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Newnham (Old)

Newnham (since circa 1718[1] Old Newnham) in the parish of Plympton St Mary in Devon is a historic estate long held by the Devonshire gentry family of Strode.[2] The ancient mansion house is situated 1 mile north-east of St Mary's Church, beside the Smallhanger Brook, a tributary of the Tory Brook, itself flowing into the River Plym. The house was abandoned by the Strode family in about 1700 when they built a new mansion on the site of Loughtor Manor House, about 1/3 mile to the north-east of Old Newnham.

Old Newnham in 2014, looking northward
Old Newnham, west wing, looking north-eastward
"Nuneham Mills", one of three 1797 watercolours by Rev. John Swete (d.1821) of the mill attached to the manor of Newnham. Devon Record Office 564M/F13/65

Monuments to the Strode family survive in St Mary's Church, Plympton, including the canopied stone effigy of Richard Strode (d.1464), showing a recumbent knight clad in armour. The mural monument of William II Strode (d.1637) and his family shows him kneeling with his two wives on either side and ten children below. The kneeling effigy mural monument to his daughter Ursula Strode, the wife of Sir John III Chichester of Hall, North Devon, survives in Bishop's Tawton Church. A notable member of this family and William II Strode's second son was the parliamentarian Sir William Strode (1594–1645), one of the Five Members whom King Charles I attempted to arrest in the House of Commons in 1642. In 1538 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries the Strode family purchased the demesne lands of Plympton Priory[3] the second wealthiest monastery in Devon, and thus greatly expanded their estate. The Parliamentary Rotten Borough of Plympton Erle (abolished following the Reform Act of 1832) was controlled by the Strode family and the Treby family of Plympton House, and thus several Members of Parliament for the borough were members of these two families or were nominated by them.

Descent of estate edit

de Plympton edit

According to the Devon historian Sir William Pole (d.1635) the descent of the estate of Newnham was as follows:

  • Simon de Plimton, in residence during the reign of King Edward I (1272–1307)
  • John de Plimton, in residence in 1314

de Newenham edit

 
Arms of de Newnham: Argent, three eagles displayed gules crowned or[4]
  • Simon de Newenham (son of John de Plimton), who took the surname de Newenham. He married Cicely de Doddescombe, one of the five daughters and co-heiress of John de Doddescombe (fl. temp. King Edward III (1327–1377)) of Doddescombe Leigh[5] and Compton Pole.[6]
  • John de Newenham (son)
  • Simon de Newenham (son)
  • Melior de Newenham (daughter and heiress), who married John Strode of Strode in the parish of Ermington in Devon,[7] to which family thus passed the estate of Newnham.

Strode edit

 
Arms of Strode: Argent, a chevron between three conies courant sable. Detail from mural monument to Sir William IV Strode (1562–1637) in St Mary's Church, Plympton

The de Strode family originated at the estate of Strode in the parish of Ermington in Devon,[8] from which they took their surname. Today's Strode Farmhouse incorporates traces of the ancient former mansion house of the Strodes.[9]

Strode of Strode edit

The ancestry of the Strode family of Strode is recorded by Pole as follows:[10]

  • Adam de Strode was in residence during the reign of King Henry III (1216–1272)[11] and was one of the gentlemen of Devon summoned by royal herald to attend King Edward I (1272–1307) in his Scottish wars.[12]
  • Roger de Strode
  • Richard I de Strode
  • William I de Strode
  • John I de Strode
  • Reginald de Strode, who married Florence[13]
  • John II de Strode (son), who during the reign of King Henry IV (1399–1413) married Melior de Newnham, heiress of Newnham. The Strodes thenceforth made Newnham their principal residence, although they were still in possession of the estate of Strode in the early 17th century.[14]

Strode of Newnham edit

The descent of the Strode family of Newnham is as follows:[15]

John II de Strode edit

John II de Strode, who during the reign of King Henry IV (1399–1413) married Melior de Newnham, daughter and heiress of Simon de Newenham.

