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John Wyndham (1558–1645)

Sir John Wyndham (1558 – 1 April 1645), JP, of Orchard Wyndham in the parish of Watchet in Somerset, was an English landowner who played an important role in the establishment of defence organisation in the West Country against the threat of Spanish invasion.

Sir John Wyndham, gilt-bronze cast relief plaque, on his purbeck marble slab, east wall of north aisle, St Decuman's Church, Watchet, Somerset
Orchard Wyndham: Sir John Wyndham's birthplace
Arms of Wyndham: Azure, a chevron between three lion's heads erased or

Origins edit

 
Monumental brasses in St Decuman's Church, Watchet, set into slabs of Portland marble, to Sir John Wyndham (d. 1572), of Orchard Wyndham and his wife Florence Wadham (1538–1597), erected by their son Sir John Wyndham (1558–1645). Displaying the arms of Wyndham and Wadham Gules, a chevron between three roses argent

He was born at Orchard Wyndham, the only child and heir of Sir John Wyndham (d. 1572) of Orchard Wyndham, by his wife Florence Wadham (1538–1597), a co-heiress of her brother Nicholas Wadham (1531/2–1609), of Merryfield, Ilton, in Somerset and of Edge, Branscombe, in Devon, who with his wife Dorothy Petre (1534/5–1618), eldest daughter of Sir William Petre, principal secretary to King Henry VIII, founded Wadham College, Oxford.

In memory of his parents, Sir John erected a pair of almost life-size monumental brasses in St Decuman's Church, Watchet, and also erected an almost identical pair (considered the finest of their style in England), also set into Purbeck marble, in memory of his uncle Nicholas Wadham and his wife on their chest tomb in the Wadham Chapel in the Church of St Mary, Ilminster.

Sir John Wyndham was one of the heirs to the large fortune of his uncle Nicholas Wadham and helped to put into effect his plans for the founding of Wadham College. Sir John Wyndham also erected similar brasses, but much smaller, in St Margaret's Church, Felbrigg, Norfolk, to his cousin Thomas Windham (d. 1599) (in the nave), from whom he inherited Felbrigg Hall, and to Thomas's sister Jane Coningsby (d. 1608) (in the chancel). The inscriptions in accomplished verse on all these monuments are believed to have been written by Wyndham himself.[1]

Early origins edit

His grandfather was Sir John Wyndham (died 1573) of Felbrigg (second son of Sir Thomas Wyndham (d. 1521) by his first wife Eleanor Scrope, daughter and heiress of Richard Scrope of Upsall Castle, Yorkshire) who inherited Orchard, Somerset from his wife Elizabeth Sydenham (d. 1 January 1571), daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Sydenham of Orchard, Somerset.[2]

Heraldic achievement edit

 
Heraldic achievement of Sir John Wyndham, Watchet Church

The ancestry of Sir John Wyndham is illustrated by the heraldic achievement shown on his monument in Watchet Church. It consists of a crest: A lion's head erased within a fetterlock or, a crest formerly belonging to the Felbrigg family of Felbrigg, Norfolk, Felbrigg Hall having been the second earliest known home of the Wyndham family (alias de Wymondham which originated at the manor of Wymondham in Norfolk), and nine quarters as follows:

  •   1st & 9th: Azure, a chevron between 3 lion's heads erased or (Wyndham);
  •   2nd: Azure, a bend or (Scrope), the paternal arms of his great-grandmother Eleanor Scrope (d. circa 1505), daughter of Sir Richard Scrope (1442–1485) of Upsall Castle, Yorks;
  •   3rd: Argent, a saltire engrailled gules (Tiptoft), the paternal arms of Margaret Tiptoft (d. 1402[3] or 1431), wife of Roger Scrope, 2nd Baron Scrope of Bolton (1348–1403) (from whom Eleanor Scrope (d. 1505) was 4th in descent) and co-heiress of her father Robert de Tibetot, 3rd Baron Tibetot (d. 1372) of Nettlestead, Suffolk;
  •   4th: Argent, a chevron between 3 rams passant sable a mullet for difference (Sydenham[4] of Orchard Sydenham, later Orchard Wyndham);
  • 5th: Argent, a fess between three men's legs couped sable, canting arms of Gambon of Moorstone in the parish of Halberton, Devon.[5] Moorstone was an estate listed in the Domesday Book (1086) and in 1406 the Gambons were licensed by the Bishop of Exeter to have a private chapel in "their mansion of Morston".[6] Substantial remains of the mediaeval manor house survive.[7] Tempore Edward IV (1461–1483) Elizabeth Gambon the heiress of Moorstone, married John Sydenham of Orchard, which eventually brought the estate to the Wyndhams, who still owned it c.1630.[8]
  •   6th: Gules, a chevron between 3 roses argent (Wadham);
  •   7th: Argent, on a chief gules two stag's heads cabosed or (Popham of Huntworth, North Petherton, Somerset, from which family the Wadhams inherited Ilton in Somerset where they built their seat of Merryfield.
  •   8th: Argent, a chevron sable between three escallops gules (Pollard of King's Nympton, Devon.

