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Thomas Fairfax

Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron (17 January 1612 – 12 November 1671), also known as Sir Thomas Fairfax,[1] was an English politician, general and Parliamentary commander-in-chief during the English Civil War. An adept and talented commander, Fairfax led Parliament to many victories, notably the crucial Battle of Naseby, becoming effectively military ruler of England, but was eventually overshadowed by his subordinate Oliver Cromwell, who was more politically adept and radical in action against Charles I. Fairfax became unhappy with Cromwell's policy and publicly refused to take part in Charles's show trial. Eventually he resigned, leaving Cromwell to control the country. Because of this, and also his honourable battlefield conduct and his active role in the Restoration of the monarchy after Cromwell's death, he was exempted from the retribution exacted on many other leaders of the revolution.


The Lord Fairfax of Cameron
Thomas Fairfax by Robert Walker
Nickname(s)Black Tom
Rider of the White Horse
Born(1612-01-17)17 January 1612
Denton Hall, Denton, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died12 November 1671(1671-11-12) (aged 59)
Nun Appleton, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Buried
Bilbrough, Yorkshire
AllegianceKingdom of England
Parliament of England
Service/branchEnglish Army
Parliamentarian army
RankLord General
Battles/wars
Signature

Early life

Thomas Fairfax was born at Denton Hall, halfway between Ilkley and Otley in the West Riding of Yorkshire, on 17 January 1612, the eldest son of Ferdinando Fairfax, 2nd Lord Fairfax of Cameron (his family title of Lord Fairfax of Cameron was in the peerage of Scotland, then still independent from England, which was why he was able to sit in the English House of Commons after he inherited it). His dark hair and eyes and a swarthy complexion earned him the nickname "Black Tom".[2]

Fairfax studied at St John's College, Cambridge,[3] and Gray's Inn (1626–1628), then volunteered to join Sir Horace Vere's expedition to fight for the Protestant cause in the Netherlands.[4] In 1639 he commanded a troop of Yorkshire dragoons which marched with King Charles I against the Scots in the First Bishops' War, which ended with the Pacification of Berwick before any fighting took place. In the Second Bishops' War the following year, the English army was routed at the Battle of Newburn. Fairfax fled with the rest of the defeated army but was nevertheless knighted in January 1641 for his services.[1]

Pre-Civil War events

 
Sir Thomas Fairfax, Knight, line engraving, 1680. National Portrait Gallery, London

The Fairfaxes, father and son, though serving at first under King Charles I, were opposed to the arbitrary prerogative of the Crown, and Sir Thomas declared that "his judgment was for the Parliament as the king and kingdom's great and safest council". Charles endeavoured to raise a guard for his own person at York, intending it, as the event afterwards proved, to form the nucleus of an army. Fairfax was employed to present a petition to his sovereign, entreating him to listen to the voice of his parliament, and to discontinue the raising of troops. This was at a great meeting of the freeholders and farmers of Yorkshire convened by the king on Heworth Moor near York. Charles attempted to ignore the petition, pressing his horse forward, but Fairfax followed him and placed the petition on the pommel of the king's saddle.[5]

Civil War

When the civil war broke out in 1642, his father, Lord Fairfax, was appointed general of the Parliamentary forces in the north, and Sir Thomas was made lieutenant-general of the horse under him. Both father and son distinguished themselves in the campaigns in Yorkshire.[a][5]

In 1643 a minor battle between Royalists for Charles I and a small group of Roundheads under Fairfax, who were en route from Tadcaster to Leeds, took place at Seacroft. Fairfax was obliged to retreat across Bramham moor and summed up the Battle of Seacroft Moor as 'the greatest loss we ever received'.[6][7]

Sometimes severely defeated, but more often successful, and always energetic, prudent and resourceful, father and son contrived to keep up the struggle until the crisis of 1644, when York was held by the Marquess of Newcastle against the combined forces of the English Parliamentarians and the Scots, and Prince Rupert hastened with all available forces to its relief. A gathering of eager national forces within a few square miles of ground naturally led to a battle, and Marston Moor (2 July 1644) proved decisive for the struggle in the north. The younger Fairfax bore himself with the greatest gallantry in the battle and, though severely wounded, managed to join Oliver Cromwell and the victorious cavalry on the other wing. One of his brothers, Colonel Charles Fairfax, was killed in the action. But the Marquess of Newcastle fled the kingdom, and the Royalists abandoned all hope of retrieving their affairs. The city of York was taken, and nearly the whole of the north submitted to the Parliament.[5]

