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Lawrence Washington (1602–1652)

Lawrence Washington (2 November 1602 – 21 January 1652) was a High Church rector of the Church of England. He was an early ancestor to the Washington family of Virginia, being the paternal great-great-grandfather of U.S. President George Washington.[1]

Lawrence Washington
Rev. Lawrence Washington (1602–1652)
Born2 November 1602
Died21 January 1652 (aged 49)
Resting placeAll Saints' Church, Maldon, Essex
OccupationRector
SpouseAmphillis Twigden
ChildrenJohn Washington
Lawrence Washington
William Washington
Elizabeth Washington
Margaret Washington
Martha Washington
Parent(s)Lawrence Washington
Margaret Butler
FamilyWashington family

Family edit

Washington was born on 2 November 1602.[citation needed] He was the fifth son of Lawrence Washington (1565–1616) of Sulgrave Manor, Northamptonshire, son and heir of Robert Washington (1544–1619), of Sulgrave by his first wife Elizabeth Lyte, daughter and heiress of Walter Lyte of Radway, Warwickshire. His mother was Margaret Butler (1568- 16 March 1651), the eldest daughter and co-heiress of William Butler of Tyes Hall in Cuckfield, West Sussex, and Margaret Greeke, the daughter of Thomas Greeke, gentleman, of Palsters, Lancashire.

Lawrence Washington had seven brothers: Robert, Sir John, Sir William, Richard, Thomas, Gregory, and George; and nine sisters: Elizabeth, Joan, Margaret, Alice, Frances, Amy, Lucy, Barbara, and Jane.[2] His elder brother, Sir William Washington, married Anne Villiers, half-sister of James I's favourite, George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham.[3][1][4][5]

Washington was a great-great-grandson of John Washington (1478–1528) and Margaret Kitson, the sister of Sir Thomas Kitson of Hengrave.[1]

Career edit

Washington was admitted to Brasenose College, Oxford in 1619. He graduated in 1623 with a Bachelor of Arts,[6] and within a few days was elected a Fellow of the College. In 1626 he was awarded a Master of Arts, and in 1627 appointed university lector.

On 26 August 1632 the Archbishop of Canterbury William Laud made Washington proctor at Oxford University. In accordance with the desires of King Charles I, the Supreme Head of the Church of England, Laud sought to enforce the High Church reforms – known as Laudianism – and to rid the university of Puritan clergy. Dr. Washington was instrumental in carrying out the archbishop's purges.[7] Washington's services to Laud earned him an appointment to the well-compensated rectory of All Saints parish at Purleigh in Essex, a position he assumed in 1632. The appointment enabled Washington to marry Amphilis Twigden, a literate, wealthy young widow. Oxford dons were forbidden from marrying, and Washington had risked his post at the university by courting her.[7]

During the Civil War more than one hundred Church of England clergymen, referred to as "scandalous, malignant priests", were dismissed from their parishes for alleged high treason, Laudianism, or immorality by the Puritan Parliament.[8] In 1643, Washington was censured on trumped-up charges of being "a common frequenter of ale-houses" who "[encouraged] others in that beastly vice" and lost his benefice.[9]

Following his ejection from Purleigh, Washington became rector of the impoverished parish of Little Braxted, also in Essex. His wife and children did not accompany him there, as they were given shelter by the family of Sir Edwin Sandys, sympathetic relations whose patriarch had served as treasurer in the Virginia Company. Through the Sandys, Lawrence's son John secured an apprenticeship with a London merchant where he learned the tobacco trade.[10]

 
The Washington coat of arms

Washington died in poverty, leaving an estate of insufficient value to require the issuance of letters of administration, and was buried in the churchyard of All Saints' Church at Maldon, Essex.[6]

 
Memorial to Lawrence Washington in the churchyard of All Saints, Maldon, Essex

Three of Washington's children emigrated to Virginia, as did another family member, Sir Samuel Argall, whose widowed mother, Mary (d. 1598), had married Washington's great-uncle, Lawrence Washington (d. 1619) of Maidstone, Kent; he was Registrar of the Court of Chancery.[1][11][12]

Commemoration edit

In 1928 the Washington window, commemorating the Washington family, was given to All Saints' Church, Maldon, by the citizens of Malden, Massachusetts.[6][13]