Birth and childhood edit

Sir John Wyndham is the ancestor of every living member of the widespread Wyndham family (except perhaps for one branch in the United States)[9] and therefore had he not been born the dynasty would have failed. However, he was born following a near-miraculous rising from the dead by his mother. The famous story is that one year after her marriage and already pregnant, Florence Wyndham became ill, was thought to have died and was left that evening in a coffin in the Wyndham Chapel in St Decuman's Church, about half a mile east of her husband's home at Kentsford Manor House, and two miles north of her father-in-law's home at Orchard Wyndham, awaiting a funeral the following day.[10]

That night a "covetous sexton" crept into the church and in attempting to remove a valuable ring, cut the lady's finger, thereby awakening her from a cataleptic trance. "The sexton fled, leaving his lantern behind him, and with its aid she made her way home to her astounded family"[11] at Kentsford.[12] The story was composed in verse as "Lady Wyndham's Return", by Rev. Lewis H. Court, Vicar of St Decuman's. (See full text on Wikisource s:Lady Wyndham's Return). Soon after she gave birth to Sir John, who would be her only child. He was a minor aged twelve at the death of his father and as a tenant-in-chief his wardship and marriage reverted to the crown, Queen Elizabeth I, to be granted to whom she pleased. His grandfather, however, was able to buy-back his wardship, which prevented a forced marriage.

Home defence against Spain edit

He played an important role in the defence organisation of Somerset, the substantial growth of which is shown by the muster in 1580 being 12,000 able footmen, double the total twenty years earlier. The special census of horses taken on 26 August 1583 shows that their number had also increased to forty-seven great horses and 308 light horses. While the defeat of the Spanish Armada saved England from the feared invasion, the significance and value of the defence movement was in keying up the nation and teaching it to realise the heritage it had to defend.

Justice of the Peace edit

He served as one of the County Justices and as such shared effective responsibility for local government and administration, acting as the representative and general agent of the central government, as well as sitting in quarter sessions.

Civil War edit

At the start of the Civil War his sympathies appear to have been with the Parliament, which is borne out by a foray made by his cousin Sir Francis Wyndham, 1st Baronet (d. 1676), governor of Dunster Castle, in June 1644 against Orchard Wyndham, as the manor is now known, which resulted in £4,000 worth of plunder being seized for the Royalist cause. Three months after this event he gave £4,000 each for safe keeping to his eighth and ninth sons, Sir Hugh Wyndham and Sir Wadham Wyndham.

Oversees founding of Wadham College edit

Although Dorothy Wadham was largely responsible for overseeing the foundation and building of Wadham College, Oxford[13] a nephew, possibly Sir John Wyndham, is recorded as attending on his dying uncle Nicholas Wadham (1531/1532 – 1609). A detailed record, preserved in the College archives, was drawn up by Wyndham of a discussion held with his uncle four days before his death in 1609 as follows:

