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Rowland Egerton-Warburton

Rowland Eyles Egerton-Warburton DL (14 September 1804 – 6 December 1891) was an English landowner and poet from the Egerton family in Cheshire. He was a devout Anglican in the high church tradition and a local benefactor. He paid for the restoration of his parish church and for the building of two new churches in villages on his estates. He also built cottages and farm buildings in the villages.

Rowland Egerton-Warburton

Born(1804-09-14)14 September 1804
Norley Bank, Norley, Cheshire, England
Died6 December 1891(1891-12-06) (aged 87)
Resting placeSt Mary and All Saints Church, Great Budworth, Cheshire
EducationEton College
Alma materCorpus Christi College, Oxford
Known forRebuilding Arley Hall
RelativesPeter Egerton-Warburton (brother)
Piers Egerton-Warburton (son)

Through his mother's line, he inherited the Arley and Warburton estates in Cheshire. He is best remembered for rebuilding Arley Hall and its chapel dedicated to St Mary, and for helping to create the picturesque appearance of the village of Great Budworth. He and his wife designed extensive new formal gardens to the southeast of the hall, which included one of the earliest herbaceous borders in Britain. The hall and gardens are still owned by his family, but are open to the public.

Egerton-Warburton's main hobby was hunting. He was a keen member, and later the president, of the nearby Tarporley Hunt Club. He also wrote poetry, the subject matter of which reflected his interests in hunting and in the countryside. Some of his rhymes are to be found on signposts in the grounds of the hall.[1]

Early life edit

He was born Rowland Egerton in 1804 at Norley Bank, Norley, Cheshire, the eldest son of Rowland Egerton and his wife, Emma. His father was the seventh son of Philip Egerton who became the 9th baronet of Egerton and Oulton on the death of his elder brother in 1825.[2] His maternal grandmother (also called Emma) was the youngest sister of Sir Peter Warburton, 5th baronet of Arley, who had no children.[3] Sir Peter died in 1813 and in his will he left the estates of Warburton and Arley to Rowland junior, who was at that time still a minor.[4] His father added the name "Warburton" by royal licence in the same year.[5] Egerton-Warburton was educated at Eton College, and although he was admitted to Corpus Christi College, Oxford in 1823, there is no evidence that he was awarded a degree. After his time in Oxford, he went on a Grand Tour, and returned to the life of a squire at Arley Hall,[6] having gained control of the estates on achieving his age of majority in 1825.[7]

Landowner and benefactor edit

 
St Cross Church, Appleton Thorn

Egerton-Warburton managed the Arley estate from 1825 until his death in 1891. During this time the estate was profitable and he was able to enjoy a larger income than his predecessors.[7] He was a high church Anglican and a supporter of the Oxford Movement, having been influenced by Keble, Pusey and Newman.[8] He regularly attended choral Matins in the chapel at Arley Hall, and on hunt days he wore his hunting colours.[6] He took little interest in politics, in which respect he is regarded as having been "passive".[6]

In the 1850s he paid for the restoration of his local parish church of St Mary and All Saints at Great Budworth, where he encouraged a more Anglo-Catholic style of worship.[9] He paid for the building of new churches in two villages on his estates. In the village of Warburton he paid for the new church of St Werburgh. This was built in 1883–85 to a design by John Douglas of Chester,[10][11] at which time Egerton-Warburton's nephew, Rev. Geoffrey Egerton-Warburton, was the incumbent.[12] This church replaced the old church in Warburton, also dedicated to St Werburgh, as the parish church.[12] The old church still exists on another site in the village.[13] In the village of Appleton Thorn, 3.3 miles (5 km) to the north of Arley Hall, he paid for St Cross church, which was built in 1886–87 to a design by Edmund Kirby of Liverpool.[14]