John III Strode edit

John III Strode (son) who married Joane Burley, daughter of a certain Burley of Clanacombe

 
Effigy of Richard II Strode (d.1464) of Newnham, detail from his canopied monument in St Mary's Church, Plympton
 
Monument to Richard II Strode (d.1464) of Newnham. St Mary's Church, Plympton
Richard II Strode (d.1464) edit

Richard II Strode (d.1464) (son), who married Margaret Fortescue, a daughter of Sir Henry Fortescue (fl. 1426), Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in Ireland, who had married as his first wife Jane Bozun, daughter of Edmond Bozun of Wood in the parish of Woodleigh,[16] Devon, and Wood became the residence of his son and heir John Fortescue, and passed to his male descendants for three generations[17] and then to Fortescue cousins. Sir Henry was a younger son of the Fortescue family whose earliest known seat in Devon was Wympstone in the parish of Modbury,[18] later Earls Fortescue seated at Castle Hill, Filleigh. Richard II Strode's canopied effigy survives in St Mary's Church, Plympton, against the north chancel aisle of the north aisle chapel.

William II Strode (d.1518) edit

William II Strode (d.1518) (eldest son), who married three times without progeny

Richard III Strode edit

Richard III Strode (brother), who married Joan Pennalls, daughter of Ellis Pennalls of Plympton. Possibly identical in person to Richard Strode (floruit 1512) who was MP for Plympton Erle in 1512 and was responsible for having instigated Strode's case, one of the earliest and most important English legal cases dealing with parliamentary privilege.[19]

Richard IV Strode (d.1552) edit
 
Canting arms of Militon: Gules, a chevron or between three millets hauriant argent[20]

Richard IV Strode (d.1552)(son), who married Agnes Milliton, daughter of John Milliton of Meavy, about 6 miles north of Newnham. Meavy was later one of the residences of Sir William IV Strode (1562–1637),[21] and later became the seat of the latter's 2nd son William Strode (1594–1645), MP.[22] In 1538 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries Richard IV purchased the demesne lands of Plympton Priory[23] the second wealthiest monastery in Devon, and thus greatly expanded his estate.

William III Strode (1512-1579) edit

William III Strode (1512–1579) (son), married his neighbour Elizabeth Courtenay, daughter and heiress of Philip Courtenay of Loughtor, a younger son of Sir Philip Courtenay (d.1488) of Molland in North Devon.[24] Thus Loughtor passed into the possession of the Strode family.[25] The mansion house of the estate of Loughtor was situated within the parish of Plympton St Mary, on a hill about 1/3 mile north-east of Newnham, and to this site the Strode family later moved its residence, where in about 1700 a new mansion house was built near or on the site of Loughtor House and named "Newnham Park",[26] which survives today. The Courtenay family of Molland were a junior branch of the Courtenay family of Powderham, itself a junior branch of the Courtenay Earls of Devon, feudal barons of Plympton and feudal barons of Okehampton, seated at Tiverton Castle. The canopied effigy of William Courtenay of Loughtor survives, in a mutilated state, in St Mary's Church, Plympton. The 6th son of William III Strode (1512–1579) was Rev. Sampson Strode (born 1552), rector of Dittisham, whose great-great-grandson was Richard Strode (1750–1790) of Boterford, who inherited the ancient estates of the senior Strodes on the failure of the male line of Strode of Newnham, following the death in 1767 of William Strode of Newnham.[27] The 4th son was Philip Strode (d.1605) who married Wilmot Houghton, daughter of William Houghton of Houghton Towers, Lancaster, and was the father of William Strode (1602–1644), Doctor of Divinity and Public Orator of Oxford University, one of the Worthies of Devon of John Prince (d.1723),[28] who called him "this reverend divine, this rare poet, this charming orator".

Richard V Strode (d.1581) edit

Richard V Strode (d.1581) (son), who married Frances Cromwell, first cousin of King Edward VI (1547–1553). Frances was a daughter of Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell (c. 1520 – 1551) (only son of Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex (c.1485 – 1540), chief minister of King Henry VIII) by his wife Elizabeth Seymour, sister of Queen Jane Seymour and sister of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset[29] (c. 1500-1552) uncle and Lord Protector of King Edward VI.

