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Hugh Oldham

Hugh Oldham (c. 1452 – 25 June 1519) was an English cleric who was Bishop of Exeter (1505–19) and a notable patron of education as a founder and patron of Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford.


Hugh Oldham
Bishop of Exeter
Effigy of Hugh Oldham (d. 1519), Bishop of Exeter, Oldham Chapel, south aisle, Exeter Cathedral
ChurchRoman Catholic
SeeExeter
Installed12 January 1505
Term ended25 June 1519
PredecessorJohn Arundel
SuccessorJohn Vesey
Orders
Consecration5 January 1505
by William Warham
Personal details
Bornc. 1452
Died25 June 1519
Exeter, Devon
BuriedExeter Cathedral
Statue of Hugh Oldham at Manchester Grammar School
Canting arms of Oldham: Sable, a chevron or between three owls argent on a chief of the second three roses gules

Born in Lancashire to a family of minor gentry, he probably attended both Oxford and Cambridge universities, following which he was a clerk at Durham, then a rector in Cornwall before being employed by Lady Margaret Beaufort (mother of King Henry VII), rising to be the chancellor of her household by 1503. During this time he was preferred with many religious posts all over the country, being made archdeacon of Exeter in 1502 and finally bishop of that city in 1505, a decision that was probably influenced by Lady Margaret.

He was a conscientious bishop who ensured that only educated people were appointed to ecclesiastical posts. His patronage of educational establishments included the foundation of The Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford for which he donated £4,000. After his death he was buried in Exeter Cathedral in a chantry chapel that he had caused to be built for that purpose. The chapel is decorated with numerous carvings of owls, which were his personal device.

Early life edit

Oldham was one of the younger of six sons born to Roger Oldham and his wife Margery who were, the limited evidence suggests, yeomen or minor gentry at Ancoats,[1][2] which at the time was a village in North West England, but is now an inner city area of Manchester. There are few records of his early life, but it is known that he attended university, studying canon law and either arts or civil law probably at Oxford, and he was later (in 1493) a bachelor of law at Cambridge.[3] There is no contemporary evidence, however, that he was a member of Queens' College, Cambridge as was claimed by Thomas Fuller in his Worthies of England of 1662 and often repeated.[2]

In 1475 he was described in a deed transferring property to him from his eldest brother James as a "clerk of Durham". At this time he was most likely either in the household of, or employed by Lawrence Booth, Bishop of Durham, whose family came from the same area as Oldham's and by whom James had also been employed.[1] He was rector of Lanivet in Cornwall between 1488 and 1493, when he resigned the living on a pension of £12.[4] At this time he was also a servant to William Smyth, who was keeper of the hanaper in the Court of Chancery. In 1492 he was the receiver for Lady Margaret Beaufort's estates in the West Country, and by 1503 he had risen to be the chancellor of her household.[2]

In the years following 1490, Oldham was made a canon of the cathedrals of Exeter, Lichfield, Lincoln, St Paul's, Salisbury and York. In 1496 William Smyth, who was by then Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, appointed him to the non-residential post of master of the hospital of St John in Lichfield, to which Smyth had recently added a free grammar school and almshouse. The year 1499 saw him established as dean of Wimborne in Dorset, and in 1502 he was made archdeacon of Exeter.[2] In 1503, he had sufficient prestige to be present at the placing of the foundation stone of the Henry VII Lady Chapel at Westminster Abbey.[5]

Bishop of Exeter edit

 
Bishop Oldham's coat of arms. Differences of his arms form the arms of Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council and of his foundations Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford
 
Heraldic escutcheon on tomb of Hugh Oldham (d.1519), Bishop of Exeter: Dexter: Gules, a sword erect in pale argent, hilted or surmounted by two keys addorsed in saltire of the last[6] (See of Exeter) impaling: Sable, a chevron or between three owls argent on a chief of the second three roses gules (Oldham). The arms of Oldham can also be seen sculpted in stone on the tower of the Bishop's Palace, Exeter