In the West, South and South West of England, however, the Royalist cause was still strong. The war had lasted two years, and the nation began to complain of the contributions that were exacted of and the excesses that were committed by the military. Dissatisfaction was expressed with the military commanders and, as a preliminary step to reform, the Self-denying Ordinance was passed. This involved the removal of the Earl of Essex from the supreme command, along with other Members of Parliament. This was followed by the New Model Ordinance, which replaced the locally raised Parliamentary regiments with a unified army. Sir Thomas Fairfax was selected as the new Lord General, with Cromwell as his Lieutenant-General and cavalry commander. After a short preliminary campaign, the New Model Army justified its existence, and "the rebels' new brutish general", as the king called him, proved his capacity as commander-in-chief in the decisive Battle of Naseby (14 June 1645). The king fled to Wales. Fairfax besieged Leicester, and was successful at Taunton, Bridgwater and Bristol. The whole of the west was soon reduced.[5]

 
Doublet worn by Fairfax at the Battle of Maidstone in 1648

Fairfax arrived in London on 12 November 1645. In his progress towards the capital he was accompanied by applauding crowds. Complimentary speeches and thanks were presented to him by both houses of parliament, along with a jewel of great value set with diamonds, and a sum of money. The king had returned from Wales and established himself at Oxford, where there was a strong garrison but, ever vacillating, he withdrew secretly, and proceeded to Newark to throw himself into the arms of the Scots Covenanter army there. Oxford capitulated in June 1646 following the final siege, and by the end of September 1646 Charles had neither army nor garrison in England, following the surrender of Thomas Blagge at Wallingford Castle after a siege conducted by Fairfax. In January 1647 the King was delivered up by the Covenanters to the commissioners of England's parliament. Fairfax met the king beyond Nottingham, and accompanied him during the journey to Holdenby, treating him with the utmost consideration in every way. "The general", said Charles, "is a man of honour, and keeps his word which he had pledged to me."[5]

With the collapse of the Royalist cause came a confused period of negotiations between the Parliament and the King, between the King and the Scots, and between the Presbyterians and the Independents in and out of Parliament. In these negotiations the New Model Army soon began to take a most active part. The Lord General was placed in the unpleasant position of intermediary between his own officers and Parliament. In July the person of the King was seized by Cornet Joyce, a subaltern of cavalry—an act which sufficiently demonstrated the hopelessness of controlling the army by its Articles of War.[5]

 
Gold medal depicting Thomas Fairfax in profile, 1645. National Portrait Gallery, London

Fairfax was more at home in the field than at the head of a political committee, and, finding events too strong for him and that his officers were rallying around the more radical and politically shrewd Cromwell, he sought to resign his commission as commander-in-chief. He was, however, persuaded to retain it. He thus remained the titular chief of the army party, and with the greater part of its objects he was in complete, sometimes most active, sympathy. Shortly before the outbreak of the Second Civil War, Fairfax succeeded his father in the barony and in the office of governor of Hull. In the field against the English Royalists in 1648 he displayed his former energy and skill, and his operations culminated in the successful siege of Colchester, after the surrender of which place he approved the execution of the Royalist leaders Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisle, holding that these officers had broken their parole. At the same time Cromwell's great victory of Preston crushed the faction of the Scots Covenanters who had made an engagement with the king, the Engagers.[4]

John Milton, in a sonnet written during the siege of Colchester, called upon the Lord General to settle the kingdom, but the crisis was now at hand. Fairfax was in agreement with Cromwell and the army leaders in demanding the punishment of Charles, and he was still the effective head of the army. He approved, if he did not take an active part in, Pride's Purge (6 December 1648), but on the last and gravest of the questions at issue he set himself in deliberate and open opposition to the policy of the officers. He was placed at the head of the judges who were to try the King, and attended the preliminary sitting of the court, but absented himself after this. The most likely explanation is that when he saw that they were serious about intending to execute the king he declined to have anything to do with this.[8]