 
Mural monument to Sir William IV Strode (d.1637), his 2 wives and 10 children, St Mary's Church, Plympton
 
Relief sculpted panel depicting the progeny of Sir William IV Strode (d.1637) of Newnham, detail from the latter's mural monument in St Mary's Church, Plympton. The eldest son (right) is Sir Richard VI Strode (1584–1669) and the 2nd son (middle) is William Strode (1594–1645), MP, one of the Five Members, who erected the monument[30]
Sir William IV Strode (1562-1637) edit

Sir William IV Strode (1562–1637) (son), whose mural monument survives in St Mary's Church, Plympton. He was MP for Devon in 1597 and 1624, for Plympton Erle in 1601, 1604, 1621 and 1625, and for Plymouth in 1614, was High Sheriff of Devon from 1593 to 1594 and was Deputy Lieutenant of Devon from 1599. His 2nd son was William Strode (1594–1645), MP, one of the Five Members whose impeachment and attempted unconstitutional arrest by King Charles I in the House of Commons in 1642 sparked the Civil War.

Sir Richard VI Strode (1584-1669) edit

Sir Richard VI Strode (1584–1669) (eldest son), also resident at Chalmington in Dorset, who served as MP for Bere Alston in 1604, Bridport in 1626 and for Plympton Erle in 1640. He was a puritan and during the Civil War a parliamentarian who raised a force of 3,000 dragoons.[31]

William V Strode (1614-1676) edit

William V Strode (1614–1676) (son), twice MP for Plympton Erle, in 1660 and 1661-1676.

Richard VII Strode (1638-1707) edit

Richard VII Strode (1638–1707) (eldest son from 1st marriage), MP for Plympton Erle.[32] He died unmarried. Together with his near neighbour Sir George Treby (d.1700) of Plympton House, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, also an MP for Plympton Erle, he financed the building of Plympton Guildhall which he gave to the Borough of Plympton.[33][34]

William Strode (d.1718) edit

William Strode (d.1718) (half-brother), died without progeny.

Sidney II Strode (1684-1721) edit

Sidney II Strode (1684–1721), (nephew, son of Sidney I Strode (1655–1712), younger brother of William Strode (d.1718)), who abandoned Old Newnham and moved his residence to the manor of Loughtor, 1/3 mile to the north-east, where he rebuilt the manor house and called it "Newnham Park"[35] He married Ann Trevanion, daughter of Sir Nicholas Trevanion, by whom he had a son William Strode (1718–1767) who died without progeny, when the heir to Newnham became his distant cousin Richard Strode (1750–1790) of Boterford, North Huish, Devon,[36] descended from William Strode (d.1579) of Newnham by his wife Elizabeth Courtenay, heiress of Loughtor.[37]

For further descents of this family up to 2014 see Newnham Park

Let to tenants edit

 
 
Left:"Nuneham Old House", 1797 watercolour by Rev John Swete (1752–1821), view looking north-west; right: the same view in 2014

Following the removal of Sidney II Strode (1684–1721) to Loughtor ("Newnham Park"), Old Newnham was let to tenants. In 1797 Rev John Swete visited Old Newnham, which he painted in watercolour, and made the following entry in his travel journal, having just visited Newnham Park:[38]

"Reluctantly therefore quitting a scenery so very picturesque I returned by the mill to the public road on which I had rode but a short way when from a rising of a hill I had a prospect of an old mansion in a bottom on the left, its appearance was exceedingly antique, of the architecture which subsisted two or three centuries past. In a guess that I made as to this edifice being Old Newnham, I found from the information gained from a labourer, that I was right...This mansion, the remains of which even now were respectable...The pile of buildings was large and apparently constructed at different periods. It was now inhabited, and had been for a considerable time, by a farmer who rented part of the demesne and much of it seem'd in a state of dilapidation. Having from within a gate of the courtyard taken hastily the foregoing sketch, I proceeded toward Cornwood..."