Marriage and issue edit

In 1630 Washington met Amphilis Twigden on a visit to Pendley Manor in Tring, Hertfordshire.[14] Amphilis, baptized 2 February 1602, was the daughter and co-heiress of John Twigden of Little Creaton, Northamptonshire, and Anne Dicken, daughter of William Dicken. Lawrence and Amphilis married in Tring in December 1633, and had three sons and three daughters:[6][2]

  • Lt. Col. John Washington was born in 1633/4, shortly after his parents' marriage. He emigrated to Virginia in 1656. He married firstly, in 1658, Anne Pope (d.1668), the daughter of Nathaniel Pope, gentleman, of Virginia, by whom he had two sons, Lawrence (grandfather of George Washington) and John, and a daughter, Anne. He married secondly Anne (maiden name unknown), widow successively of Walter Broadhurst (d.1658), and Henry Brett. He married thirdly Frances Gerard, widow successively of Thomas Speak, Valentine Peyton and John Appleton. He left a will dated 21 September 1675, which was proved 10 January 1677:8. After his death, his widow, Frances, married William Hardidge.[15]
  • Lawrence Washington, who was baptized at Tring on 18 June 1635. He emigrated to Virginia before May 1659, but returned to England, becoming a merchant in Luton, Bedfordshire. He married firstly Mary Jones, daughter of Edmund Jones, gentleman, of Luton, by whom he had a son, Charles, and a daughter, Mary. He emigrated to Virginia a second time shortly before 27 September 1667. He married secondly, about 1669, Joyce Jones, widow successively of Anthony Hoskins and Alexander Fleming, and daughter of William Jones of Virginia, by whom he had a son, John, and a daughter, Anne. He left a will dated 27 September 1675, which was proved 6 June 1677. After his death his widow, Joyce, married James Yates.[15]
  • William Washington (baptised 14 October 1641).[2]
  • Elizabeth Washington (baptised 17 August 1636), who married a husband surnamed Rumbold.[2]
  • Margaret Washington, who married George Talbot.[2]
  • Martha Washington, who emigrated to Virginia in 1678. She married Samuel Hayward of Virginia, son of the London merchant Nicholas Hayward. There were no issue of the marriage. She left a will dated 6 May 1697, which was proved 8 December 1697.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Washington Family Tree". Sulgrave Manor, Northamptonshire. Archived from the original on 17 July 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Richardson IV 2011, p. 294.
  3. ^ Anne Villiers was the daughter of Sir George Villiers by his first wife, Audrey Saunders (d.1587); she was buried at Chelsea 25 May 1643.
  4. ^ Metcalfe 1887, p. 45.
  5. ^ Firth 1892, p. 416.
  6. ^ a b c d "Reverend Lawrence Washington, 1602-1652/3". Sulgrave Manor, Northamptonshire. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  7. ^ a b Randall 1997, p. 10.
  8. ^ White, John (1575–1648) "The First Century of Scandalous, Malignant Priests" (London:1643), listed as number 9 on p.4 Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  9. ^ Chernow 2010, p. 5.
  10. ^ Randall 1997, pp. 10–11.
  11. ^ Baldwin 2004.
  12. ^ Memorial to Lawrence Washington in All Saints Church, Maidstone Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  13. ^ All Saints Maldon - History of Our Parish and Church Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  14. ^ "George Washington & the Tring Connection". Tring Local History Museum. from the original on 27 October 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  15. ^ a b c Richardson IV 2011, p. 295.