 
Cottages in Great Budworth

Egerton-Warburton also paid for the construction of secular buildings in villages on his estates, many of which were designed by John Douglas. In Great Budworth he had a "campaign to restore the village and render it picturesque in Victorian eyes".[15] He restored many of the cottages in the village and built new ones to blend with them.[16] In 1875, the George and Dragon, a simple three-bay Georgian inn in the village, was remodelled by adding ribbed chimneys, moulded brick mullions, an elliptical-headed doorway and a steep pyramid-shaped turret.[17] The village has changed little since then and it remains "one of Cheshire's most charming villages".[16] In 1873 he paid for the building of a cottage in Arley Green[18] and founded Arley School in the village.[19] In Warburton, he paid for a school in 1871–72,[20] a church hall in 1889,[21] and a post office in 1893.[22] Features in the style of Douglas were added to the timber-framed Bent Farm, which stands opposite the new church, in 1880.[10][23] He also built the public road from Arley Hall to Appleton Thorn.[8]

Fox hunter and poet edit

Egerton-Warburton was a keen fox hunter and rode with the Tarporley Hunt Club, of which he became a member in 1825 and president in 1838. When he retired from hunting in 1873, he was made an honorary member of the club. His friend, the Bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce, described him as being "equally at home in the hunting field and the parish church".[6] He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Cheshire in 1825,[24] was an officer in the Royal Cheshire Militia[25] and in the Cheshire Yeomanry,[26] served as a Justice of the Peace,[6] and was High Sheriff of Cheshire for 1833.[27]

His poetry, usually on the subjects of hunting and country life, was light-hearted and popular. In 1834 he published his Hunting Songs, which ran to eight editions. Titles of the songs include "A Good Merry Gallop for Me!" and "Farmer Dobbin".[6] His nine-stanza poem "Quaesitum meritis" is considered to be his best work.[6] He created signposts on his estate with rhyming inscriptions, some of which are still present.[8] He also published more serious documents about the cattle plague of 1747–49.[6] Lord Halifax referred to him as "a perfect combination, a good churchman, a good landlord, a keen sportsman, and a man of literary tastes".[7] In his 1885 book Hunting, the Duke of Beaufort described Warburton as 'that Homer of the hunting-field'.[28]

He also wrote a couplet as an epitaph for the headstone of Copenhagen, the war horse ridden at the Battle of Waterloo by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. The couplet, "God's humbler instrument, though meaner clay, should share the glory of that glorious day,"[29] was written at the request of the 2nd Duke, when he erected a tombstone for his father's famous horse on his grave at Strathfield Saye. The first Duke would have approved of the choice of poet, since he, like Egerton-Warburton, was a keen sportsman, and in fact, the Duke had often hunted on Copenhagen when the two of them were in the Peninsula.

Rebuilding of Arley Hall edit

 
South front of Arley Hall

When Egerton-Warburton took over the estate, the hall was "dilapidated and swarming with rats",[8] and so he decided to replace it completely.[30] He took great interest in the design of the new house and chapel, and his ideas reflected respectively his artistic and his religious values. In respect of the house, he was influenced by the spirit of the Romantic movement. He also wanted the new house to reflect his ancient lineage: "to suggest something of the piety of the Middle Ages as well as the grandeur of Elizabethan England".[31] He, therefore, rejected the neoclassical style of architecture, which was fashionable at the time, and chose instead to build a house in what is now known as Jacobethan style. He also wanted it to incorporate modern technology and materials in its construction, and he did not want it to be too expensive. He commissioned a young local architect, George Latham from Nantwich, and worked closely with him in the design. Latham suggested that the final cost would be in the region of £5,000–6,000 (£480,000–£570,000 today).[32] It was agreed that every architectural feature of the house should have an exact model in an existing Elizabethan building. Egerton-Warburton and Latham travelled together and visited such buildings to study these features.[33]