Old Newnham in 2014 edit

In 2014 Old Newnham House, having been converted into two residences, is in multiple ownership. The landed estate however forms part of the 1,550 acre estate of Newnham Park, formerly Loughtor. Part of the land now forms the Newnham Industrial Estate, a few hundred yards to the west of Old Newnham House. In 2014 Newnham Park mansion house and estate are still owned by a descendant of the Strode family, via female lines, in the person of David Michael Strode Cobbald (born 1961), who operates the estate as a clay-pigeon shooting ground[39] and benefits from various mineral mines on the estate.

Sources edit

  • Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, pp. 718–20, pedigree of Strode of Newnham
  • Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, pp. 329–10, Newenham & Loughtorre
  • Risdon, Tristram (d.1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, pp. 197–8, 395, Newnham & Loughter
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, pp. 582–4, Old Newnham & Newnham Park
  • Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, pp. 2172–3, Strode of Newnham Park
  • Gray, Todd & Rowe, Margery (Eds.), Travels in Georgian Devon: The Illustrated Journals of The Reverend John Swete, 1789-1800, 4 vols., Tiverton, 1999, vil 4, pp. 17–20

References edit

  1. ^ Following death in 1718 of William Strode his heir was his nephew Sidney II Strode (1684-1721) who moved his residence from Old Newnham to Loughtor, see below
  2. ^ Vivian, Heralds' Visitations of Devon, 1895, pp.718–20, pedigree of Strode of Newnham
  3. ^ Pole, p.326
  4. ^ As shown on a painted escutcheon (c.1900?) displayed inside Newnham Park. Pole gives the arms of "Newenham of Newenham" as Argent, 3 eglets displayed geules (Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.494)
  5. ^ Pole, pp.256, 329
  6. ^ Pole, p.280
  7. ^ Pole, p.280
  8. ^ Pole, pp.319, 329
  9. ^ Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.393
  10. ^ Pole, p.319
  11. ^ Pole, p.319
  12. ^ Risdon, p.198; Prince, John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, p.730: "As appears from Rolls in the Tower" (of London)
  13. ^ Pole, p.319; Vivian, p.718
  14. ^ Pole, writing in the early 17th century, p.319: "(They) keepe Strode unto this day"
  15. ^ Vivian, Heralds' Visitations of Devon, 1895, pp.718–19
  16. ^ Risdon, p.181; Pevsner, p.920
  17. ^ Vivian, p.352-3, pedigree of Fortescue
  18. ^ Risdon, Tristram (d.1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.181
  19. ^ Hawkyard, A.D.K., biography of Richard Strode published in History of Parliament: House of Commons 1509-1558, ed. S.T. Bindoff, 1982
  20. ^ Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.493
  21. ^ Risdon, ("Meavy Church") p.195; Pole, ("Mewy") p.337
  22. ^ Vivian, p.719
  23. ^ Pole, p.326
  24. ^ Vivian, p.251 & 718
  25. ^ Risdon, pp.197,395
  26. ^ Pevsner, pp.583-4
  27. ^ Vivian, p.720
  28. ^ Prince, John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, pp.730-735, biography of Strode, William, Doctor of Divinity
  29. ^ Risdon, p.198
  30. ^ As stated at the bottom of the Latin inscription: Monumentum hoc posuit Guilielmus Strode ("William Strode placed this monument")
  31. ^ Ferris, John. P. & Hunneyball, Paul, biography of Richard Strode (d.1669) published in History of Parliament: House of Commons 1604-1629, ed. Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris, 2010
  32. ^ "STRODE, Richard (1638-1707), of Newnham, Plympton St. Mary, Devon. | History of Parliament Online".
  33. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.684
  34. ^ The front of the building shows two matching stone heraldic tablets, one surviving in good condition showing the arms of Treby inscribed "Sir George Treby, Knt, 1688" (See File:1688TrebyArms PlymptonGuildhall.JPG) the other, presumably of Strode, completely worn away and illegible
  35. ^ Risdon, p.395
  36. ^ Vivian, p.720; Risdon, p.385-6
  37. ^ Vivian, pp.718-20
  38. ^ Swete, vol.4, pp.19-20
  39. ^ "Home". newnham.co.uk.