Possibly with some influence from Lady Margaret Beaufort (who was the mother of the then reigning king, Henry VII), Oldham was appointed as Bishop of Exeter on 24 November 1504, and was consecrated in the post on 12 January 1505. He evidently took his duties as bishop seriously and ensured that only educated people, such as university graduates, were raised to most of the important roles under his control. He also instigated examinations to select the best candidates for ordination.[2]

Bishop Oldham's coat of arms, shown here, are described as "Sable, a chevron or, between three Owls proper; on a chief of the second, three Roses gules."[7] Oldham adopted the owl as his personal device. It was a play on words or rebus based on his surname, which would probably have been pronounced at the time as owl-dom.[8]

From 1510 to 1513 he was one of a group of bishops who resisted, largely successfully, what they considered were undue claims made by William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, regarding the probate courts.[9] In 1511 he regulated many cathedral matters by the issue of statutes, and he was not shy in confronting other religious houses when he thought it appropriate. He successfully annexed Warland Hospital in Totnes from the Trinitarian Order in 1509.[2] This was done, as was the similar annexation of Clyst Gabriel at Sowton, to help finance the provision of regular meals for the twenty vicars choral at his Cathedral.[10]

He was initially successful in his litigation against Richard Banham, the abbot of Tavistock Abbey, who in 1513 had declared his abbey exempt from the bishop's right of episcopal visitation. Oldham quickly excommunicated him, but after Banham's personal appeal that he be "absolved from his censures", Oldham reinstated him, on payment of five pounds. However, soon afterwards Banham appealed to Archbishop William Warham and Richard FitzJames, Bishop of London, who decided early in 1514 that since he had not produced any evidence of papal exemption, he had to submit to the bishop. Still not satisfied, Banham appealed directly to Rome and eventually received a papal bull, dated 14 September 1517, that exempted him totally from episcopal jurisdiction and took the Abbey under the sole protection of the Holy See, on payment of twenty shillings annually.[11][12] These events are in direct contrast to what was written in 1601 by Francis Godwin in his Catalogue of the Bishops of England where he stated that it was Oldham who was excommunicated by the pope as a result of this dispute. Godwin's version of events was followed by several later historians,[13] but Mumford (1936) flatly stated that "there is no record of any such excommunication".[14]

Hugh Oldham had a brother, Bernard, who also followed a religious career. At Hugh's request, Lady Margaret Beaufort had seen that he was installed as rector in Crewkerne, Somerset, in around 1495. While there, Bernard helped John Combe, a lawyer and precentor of Exeter Cathedral, who came from Crewkerne, establish a free grammar school in the town. After Lady Margaret's death in 1509, Hugh spent a long time with his brother in Crewkerne,[15] and arranged for him to be Archdeacon of Cornwall, a post which he held from 1509 to 1515.[16] On 5 April 1515 Bernard was made treasurer of Exeter Cathedral, but he died within a month of taking up the post.[2][7]

George Oliver in his Lives of the Bishops of Exeter (1861), relates an anecdote, originally told by John Hooker in the late 16th century, regarding the bishop's punctuality of dining at eleven o'clock in the morning, and of supping at five o'clock in the afternoon. Apparently to ensure precision he had a house-clock to strike the hours, and a servant to look after it. If the bishop was prevented by important business from coming to table at the appointed time, the servant would delay the clock's striking the hour until he knew that his master was ready. Sometimes, if asked what was the hour, the servant would humorously answer, "As your lordship pleaseth," at which the bishop would smile and go his way.[17] Hooker also summed up his opinion of Bishop Oldham in these words: "A man having more zeal than knowledge and more devotion than learning; somewhat rough in speeches but friendly in doings [...] albeit he was not very much learned, yet a great favourer and a friend both to learning and to learned men".[2]