In calling over the court, when the crier pronounced the name of Fairfax, it is said that his wife, Anne Fairfax, shouted from the gallery that "he had more wit than to be there". Later when the court said that they were acting for "all the good people of England", she shouted "No, nor the hundredth part of them!". This resulted in an investigation and Anne was asked or required to leave the court.[9][8] It was said that Anne could not forbear, as Bulstrode Whitelocke says, to exclaim aloud against the proceedings of the High Court of Justice.[4] In February 1649 Fairfax was elected Member of Parliament for Cirencester in the Rump Parliament.[10] Anne was later approached to intercede on the King's behalf to prevent his execution.[9]

Fairfax's last service as Commander-in-chief was the suppression of the Leveller mutiny at Burford in May 1649. He had given his adhesion to the new order of things, and had been reappointed Lord General, but he merely administered the affairs of the army; when in 1650 Scots Covenanter Kirk Party eventually declared for Charles II, and the Council of State resolved to send an army to Scotland in order to prevent an invasion of England, Fairfax resigned his commission. Cromwell desired to see him continue as Commander-in-chief, as did those planning the war, but Fairfax could not support the war. Cromwell was appointed his successor, "Captain-general and Commander-in-chief of all the forces raised or to be raised at authority of Parliament within the Commonwealth of England."[4]

Interregnum

 
The Most Excellent Thomas Fairfax, Captin Generall of the Armyes etc, etching, 1640s. National Portrait Gallery, London

During the Commonwealth of England in 1654, Fairfax was elected MP for the newly created constituency of West Riding in the First Protectorate Parliament.[10] He received a pension of £5,000 a year, and lived in retirement at his Yorkshire home of Nunappleton until after the death of the Lord Protector in 1658. Nunappleton and Fairfax's retirement there are the subject of Andrew Marvell's country house poem, Upon Appleton House. The troubles of the later Commonwealth recalled Lord Fairfax to political activity, and in 1659 he was elected MP for Yorkshire in the Third Protectorate Parliament.[10]

Restoration

For the last time Fairfax's appearance in arms helped to shape the future of the country, when George Monck invited him to assist in the operations about to be undertaken against John Lambert's army. In December 1659 he appeared at the head of a body of Yorkshire gentlemen, and such was the influence of Fairfax's name and reputation that 1,200 horse quit Lambert's colours and joined him. This was speedily followed by the breaking up of all Lambert's forces, and that day secured the restoration of the monarchy. For these actions, along with his honourable conduct in the civil war, he was spared from the wave of Royalist retributions. In April 1660 Fairfax was re-elected MP for Yorkshire in the Convention Parliament.[10] He was put at the head of the commission appointed by the House of Commons to wait upon Charles II at the Hague and urge his speedy return. His actions assisted the Stuart Restoration. Fairfax provided the horse which Charles rode at his coronation.[4]

Later life

The remaining eleven years of the life of Lord Fairfax were spent in retirement at his seat in Yorkshire. His wife died in 1665[9] and Fairfax died at Nun Appleton Priory in 1671. He was buried at Bilbrough, near York.[4]

Bibliography

Fairfax had a taste for literature. He translated some of the Psalms, and wrote poems on solitude, the Christian warfare, the shortness of life, etc.[11] During the last year or two of his life he wrote two Memorials which have been published—one on the northern actions in which he was engaged in 1642–44, and the other on some events in his tenure of the chief command. At York and at Oxford he endeavoured to save the libraries from pillage, and he enriched the Bodleian with some valuable manuscripts. His correspondence was edited by G.W. Johnson and published in 1848–49 in four volumes.[12]

The metaphysical poet Andrew Marvell wrote "Upon Appleton House, To My Lord Fairfax", nominally about Fairfax's home, but also his character as well as England during his era.[13]

Family

 
Lead bust of Thomas Fairfax, c. 1650, National Portrait Gallery, London

Fairfax married Hon. Anne de Vere, daughter of Horace Vere, 1st Baron Vere of Tilbury and Mary Tracy, on 20 June 1637. They had a daughter, Hon. Mary Fairfax (30 July 1638 – 20 October 1704),[14] who married George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.[4]