newnham, newnham, since, circa, 1718, newnham, parish, plympton, mary, devon, historic, estate, long, held, devonshire, gentry, family, strode, ancient, mansion, house, situated, mile, north, east, mary, church, beside, smallhanger, brook, tributary, tory, bro. Newnham since circa 1718 1 Old Newnham in the parish of Plympton St Mary in Devon is a historic estate long held by the Devonshire gentry family of Strode 2 The ancient mansion house is situated 1 mile north east of St Mary s Church beside the Smallhanger Brook a tributary of the Tory Brook itself flowing into the River Plym The house was abandoned by the Strode family in about 1700 when they built a new mansion on the site of Loughtor Manor House about 1 3 mile to the north east of Old Newnham Old Newnham in 2014 looking northwardOld Newnham west wing looking north eastward Nuneham Mills one of three 1797 watercolours by Rev John Swete d 1821 of the mill attached to the manor of Newnham Devon Record Office 564M F13 65Monuments to the Strode family survive in St Mary s Church Plympton including the canopied stone effigy of Richard Strode d 1464 showing a recumbent knight clad in armour The mural monument of William II Strode d 1637 and his family shows him kneeling with his two wives on either side and ten children below The kneeling effigy mural monument to his daughter Ursula Strode the wife of Sir John III Chichester of Hall North Devon survives in Bishop s Tawton Church A notable member of this family and William II Strode s second son was the parliamentarian Sir William Strode 1594 1645 one of the Five Members whom King Charles I attempted to arrest in the House of Commons in 1642 In 1538 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries the Strode family purchased the demesne lands of Plympton Priory 3 the second wealthiest monastery in Devon and thus greatly expanded their estate The Parliamentary Rotten Borough of Plympton Erle abolished following the Reform Act of 1832 was controlled by the Strode family and the Treby family of Plympton House and thus several Members of Parliament for the borough were members of these two families or were nominated by them Contents 1 Descent of estate 1 1 de Plympton 1 2 de Newenham 1 3 Strode 1 3 1 Strode of Strode 1 3 2 Strode of Newnham 1 3 2 1 John II de Strode 1 3 2 2 John III Strode 1 3 2 3 Richard II Strode d 1464 1 3 2 4 William II Strode d 1518 1 3 2 5 Richard III Strode 1 3 2 6 Richard IV Strode d 1552 1 3 2 7 William III Strode 1512 1579 1 3 2 8 Richard V Strode d 1581 1 3 2 9 Sir William IV Strode 1562 1637 1 3 2 10 Sir Richard VI Strode 1584 1669 1 3 2 11 William V Strode 1614 1676 1 3 2 12 Richard VII Strode 1638 1707 1 3 2 13 William Strode d 1718 1 3 2 14 Sidney II Strode 1684 1721 1 3 3 Let to tenants 1 4 Old Newnham in 2014 2 Sources 3 ReferencesDescent of estate editde Plympton edit According to the Devon historian Sir William Pole d 1635 the descent of the estate of Newnham was as follows Simon de Plimton in residence during the reign of King Edward I 1272 1307 John de Plimton in residence in 1314de Newenham edit nbsp Arms of de Newnham Argent three eagles displayed gules crowned or 4 Simon de Newenham son of John de Plimton who took the surname de Newenham He married Cicely de Doddescombe one of the five daughters and co heiress of John de Doddescombe fl temp King Edward III 1327 1377 of Doddescombe Leigh 5 and Compton Pole 6 John de Newenham son Simon de Newenham son Melior de Newenham daughter and heiress who married John Strode of Strode in the parish of Ermington in Devon 7 to which family thus passed the estate of Newnham Strode edit nbsp Arms of Strode Argent a chevron between three conies courant sable Detail from mural monument to Sir William IV Strode 1562 1637 in St Mary s Church PlymptonThe de Strode family originated at the estate of Strode in the parish of Ermington in Devon 8 from which they took their surname Today s Strode Farmhouse incorporates traces of the ancient former mansion house of the Strodes 9 Strode of Strode edit The ancestry of the Strode family of Strode is recorded by Pole as follows 10 Adam de Strode was in residence during the reign of King Henry III 1216 1272 11 and was one of the gentlemen of Devon