Interest in education edit

As bishop, Oldham showed a keen interest in education, probably influenced by his brother Bernard's experiences in Crewkerne.[15] He donated £4,000[18] and land in Chelsea towards Corpus Christi College, Oxford, which his friend and former Bishop of Exeter, Richard Foxe was in the process of establishing.[2] In 1513, Foxe's original intention had been for the college to be for monks, similar to the long-established Durham College and Canterbury College, both at Oxford. However, Oldham appears to have persuaded Foxe to found a secular college instead, along the lines of New College or Magdalen,[19] supposedly telling him that "monks were but a sort of bussing [buzzing] flies ... whose state could not long endure"—showing, according to some, that Oldham was well aware of the coming Reformation.[2] In return for his generosity, daily prayers for him were recited in the new chapel at Corpus Christi both during his lifetime and after his death,[20] and the college still has a contemporary portrait of him.[2]

Oldham may also have patronized Brasenose College, Oxford, which his former master William Smyth had founded in 1509. The historian John Hooker stated that Oldham's advances to Smyth were rebuffed, but evidence of the patronage existed in the form of his coat of arms that used to be set in a library window there. He apparently also offered help to Exeter College, Oxford, established in 1314 by one of his predecessors at Exeter, Bishop Stapledon, but in this case there is no evidence to contradict Hooker's statement that his offer was rejected.[2]

Oldham's interests also extended to lower levels of education. He ensured that the younger members of Exeter's cathedral choir attended the city high school, for instance,[2] but his main endowment in this field was made back in his home country of Lancashire. On 2 July 1515 he signed an endowment trust deed establishing the Manchester Free Grammar School for Lancashire Boys which later became The Manchester Grammar School. This deed promoted "godliness and good learning" and promised that any boy showing sufficient academic ability, regardless of background, could attend, free of charge.[8] A site was purchased in September 1516 and construction took place between April 1517 and August 1518. The total cost, as shown by a bill signed by Oldham, was £218.13s.5d, most of which must have been given by Oldham himself.[21]

 
Oldham's tomb in Exeter Cathedral

Oldham's death, his chapel and tomb edit

 
Some of about 59 sculpted owl rebuses on the walls, ceiling and tomb in the chantry chapel of Bishop Oldham
 
The owl-dom rebus. A depiction of the stone carving in Oldham's chantry[22]

Sir John Speke, a wealthy Devon knight, and Bishop Oldham jointly planned the construction of two new chantry chapels in complementary positions off the north and south choir-aisles of Exeter Cathedral.[23] Oldham's chapel, off the south aisle, was apparently complete by 1513.[24] It was dedicated to St Saviour, and Oldham intended his body to rest there. Speke died on 28 April 1518 and was interred in his tomb off the north aisle.[25] On 16 December of the same year, Oldham drew up his will in which he gave £80 for the vicars choral to celebrate a daily mass for his soul at his tomb.[26] He died just six months later, on 25 June 1519.[2]

His body lies in his chantry chapel which is decorated with numerous carvings of the owl that was his personal device. One of the owls carries a scroll in its beak, bearing the letters "DOM".[27] His tomb is surmounted by a brightly painted, but rather crudely carved effigy,[28] typical of the general decline in the quality of sepulchral monuments of the early 16th century.[29] The tomb was restored by Corpus Christi College in the late 19th century.[20] It was restored again and recoloured, together with many other monuments in the Cathedral, between 1956 and 1967.[30]

Legacy edit

Bishop Oldham is well remembered by Manchester Grammar School: on a Sunday at the end of June each year representatives from the school hold a commemorative service in Exeter Cathedral during which a wreath is laid on his tomb.[31] Since 2005 the school has held an annual Hugh Oldham Lecture,[32] with speakers that have included Astronomer Royal Martin Rees, historian Michael Wood and Lord Winston.[33] And in 2001 the Bishop of Exeter, Michael Langrish gave a speech to the London Section of the Old Mancunians' Association in which he emphasised two facets of Bishop Oldham's life, both of which he said have relevance today: the importance of learning and education that is broad-based, humane and directed to the well-being of society, and to be open to the future and critically appreciative of what it might be.[34] A life-size bronze statue of the bishop, sculpted by William Macmillan in 1931, stands in the school grounds,[21] and the school's badge still incorporates Oldham's owls.[8]