Fairfax was succeeded as Lord Fairfax by a cousin, Henry Fairfax, 4th Lord Fairfax of Cameron.[15]

Analysis

As a soldier he was exact and methodical in planning, in the heat of battle "so highly transported that scarce any one durst speak a word to him",[16] chivalrous and punctilious in his dealings with his own men and the enemy. Honour and conscientiousness were equally the characteristics of his private and public character. But his modesty and distrust of his powers made him less effectual as a statesman than as a soldier, and above all he is placed at a disadvantage by being both in war and peace overshadowed by his associate Cromwell, who was politically talented and able to manipulate public antipathy against Charles to lead to his execution, something Fairfax never wanted.[4]

In fiction

Fairfax, played by actor Dougray Scott, is a pivotal character in the 2003 film To Kill a King,[17] as well as in Rosemary Sutcliff's 1953 historical fiction Simon, being portrayed as inspiring and fair.[18] He also appears as a central character in Sutcliff's 1959 novel The Rider of the White Horse, which gives an account of the early stage of the Civil War from the point of view of his wife,[a] and in Howard Brenton's 2012 play 55 Days.[19] Douglas Wilmer portrayed him in the 1970 Ken Hughes film Cromwell.[20] He was played by Jerome Willis in the 1975 historical film Winstanley.[21] He appears in Michael Arnold's novel Marston Moor, which includes an account of Fairfax's adventures in the eponymous battle.[22] He was also a central character, played by Nigel Anthony, in the 1988 BBC Radio production of Don Taylor's play God's Revolution.[23]

Notes

  1. ^ a b In the winter of 1642/43 Parliamentary victories were few and far between. One of the more notable was the capture of Leeds on 23 January 1643 by Parliamentary forces under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax. The London news broadsheets published the exploits and one of them suggested that Fairfax was "the Rider of the White Horse", the allegory was immediately clear to those of a Puritan leaning as it was a passage in the Book of Revelation 19:11 "And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make war", and hence implying to the Puritan supporters of Parliament that Fairfax was a hero doing God's work (Hopper 2007, p. 174)

Citations

  1. ^ a b Plant 2005, Sir Thomas, Lord Fairfax 1612–1671.
  2. ^ Cotterill 2004, p. 110 footnote 22, cites Gibbs 1938, p. 4
  3. ^ "Fairfax, Thomas (FRFS626T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Chisholm 1911, p. 131.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911, p. 130.
  6. ^ Cooke, D. (2004). The Civil War in Yorkshire: Fairfax Versus Newcastle. Casemate Publishers. p. 52. ISBN 1844150763. Retrieved 3 August 2019. Sir Thomas Fairfax summed up the Battle of Seacroft Moor as 'the greatest loss we ever received'.
  7. ^ Hutchinson, A. (11 June 2019). "A - Z of Leeds". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 3 August 2019. B is for Beechwood - Ancestral home of a Leeds dynasty which has links to Kate Middleton and Sir Thomas Fairfax, who helped win English Civil War for Oliver Cromwell. Today the mansion is used as offices but it was once the family home of the Luptons.
  8. ^ a b Wedgewood, C.V. The Trial of Charles I
  9. ^ a b c Eales, Jacqueline. "Fairfax [née Vere], Anne, Lady Fairfax". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/66848. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  10. ^ a b c d Helms & Cruickshanks 1983
  11. ^ Fairfax & Reed 1909.
  12. ^ Firth 1889, p. 149.
  13. ^ Marvell, Andrew. "Upon Appleton House, to my Lord Fairfax". Luminarium. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  14. ^ Mosley 2003, p. 1373
  15. ^ "Henry Fairfax, 4th Lord Of Cameron". Harrison Genealogy Repository. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  16. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 131 quotes Whitelocke
  17. ^ Thomas Fairfax at IMDb
  18. ^ "Books by Rosemary Sutcliff". Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  19. ^ "55 Days". Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  20. ^ Cromwell at IMDb
  21. ^ Winstanley at IMDb
  22. ^ Arnold, Michael (2015). Marston Moor: Book 6 of The Civil War Chronicles. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1848547643.
  23. ^ "God's Revolution". BBC. Retrieved 6 August 2017.