summoned by royal herald to attend King Edward I 1272 1307 in his Scottish wars 12 Roger de Strode Richard I de Strode William I de Strode John I de Strode Reginald de Strode who married Florence 13 John II de Strode son who during the reign of King Henry IV 1399 1413 married Melior de Newnham heiress of Newnham The Strodes thenceforth made Newnham their principal residence although they were still in possession of the estate of Strode in the early 17th century 14 Strode of Newnham edit The descent of the Strode family of Newnham is as follows 15 John II de Strode edit John II de Strode who during the reign of King Henry IV 1399 1413 married Melior de Newnham daughter and heiress of Simon de Newenham John III Strode edit John III Strode son who married Joane Burley daughter of a certain Burley of Clanacombe nbsp Effigy of Richard II Strode d 1464 of Newnham detail from his canopied monument in St Mary s Church Plympton nbsp Monument to Richard II Strode d 1464 of Newnham St Mary s Church PlymptonRichard II Strode d 1464 edit Richard II Strode d 1464 son who married Margaret Fortescue a daughter of Sir Henry Fortescue fl 1426 Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in Ireland who had married as his first wife Jane Bozun daughter of Edmond Bozun of Wood in the parish of Woodleigh 16 Devon and Wood became the residence of his son and heir John Fortescue and passed to his male descendants for three generations 17 and then to Fortescue cousins Sir Henry was a younger son of the Fortescue family whose earliest known seat in Devon was Wympstone in the parish of Modbury 18 later Earls Fortescue seated at Castle Hill Filleigh Richard II Strode s canopied effigy survives in St Mary s Church Plympton against the north chancel aisle of the north aisle chapel William II Strode d 1518 edit William II Strode d 1518 eldest son who married three times without progeny Richard III Strode edit Richard III Strode brother who married Joan Pennalls daughter of Ellis Pennalls of Plympton Possibly identical in person to Richard Strode floruit 1512 who was MP for Plympton Erle in 1512 and was responsible for having instigated Strode s case one of the earliest and most important English legal cases dealing with parliamentary privilege 19 Richard IV Strode d 1552 edit nbsp Canting arms of Militon Gules a chevron or between three millets hauriant argent 20 Richard IV Strode d 1552 son who married Agnes Milliton daughter of John Milliton of Meavy about 6 miles north of Newnham Meavy was later one of the residences of Sir William IV Strode 1562 1637 21 and later became the seat of the latter s 2nd son William Strode 1594 1645 MP 22 In 1538 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries Richard IV purchased the demesne lands of Plympton Priory 23 the second wealthiest monastery in Devon and thus greatly expanded his estate William III Strode 1512 1579 edit William III Strode 1512 1579 son married his neighbour Elizabeth Courtenay daughter and heiress of Philip Courtenay of Loughtor a younger son of Sir Philip Courtenay d 1488 of Molland in North Devon 24 Thus Loughtor passed into the possession of the Strode family 25 The mansion house of the estate of Loughtor was situated within the parish of Plympton St Mary on a hill about 1 3 mile north east of Newnham and to this site the Strode family later moved its residence where in about 1700 a new mansion house was built near or on the site of Loughtor House and named Newnham Park 26 which survives today The Courtenay family of Molland were a junior branch of the Courtenay family of Powderham itself a junior branch of the Courtenay Earls of Devon feudal barons of Plympton and feudal barons of Okehampton seated at Tiverton Castle The canopied effigy of William Courtenay of Loughtor survives in a mutilated state in St Mary s Church Plympton The 6th son of William III Strode 1512 1579 was Rev Sampson Strode born 1552 rector of Dittisham whose great great grandson was Richard Strode 1750 1790 of Boterford who inherited the ancient estates of the senior Strodes on the failure of the male line of Strode of Newnham following the death in 1767 of William Strode of Newnham 27 The 4th son was Philip Strode d 1605 who married Wilmot