Hugh Oldham Lads Club, one of the first Lads Clubs in Manchester and similar in its purpose to the later Salford Lads Club, was founded by the educator Alexander Devine in 1887 as a result of his concern for the welfare of children. It continued until 1958.[35]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b Pickerill (2001), p. 11.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Nicholas Orme, Oldham, Hugh (c.1450–1519), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition (subscription required). Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  3. ^ Sources differ on what he studied and where.
  4. ^ Oliver (1861), p. 118.
  5. ^ Britton, John (1814), The Architectural Antiquities of Great Britain.
  6. ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.432
  7. ^ a b Oliver (1861), p. 120.
  8. ^ a b c Moss, John. . ManchesterUK. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  9. ^ Burton, Edwin. . Catholic Answers. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
  10. ^ Orme, Nicholas (1981), "The Medieval Clergy of Exeter Cathedral - 1. The Vicars and Annuellars", Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association, 113: 89–90
  11. ^ Pickerill (2001), pp. 46, 49.
  12. ^ Oliver, George (1820). Historic Collections, relating to the monasteries of Devon. Exeter: R. Cullum.
  13. ^ For instance, Thomas Fuller's The Worthies of England (1644) and the Original Catholic Encyclopedia 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Pickerill (2001), p. 49.
  15. ^ a b Pickerill (2001), p. 47.
  16. ^ Horn, Joyce M. (1964). "Archdeacons - Cornwall". Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300-1541. Vol. 9: Exeter diocese. pp. 15–17. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  17. ^ Oliver (1861), p. 119.
  18. ^ Some sources state 6,000 marks.
  19. ^ Salter, H. E.; Lobel, Mary D., eds. (1954). Corpus Christi College. A History of the County of Oxford. Vol. 3 - The University of Oxford. pp. 219–228. Retrieved 5 January 2011.
  20. ^ a b Thomas Fowler (1895). "Oldham, Hugh" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 42. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 105–107.
  21. ^ a b "In the beginning". The Manchester Grammar School. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  22. ^ Boutell, Charles (1863). Heraldry, Historical and Popular (2nd ed.). London: Winsor and Newton. p. 118.
  23. ^ Lepine & Orme (2003), p. 30.
  24. ^ Orme (1986), p. 32.
  25. ^ Orme (1986), p. 20.
  26. ^ Lepine & Orme (2003), p. 247.
  27. ^ Erskine, Hope & Lloyd (1988), p. 118.
  28. ^ . Exeter Cathedral. Archived from the original on 8 September 2011. Retrieved 2 January 2011.
  29. ^ Erskine, Hope & Lloyd (1988), p. 105.
  30. ^ Erskine, Hope & Lloyd (1988), p. 89.
  31. ^ (PDF). MGS Old Boys Network. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2008. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  32. ^ (PDF). MGS Old Boys Network. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  33. ^ See the relevant issues of "The Old Mancunian" listed on the association's website 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  34. ^ . The Manchester Grammar School Old Boys Network. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  35. ^ (PDF). Greater Manchester Federation of Clubs for Young People. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2011.

Sources edit

  • Erskine, Audrey; Hope, Vyvyan; Lloyd, John (1988). Exeter Cathedral - A Short History and Description. The Dean & Chapter of Exeter Cathedral. ISBN 0-9503320-4-6.
  • Lepine, David; Orme, Nicholas (2003). Death and Memory in Medieval Exeter. New series. Vol. 46. Devon and Cornwall Record Society. ISBN 0-901853-46-1.
  • Oliver, George (1861). . Exeter: William Roberts. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 3 January 2010.
  • Orme, Nicholas (1986), "Sir John Speke and his Chapel in Exeter Cathedral", Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association, 118
  • Pickerill, J. B. (2001), (PDF), The Manchester Grammar School Old Boys Network, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011, retrieved 7 January 2011