"I was sent for after dinner unto my Uncle Wadham by Mr. Bartlett there beinge present only with him my Aunte, Mr. Bartlett and Mr. Arnold. In the presence of them he told me of the greate care that he had for the erecting of a Colledge in Oxforde, as he had hearetofore often times acquainted me. that for the performance thereof, he had in Mr. Arnold's hands £4,000 with the £500 of Sr. Henry Hawley's, and in Mr. Bartlett's hands which would shortly made up £2,000 which as he thought would be sufficient to procure above £300 p ann; that he had £400 the yeare in Essex, which he left unto my Aunte his wife duringe her life, yet hoped that out of her benevolence consideringe howe well he had dealt with her, that she would imparte a portion of it unto his Colledge during her life. That his desire was to conferre it upon Gloster hall if St Johns Colledge and the Principal might reasonably be compounded withall, otherwise he did appointe it unto Jhesus Colledge. That for the buildinge of a Chappell with buttery sellar and kitchinge he appointed £2,000, whereof (as I understood him) one £1,000 was in his Studye, and the other £1,000 was to be made out of Hewnebeare. That also (as I understood him) he appointed the moitie of the Parsonage of Abbotsbury unto the Colledge. That he must entreat me for the bestowinge of my Travayle and pains for the seinge of all things performed accordinge unto his Intention, as he had often heretofore discoursed with me about it for he did trust me only with it and reposed himself absolutely uppon me, and meant not that it shoulde be any wayes chargeable unto me, for I should have my charges absolutely defrayed in a liberall and a worthie manner to the uttermost"...[14]

Felbrigg inheritance edit

 
Felbrigg Hall, viewed from the south, as rebuilt circa 1620-24 by Sir John Wyndham for his 3rd son Thomas

In 1599 he succeeded to the Felbrigg estate in Norfolk, including Felbrigg Hall, from his father's first cousin Thomas Wyndham (d. 1599), who like his two brothers Sir Roger and Francis (d. 1592), Judge of Common Pleas (whose monument exists in St Peter Mancroft in Norwich) died without issue. Felbrigg was the seat of the senior line of the Wyndham family. In gratitude he placed a monumental brass inlaid in Purbeck marble, in Felbrigg Church.[15] Sir Edmund Wyndham (d. 1568) was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Wyndham (eldest son of Sir John Wyndham (beheaded 1503 on Tower Hill with James Tyrrell) by his first wife Lady Margaret Howard, 4th daughter of John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk (d. 1485)) by his first wife Alianore Scrope, daughter and heiress of Richard Scrope of Upsall, Yorks. Sir John also placed a monumental brass inlaid in Purbeck marble in Felbrigg Church to Thomas Wyndham's sister Jane Wyndham (d. 1608). Both brasses are in the same style, but much smaller, as those Sir John erected in Watchet church to his parents and in Ilminstaer Church to his uncle Nicholas Wadham. The original accounts concerning the shipping and laying down of the Felbrigg brasses survive in the Wyndham papers at Felbrigg Hall, and although the brasses are known to have been purchased in London, the maker's name is not recorded.[16] Sir John gave Felbrigg to his third son Thomas Wyndham (d. 1653), for whom he rebuilt the manor house, completed in 1624,[17] which survives today. The arms of father (impaling Portman) and son (impaling Lytton) survive sculpted in stone side by side above the front door.[18]

Wadham inheritance edit

 
Almshouses on Merryfield Lane, Ilton, built by Sir John Wyndham (1558–1645), believed to have been made from materials from the demolished Merryfield House.

He inherited part of the lands of his uncle Nicholas Wadham, his mother having been one of his sisters and co-heiresses. Amongst the manors which fell to his share were:

"When John Wyndham came to the estate, disliking the situation of the house, because it was surrounded with wood, he pulled it down, and with the materials built a farm-house at a little distance, now called Woodhouse, and likewise an alms-house in the village of Ilton. There now remains no part of the ancient edifice, except an old wall on the east side. The seat was formerly moted round, and the buildings exhibited many striking indications of remote antiquity".
  • Silverton in Devon, where his descendant George Wyndham, 4th Earl of Egremont (1786–1845) built "Silverton Park" (or "Egremont House"), a large neoclassical mansion, demolished in 1901. He built it to compensate himself for having been excluded from the inheritance of Petworth House in Sussex by his uncle the 3rd Earl who bequeathed it instead to his illegitimate son and adopted heir Col. George Wyndham, ancestor of the present Baron Leconfield and Egremont.
  • Wadham in the parish of Knowstone in Devon, the earliest seat of the Wadham family.