The first phase of building started in 1832, and the east, north and west wings of the old house were demolished. Most of the new buildings in this phase consisted of servants' quarters and utility rooms. A drawing room, grand staircase and hall were built but they were left unfinished. Modern plumbing was fitted, the structure of the house was raised on arches to reduce the effect of damp, and the spaces under the arches were ventilated and warmed by a patent device. This phase was completed in 1835 at a cost of about £13,000 (£1.36 million today).[32][34] Egerton-Warburton then took a break, partly to raise the money needed for the completion of the house, and also to work on the designs of the remaining rooms. The second and final phase was built between 1840 and 1845. The south front was demolished and the building, much of which is present today, was finished.[35] The final cost of the house came to about £30,000 (£3.16 million today).[32][36]

 
Herbaceous border

In designing the chapel, he again broke away from the classical style of architecture. Having been influenced by the Oxford Movement, he decided that it should be designed in Gothic style. He commissioned the nationally famous architect Anthony Salvin to design a Gothic Revival chapel, which was completed and consecrated in 1845. In 1856–57, a north aisle and porch were added to a design by George Street.[37]

When Egerton-Warburton took over the estate, the gardens were mainly to the east of the hall, but with his wife, Mary, he designed new gardens. These were developed to the southwest of the hall between 1840 and 1860. They implemented their designs apparently without any professional help, and the present gardens are largely the result of their planning. The herbaceous border was one of the first of its type to have been created in England.[38] Items they planted which are still present include the yew finials in the herbaceous border, which were planted in 1856, and the holly oak cylinders in the Ilex Walk, which were also planted in the 1850s.[39]

Family and later life edit

Egerton-Warburton was the eldest child of ten; he had four brothers and five sisters. His younger brother, James Francis, who was born in 1807, graduated MA and became the rector of Warburton. Henry William was born in 1808, and became a major in the 47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot.[40] Peter, born in 1813, worked with the East India Company before moving to Australia, where he achieved some notoriety as an explorer.[41] The youngest brother, George Edward was born in 1819.[40] He also emigrated and established a farm in Western Australia.[8] Egerton-Warburton's sisters were Emma Elizabeth (1805-1891), who married James Saurin, Archdeacon of Dromore, Frances Mary (1809), Maria Sybilla (1812–1895), who married the noted horticulturalist James Bateman, Charlotte (1815), and Sophia (1816).[40]

On 7 April 1831, Egerton-Warburton married Mary Brooke, the eldest daughter of Sir Richard Brooke, 6th baronet of Norton Priory and Harriet Cunliffe, daughter of Sir Foster Cunliffe, 3rd Baronet. They had three children, Mary Alice, Piers (later MP for Mid Cheshire), and Mary.[3] His wife died in 1881 and his younger daughter and her family moved in to live with him.[6] By 1874 he was suffering from glaucoma, and soon afterwards became blind. He continued to take walks, led on a leather strap by his gardener. He had a path, Furlong Walk, constructed from the terrace at the hall with wire to guide him. His health began to fail from 1888 and he died in 1891 at the age of 87. He was buried in the family vault at Great Budworth church. His estate amounted to a little over £51,670 (£6 million today).[6][32]