Further reading edit

  • Mumford, Alfred Alexander (1936). Hugh Oldham, 1452? - 1519, Bishop of Exeter, principal benefactor of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and founder of the Manchester Grammar School. London: Faber.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of Exeter
1504–1519
Succeeded by

hugh, oldham, canadian, football, player, canadian, football, 1452, june, 1519, english, cleric, bishop, exeter, 1505, notable, patron, education, founder, patron, manchester, grammar, school, corpus, christi, college, oxford, right, reverendbishop, exetereffi. For the Canadian football player see Hugh Oldham Canadian football Hugh Oldham c 1452 25 June 1519 was an English cleric who was Bishop of Exeter 1505 19 and a notable patron of education as a founder and patron of Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College Oxford The Right ReverendHugh OldhamBishop of ExeterEffigy of Hugh Oldham d 1519 Bishop of Exeter Oldham Chapel south aisle Exeter CathedralChurchRoman CatholicSeeExeterInstalled12 January 1505Term ended25 June 1519PredecessorJohn ArundelSuccessorJohn VeseyOrdersConsecration5 January 1505by William WarhamPersonal detailsBornc 1452 Lancashire EnglandDied25 June 1519Exeter DevonBuriedExeter CathedralStatue of Hugh Oldham at Manchester Grammar SchoolCanting arms of Oldham Sable a chevron or between three owls argent on a chief of the second three roses gulesBorn in Lancashire to a family of minor gentry he probably attended both Oxford and Cambridge universities following which he was a clerk at Durham then a rector in Cornwall before being employed by Lady Margaret Beaufort mother of King Henry VII rising to be the chancellor of her household by 1503 During this time he was preferred with many religious posts all over the country being made archdeacon of Exeter in 1502 and finally bishop of that city in 1505 a decision that was probably influenced by Lady Margaret He was a conscientious bishop who ensured that only educated people were appointed to ecclesiastical posts His patronage of educational establishments included the foundation of The Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College Oxford for which he donated 4 000 After his death he was buried in Exeter Cathedral in a chantry chapel that he had caused to be built for that purpose The chapel is decorated with numerous carvings of owls which were his personal device Contents 1 Early life 2 Bishop of Exeter 3 Interest in education 4 Oldham s death his chapel and tomb 5 Legacy 6 Notes and references 7 Sources 8 Further readingEarly life editOldham was one of the younger of six sons born to Roger Oldham and his wife Margery who were the limited evidence suggests yeomen or minor gentry at Ancoats 1 2 which at the time was a village in North West England but is now an inner city area of Manchester There are few records of his early life but it is known that he attended university studying canon law and either arts or civil law probably at Oxford and he was later in 1493 a bachelor of law at Cambridge 3 There is no contemporary evidence however that he was a member of Queens College Cambridge as was claimed by Thomas Fuller in his Worthies of England of 1662 and often repeated 2 In 1475 he was described in a deed transferring property to him from his eldest brother James as a clerk of Durham At this time he was most likely either in the household of or employed by Lawrence Booth Bishop of Durham whose family came from the same area as Oldham s and by whom James had also been employed 1 He was rector of Lanivet in Cornwall between 1488 and 1493 when he resigned the living on a pension of 12 4 At this time he was also a servant to William Smyth who was keeper of the hanaper in the Court of Chancery In 1492 he was the receiver for Lady Margaret Beaufort s estates in the West Country and by 1503 he had risen to be the chancellor of her household 2 In the years following 1490 Oldham was made a canon of the cathedrals of Exeter Lichfield Lincoln St Paul s Salisbury and York In 1496 William Smyth who was by then Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield appointed him to the non residential post of master of the hospital of St John in Lichfield to which Smyth had recently added a free grammar school and almshouse The year 1499 saw him established as dean of Wimborne in Dorset and in 1502 he was made archdeacon of Exeter 2 In 1503 he had sufficient prestige to be present at the placing of the foundation stone of the Henry VII Lady Chapel at Westminster Abbey 5 Bishop of Exeter edit nbsp Bishop Oldham s coat of arms Differences of his arms form the arms of Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council