See also edit

References edit

  • Baldwin, R.C.D. (2004). "Argall, Sir Samuel (bap. 1580, d. 1626)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/640. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Chernow, Ron (2010). Washington: A Life. New York: Penguin.
  • Firth, Charles Harding (1892). "Legge, William (1609?-1672)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 32. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 414–16.
  • Metcalfe, Walter C., ed. (1887). The Visitations of Northamptonshire Made in 1564 and 1618–19. London: Mitchell and Hughes. p. 45. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  • Randall, Willard Sterne (1997). George Washington: A Life. New York: Holt & Co.
  • Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Vol. IV (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. p. 417. ISBN 978-1460992708.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Frank E. Grizzard, Jr. George Washington, A Biographical Compendium Santa Barbara California, ABC-CLIO, 2002, details the portrait of Lawrence Washington with the contemporary phrasing of the charge laid against him and that led to his removal from Purleigh:
common frequenter of ale-houses, not only himself sitting daily tippling there, but also encouraging others in that beastly vice in op. cit. p. 5, s.v. Ancestry.
  • C. V. Wedgwood, The King's Peace 1637–1641 London and Glasgow, Collins Fontana, 1973
  • C. V. Wedgwood, The King's War 1641–1647 London and Glasgow, Collins Fontana, 1973
  • Christopher Hill, The Century of Revolution 1603–1714 London and New York, Routledge Classics, 2006
  • A. L. Rowse, The Elizabethan Renaissance: The Life of the Society London, Penguin Classic History, 2000
  • A. L. Rowse, Ralegh and the Throckmortons (1962) The Reprint Society, London, 1964 (index s.v. Sulgrave, Washington)
  • Wallace Notestein, The English People on the Eve of Colonization 1603–1630 New York, Harper&Brothers, 1954 in: The New American Nation Series (Steele Commager and Morris ed.)
  • Blair Worden ed., Stuart England Oxford, Phaedon 1986
  • Helen Gardner, (introduction, edition) The Metaphysical Poets Penguin Books, 1972 (biographical notes pp. 306–323)
  • Henry Morley, Character Writings of the Seventeenth Century London, George Routledge and Sons, 1891 in: The Carisbrooke Library. XIV
  • Hugh Ross Williamson, George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham: Study for a Biography London, Duckworth 1940
  • Glyn Redworth, The Prince and the Infanta: The Cultural Politics of the Spanish Match New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2003 (index s.v. Washington)
  • The Brazen Nose [the college's magazine], volume 41 (2006–7), page 110, for the story of the unpaid debt left by Lawrence.
  • The Washingtons of Tring by Murray Neil (Tring, 2013, ISBN 978-0954986025) includes information on the time Ahphyllis and her children lived in this small Hertfordshire Town.

External links edit

  • Will of Lawrence Washington, Register of His Majesty's High Court of Chancery, proved 10 January 1620, PROB 11/135/14, National Archives Retrieved 30 August 2013
  • at Rotherham Web, archived in 2009
  • Washington family, Sulgrave Manor, Northamptonshire Retrieved 15 July 2013
  • Sulgrave/Virginia family tree
  • Sulgrave Manor Website