References

  • Cotterill, Anne (2004), Digressive voices in early modern English literature, Oxford University Press, p. 110, ISBN 978-0-19-926117-8 cites
  • Fairfax, Thomas; Reed, Edward Bliss (1909), The poems of Thomas, third lord Fairfax from Ms. Fairfax 40 in the Bodleian library, Oxford, New Haven, Conn.: Pub. under the auspices of Yale university
  • Gibbs, M. A. (1938), The Lord General: A life of Thomas Fairfax, Drummond, p. 4
  • Helms, M. W.; Cruickshanks, Eveline (1983), "Fairfax, Thomas, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron [S] (1612–71), of Nun Appleton, Yorks.", in Henning, B. D. (ed.), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1660–1690, Boydell and Brewer
  • Hopper, Andrew (2007), Black Tom: Sir Thomas Fairfax and the English Revolution (illustrated ed.), Manchester University Press, pp. 174, ISBN 9780719071096
  • Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003), Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, vol. 1 (107th ed.), Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage, p. 1373
  • Plant, David (21 June 2005), Sir Thomas, Lord Fairfax 1612–1671, british-civil-wars.co.uk, retrieved 17 May 2011.[better source needed]

Attribution:

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainFirth, Charles Harding (1889). "Fairfax, Thomas (1612-1671)". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 141–149.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Fairfax of Cameron, Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Baron". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 130–131.
Parliament of England
Vacant
Title last held by
Sir Theobald Gorges
John George
Member of Parliament for Cirencester
1648
With: Nathaniel Rich
Succeeded by
Military offices
New title
office created
Commander-in-Chief of the Forces
1645–1650
Succeeded by
Captain General
(Lord General)

1645–1650
Honorary titles
Vacant
Title last held by
The Viscount Savile
Custos Rotulorum of the West Riding of Yorkshire
1660–1671
Succeeded by
Head of State of the Isle of Man
Preceded by Lord of Mann
1651–1660
Succeeded by
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by Lord Fairfax of Cameron
1648–1671
Succeeded by