Marriage and children edit

 
Joanna Portman (d. 13 September 1633), wife of Sir John Wyndham. Gilt-bronze cast relief plaque, on purbeck marble slab, Watchet Church

Sir John Wyndham married Joan Portman, daughter of Sir Henry Portman (d. 1590), of Orchard Portman, Somerset, son of Sir William Portman (d. 1557), Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, by whom he had nine sons and six daughters:

Sons edit

  • Henry Wyndham (1583–1613), eldest son, scholar in civil law, predeceased father.
  • John Wyndham (d. 1649), 2nd son.
  • Thomas Wyndham (d. 1653), 3rd son, to whom his father gave Felbrigg Hall and jointly with him rebuilt the ancient manor house, completed in 1624.[20] The arms of father (impaling Portman) and son (Wyndham with cadency mark of a crescent for difference of a second son, impaling Lytton Ermine, on a chief indented azure three ducal crowns or) survive sculpted in stone side by side above the front door.[21] He married Elizabeth Lytton.
  • Humphrey, 6th (?) son.
  • George Wyndham (6th son) of Uffords Manor, Cromer, Norfolk.
  • George Wyndham ("senior"), (7th. son[22]), (1592–1624), soldier.
  • Hugh Wyndham (8th son), Baron of the Exchequer, >[23] the widow of Sir Henry Berkeley, 1st Baronet of Wymondham, Leicestershire; (3) Catherine Fleming, daughter of Sir Thomas Fleming (d. 1624) of North Stoneham, Hampshire.
  • Sir Wadham Wyndham (9th son), a judge of the King's Bench.[24]

Daughters edit

Death, burial and monument edit

 
Monument to Sir John Wyndham and his wife Joan Portman, St Decuman's Church, Watchet. Immediately adjacent to the right is the monument to his father and mother

He died on 1 April 1645 and was buried in Watchet Church, Somerset, where exists a memorial to him and his wife consisting of a large slab of purbeck marble erected vertically against the east wall of the north aisle chapel, containing inlaid plaques of gilt-bronze relief-sculpted portraits and armorial shields.

See also edit

Sources edit

  • Wyndham, Hon Hugh Archibald (later 4th Baron Leconfield), A Family History, The Wyndhams of Norfolk and Somerset, 1939.
  • Wyndham, the Hon Hugh Archibald, A Family History, The Wyndhams of Somerset, Sussex and Wiltshire, 1950.
  • Collinson, John, History of Somerset, Vol.3, pp. 486–496

References edit

  1. ^ Ketton-Cremer, Robert Wyndham, Felbrigg, the Story of a House, London, 1962, p.32
  2. ^ Blomefield, op.cit. is in error as he does not derive the Orchard family from Eleanor Scrope, which ancestry is clearly shown in the heraldry in Watchet Church. He erroneously states John Windham (the husband of Elizabeth Sydenham) to be the younger brother of Sir Thomas Windham (d. 1521), therefore the brother-in-law, not son, of Eleanor Scrope
  3. ^ 1402 may be her mother Margaret Deincourt's year of death
  4. ^ Robson, Thomas, The British Herald, "Sydenham of Langford, Som."
  5. ^ Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.484
  6. ^ Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.402
  7. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.467
  8. ^ Pole, p.197
  9. ^ Ketton-Cremer, p. 31
  10. ^ Emeny, Richard, A Description of Orchard Wyndham, 2000, p. 2 (guide-booklet available at Orchard Wyndham)
  11. ^ Ketton-Cremer, p. 30
  12. ^ She probably went to Kentsford Manor House, a secondary Wyndham seat a short distance west of the church, rather than back to Orchard Wyndham, about 2 miles south of the church
  13. ^ T.G.Jackson; Wadham College, Oxford
  14. ^ Thomas Graham Jackson, Wadham College, Oxford, its Foundation, Architecture and History, with an Account of the Family of Wadham and their Seats in Somerset and Devon, Oxford, 1893, pp. 12-13.
  15. ^ "North Erpingham Hundred: Felbrigg". british-history.ac.uk.
  16. ^ Ketton-Cremer, Robert Wyndham, Felbrigg, the Story of a House, London, 1962, p.32
  17. ^ Ketton-Cremer, pp.35-6
  18. ^ Image 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Collinson, Rev. John (1791), History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset, vol. I (3 volumes ed.), Bath [Eng.] Printed by R. Cruttwell, pp. 46–50
  20. ^ Ketton-Cremer, Robert Wyndham, Felbrigg, the Story of a House, London, 1962, pp.35-6
  21. ^ Image; 8 December 2015 at the Wayback MachineImage
  22. ^ Stated to be seventh-born (septimogenitus) and Georgi(us) senior on his monument at Watchet
  23. ^ "Woodcote Park". epsomandewellhistoryexplorer.org.uk.
  24. ^ "CLERKE (CLARKE), George (c.1626-89), of Watford, Northants". historyofparliamentonline.org.
  25. ^ "STRODE, John (c. 1561-1642), of the Middle Temple, London and Chantmarle, Cattistock, Dorset | History of Parliament Online".

