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Nicholas Wadham (1531–1609)

Nicholas Wadham (/ˈwɒdəm/) (1531–1609) of Merryfield in the parish of Ilton, Somerset, and Edge in the parish of Branscombe, Devon, was a posthumous co-founder of Wadham College, Oxford, with his wife Dorothy Wadham who, outliving him, saw the project through to completion in her late old age. He was Sheriff of Somerset in 1585.

Nicholas Wadham (d. 1609), portrait c. 1595 by unknown artist. National Trust, collection of Petworth House, Sussex
Nicholas Wadham (d. 1609), detail from his monumental brass in St Mary's Church, Ilminster
Arms of Wadham: Gules, a chevron between three roses argent[1]

Origins

Nicholas Wadham was probably born at Merryfield, a moated and fortified manor house, built around 1400 by his ancestor Sir John Wadham of Edge, a Justice of the Common Pleas in the reign of King Richard II.

He was the only surviving son of John Wadham (d. 1578) of Merryfield and Edge, Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset in 1556, by his wife Joan Tregarthin (d. 1583), daughter and co-heiress of John Tregarthin of Cornwall, and widow of John Kelloway of Cullompton,[2] Devon.

Wadham's grandfather, Sir Nicholas Wadham (1472–1542), was a member of parliament in the English Reformation Parliament of 1529, Sheriff of Devon, Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset, Sheriff of Wiltshire, Captain of the Isle of Wight at Carisbrooke Castle, Vice Admiral to Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey and, with his uncle, Sir Edward Wadham (Sheriff of Gloucestershire), accompanied King Henry VIII to the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520.

Career

A biography written before 1637 states that Wadham attended Corpus Christi College, Oxford as a commoner, but did not take a degree. He may have lodged with John Kennall, the civil lawyer, later canon of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. Wadham was briefly at court, as the text relates: vitam aulicam aliquantisper ingressus est ("he entered the courtly life for a moderately long time"). A certain "Nicholas Wadham of Brimpton, Somerset", was admitted to the Inner Temple on 9 March 1553 on the pledge of Richard Baker, who was married to Catherine Tyrell, a stepdaughter of Sir William Petre (Wadham's father-in-law), Principle Secretary to King Henry VIII. Due to the Petre connection, it is likely that the record refers to the Nicholas Wadham who is the subject of this article.

Wadham was appointed to the commission of the peace and other minor commissions in Somerset, appearing as executor and overseer in the wills of other Somerset gentlemen. Two personal letters of his exist, one from Sir Amias Paulet (1532–1588), Ambassador to Paris, advising that Wadham was unlikely 'to be envious of our French news' and thanking him for his efforts in the leasing of Paulet's park. The other letter was to Sir John Talbot of Grafton (1545–1611), who had married Dorothy's sister Katherine Petre, regarding Wadham's work in negotiating a lease. Wadham was known for his hospitality and he maintained a fine household at Merifield, described by Thomas Fuller (1608–1661) as "an inn at all times, a court at Christmas".

Wadham and his wife were suspected of recusancy. In 1608 the privy council ordered a stay of proceedings against both Wadham and his wife on a charge of recusancy. John Carpenter, Rector of Branscombe, dedicated to him his literary work "Contemplations", for the Institution of Children in the Christian Religion (1601), noting his "gentle affability with all persons" and his generosity.

Marriage

 
Dorothy Petre (d. 1618), wife of Nicholas Wadham. Detail from her monumental brass in St Mary's Church, Ilminster

On 3 September 1555 at St Botolph's, Aldersgate in the City of London, Nicholas Wadham married Dorothy Petre (1534/5–1618), the eldest daughter of Sir William Petre, Principal Secretary to King Henry VIII. The couple had no children. Wadham and his wife lived with his parents until his father's death in 1578, when his mother moved into her dower house at Edge. Her monumental tomb survives in the Church of St Winifred, Branscombe, Devon.

Death and burial

On 20 October 1609, aged seventy-seven, Wadham died at Merrifield. In his will he left the huge sum of £500 for his funeral expenses and directed his body be buried "in myne ile at Ilminster where myne auncestors lye interred".[3] He was duly buried in the Wadham chapel in the Church of St Mary, Ilminster on 21 November 1609; his monument survives in the north-east corner of the Chapel (north transept) of St Mary's.[4] It consists of a 1689 Baroque monument erected by his subsequent heirs Sir Edward Wyndham, 2nd Baronet and Thomas Strangways on which was re-placed the Purbeck marble slab inset with late-Gothic-style post-Reformation monumental brasses from the original monument which had collapsed.[5] The monument was again restored in 1899 by the architect Thomas Graham Jackson (1835–1924).[6] There is, according to A. K. Wickham,[7] "no finer post-Reformation brass in England".