lawrence, washington, 1602, 1652, lawrence, washington, november, 1602, january, 1652, high, church, rector, church, england, early, ancestor, washington, family, virginia, being, paternal, great, great, grandfather, president, george, washington, lawrence, wa. Lawrence Washington 2 November 1602 21 January 1652 was a High Church rector of the Church of England He was an early ancestor to the Washington family of Virginia being the paternal great great grandfather of U S President George Washington 1 Lawrence WashingtonRev Lawrence Washington 1602 1652 Born2 November 1602Kingdom of EnglandDied21 January 1652 aged 49 Kingdom of EnglandResting placeAll Saints Church Maldon EssexOccupationRectorSpouseAmphillis TwigdenChildrenJohn WashingtonLawrence WashingtonWilliam WashingtonElizabeth WashingtonMargaret WashingtonMartha WashingtonParent s Lawrence WashingtonMargaret ButlerFamilyWashington family Contents 1 Family 2 Career 3 Commemoration 4 Marriage and issue 5 Notes 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksFamily editWashington was born on 2 November 1602 citation needed He was the fifth son of Lawrence Washington 1565 1616 of Sulgrave Manor Northamptonshire son and heir of Robert Washington 1544 1619 of Sulgrave by his first wife Elizabeth Lyte daughter and heiress of Walter Lyte of Radway Warwickshire His mother was Margaret Butler 1568 16 March 1651 the eldest daughter and co heiress of William Butler of Tyes Hall in Cuckfield West Sussex and Margaret Greeke the daughter of Thomas Greeke gentleman of Palsters Lancashire Lawrence Washington had seven brothers Robert Sir John Sir William Richard Thomas Gregory and George and nine sisters Elizabeth Joan Margaret Alice Frances Amy Lucy Barbara and Jane 2 His elder brother Sir William Washington married Anne Villiers half sister of James I s favourite George Villiers 1st Duke of Buckingham 3 1 4 5 Washington was a great great grandson of John Washington 1478 1528 and Margaret Kitson the sister of Sir Thomas Kitson of Hengrave 1 Career editWashington was admitted to Brasenose College Oxford in 1619 He graduated in 1623 with a Bachelor of Arts 6 and within a few days was elected a Fellow of the College In 1626 he was awarded a Master of Arts and in 1627 appointed university lector On 26 August 1632 the Archbishop of Canterbury William Laud made Washington proctor at Oxford University In accordance with the desires of King Charles I the Supreme Head of the Church of England Laud sought to enforce the High Church reforms known as Laudianism and to rid the university of Puritan clergy Dr Washington was instrumental in carrying out the archbishop s purges 7 Washington s services to Laud earned him an appointment to the well compensated rectory of All Saints parish at Purleigh in Essex a position he assumed in 1632 The appointment enabled Washington to marry Amphilis Twigden a literate wealthy young widow Oxford dons were forbidden from marrying and Washington had risked his post at the university by courting her 7 During the Civil War more than one hundred Church of England clergymen referred to as scandalous malignant priests were dismissed from their parishes for alleged high treason Laudianism or immorality by the Puritan Parliament 8 In 1643 Washington was censured on trumped up charges of being a common frequenter of ale houses who encouraged others in that beastly vice and lost his benefice 9 Following his ejection from Purleigh Washington became rector of the impoverished parish of Little Braxted also in Essex His wife and children did not accompany him there as they were given shelter by the family of Sir Edwin Sandys sympathetic relations whose patriarch had served as treasurer in the Virginia Company Through the Sandys Lawrence s son John secured an apprenticeship with a London merchant where he learned the tobacco trade 10 nbsp The Washington coat of armsWashington died in poverty leaving an estate of insufficient value to require the issuance of letters of administration and was buried in the churchyard of All Saints Church at Maldon Essex 6 nbsp Memorial to Lawrence Washington in the churchyard of All Saints Maldon EssexThree of Washington s children emigrated to Virginia as did another family member Sir Samuel Argall whose widowed mother Mary d 1598 had married Washington s great uncle Lawrence Washington d 1619 of Maidstone Kent he was Registrar of the Court of Chancery 1 11 12 Commemoration editIn 1928 the Washington window commemorating the Washington family was given to All Saints Church Maldon by the citizens of Malden Massachusetts 6 13 Marriage and issue editIn 1630 Washington met Amphilis Twigden on a visit to Pendley Manor in Tring Hertfordshire 14 Amphilis baptized 2 February 1602 was the daughter and co heiress of John Twigden of Little Creaton Northamptonshire and Anne Dicken daughter of William Dicken Lawrence and Amphilis married in Tring in December 1633 and had three sons and three daughters 6 2 Lt Col John Washington was born in 1633 4 shortly after his parents marriage He emigrated to Virginia in 1656 He married firstly in 1658 Anne Pope d 1668 the daughter of Nathaniel Pope gentleman of Virginia by whom he had two sons Lawrence grandfather of George Washington and John and a daughter Anne He married secondly Anne maiden name unknown widow successively of Walter Broadhurst d 1658 and Henry Brett He married thirdly Frances Gerard widow successively of Thomas Speak Valentine Peyton and John Appleton He left a will dated 21 September 1675 which was proved 10 January 1677 8 After his death his widow Frances