References edit

Citations

  1. ^ "Mr. P. Egerton-Warburton". The Times. 26 March 1914. p. 10.
  2. ^ Ormerod & Helsby 1882, pp. ii. 222–23.
  3. ^ a b Ormerod & Helsby 1882, p. i. 575.
  4. ^ Ormerod & Helsby 1882, p. i. 573.
  5. ^ "No. 16765". The London Gazette. 17 August 1813. p. 1635.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Atkinson, Damian. "Warburton, Rowland Eyles Egerton (1804–1891)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28678. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ a b c Foster 1999, p. 20.
  8. ^ a b c d e Foster 1999, p. 21.
  9. ^ "A Brief History of Great Budworth Church". St Mary & All Saints Parish Church of Great Budworth.
  10. ^ a b Pevsner & Hubbard 1971, p. 376.
  11. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 137.
  12. ^ a b "No. 25453". The London Gazette. 20 March 1885. p. 1258.
  13. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 1971, pp. 375–76.
  14. ^ Pollard, Richard; Pevsner, Nikolaus; Sharples, Joseph (2006). Lancashire: Liverpool and the Southwest. The Buildings of England. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10910-5.
  15. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 92.
  16. ^ a b Boast, Howard. "History on your doorstep: Great Budworth". Cheshire Magazine. C. C. Publishing. Retrieved 29 January 2009.
  17. ^ Hubbard 1991, pp. 92–93.
  18. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 244.
  19. ^ Foster 1999, p. 15.
  20. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 243.
  21. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 258.
  22. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 263.
  23. ^ Hubbard 1991, p. 110.
  24. ^ "No. 18187". The London Gazette. 25 October 1825. p. 1941.
  25. ^ "No. 18327". The London Gazette. 23 January 1827. p. 154.
  26. ^ "No. 18585". The London Gazette. 16 June 1829. p. 1110.
  27. ^ "No. 19028". The London Gazette. 8 March 1833. p. 473.
  28. ^ Somerset, Henry; Morris, Mowbray (1885). Hunting. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
  29. ^ Whitaker, Julie; Whitelaw, Ian (2007). The Horse: A Miscellany of Equine Knowledge. St. Martin's Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-312-37108-1.
  30. ^ Foster 1999, pp. 6–7.
  31. ^ Foster 1999, p. 7.
  32. ^ a b c d UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  33. ^ Foster 1999, pp. 6–9.
  34. ^ Foster 1999, pp. 9–10.
  35. ^ Foster 1999, pp. 10–12.
  36. ^ Foster 1999, p. 8.
  37. ^ Foster 1999, pp. 14–15.
  38. ^ Ashbrook, Elizabeth (1999), "The Garden", in Albrighton, Tom (ed.), Arley Hall and Gardens, Cheshire, Norwich: Jarrold, p. 24
  39. ^ Foster, Jane. . Arley Hall & Gardens. Archived from the original on 28 March 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009.
  40. ^ a b c Ormerod & Helsby 1882, p. ii. 45.
  41. ^ Harris, Charles Alexander (1899). "Warburton, Peter Egerton" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co. Retrieved on 29 January 2009.

Sources

External links edit

  • Hunting Songs, Ballads, &c., by Rowland Egerton-Warburton (1834) (includes "Quaesitum meritis")