Following his father's example, his will ordered a full heraldic funeral, with alms to be distributed throughout the county. Statues survive of Nicholas Wadham and his wife Dorothy Petre at their foundation, Wadham College, Oxford, high on the external wall of one of the buildings. Thomas Moore (1779–1852) described him as "an ancient schismatic", referring to his attendance at Church of England services, and described Wadham as "dying a Catholic".

Succession

At his death he owned almost 30 manors and other lands and tenements in the counties of Devon, Dorset and Somerset, including:[8]

He died childless, and all his estates and other wealth had been expected to pass to the children of his three sisters:

  • Joan Wadham (d. 1603), widow of Sir Giles Strangways, MP,[12][13] ancestors of the Earls of Ilchester, and then Sir John Young, MP. She bore the former 4 sons and 2 daughters, and the latter 2 daughters and a son. In 1592, she was a party in the landmark Case of the Swans.
  • Margaret Wadham, wife of Sir Nicholas Martyn (1529–1595) of Athelhampton, Dorset. The couple's monumental brass, showing them kneeling beneath an escutcheon with the ancient arms of FitzMartin (Argent, two bars gules) impaling Wadham, survives in St Mary's Church, Puddletown, Dorset.[14] Nicholas Martyn, in full armour, kneels bare-headed before an altar on which is an open book. His three sons, who all predeceased him, kneel behind him. To the right is his wife Margaret Wadham, behind whom kneel their seven daughters, of whom four survived as co-heiresses. Athelhampton descended by marriage of their daughter Elizabeth Martin to Henry Brune to Mary Brune, who married Sir Ralph Bankes of Kingston Lacy and Corfe Castle, their great-great-granddaughter.[15]
  • Florence Wadham (d. 1596), wife of Sir John Wyndham (d. 1572) of Orchard Wyndham, Watchet, in Somerset, and mother of Sir John Wyndham (1558–1645), ancestor of the Wyndham Earls of Egremont of Petworth House in Sussex.

Instead he determined to use much of his wealth to perpetuate his name and in 1606 he founded an almshouse for eight poor people at Ilton. Wadham had also been saving money to found a college at Oxford, yet his intentions had not been written down and his instructions on his death-bed were contradictory. Despite this, his wife Dorothy, adding much of her own paternal inheritance,[16] attended to his wishes and, in her old age, oversaw the construction Wadham College, Oxford to its completion.

The descendants of his sisters nevertheless still received large inheritances from Nicholas Wadham, including the manor of Ilton (to Wyndham); the manor of Wadham, Knowstone, (to Wyndham and Strangways); Lustleigh (to Wyndham and Strangways); Edge, Branscombe (to Wyndham and Strangways), Silverton in Devon (to Wyndham); Chiselborough (to Strangways) etc. Today, in 2017, the Wadham family's Merryfield estate is still owned by the Wyndham family of Orchard Wyndham.

References

  1. ^ Devon heraldry
  2. ^ Prince, John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, p. 749
  3. ^ 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, p. 14
  4. ^ Pevsner, Buildings of England, South & West Somerset, p. 208
  5. ^ A tablet on top of the monument is inscribed: Hoc monumentum vetustate collapsum instauratum erat sumptibus Domini Edvardi Wyndham Baronetti & Thomae Strangways Armigeri duorum cohaeredibus dicti Nicolai Wadham Septembris die VII Anno Dom MDCXXCIX ("This monument, collapsed from old age, was erected by the expenditures of Sir Edward Wyndham, Baronet & Thomas Strangways, Esquire, two of the co-heirs of the said Nicholas Wadham, on the 7th day of September in the year of Our Lord 1689")
  6. ^ A tablet on the monument is inscribed: Hoc fundatorum monumentum iterum vetustate dilapsurum Collegii Wadhami in Univ. Oxon. alumni beneficiorum memores pietatis causa restituendum curaverunt AD MDCCCXCIX. T. G. Jackson RA Coll. Wadh. Socii Opera ("This monument of the Founders, again about to collapse from old age, the alumni of Wadham College in the University of Oxford took care for the restoring of, by cause of piety towards the memories of their Benefactors, in the year of Our Lord 1899. By the work of T. G. Jackson, RA, Fellow of Wadham")
  7. ^ A. K. Wickham, author of The Churches of Somerset (pub. David & Charles, 1965), ISBN 9780715340325; and The Villages of England, 1932.
  8. ^ Listed in Antiquities of Berkshire, Vol.3, 1723, pp. 344–5,[1] by Elias Ashmole (1617–1692), as quoted in Jackson, p. 15, footnote
  9. ^ Pole, Sir William (d. 1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, pp. 213–4
  10. ^ Pole, p. 264
  11. ^ Pages 545 & 546, The Buildings of England, DEVON by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner
  12. ^ STRANGWAYS, Sir Giles II (1528–62), of Melbury Sampford, Dorset.
  13. ^ Burke, John, The Royal Families of England, pedigree CCII, Earl of Dunraven
  14. ^ https://www.flickr.com/photos/norfolkboy1/14854067678/in/pool-dorsetchurches/ [2]
  15. ^ "Individual Page".
  16. ^ Part of the Petre inheritance received by Dorothy came from grants made by Queen Mary to her father Sir William Petre, of lands formerly held by Lady Jane Gray and forfeited to the crown, which had come in part from the great heiress Cecily Bonville, of Shute, Devon (Bridie, M.F., The Story of Shute, Axminster, 1955, pp. 76–8)