married William Hardidge 15 Lawrence Washington who was baptized at Tring on 18 June 1635 He emigrated to Virginia before May 1659 but returned to England becoming a merchant in Luton Bedfordshire He married firstly Mary Jones daughter of Edmund Jones gentleman of Luton by whom he had a son Charles and a daughter Mary He emigrated to Virginia a second time shortly before 27 September 1667 He married secondly about 1669 Joyce Jones widow successively of Anthony Hoskins and Alexander Fleming and daughter of William Jones of Virginia by whom he had a son John and a daughter Anne He left a will dated 27 September 1675 which was proved 6 June 1677 After his death his widow Joyce married James Yates 15 William Washington baptised 14 October 1641 2 Elizabeth Washington baptised 17 August 1636 who married a husband surnamed Rumbold 2 Margaret Washington who married George Talbot 2 Martha Washington who emigrated to Virginia in 1678 She married Samuel Hayward of Virginia son of the London merchant Nicholas Hayward There were no issue of the marriage She left a will dated 6 May 1697 which was proved 8 December 1697 15 Notes edit a b c d Washington Family Tree Sulgrave Manor Northamptonshire Archived from the original on 17 July 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2013 a b c d e Richardson IV 2011 p 294 Anne Villiers was the daughter of Sir George Villiers by his first wife Audrey Saunders d 1587 she was buried at Chelsea 25 May 1643 Metcalfe 1887 p 45 Firth 1892 p 416 a b c d Reverend Lawrence Washington 1602 1652 3 Sulgrave Manor Northamptonshire Archived from the original on 27 August 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2013 a b Randall 1997 p 10 White John 1575 1648 The First Century of Scandalous Malignant Priests London 1643 listed as number 9 on p 4 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Chernow 2010 p 5 Randall 1997 pp 10 11 Baldwin 2004 Memorial to Lawrence Washington in All Saints Church Maidstone Retrieved 30 August 2013 All Saints Maldon History of Our Parish and Church Retrieved 13 March 2019 George Washington amp the Tring Connection Tring Local History Museum Archived from the original on 27 October 2017 Retrieved 27 October 2017 a b c Richardson IV 2011 p 295 See also editWashington familyReferences editBaldwin R C D 2004 Argall Sir Samuel bap 1580 d 1626 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 640 Subscription or UK public library membership required Chernow Ron 2010 Washington A Life New York Penguin Firth Charles Harding 1892 Legge William 1609 1672 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 32 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 414 16 Metcalfe Walter C ed 1887 The Visitations of Northamptonshire Made in 1564 and 1618 19 London Mitchell and Hughes p 45 Retrieved 30 August 2013 Randall Willard Sterne 1997 George Washington A Life New York Holt amp Co Richardson Douglas 2011 Everingham Kimball G ed Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Vol IV 2nd ed Salt Lake City p 417 ISBN 978 1460992708 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Frank E Grizzard Jr George Washington A Biographical Compendium Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO 2002 details the portrait of Lawrence Washington with the contemporary phrasing of the charge laid against him and that led to his removal from Purleigh common frequenter of ale houses not only himself sitting daily tippling there but also encouraging others in that beastly vice in op cit p 5 s v Ancestry C V Wedgwood The King s Peace 1637 1641 London and Glasgow Collins Fontana 1973 C V Wedgwood The King s War 1641 1647 London and Glasgow Collins Fontana 1973 Christopher Hill The Century of Revolution 1603 1714 London and New York Routledge Classics 2006 A L Rowse The Elizabethan Renaissance The Life of the Society London Penguin Classic History 2000 A L Rowse Ralegh and the Throckmortons 1962 The Reprint Society London 1964 index s v Sulgrave Washington Wallace Notestein The English People on the Eve of Colonization 1603 1630 New York Harper amp Brothers 1954 in The New American Nation Series Steele Commager and Morris ed Blair Worden ed Stuart England Oxford Phaedon 1986 Helen Gardner introduction edition The Metaphysical Poets Penguin Books 1972 biographical notes pp 306 323 Henry Morley Character Writings of the Seventeenth Century London George Routledge and Sons 1891 in The Carisbrooke Library XIV Hugh Ross Williamson George Villiers First Duke of Buckingham Study for a Biography London Duckworth 1940 Glyn Redworth The Prince and the Infanta The Cultural Politics of the Spanish Match New Haven and London Yale University Press 2003 index s v Washington The Brazen Nose the college s magazine volume 41 2006 7 page 110 for the story of the unpaid debt left by Lawrence The Washingtons of Tring by Murray Neil Tring 2013 ISBN 978 0954986025 includes information on the time Ahphyllis and her children lived in this small Hertfordshire Town External links editWill of Lawrence Washington Register of His Majesty s High Court of Chancery proved 10 January 1620 PROB 11 135 14 National Archives Retrieved 30 August 2013 Washington genealogy at Rotherham Web archived in 2009 Washington family Sulgrave Manor Northamptonshire Retrieved 15 July 2013 Sulgrave Virginia family tree Lawrence Washington Sandys connection Sulgrave Manor Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lawrence Washington 1602 1652 amp oldid 1187943648, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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