and of his foundations Manchester Grammar School and Corpus Christi College Oxford nbsp Heraldic escutcheon on tomb of Hugh Oldham d 1519 Bishop of Exeter Dexter Gules a sword erect in pale argent hilted or surmounted by two keys addorsed in saltire of the last 6 See of Exeter impaling Sable a chevron or between three owls argent on a chief of the second three roses gules Oldham The arms of Oldham can also be seen sculpted in stone on the tower of the Bishop s Palace ExeterPossibly with some influence from Lady Margaret Beaufort who was the mother of the then reigning king Henry VII Oldham was appointed as Bishop of Exeter on 24 November 1504 and was consecrated in the post on 12 January 1505 He evidently took his duties as bishop seriously and ensured that only educated people such as university graduates were raised to most of the important roles under his control He also instigated examinations to select the best candidates for ordination 2 Bishop Oldham s coat of arms shown here are described as Sable a chevron or between three Owls proper on a chief of the second three Roses gules 7 Oldham adopted the owl as his personal device It was a play on words or rebus based on his surname which would probably have been pronounced at the time as owl dom 8 From 1510 to 1513 he was one of a group of bishops who resisted largely successfully what they considered were undue claims made by William Warham Archbishop of Canterbury regarding the probate courts 9 In 1511 he regulated many cathedral matters by the issue of statutes and he was not shy in confronting other religious houses when he thought it appropriate He successfully annexed Warland Hospital in Totnes from the Trinitarian Order in 1509 2 This was done as was the similar annexation of Clyst Gabriel at Sowton to help finance the provision of regular meals for the twenty vicars choral at his Cathedral 10 He was initially successful in his litigation against Richard Banham the abbot of Tavistock Abbey who in 1513 had declared his abbey exempt from the bishop s right of episcopal visitation Oldham quickly excommunicated him but after Banham s personal appeal that he be absolved from his censures Oldham reinstated him on payment of five pounds However soon afterwards Banham appealed to Archbishop William Warham and Richard FitzJames Bishop of London who decided early in 1514 that since he had not produced any evidence of papal exemption he had to submit to the bishop Still not satisfied Banham appealed directly to Rome and eventually received a papal bull dated 14 September 1517 that exempted him totally from episcopal jurisdiction and took the Abbey under the sole protection of the Holy See on payment of twenty shillings annually 11 12 These events are in direct contrast to what was written in 1601 by Francis Godwin in his Catalogue of the Bishops of England where he stated that it was Oldham who was excommunicated by the pope as a result of this dispute Godwin s version of events was followed by several later historians 13 but Mumford 1936 flatly stated that there is no record of any such excommunication 14 Hugh Oldham had a brother Bernard who also followed a religious career At Hugh s request Lady Margaret Beaufort had seen that he was installed as rector in Crewkerne Somerset in around 1495 While there Bernard helped John Combe a lawyer and precentor of Exeter Cathedral who came from Crewkerne establish a free grammar school in the town After Lady Margaret s death in 1509 Hugh spent a long time with his brother in Crewkerne 15 and arranged for him to be Archdeacon of Cornwall a post which he held from 1509 to 1515 16 On 5 April 1515 Bernard was made treasurer of Exeter Cathedral but he died within a month of taking up the post 2 7 George Oliver in his Lives of the Bishops of Exeter 1861 relates an anecdote originally told by John Hooker in the late 16th century regarding the bishop s punctuality of dining at eleven o clock in the morning and of supping at five o clock in the afternoon Apparently to ensure precision he had a house clock to strike the hours and a servant to look after it If the bishop was prevented by important business from coming to table at the appointed time the servant would delay the clock s striking the hour until he knew that his master was ready Sometimes if asked what was the hour the servant would humorously answer As your lordship pleaseth at which the bishop would smile and go his way 17 Hooker also summed up his opinion of Bishop Oldham in these words A man having more zeal than knowledge and more devotion than learning somewhat rough in speeches but friendly in doings albeit he was not very much learned yet a great favourer