Further reading

  • Prince, John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, biography of Wadham, Sir John, Knight, (died 1412), pp. 748–752
  • Stevens, Hariet Weeks Wadhams, Wadhams (sic) Genealogy, Preceded by a Sketch of the Wadham Family of England, New York, 1913
  • Rogers, William Henry Hamilton, Memorials of the West, Historical and Descriptive, Collected on the Borderland of Somerset, Dorset and Devon, Exeter, 1888, pp.147–173, The Founder and Foundress of Wadham
  • 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

nicholas, wadham, 1531, 1609, grandfather, nicholas, wadham, 1472, 1542, nicholas, wadham, 1531, 1609, merryfield, parish, ilton, somerset, edge, parish, branscombe, devon, posthumous, founder, wadham, college, oxford, with, wife, dorothy, wadham, outliving, p. For his grandfather see Nicholas Wadham 1472 1542 Nicholas Wadham ˈ w ɒ d e m 1531 1609 of Merryfield in the parish of Ilton Somerset and Edge in the parish of Branscombe Devon was a posthumous co founder of Wadham College Oxford with his wife Dorothy Wadham who outliving him saw the project through to completion in her late old age He was Sheriff of Somerset in 1585 Nicholas Wadham d 1609 portrait c 1595 by unknown artist National Trust collection of Petworth House Sussex Nicholas Wadham d 1609 detail from his monumental brass in St Mary s Church Ilminster Arms of Wadham Gules a chevron between three roses argent 1 Contents 1 Origins 2 Career 3 Marriage 4 Death and burial 5 Succession 6 References 7 Further readingOrigins EditNicholas Wadham was probably born at Merryfield a moated and fortified manor house built around 1400 by his ancestor Sir John Wadham of Edge a Justice of the Common Pleas in the reign of King Richard II He was the only surviving son of John Wadham d 1578 of Merryfield and Edge Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset in 1556 by his wife Joan Tregarthin d 1583 daughter and co heiress of John Tregarthin of Cornwall and widow of John Kelloway of Cullompton 2 Devon Wadham s grandfather Sir Nicholas Wadham 1472 1542 was a member of parliament in the English Reformation Parliament of 1529 Sheriff of Devon Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset Sheriff of Wiltshire Captain of the Isle of Wight at Carisbrooke Castle Vice Admiral to Thomas Howard Earl of Surrey and with his uncle Sir Edward Wadham Sheriff of Gloucestershire accompanied King Henry VIII to the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520 Career EditA biography written before 1637 states that Wadham attended Corpus Christi College Oxford as a commoner but did not take a degree He may have lodged with John Kennall the civil lawyer later canon of Christ Church Cathedral Oxford Wadham was briefly at court as the text relates vitam aulicam aliquantisper ingressus est he entered the courtly life for a moderately long time A certain Nicholas Wadham of Brimpton Somerset was admitted to the Inner Temple on 9 March 1553 on the pledge of Richard Baker who was married to Catherine Tyrell a stepdaughter of Sir William Petre Wadham s father in law Principle Secretary to King Henry VIII Due to the Petre connection it is likely that the record refers to the Nicholas Wadham who is the subject of this article Wadham was appointed to the commission of the peace and other minor commissions in Somerset appearing as executor and overseer in the wills of other Somerset gentlemen Two personal letters of his exist one from Sir Amias Paulet 1532 1588 Ambassador to Paris advising that Wadham was unlikely to be envious of our French news and thanking him for his efforts in the leasing of Paulet s park The other letter was to Sir John Talbot of Grafton 1545 1611 who had married Dorothy s sister Katherine Petre regarding Wadham s work in negotiating a lease Wadham was known for his hospitality and he maintained a fine household at Merifield described by Thomas Fuller 1608 1661 as an inn at all times a court at Christmas Wadham and his wife were suspected of recusancy In 1608 the privy council ordered a stay of proceedings against both Wadham and his wife on a charge of recusancy John Carpenter Rector of Branscombe dedicated to him his literary work Contemplations for the Institution of Children in the Christian Religion 1601 noting his gentle affability