External links edit

  • thepeerage.com, Wyndham

john, wyndham, 1558, 1645, other, people, named, john, wyndham, john, wyndham, disambiguation, john, wyndham, 1558, april, 1645, orchard, wyndham, parish, watchet, somerset, english, landowner, played, important, role, establishment, defence, organisation, wes. For other people named John Wyndham see John Wyndham disambiguation Sir John Wyndham 1558 1 April 1645 JP of Orchard Wyndham in the parish of Watchet in Somerset was an English landowner who played an important role in the establishment of defence organisation in the West Country against the threat of Spanish invasion Sir John Wyndham gilt bronze cast relief plaque on his purbeck marble slab east wall of north aisle St Decuman s Church Watchet SomersetOrchard Wyndham Sir John Wyndham s birthplaceArms of Wyndham Azure a chevron between three lion s heads erased or Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Early origins 1 1 1 Heraldic achievement 2 Birth and childhood 2 1 Home defence against Spain 2 2 Justice of the Peace 2 3 Civil War 2 4 Oversees founding of Wadham College 3 Felbrigg inheritance 4 Wadham inheritance 5 Marriage and children 5 1 Sons 5 2 Daughters 6 Death burial and monument 7 See also 8 Sources 9 References 10 External linksOrigins edit nbsp Monumental brasses in St Decuman s Church Watchet set into slabs of Portland marble to Sir John Wyndham d 1572 of Orchard Wyndham and his wife Florence Wadham 1538 1597 erected by their son Sir John Wyndham 1558 1645 Displaying the arms of Wyndham and Wadham Gules a chevron between three roses argentHe was born at Orchard Wyndham the only child and heir of Sir John Wyndham d 1572 of Orchard Wyndham by his wife Florence Wadham 1538 1597 a co heiress of her brother Nicholas Wadham 1531 2 1609 of Merryfield Ilton in Somerset and of Edge Branscombe in Devon who with his wife Dorothy Petre 1534 5 1618 eldest daughter of Sir William Petre principal secretary to King Henry VIII founded Wadham College Oxford In memory of his parents Sir John erected a pair of almost life size monumental brasses in St Decuman s Church Watchet and also erected an almost identical pair considered the finest of their style in England also set into Purbeck marble in memory of his uncle Nicholas Wadham and his wife on their chest tomb in the Wadham Chapel in the Church of St Mary Ilminster Sir John Wyndham was one of the heirs to the large fortune of his uncle Nicholas Wadham and helped to put into effect his plans for the founding of Wadham College Sir John Wyndham also erected similar brasses but much smaller in St Margaret s Church Felbrigg Norfolk to his cousin Thomas Windham d 1599 in the nave from whom he inherited Felbrigg Hall and to Thomas s sister Jane Coningsby d 1608 in the chancel The inscriptions in accomplished verse on all these monuments are believed to have been written by Wyndham himself 1 Early origins edit His grandfather was Sir John Wyndham died 1573 of Felbrigg second son of Sir Thomas Wyndham d 1521 by his first wife Eleanor Scrope daughter and heiress of Richard Scrope of Upsall Castle Yorkshire who inherited Orchard Somerset from his wife Elizabeth Sydenham d 1 January 1571 daughter and co heiress of Sir John Sydenham of Orchard Somerset 2 Heraldic achievement edit nbsp Heraldic achievement of Sir John Wyndham Watchet ChurchThe ancestry of Sir John Wyndham is illustrated by the heraldic achievement shown on his monument in Watchet Church It consists of a crest A lion s head erased within a fetterlock or a crest formerly belonging to the Felbrigg family of Felbrigg Norfolk Felbrigg Hall having been the second earliest known home of the Wyndham family alias de Wymondham which originated at the manor of Wymondham in Norfolk and nine quarters as follows nbsp 1st amp 9th Azure a chevron between 3 lion s heads erased or Wyndham nbsp 2nd Azure a bend or Scrope the paternal arms of his great grandmother Eleanor Scrope d circa 1505 daughter of Sir Richard Scrope 1442 1485 of Upsall Castle Yorks nbsp 3rd Argent a saltire engrailled gules Tiptoft the paternal arms of Margaret Tiptoft d 1402 3 or 1431 wife of Roger Scrope 2nd Baron Scrope of Bolton 1348 1403 from whom Eleanor Scrope d 1505 was 4th in descent and co heiress of her father Robert de Tibetot 3rd Baron Tibetot d 1372 of Nettlestead Suffolk nbsp 4th Argent a chevron between 3 rams passant sable a mullet for difference Sydenham 4 of Orchard Sydenham later Orchard Wyndham 5th Argent a fess between three men s legs couped sable canting arms of Gambon of Moorstone in the parish of Halberton