Houghton daughter of William Houghton of Houghton Towers Lancaster and was the father of William Strode 1602 1644 Doctor of Divinity and Public Orator of Oxford University one of the Worthies of Devon of John Prince d 1723 28 who called him this reverend divine this rare poet this charming orator Richard V Strode d 1581 edit Richard V Strode d 1581 son who married Frances Cromwell first cousin of King Edward VI 1547 1553 Frances was a daughter of Gregory Cromwell 1st Baron Cromwell c 1520 1551 only son of Thomas Cromwell 1st Earl of Essex c 1485 1540 chief minister of King Henry VIII by his wife Elizabeth Seymour sister of Queen Jane Seymour and sister of Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset 29 c 1500 1552 uncle and Lord Protector of King Edward VI nbsp Mural monument to Sir William IV Strode d 1637 his 2 wives and 10 children St Mary s Church Plympton nbsp Relief sculpted panel depicting the progeny of Sir William IV Strode d 1637 of Newnham detail from the latter s mural monument in St Mary s Church Plympton The eldest son right is Sir Richard VI Strode 1584 1669 and the 2nd son middle is William Strode 1594 1645 MP one of the Five Members who erected the monument 30 Sir William IV Strode 1562 1637 edit Sir William IV Strode 1562 1637 son whose mural monument survives in St Mary s Church Plympton He was MP for Devon in 1597 and 1624 for Plympton Erle in 1601 1604 1621 and 1625 and for Plymouth in 1614 was High Sheriff of Devon from 1593 to 1594 and was Deputy Lieutenant of Devon from 1599 His 2nd son was William Strode 1594 1645 MP one of the Five Members whose impeachment and attempted unconstitutional arrest by King Charles I in the House of Commons in 1642 sparked the Civil War Sir Richard VI Strode 1584 1669 edit Sir Richard VI Strode 1584 1669 eldest son also resident at Chalmington in Dorset who served as MP for Bere Alston in 1604 Bridport in 1626 and for Plympton Erle in 1640 He was a puritan and during the Civil War a parliamentarian who raised a force of 3 000 dragoons 31 William V Strode 1614 1676 edit William V Strode 1614 1676 son twice MP for Plympton Erle in 1660 and 1661 1676 Richard VII Strode 1638 1707 edit Richard VII Strode 1638 1707 eldest son from 1st marriage MP for Plympton Erle 32 He died unmarried Together with his near neighbour Sir George Treby d 1700 of Plympton House Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas also an MP for Plympton Erle he financed the building of Plympton Guildhall which he gave to the Borough of Plympton 33 34 William Strode d 1718 edit William Strode d 1718 half brother died without progeny Sidney II Strode 1684 1721 edit Sidney II Strode 1684 1721 nephew son of Sidney I Strode 1655 1712 younger brother of William Strode d 1718 who abandoned Old Newnham and moved his residence to the manor of Loughtor 1 3 mile to the north east where he rebuilt the manor house and called it Newnham Park 35 He married Ann Trevanion daughter of Sir Nicholas Trevanion by whom he had a son William Strode 1718 1767 who died without progeny when the heir to Newnham became his distant cousin Richard Strode 1750 1790 of Boterford North Huish Devon 36 descended from William Strode d 1579 of Newnham by his wife Elizabeth Courtenay heiress of Loughtor 37 For further descents of this family up to 2014 see Newnham Park Let to tenants edit nbsp nbsp Left Nuneham Old House 1797 watercolour by Rev John Swete 1752 1821 view looking north west right the same view in 2014 Following the removal of Sidney II Strode 1684 1721 to Loughtor Newnham Park Old Newnham was let to tenants In 1797 Rev John Swete visited Old Newnham which he painted in watercolour and made the following entry in his travel journal having just visited Newnham Park 38 Reluctantly therefore quitting a scenery so very picturesque I returned by the mill to the public road on which I had rode but a short way when from a rising of a hill I had a prospect of an old mansion in a bottom on the left its appearance was exceedingly antique of the architecture which subsisted two or three centuries past In a guess that I made as to this edifice being Old Newnham I found from the information gained from a labourer that I was right This mansion the remains of which