rowland, egerton, warburton, rowland, eyles, egerton, warburton, september, 1804, december, 1891, english, landowner, poet, from, egerton, family, cheshire, devout, anglican, high, church, tradition, local, benefactor, paid, restoration, parish, church, buildi. Rowland Eyles Egerton Warburton DL 14 September 1804 6 December 1891 was an English landowner and poet from the Egerton family in Cheshire He was a devout Anglican in the high church tradition and a local benefactor He paid for the restoration of his parish church and for the building of two new churches in villages on his estates He also built cottages and farm buildings in the villages Rowland Egerton WarburtonDLBorn 1804 09 14 14 September 1804Norley Bank Norley Cheshire EnglandDied6 December 1891 1891 12 06 aged 87 Arley Hall Cheshire EnglandResting placeSt Mary and All Saints Church Great Budworth CheshireEducationEton CollegeAlma materCorpus Christi College OxfordKnown forRebuilding Arley HallRelativesPeter Egerton Warburton brother Piers Egerton Warburton son Through his mother s line he inherited the Arley and Warburton estates in Cheshire He is best remembered for rebuilding Arley Hall and its chapel dedicated to St Mary and for helping to create the picturesque appearance of the village of Great Budworth He and his wife designed extensive new formal gardens to the southeast of the hall which included one of the earliest herbaceous borders in Britain The hall and gardens are still owned by his family but are open to the public Egerton Warburton s main hobby was hunting He was a keen member and later the president of the nearby Tarporley Hunt Club He also wrote poetry the subject matter of which reflected his interests in hunting and in the countryside Some of his rhymes are to be found on signposts in the grounds of the hall 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Landowner and benefactor 3 Fox hunter and poet 4 Rebuilding of Arley Hall 5 Family and later life 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editHe was born Rowland Egerton in 1804 at Norley Bank Norley Cheshire the eldest son of Rowland Egerton and his wife Emma His father was the seventh son of Philip Egerton who became the 9th baronet of Egerton and Oulton on the death of his elder brother in 1825 2 His maternal grandmother also called Emma was the youngest sister of Sir Peter Warburton 5th baronet of Arley who had no children 3 Sir Peter died in 1813 and in his will he left the estates of Warburton and Arley to Rowland junior who was at that time still a minor 4 His father added the name Warburton by royal licence in the same year 5 Egerton Warburton was educated at Eton College and although he was admitted to Corpus Christi College Oxford in 1823 there is no evidence that he was awarded a degree After his time in Oxford he went on a Grand Tour and returned to the life of a squire at Arley Hall 6 having gained control of the estates on achieving his age of majority in 1825 7 Landowner and benefactor edit nbsp St Cross Church Appleton ThornEgerton Warburton managed the Arley estate from 1825 until his death in 1891 During this time the estate was profitable and he was able to enjoy a larger income than his predecessors 7 He was a high church Anglican and a supporter of the Oxford Movement having been influenced by Keble Pusey and Newman 8 He regularly attended choral Matins in the chapel at Arley Hall and on hunt days he wore his hunting colours 6 He took little interest in politics in which respect he is regarded as having been passive 6 In the 1850s he paid for the restoration of his local parish church of St Mary and All Saints at Great Budworth where he encouraged a more Anglo Catholic style of worship 9 He paid for the building of new churches in two villages on his estates In the village of Warburton he paid for the new church of St Werburgh This was built in 1883 85 to a design by John Douglas of Chester 10 11 at which time Egerton Warburton s nephew Rev Geoffrey Egerton Warburton was the incumbent 12 This church replaced the old church in Warburton also dedicated to St Werburgh as the parish church 12 The old church still exists on another site in the village 13 In the village of Appleton Thorn 3 3 miles 5 km to the north of Arley Hall he paid for St Cross church which was built in 1886 87 to a design by Edmund Kirby of Liverpool 14 nbsp Cottages in Great BudworthEgerton Warburton also paid for the construction of secular buildings in villages on his estates many of which were designed by John Douglas In Great Budworth he had a campaign to restore the village and render it picturesque in Victorian eyes 15 He restored many of the cottages in the village and built new ones to blend with them 16 In 1875 the George and Dragon a simple three bay Georgian inn in the village was remodelled by adding ribbed chimneys moulded brick mullions an elliptical headed doorway and a steep pyramid shaped turret 17 The village has changed little since then and it remains one of Cheshire s most charming villages 16 In 1873 he paid for the building of a cottage in Arley Green 18 and founded Arley School in the village 19 In Warburton he