Devon 5 Moorstone was an estate listed in the Domesday Book 1086 and in 1406 the Gambons were licensed by the Bishop of Exeter to have a private chapel in their mansion of Morston 6 Substantial remains of the mediaeval manor house survive 7 Tempore Edward IV 1461 1483 Elizabeth Gambon the heiress of Moorstone married John Sydenham of Orchard which eventually brought the estate to the Wyndhams who still owned it c 1630 8 nbsp 6th Gules a chevron between 3 roses argent Wadham nbsp 7th Argent on a chief gules two stag s heads cabosed or Popham of Huntworth North Petherton Somerset from which family the Wadhams inherited Ilton in Somerset where they built their seat of Merryfield nbsp 8th Argent a chevron sable between three escallops gules Pollard of King s Nympton Devon Birth and childhood editSir John Wyndham is the ancestor of every living member of the widespread Wyndham family except perhaps for one branch in the United States 9 and therefore had he not been born the dynasty would have failed However he was born following a near miraculous rising from the dead by his mother The famous story is that one year after her marriage and already pregnant Florence Wyndham became ill was thought to have died and was left that evening in a coffin in the Wyndham Chapel in St Decuman s Church about half a mile east of her husband s home at Kentsford Manor House and two miles north of her father in law s home at Orchard Wyndham awaiting a funeral the following day 10 That night a covetous sexton crept into the church and in attempting to remove a valuable ring cut the lady s finger thereby awakening her from a cataleptic trance The sexton fled leaving his lantern behind him and with its aid she made her way home to her astounded family 11 at Kentsford 12 The story was composed in verse as Lady Wyndham s Return by Rev Lewis H Court Vicar of St Decuman s See full text on Wikisource s Lady Wyndham s Return Soon after she gave birth to Sir John who would be her only child He was a minor aged twelve at the death of his father and as a tenant in chief his wardship and marriage reverted to the crown Queen Elizabeth I to be granted to whom she pleased His grandfather however was able to buy back his wardship which prevented a forced marriage Home defence against Spain edit He played an important role in the defence organisation of Somerset the substantial growth of which is shown by the muster in 1580 being 12 000 able footmen double the total twenty years earlier The special census of horses taken on 26 August 1583 shows that their number had also increased to forty seven great horses and 308 light horses While the defeat of the Spanish Armada saved England from the feared invasion the significance and value of the defence movement was in keying up the nation and teaching it to realise the heritage it had to defend Justice of the Peace edit He served as one of the County Justices and as such shared effective responsibility for local government and administration acting as the representative and general agent of the central government as well as sitting in quarter sessions Civil War edit At the start of the Civil War his sympathies appear to have been with the Parliament which is borne out by a foray made by his cousin Sir Francis Wyndham 1st Baronet d 1676 governor of Dunster Castle in June 1644 against Orchard Wyndham as the manor is now known which resulted in 4 000 worth of plunder being seized for the Royalist cause Three months after this event he gave 4 000 each for safe keeping to his eighth and ninth sons Sir Hugh Wyndham and Sir Wadham Wyndham Oversees founding of Wadham College edit Although Dorothy Wadham was largely responsible for overseeing the foundation and building of Wadham College Oxford 13 a nephew possibly Sir John Wyndham is recorded as attending on his dying uncle Nicholas Wadham 1531 1532 1609 A detailed record preserved in the College archives was drawn up by Wyndham of a discussion held with his uncle four days before his death in 1609 as follows I was sent for after dinner unto my Uncle Wadham by Mr Bartlett there beinge present only with him my Aunte Mr Bartlett and Mr Arnold In the presence of them he told me of the greate care that he had for the erecting of a Colledge in Oxforde as he had hearetofore often times acquainted me that for the performance thereof he had in Mr Arnold s hands 4 000 with the 500 of Sr Henry Hawley s and in Mr Bartlett s hands which would shortly made up 2 000 which as he thought would be sufficient to procure above 300 p ann that he had 400 the yeare in Essex which he