even now were respectable The pile of buildings was large and apparently constructed at different periods It was now inhabited and had been for a considerable time by a farmer who rented part of the demesne and much of it seem d in a state of dilapidation Having from within a gate of the courtyard taken hastily the foregoing sketch I proceeded toward Cornwood Old Newnham in 2014 edit In 2014 Old Newnham House having been converted into two residences is in multiple ownership The landed estate however forms part of the 1 550 acre estate of Newnham Park formerly Loughtor Part of the land now forms the Newnham Industrial Estate a few hundred yards to the west of Old Newnham House In 2014 Newnham Park mansion house and estate are still owned by a descendant of the Strode family via female lines in the person of David Michael Strode Cobbald born 1961 who operates the estate as a clay pigeon shooting ground 39 and benefits from various mineral mines on the estate Sources editVivian Lt Col J L Ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 pp 718 20 pedigree of Strode of Newnham Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 pp 329 10 Newenham amp Loughtorre Risdon Tristram d 1640 Survey of Devon 1811 edition London 1811 with 1810 Additions pp 197 8 395 Newnham amp Loughter Pevsner Nikolaus amp Cherry Bridget The Buildings of England Devon London 2004 pp 582 4 Old Newnham amp Newnham Park Burke s Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry 15th Edition ed Pirie Gordon H London 1937 pp 2172 3 Strode of Newnham Park Gray Todd amp Rowe Margery Eds Travels in Georgian Devon The Illustrated Journals of The Reverend John Swete 1789 1800 4 vols Tiverton 1999 vil 4 pp 17 20References edit Following death in 1718 of William Strode his heir was his nephew Sidney II Strode 1684 1721 who moved his residence from Old Newnham to Loughtor see below Vivian Heralds Visitations of Devon 1895 pp 718 20 pedigree of Strode of Newnham Pole p 326 As shown on a painted escutcheon c 1900 displayed inside Newnham Park Pole gives the arms of Newenham of Newenham as Argent 3 eglets displayed geules Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 494 Pole pp 256 329 Pole p 280 Pole p 280 Pole pp 319 329 Hoskins W G A New Survey of England Devon London 1959 first published 1954 p 393 Pole p 319 Pole p 319 Risdon p 198 Prince John 1643 1723 The Worthies of Devon 1810 edition p 730 As appears from Rolls in the Tower of London Pole p 319 Vivian p 718 Pole writing in the early 17th century p 319 They keepe Strode unto this day Vivian Heralds Visitations of Devon 1895 pp 718 19 Risdon p 181 Pevsner p 920 Vivian p 352 3 pedigree of Fortescue Risdon Tristram d 1640 Survey of Devon 1811 edition London 1811 with 1810 Additions p 181 Hawkyard A D K biography of Richard Strode published in History of Parliament House of Commons 1509 1558 ed S T Bindoff 1982 Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 493 Risdon Meavy Church p 195 Pole Mewy p 337 Vivian p 719 Pole p 326 Vivian p 251 amp 718 Risdon pp 197 395 Pevsner pp 583 4 Vivian p 720 Prince John 1643 1723 The Worthies of Devon 1810 edition pp 730 735 biography of Strode William Doctor of Divinity Risdon p 198 As stated at the bottom of the Latin inscription Monumentum hoc posuit Guilielmus Strode William Strode placed this monument Ferris John P amp Hunneyball Paul biography of Richard Strode d 1669 published in History of Parliament House of Commons 1604 1629 ed Andrew Thrush and John P Ferris 2010 STRODE Richard 1638 1707 of Newnham Plympton St Mary Devon History of Parliament Online Pevsner Nikolaus amp Cherry Bridget The Buildings of England Devon London 2004 p 684 The front of the building shows two matching stone heraldic tablets one surviving in good condition showing the arms of Treby inscribed Sir George Treby Knt 1688 See File 1688TrebyArms PlymptonGuildhall JPG the other presumably of Strode completely worn away and illegible Risdon p 395 Vivian p 720 Risdon p 385 6 Vivian pp 718 20 Swete vol 4 pp 19 20 Home newnham co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newnham Old amp oldid 1102938171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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