with all persons and his generosity Marriage Edit Dorothy Petre d 1618 wife of Nicholas Wadham Detail from her monumental brass in St Mary s Church Ilminster On 3 September 1555 at St Botolph s Aldersgate in the City of London Nicholas Wadham married Dorothy Petre 1534 5 1618 the eldest daughter of Sir William Petre Principal Secretary to King Henry VIII The couple had no children Wadham and his wife lived with his parents until his father s death in 1578 when his mother moved into her dower house at Edge Her monumental tomb survives in the Church of St Winifred Branscombe Devon Death and burial EditOn 20 October 1609 aged seventy seven Wadham died at Merrifield In his will he left the huge sum of 500 for his funeral expenses and directed his body be buried in myne ile at Ilminster where myne auncestors lye interred 3 He was duly buried in the Wadham chapel in the Church of St Mary Ilminster on 21 November 1609 his monument survives in the north east corner of the Chapel north transept of St Mary s 4 It consists of a 1689 Baroque monument erected by his subsequent heirs Sir Edward Wyndham 2nd Baronet and Thomas Strangways on which was re placed the Purbeck marble slab inset with late Gothic style post Reformation monumental brasses from the original monument which had collapsed 5 The monument was again restored in 1899 by the architect Thomas Graham Jackson 1835 1924 6 There is according to A K Wickham 7 no finer post Reformation brass in England Following his father s example his will ordered a full heraldic funeral with alms to be distributed throughout the county Statues survive of Nicholas Wadham and his wife Dorothy Petre at their foundation Wadham College Oxford high on the external wall of one of the buildings Thomas Moore 1779 1852 described him as an ancient schismatic referring to his attendance at Church of England services and described Wadham as dying a Catholic Succession EditAt his death he owned almost 30 manors and other lands and tenements in the counties of Devon Dorset and Somerset including 8 Manor of Wadham Knowstone Devon original seat of the family from which they took their name Manor of Silverton Devon purchased in 1386 by Sir John Wadham Edge in Branscombe Devon estate purchased c 1370 by Sir John Wadham Merryfield in Ilton near Yeovil Somerset which became the main seat of the family built on land purchased around 1400 by Sir John Wadham from Cecily de Beauchamp a sister and co heiress of John Beauchamp 3rd Baron Beauchamp of Somerset of the feudal barony of Hatch Beauchamp with nearby land at Braydon inherited by a later generation of the Wadham family from Sir Stephen Popham Broad life sic Pole Anthony from the Rede or Read family to Popham to Wadham 9 Manor of Penselwood Somerset part of the inheritance of Margaret Chiseldon of the Manor of Holcombe Rogus Devon who married Sir William Wadham died 1452 Chiselborough Somerset Manor of Haydon Somerset Norcot Widicomb Sydmouth Wirgland Manor of Lustleigh Devon purchased 1403 by Sir John Wadham 10 The medieval hall and solar still exist Uphill and Great Hall Mapstone Hill A major medieval house preserving two fine roofs the property of the Wadham family of Ilminster in the C15 The date may be c 1400 11 Eton Tidcock Oldbury Cullioford Guttesham not Gittesham Devon never held by Wadham He died childless and all his estates and other wealth had been expected to pass to the children of his three sisters Joan Wadham d 1603 widow of Sir Giles Strangways MP 12 13 ancestors of the Earls of Ilchester and then Sir John Young MP She bore the former 4 sons and 2 daughters and the latter 2 daughters and a son In 1592 she was a party in the landmark Case of the Swans Margaret Wadham wife of Sir Nicholas Martyn 1529 1595 of Athelhampton Dorset The couple s monumental brass showing them kneeling beneath an escutcheon with the ancient arms of FitzMartin Argent two bars gules impaling Wadham survives in St Mary s Church Puddletown Dorset 14 Nicholas Martyn in full armour kneels bare headed before an altar on which is an open book His three sons who all predeceased him kneel behind him To the right is his wife Margaret Wadham behind whom kneel their seven daughters of whom four survived as co heiresses Athelhampton descended by marriage of their daughter Elizabeth Martin to Henry