paid for a school in 1871 72 20 a church hall in 1889 21 and a post office in 1893 22 Features in the style of Douglas were added to the timber framed Bent Farm which stands opposite the new church in 1880 10 23 He also built the public road from Arley Hall to Appleton Thorn 8 Fox hunter and poet editEgerton Warburton was a keen fox hunter and rode with the Tarporley Hunt Club of which he became a member in 1825 and president in 1838 When he retired from hunting in 1873 he was made an honorary member of the club His friend the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce described him as being equally at home in the hunting field and the parish church 6 He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Cheshire in 1825 24 was an officer in the Royal Cheshire Militia 25 and in the Cheshire Yeomanry 26 served as a Justice of the Peace 6 and was High Sheriff of Cheshire for 1833 27 His poetry usually on the subjects of hunting and country life was light hearted and popular In 1834 he published his Hunting Songs which ran to eight editions Titles of the songs include A Good Merry Gallop for Me and Farmer Dobbin 6 His nine stanza poem Quaesitum meritis is considered to be his best work 6 He created signposts on his estate with rhyming inscriptions some of which are still present 8 He also published more serious documents about the cattle plague of 1747 49 6 Lord Halifax referred to him as a perfect combination a good churchman a good landlord a keen sportsman and a man of literary tastes 7 In his 1885 book Hunting the Duke of Beaufort described Warburton as that Homer of the hunting field 28 He also wrote a couplet as an epitaph for the headstone of Copenhagen the war horse ridden at the Battle of Waterloo by Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington The couplet God s humbler instrument though meaner clay should share the glory of that glorious day 29 was written at the request of the 2nd Duke when he erected a tombstone for his father s famous horse on his grave at Strathfield Saye The first Duke would have approved of the choice of poet since he like Egerton Warburton was a keen sportsman and in fact the Duke had often hunted on Copenhagen when the two of them were in the Peninsula Rebuilding of Arley Hall editMain article Arley Hall nbsp South front of Arley HallWhen Egerton Warburton took over the estate the hall was dilapidated and swarming with rats 8 and so he decided to replace it completely 30 He took great interest in the design of the new house and chapel and his ideas reflected respectively his artistic and his religious values In respect of the house he was influenced by the spirit of the Romantic movement He also wanted the new house to reflect his ancient lineage to suggest something of the piety of the Middle Ages as well as the grandeur of Elizabethan England 31 He therefore rejected the neoclassical style of architecture which was fashionable at the time and chose instead to build a house in what is now known as Jacobethan style He also wanted it to incorporate modern technology and materials in its construction and he did not want it to be too expensive He commissioned a young local architect George Latham from Nantwich and worked closely with him in the design Latham suggested that the final cost would be in the region of 5 000 6 000 480 000 570 000 today 32 It was agreed that every architectural feature of the house should have an exact model in an existing Elizabethan building Egerton Warburton and Latham travelled together and visited such buildings to study these features 33 The first phase of building started in 1832 and the east north and west wings of the old house were demolished Most of the new buildings in this phase consisted of servants quarters and utility rooms A drawing room grand staircase and hall were built but they were left unfinished Modern plumbing was fitted the structure of the house was raised on arches to reduce the effect of damp and the spaces under the arches were ventilated and warmed by a patent device This phase was completed in 1835 at a cost of about 13 000 1 36 million today 32 34 Egerton Warburton then took a break partly to raise the money needed for the completion of the house and also to work on the designs of the remaining rooms The second and final phase was built between 1840 and 1845 The south front was demolished and the building much of which is present today was finished 35 The final cost of the house came to about 30 000 3 16 million today 32 36 nbsp Herbaceous borderIn designing the chapel he again broke away from the classical style of architecture Having been influenced by the Oxford Movement he decided that it should be designed in Gothic style He commissioned the nationally famous architect Anthony Salvin to design a Gothic Revival chapel which was completed and consecrated in 1845 In 1856 57 a north aisle and porch were added to a design by George Street 37 When Egerton Warburton took over the estate the gardens were mainly to the east of the hall but with his wife Mary he designed new gardens These were developed to the southwest of the hall between 1840 and 1860 They implemented