and a friend both to learning and to learned men 2 Interest in education editAs bishop Oldham showed a keen interest in education probably influenced by his brother Bernard s experiences in Crewkerne 15 He donated 4 000 18 and land in Chelsea towards Corpus Christi College Oxford which his friend and former Bishop of Exeter Richard Foxe was in the process of establishing 2 In 1513 Foxe s original intention had been for the college to be for monks similar to the long established Durham College and Canterbury College both at Oxford However Oldham appears to have persuaded Foxe to found a secular college instead along the lines of New College or Magdalen 19 supposedly telling him that monks were but a sort of bussing buzzing flies whose state could not long endure showing according to some that Oldham was well aware of the coming Reformation 2 In return for his generosity daily prayers for him were recited in the new chapel at Corpus Christi both during his lifetime and after his death 20 and the college still has a contemporary portrait of him 2 Oldham may also have patronized Brasenose College Oxford which his former master William Smyth had founded in 1509 The historian John Hooker stated that Oldham s advances to Smyth were rebuffed but evidence of the patronage existed in the form of his coat of arms that used to be set in a library window there He apparently also offered help to Exeter College Oxford established in 1314 by one of his predecessors at Exeter Bishop Stapledon but in this case there is no evidence to contradict Hooker s statement that his offer was rejected 2 Oldham s interests also extended to lower levels of education He ensured that the younger members of Exeter s cathedral choir attended the city high school for instance 2 but his main endowment in this field was made back in his home country of Lancashire On 2 July 1515 he signed an endowment trust deed establishing the Manchester Free Grammar School for Lancashire Boys which later became The Manchester Grammar School This deed promoted godliness and good learning and promised that any boy showing sufficient academic ability regardless of background could attend free of charge 8 A site was purchased in September 1516 and construction took place between April 1517 and August 1518 The total cost as shown by a bill signed by Oldham was 218 13s 5d most of which must have been given by Oldham himself 21 nbsp Oldham s tomb in Exeter CathedralOldham s death his chapel and tomb edit nbsp Some of about 59 sculpted owl rebuses on the walls ceiling and tomb in the chantry chapel of Bishop Oldham nbsp The owl dom rebus A depiction of the stone carving in Oldham s chantry 22 Sir John Speke a wealthy Devon knight and Bishop Oldham jointly planned the construction of two new chantry chapels in complementary positions off the north and south choir aisles of Exeter Cathedral 23 Oldham s chapel off the south aisle was apparently complete by 1513 24 It was dedicated to St Saviour and Oldham intended his body to rest there Speke died on 28 April 1518 and was interred in his tomb off the north aisle 25 On 16 December of the same year Oldham drew up his will in which he gave 80 for the vicars choral to celebrate a daily mass for his soul at his tomb 26 He died just six months later on 25 June 1519 2 His body lies in his chantry chapel which is decorated with numerous carvings of the owl that was his personal device One of the owls carries a scroll in its beak bearing the letters DOM 27 His tomb is surmounted by a brightly painted but rather crudely carved effigy 28 typical of the general decline in the quality of sepulchral monuments of the early 16th century 29 The tomb was restored by Corpus Christi College in the late 19th century 20 It was restored again and recoloured together with many other monuments in the Cathedral between 1956 and 1967 30 Legacy editBishop Oldham is well remembered by Manchester Grammar School on a Sunday at the end of June each year representatives from the school hold a commemorative service in Exeter Cathedral during which a wreath is laid on his tomb 31 Since 2005 the school has held an annual Hugh Oldham Lecture 32 with speakers that have included Astronomer Royal Martin Rees historian Michael Wood and Lord Winston 33 And in 2001 the Bishop of Exeter Michael Langrish gave a speech to the London Section of the Old Mancunians Association in which he emphasised two facets of Bishop Oldham s life both of which he said have relevance today the importance of learning and education that is broad based humane and directed to the well being of society and to be open to the future and critically appreciative of what it might be 34 A life size bronze