left unto my Aunte his wife duringe her life yet hoped that out of her benevolence consideringe howe well he had dealt with her that she would imparte a portion of it unto his Colledge during her life That his desire was to conferre it upon Gloster hall if St Johns Colledge and the Principal might reasonably be compounded withall otherwise he did appointe it unto Jhesus Colledge That for the buildinge of a Chappell with buttery sellar and kitchinge he appointed 2 000 whereof as I understood him one 1 000 was in his Studye and the other 1 000 was to be made out of Hewnebeare That also as I understood him he appointed the moitie of the Parsonage of Abbotsbury unto the Colledge That he must entreat me for the bestowinge of my Travayle and pains for the seinge of all things performed accordinge unto his Intention as he had often heretofore discoursed with me about it for he did trust me only with it and reposed himself absolutely uppon me and meant not that it shoulde be any wayes chargeable unto me for I should have my charges absolutely defrayed in a liberall and a worthie manner to the uttermost 14 Felbrigg inheritance edit nbsp Felbrigg Hall viewed from the south as rebuilt circa 1620 24 by Sir John Wyndham for his 3rd son ThomasIn 1599 he succeeded to the Felbrigg estate in Norfolk including Felbrigg Hall from his father s first cousin Thomas Wyndham d 1599 who like his two brothers Sir Roger and Francis d 1592 Judge of Common Pleas whose monument exists in St Peter Mancroft in Norwich died without issue Felbrigg was the seat of the senior line of the Wyndham family In gratitude he placed a monumental brass inlaid in Purbeck marble in Felbrigg Church 15 Sir Edmund Wyndham d 1568 was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Wyndham eldest son of Sir John Wyndham beheaded 1503 on Tower Hill with James Tyrrell by his first wife Lady Margaret Howard 4th daughter of John Howard 1st Duke of Norfolk d 1485 by his first wife Alianore Scrope daughter and heiress of Richard Scrope of Upsall Yorks Sir John also placed a monumental brass inlaid in Purbeck marble in Felbrigg Church to Thomas Wyndham s sister Jane Wyndham d 1608 Both brasses are in the same style but much smaller as those Sir John erected in Watchet church to his parents and in Ilminstaer Church to his uncle Nicholas Wadham The original accounts concerning the shipping and laying down of the Felbrigg brasses survive in the Wyndham papers at Felbrigg Hall and although the brasses are known to have been purchased in London the maker s name is not recorded 16 Sir John gave Felbrigg to his third son Thomas Wyndham d 1653 for whom he rebuilt the manor house completed in 1624 17 which survives today The arms of father impaling Portman and son impaling Lytton survive sculpted in stone side by side above the front door 18 Wadham inheritance edit nbsp Almshouses on Merryfield Lane Ilton built by Sir John Wyndham 1558 1645 believed to have been made from materials from the demolished Merryfield House He inherited part of the lands of his uncle Nicholas Wadham his mother having been one of his sisters and co heiresses Amongst the manors which fell to his share were Ilton in Somerset in which he promptly demolished the former Wadham seat of Merryfield According to Collinson 1791 19 When John Wyndham came to the estate disliking the situation of the house because it was surrounded with wood he pulled it down and with the materials built a farm house at a little distance now called Woodhouse and likewise an alms house in the village of Ilton There now remains no part of the ancient edifice except an old wall on the east side The seat was formerly moted round and the buildings exhibited many striking indications of remote antiquity dd Silverton in Devon where his descendant George Wyndham 4th Earl of Egremont 1786 1845 built Silverton Park or Egremont House a large neoclassical mansion demolished in 1901 He built it to compensate himself for having been excluded from the inheritance of Petworth House in Sussex by his uncle the 3rd Earl who bequeathed it instead to his illegitimate son and adopted heir Col George Wyndham ancestor of the present Baron Leconfield and Egremont Wadham in the parish of Knowstone in Devon the earliest seat of the Wadham family Marriage and children edit nbsp Joanna Portman d 13 September 1633 wife of Sir John Wyndham Gilt bronze cast relief plaque on purbeck marble slab Watchet ChurchSir John Wyndham married Joan Portman daughter of Sir Henry Portman d 1590 of Orchard Portman Somerset son of Sir William Portman d 1557 Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales by whom he had nine sons and six daughters Sons edit Henry Wyndham 1583 1613 eldest son scholar in civil law predeceased father John Wyndham d 1649 2nd son Thomas Wyndham d 1653 3rd son to whom his father gave Felbrigg Hall and jointly with him rebuilt the ancient manor house completed in 1624 20 The arms of father impaling Portman and son Wyndham with cadency mark of a crescent for difference of a second son impaling Lytton Ermine on a chief indented azure three ducal crowns or survive sculpted in stone side by side above the front door 21 He married Elizabeth Lytton Humphrey 6th son George Wyndham 6th son of Uffords Manor Cromer Norfolk George Wyndham senior 7th son 22 1592 1624 soldier Hugh Wyndham 8th son Baron of the Exchequer gt 23 the widow of Sir Henry Berkeley 1st Baronet of Wymondham Leicestershire 3 Catherine Fleming daughter of Sir Thomas Fleming d 1624 of North Stoneham Hampshire Sir Wadham Wyndham 9th son a judge of the King s Bench 24 Daughters edit Joan Wyndham married Col John Giffard 1602 1665 Margaret Wyndham married John Courtenay d 1660 Florence Wyndham married John Harris d 1657 Rachel Wyndham married Thomas Moore d 1695 Margery Wyndham married Thomas Carew of Crowcombe Court Anne Wyndham d 1645 married Sir John Strode c 1561 1642 25 Death burial and monument edit nbsp Monument to Sir John Wyndham and his wife Joan Portman St Decuman s Church Watchet Immediately adjacent to the right is the monument to his father and motherHe died on 1 April 1645 and was buried in Watchet Church Somerset where exists a memorial to him and his wife consisting of a large slab of purbeck marble erected vertically against the east wall of the north aisle chapel containing inlaid plaques of gilt bronze relief sculpted portraits and armorial shields See also editWyndham baronets Earl of EgremontSources editWyndham Hon Hugh Archibald later 4th Baron Leconfield A Family History The Wyndhams of Norfolk and Somerset 1939 Wyndham the Hon Hugh Archibald A Family History The Wyndhams of Somerset Sussex and Wiltshire 1950 Collinson John History of Somerset Vol 3 pp 486 496References edit Ketton Cremer Robert Wyndham Felbrigg the Story of a House London 1962 p 32 Blomefield op cit is in error as he does not derive the Orchard family from Eleanor Scrope which ancestry is clearly shown in the heraldry in Watchet Church He erroneously states John Windham the husband of Elizabeth Sydenham to be the younger brother of Sir Thomas Windham d 1521 therefore the brother in law not son of Eleanor Scrope 1402 may be her mother Margaret Deincourt s year of death Robson Thomas The British Herald Sydenham of Langford Som Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 484 Hoskins W G A New Survey of England Devon London 1959 first published 1954 p 402 Pevsner Nikolaus amp Cherry Bridget The Buildings of England Devon London 2004 p 467 Pole p 197 Ketton Cremer p 31 Emeny Richard A Description of Orchard Wyndham 2000 p 2 guide booklet available at Orchard Wyndham Ketton Cremer p 30 She probably went to Kentsford Manor House a secondary Wyndham seat a short distance west of the church rather than back to Orchard Wyndham about 2 miles south of the church T G Jackson Wadham College Oxford Thomas Graham Jackson Wadham College Oxford its Foundation Architecture and History with an Account of the Family of Wadham and their Seats in Somerset and Devon Oxford 1893 pp 12 13 North Erpingham Hundred Felbrigg british history ac uk Ketton Cremer Robert Wyndham Felbrigg the Story of a House London 1962 p 32 Ketton Cremer pp 35 6 Image Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Collinson Rev John 1791 History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset vol I 3 volumes ed Bath Eng Printed by R Cruttwell pp 46 50 Ketton Cremer Robert Wyndham Felbrigg the Story of a House London 1962 pp 35 6 Image Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback MachineImage Stated to be seventh born septimogenitus and Georgi us senior on his monument at Watchet Woodcote Park epsomandewellhistoryexplorer org uk CLERKE CLARKE George c 1626 89 of Watford Northants historyofparliamentonline org STRODE John c 1561 1642 of the Middle Temple London and Chantmarle Cattistock Dorset History of Parliament Online External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Wyndham thepeerage com Wyndham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Wyndham 1558 1645 amp oldid 1167931911, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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