their designs apparently without any professional help and the present gardens are largely the result of their planning The herbaceous border was one of the first of its type to have been created in England 38 Items they planted which are still present include the yew finials in the herbaceous border which were planted in 1856 and the holly oak cylinders in the Ilex Walk which were also planted in the 1850s 39 Family and later life editEgerton Warburton was the eldest child of ten he had four brothers and five sisters His younger brother James Francis who was born in 1807 graduated MA and became the rector of Warburton Henry William was born in 1808 and became a major in the 47th Lancashire Regiment of Foot 40 Peter born in 1813 worked with the East India Company before moving to Australia where he achieved some notoriety as an explorer 41 The youngest brother George Edward was born in 1819 40 He also emigrated and established a farm in Western Australia 8 Egerton Warburton s sisters were Emma Elizabeth 1805 1891 who married James Saurin Archdeacon of Dromore Frances Mary 1809 Maria Sybilla 1812 1895 who married the noted horticulturalist James Bateman Charlotte 1815 and Sophia 1816 40 On 7 April 1831 Egerton Warburton married Mary Brooke the eldest daughter of Sir Richard Brooke 6th baronet of Norton Priory and Harriet Cunliffe daughter of Sir Foster Cunliffe 3rd Baronet They had three children Mary Alice Piers later MP for Mid Cheshire and Mary 3 His wife died in 1881 and his younger daughter and her family moved in to live with him 6 By 1874 he was suffering from glaucoma and soon afterwards became blind He continued to take walks led on a leather strap by his gardener He had a path Furlong Walk constructed from the terrace at the hall with wire to guide him His health began to fail from 1888 and he died in 1891 at the age of 87 He was buried in the family vault at Great Budworth church His estate amounted to a little over 51 670 6 million today 6 32 References editCitations Mr P Egerton Warburton The Times 26 March 1914 p 10 Ormerod amp Helsby 1882 pp ii 222 23 a b Ormerod amp Helsby 1882 p i 575 Ormerod amp Helsby 1882 p i 573 No 16765 The London Gazette 17 August 1813 p 1635 a b c d e f g h i j Atkinson Damian Warburton Rowland Eyles Egerton 1804 1891 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28678 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Foster 1999 p 20 a b c d e Foster 1999 p 21 A Brief History of Great Budworth Church St Mary amp All Saints Parish Church of Great Budworth a b Pevsner amp Hubbard 1971 p 376 Hubbard 1991 p 137 a b No 25453 The London Gazette 20 March 1885 p 1258 Pevsner amp Hubbard 1971 pp 375 76 Pollard Richard Pevsner Nikolaus Sharples Joseph 2006 Lancashire Liverpool and the Southwest The Buildings of England Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 10910 5 Hubbard 1991 p 92 a b Boast Howard History on your doorstep Great Budworth Cheshire Magazine C C Publishing Retrieved 29 January 2009 Hubbard 1991 pp 92 93 Hubbard 1991 p 244 Foster 1999 p 15 Hubbard 1991 p 243 Hubbard 1991 p 258 Hubbard 1991 p 263 Hubbard 1991 p 110 No 18187 The London Gazette 25 October 1825 p 1941 No 18327 The London Gazette 23 January 1827 p 154 No 18585 The London Gazette 16 June 1829 p 1110 No 19028 The London Gazette 8 March 1833 p 473 Somerset Henry Morris Mowbray 1885 Hunting London Longmans Green and Co Whitaker Julie Whitelaw Ian 2007 The Horse A Miscellany of Equine Knowledge St Martin s Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 312 37108 1 Foster 1999 pp 6 7 Foster 1999 p 7 a b c d UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Foster 1999 pp 6 9 Foster 1999 pp 9 10 Foster 1999 pp 10 12 Foster 1999 p 8 Foster 1999 pp 14 15 Ashbrook Elizabeth 1999 The Garden in Albrighton Tom ed Arley Hall and Gardens Cheshire Norwich Jarrold p 24 Foster Jane Tour of the Gardens Arley Hall amp Gardens Archived from the original on 28 March 2009 Retrieved 21 January 2009 a b c Ormerod amp Helsby 1882 p ii 45 Harris Charles Alexander 1899 Warburton Peter Egerton In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 59 London Smith Elder amp Co Retrieved on 29 January 2009 Sources Maxwell Herbert Eustace 1899 Warburton Rowland Eyles Egerton In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 59 London Smith Elder amp Co p 301 Foster Charles 1999 The History of the House and the Family in Albrighton Tom ed Arley Hall and Gardens Cheshire Norwich Jarrold Hubbard Edward 1991 The work of John Douglas Victorian Society ISBN 0 901657 16 6 Ormerod George Helsby Thomas 1882 The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester Second ed London George Routledge and Sons Pevsner Nikolaus Hubbard Edward 1971 Cheshire The Buildings of England Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09588 3 External links edit nbsp Cheshire portalHunting Songs Ballads amp c by Rowland Egerton Warburton 1834 includes Quaesitum meritis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rowland Egerton Warburton amp oldid 1172713786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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