the island and was reinforced by a group of thirteen ships bound for Virginia On 17 December a force of more than 1 000 Barbadian militia was defeated by one of Ayscue s detachments Governor Willoughby attempted to stem the spread of Parliamentary sympathies by hanging two of the returning militia soldiers and prohibiting the reading of documents from the blockading fleet The Royalists held out for several more weeks until one of Willoughby s own commanders declared himself for Parliament A battle was averted by a week of rain after which Willoughby perhaps having seen the hopelessness of his cause sought negotiations He was replaced as governor but Barbados and the Royalists there were not punished Additionally Willoughby s properties in England were restored He returned to them in August 1652 Later years EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message While he was twice imprisoned during The Protectorate for involvement in Royalist intrigues Willoughby survived the Cromwell years and after the Restoration in 1660 he was again appointed to a governorship in the Caribbean administering the colonies at Saint Kitts Nevis Montserrat and Antigua In June 1664 he organised an expedition from Barbados against the small French garrison at Saint Lucia expelling it under the pretext that a half Carib native had effectively sold it to England and establishing a short lived English colony there During the Second Anglo Dutch War Willoughby organised Barbados defences and managed to repel a Dutch fleet led by Michiel de Ruyter in April 1665 Three months later Willoughby engaged in another expedition sailing to the Dutch island of Tobago Finding a force under the English privateer Robert Searle already looting the settlement there he put a stop to the destruction and installed a garrison of fifty men to maintain order His last act on behalf of the English crown came in July 1666 when having learned of the recent French seizure of Saint Kitts he formed a relief force of two Royal Navy frigates twelve other large vessels including commandeered merchant ships a fire ship and a ketch bearing over 1 000 men He planned to proceed north to Nevis Montserrat and Antigua to gather further reinforcements before descending on the French Leaving Barbados on 28 July 18 July O S his force prowled off Martinique and then Guadeloupe where he sent a frigate to assault the harbour and capture two merchant vessels on 2 August This success could not be exploited however as that night most of his force was destroyed by a strong hurricane including the flagship Hope from which Willoughby did not emerge Marriage and issue EditOn 16 November 1628 Willoughby married Elizabeth Cecil 1606 1661 the daughter of the soldier Edward Cecil 1st Viscount Wimbledon and Theodosia Noel Francis Willoughby and Elizabeth Cecil had four children Diana married 21 May 1645 Heneage Finch 3rd Earl of Winchilsea Frances Willoughby 1625 September 1680 married William Brereton 3rd Baron Brereton Elizabeth Willoughby born about 1633 1 August 1695 married 28 October 1662 Richard Jones 1st Earl of Ranelagh William Willoughby born about 1635 died young and unmarried in his father s lifetimeLegacy EditWilloughby died on 2 August 1666 23 July O S at sea on board his ship Hope in a hurricane off Guadeloupe In his will he left extensive holdings in Barbados Antigua and Suriname to his children and his nephew Henry Willoughby as well as smaller grants of currency or sugar to various associates and servants He named his daughter Elizabeth as his executrix 4 Notes Edit Burke 1831 p 576 Burke 1831 p 577 a b Dictionary of National Biography Willoughby Francis fifth Baron Willoughby of Parham 1613 1666 Volume Whichcord Zuylestein Vol 21 Ancestry com Dictionary of National Biography Volumes 1 22 database on line Provo UT US Ancestry com Operations Inc 2010 Original source Firth Charles Harding 1885 1900 Willoughby Francis Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co Sainsbury W Noel America and West Indies July 1666 Pages 392 402 Calendar of State Papers Colonial America and West Indies Volume 5 1661 1668 Originally published by Her Majesty s Stationery Office London 1880 British History Online Retrieved 13 August 2020 References EditBurke John 1831 A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage of England Ireland and Scotland London Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley Further reading EditPortraits of Francis Willoughby at the National Portrait Gallery Francis Willoughby at Tudor Place unreliable source Biography of Francis Lord Willoughby of Parham Archived 31 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website The Civil War in Lincolnshire Archived 11 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website Marley David F Wars of the Americas A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World 1492 to the Present Santa Barbara ABC CLIO 1998 ISBN 0 87436 837 5 Peacock Edward The Army Lists of the Roundheads and Cavaliers Containing the Names of the Officers in the Royal and Parliamentary Armies of 1642 London Chatto amp Windus 1874 googlebooks com Retrieved 30 September 2007 Staff writer 12 September 2005 Bagatelle Great House Restaurant and Wine Bar and Lord Willoughby s Tavern officially open Barbados Advocate Archived from the original on 24 December 2005 Retrieved 4 June 2010 familysearch orgPeerage of EnglandPreceded byHenry Willoughby Baron Willoughby of Parham1617 1666 Succeeded byWilliam Willoughby Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Willoughby 5th Baron Willoughby of Parham amp oldid 1154870286, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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