Brune to Mary Brune who married Sir Ralph Bankes of Kingston Lacy and Corfe Castle their great great granddaughter 15 Florence Wadham d 1596 wife of Sir John Wyndham d 1572 of Orchard Wyndham Watchet in Somerset and mother of Sir John Wyndham 1558 1645 ancestor of the Wyndham Earls of Egremont of Petworth House in Sussex Instead he determined to use much of his wealth to perpetuate his name and in 1606 he founded an almshouse for eight poor people at Ilton Wadham had also been saving money to found a college at Oxford yet his intentions had not been written down and his instructions on his death bed were contradictory Despite this his wife Dorothy adding much of her own paternal inheritance 16 attended to his wishes and in her old age oversaw the construction Wadham College Oxford to its completion The descendants of his sisters nevertheless still received large inheritances from Nicholas Wadham including the manor of Ilton to Wyndham the manor of Wadham Knowstone to Wyndham and Strangways Lustleigh to Wyndham and Strangways Edge Branscombe to Wyndham and Strangways Silverton in Devon to Wyndham Chiselborough to Strangways etc Today in 2017 the Wadham family s Merryfield estate is still owned by the Wyndham family of Orchard Wyndham References Edit Devon heraldry Prince John 1643 1723 The Worthies of Devon 1810 edition p 749 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 p 14 Pevsner Buildings of England South amp West Somerset p 208 A tablet on top of the monument is inscribed Hoc monumentum vetustate collapsum instauratum erat sumptibus Domini Edvardi Wyndham Baronetti amp Thomae Strangways Armigeri duorum cohaeredibus dicti Nicolai Wadham Septembris die VII Anno Dom MDCXXCIX This monument collapsed from old age was erected by the expenditures of Sir Edward Wyndham Baronet amp Thomas Strangways Esquire two of the co heirs of the said Nicholas Wadham on the 7th day of September in the year of Our Lord 1689 A tablet on the monument is inscribed Hoc fundatorum monumentum iterum vetustate dilapsurum Collegii Wadhami in Univ Oxon alumni beneficiorum memores pietatis causa restituendum curaverunt AD MDCCCXCIX T G Jackson RA Coll Wadh Socii Opera This monument of the Founders again about to collapse from old age the alumni of Wadham College in the University of Oxford took care for the restoring of by cause of piety towards the memories of their Benefactors in the year of Our Lord 1899 By the work of T G Jackson RA Fellow of Wadham A K Wickham author of The Churches of Somerset pub David amp Charles 1965 ISBN 9780715340325 and The Villages of England 1932 Listed in Antiquities of Berkshire Vol 3 1723 pp 344 5 1 by Elias Ashmole 1617 1692 as quoted in Jackson p 15 footnote Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 pp 213 4 Pole p 264 Pages 545 amp 546 The Buildings of England DEVON by Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner STRANGWAYS Sir Giles II 1528 62 of Melbury Sampford Dorset Burke John The Royal Families of England pedigree CCII Earl of Dunraven https www flickr com photos norfolkboy1 14854067678 in pool dorsetchurches 2 Individual Page Part of the Petre inheritance received by Dorothy came from grants made by Queen Mary to her father Sir William Petre of lands formerly held by Lady Jane Gray and forfeited to the crown which had come in part from the great heiress Cecily Bonville of Shute Devon Bridie M F The Story of Shute Axminster 1955 pp 76 8 Davies C S L Wadham Nicholas 1531 2 1609 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource Wadham Nicholas Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Further reading EditPrince John 1643 1723 The Worthies of Devon 1810 edition biography of Wadham Sir John Knight died 1412 pp 748 752 Stevens Hariet Weeks Wadhams Wadhams sic Genealogy Preceded by a Sketch of the Wadham Family of England New York 1913 Rogers William Henry Hamilton Memorials of the West Historical and Descriptive Collected on the Borderland of Somerset Dorset and Devon Exeter 1888 pp 147 173 The Founder and Foundress of Wadham 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 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicholas Wadham 1531 1609 amp oldid 1133381280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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