statue of the bishop sculpted by William Macmillan in 1931 stands in the school grounds 21 and the school s badge still incorporates Oldham s owls 8 Hugh Oldham Lads Club one of the first Lads Clubs in Manchester and similar in its purpose to the later Salford Lads Club was founded by the educator Alexander Devine in 1887 as a result of his concern for the welfare of children It continued until 1958 35 Notes and references edit a b Pickerill 2001 p 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Nicholas Orme Oldham Hugh c 1450 1519 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition subscription required Retrieved 2011 01 02 Sources differ on what he studied and where Oliver 1861 p 118 Britton John 1814 The Architectural Antiquities of Great Britain Debrett s Peerage 1968 p 432 a b Oliver 1861 p 120 a b c Moss John Manchester Celebrities Philanthropy Philosophy amp Religion Bishop Hugh Oldham ManchesterUK Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 3 January 2011 Burton Edwin Hugh Oldham Original Catholic Encyclopedia Catholic Answers Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 6 January 2011 Orme Nicholas 1981 The Medieval Clergy of Exeter Cathedral 1 The Vicars and Annuellars Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association 113 89 90 Pickerill 2001 pp 46 49 Oliver George 1820 Historic Collections relating to the monasteries of Devon Exeter R Cullum For instance Thomas Fuller s The Worthies of England 1644 and the Original Catholic Encyclopedia Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Pickerill 2001 p 49 a b Pickerill 2001 p 47 Horn Joyce M 1964 Archdeacons Cornwall Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 Vol 9 Exeter diocese pp 15 17 Retrieved 11 January 2011 Oliver 1861 p 119 Some sources state 6 000 marks Salter H E Lobel Mary D eds 1954 Corpus Christi College A History of the County of Oxford Vol 3 The University of Oxford pp 219 228 Retrieved 5 January 2011 a b Thomas Fowler 1895 Oldham Hugh In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 42 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 105 107 a b In the beginning The Manchester Grammar School Retrieved 3 January 2011 Boutell Charles 1863 Heraldry Historical and Popular 2nd ed London Winsor and Newton p 118 Lepine amp Orme 2003 p 30 Orme 1986 p 32 Orme 1986 p 20 Lepine amp Orme 2003 p 247 Erskine Hope amp Lloyd 1988 p 118 History Areas of the Cathedral The Ambulatory Exeter Cathedral Archived from the original on 8 September 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2011 Erskine Hope amp Lloyd 1988 p 105 Erskine Hope amp Lloyd 1988 p 89 The Old Mancunian September 2007 PDF MGS Old Boys Network p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2008 Retrieved 8 January 2011 The Old Mancunian Easter 2005 PDF MGS Old Boys Network Archived from the original PDF on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 8 January 2011 See the relevant issues of The Old Mancunian listed on the association s website Archived 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine London Dinner 2001 The Manchester Grammar School Old Boys Network Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 8 January 2011 A History of The Greater Manchester Federation of Clubs for Young People PDF Greater Manchester Federation of Clubs for Young People Archived from the original PDF on 16 March 2012 Retrieved 8 January 2011 Sources editErskine Audrey Hope Vyvyan Lloyd John 1988 Exeter Cathedral A Short History and Description The Dean amp Chapter of Exeter Cathedral ISBN 0 9503320 4 6 Lepine David Orme Nicholas 2003 Death and Memory in Medieval Exeter New series Vol 46 Devon and Cornwall Record Society ISBN 0 901853 46 1 Oliver George 1861 Lives of the Bishops of Exeter and a History of the Cathedral Exeter William Roberts Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 3 January 2010 Orme Nicholas 1986 Sir John Speke and his Chapel in Exeter Cathedral Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association 118 Pickerill J B 2001 The Portcullis and the Owl An account of the times of Hugh Oldham and his Patroness PDF The Manchester Grammar School Old Boys Network archived from the original PDF on 27 July 2011 retrieved 7 January 2011Further reading editMumford Alfred Alexander 1936 Hugh Oldham 1452 1519 Bishop of Exeter principal benefactor of Corpus Christi College Oxford and founder of the Manchester Grammar School London Faber Catholic Church titlesPreceded byJohn Arundel Bishop of Exeter1504 1519 Succeeded byJohn Vesey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh Oldham amp oldid 1167786775, wikipedia, 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