thomas, fairfax, other, people, with, same, name, disambiguation, lord, fairfax, cameron, january, 1612, november, 1671, also, known, english, politician, general, parliamentary, commander, chief, during, english, civil, adept, talented, commander, fairfax, pa. For other people with the same name see Thomas Fairfax disambiguation Thomas Fairfax 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron 17 January 1612 12 November 1671 also known as Sir Thomas Fairfax 1 was an English politician general and Parliamentary commander in chief during the English Civil War An adept and talented commander Fairfax led Parliament to many victories notably the crucial Battle of Naseby becoming effectively military ruler of England but was eventually overshadowed by his subordinate Oliver Cromwell who was more politically adept and radical in action against Charles I Fairfax became unhappy with Cromwell s policy and publicly refused to take part in Charles s show trial Eventually he resigned leaving Cromwell to control the country Because of this and also his honourable battlefield conduct and his active role in the Restoration of the monarchy after Cromwell s death he was exempted from the retribution exacted on many other leaders of the revolution The Right HonourableThe Lord Fairfax of CameronThomas Fairfax by Robert WalkerNickname s Black Tom Rider of the White HorseBorn 1612 01 17 17 January 1612Denton Hall Denton West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied12 November 1671 1671 11 12 aged 59 Nun Appleton West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandBuriedBilbrough YorkshireAllegianceKingdom of England Parliament of EnglandService wbr branchEnglish Army Parliamentarian army New Model ArmyRankLord GeneralBattles warsBattle of NantwichBattle of Marston MoorSiege of OxfordBattle of NasebyBattle of MaidstoneSiege of ColchesterSuppression of Leveller mutinySignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Pre Civil War events 3 Civil War 4 Interregnum 5 Restoration 6 Later life 7 Bibliography 8 Family 9 Analysis 10 In fiction 11 Notes 12 Citations 13 ReferencesEarly life EditThomas Fairfax was born at Denton Hall halfway between Ilkley and Otley in the West Riding of Yorkshire on 17 January 1612 the eldest son of Ferdinando Fairfax 2nd Lord Fairfax of Cameron his family title of Lord Fairfax of Cameron was in the peerage of Scotland then still independent from England which was why he was able to sit in the English House of Commons after he inherited it His dark hair and eyes and a swarthy complexion earned him the nickname Black Tom 2 Fairfax studied at St John s College Cambridge 3 and Gray s Inn 1626 1628 then volunteered to join Sir Horace Vere s expedition to fight for the Protestant cause in the Netherlands 4 In 1639 he commanded a troop of Yorkshire dragoons which marched with King Charles I against the Scots in the First Bishops War which ended with the Pacification of Berwick before any fighting took place In the Second Bishops War the following year the English army was routed at the Battle of Newburn Fairfax fled with the rest of the defeated army but was nevertheless knighted in January 1641 for his services 1 Pre Civil War events Edit Sir Thomas Fairfax Knight line engraving 1680 National Portrait Gallery London The Fairfaxes father and son though serving at first under King Charles I were opposed to the arbitrary prerogative of the Crown and Sir Thomas declared that his judgment was for the Parliament as the king and kingdom s great and safest council Charles endeavoured to raise a guard for his own person at York intending it as the event afterwards proved to form the nucleus of an army Fairfax was employed to present a petition to his sovereign entreating him to listen to the voice of his parliament and to discontinue the raising of troops This was at a great meeting of the freeholders and farmers of Yorkshire convened by the king on Heworth Moor near York Charles attempted to ignore the petition pressing his horse forward but Fairfax followed him and placed the petition on the pommel of the king s saddle 5 Civil War EditWhen the civil war broke out in 1642 his father Lord Fairfax was appointed general of the Parliamentary forces in the north and Sir Thomas was made lieutenant general of the horse under him Both father and son distinguished themselves in the campaigns in Yorkshire a 5 In 1643 a minor battle between Royalists for Charles I and a small group of Roundheads under Fairfax who were en route from Tadcaster to Leeds took place at Seacroft Fairfax was obliged to retreat across Bramham moor and summed up the Battle of Seacroft Moor as the greatest loss we ever received 6 7 Sometimes severely defeated but more often successful and always energetic prudent and resourceful father and son contrived to keep up the struggle until the crisis of 1644 when York was held by the Marquess of Newcastle against the combined forces of the English Parliamentarians and the Scots and Prince Rupert hastened with all available forces to its relief A gathering of eager national forces within a few square miles of ground naturally led to a battle and Marston Moor 2 July 1644 proved decisive for the struggle in the north The younger Fairfax bore himself with the greatest gallantry in the battle and though severely wounded managed to join Oliver Cromwell and the victorious cavalry on the other wing One of his brothers Colonel Charles Fairfax was killed in the action But the Marquess of Newcastle fled the kingdom and the Royalists abandoned all hope of retrieving their affairs The city of York was taken and nearly the whole of the north submitted to the Parliament 5 In the West South and South West of England however the Royalist cause was still strong The war had lasted two years and the nation began to complain of the contributions that were exacted of and the excesses that were committed by the military Dissatisfaction was expressed with the military commanders and as a preliminary step to reform the Self denying Ordinance was passed This involved the removal of the Earl of Essex from the supreme command along with other Members of Parliament This was followed by the New Model Ordinance which replaced the locally raised Parliamentary regiments with a unified army Sir Thomas Fairfax was selected as the new Lord General with Cromwell as his Lieutenant General and cavalry commander After a short preliminary campaign the New Model Army justified its existence and the rebels new brutish general as the king called him proved his capacity as commander in chief in the decisive Battle of Naseby 14 June 1645 The king fled to Wales Fairfax besieged Leicester and was successful at Taunton Bridgwater and Bristol The whole of the west was soon reduced 5 Doublet worn by Fairfax at the Battle of Maidstone in 1648 Fairfax arrived in London on 12 November 1645 In his progress towards the capital he was accompanied by applauding crowds Complimentary speeches and thanks were presented to him by both houses of parliament along with a jewel of great value set with diamonds and a sum of money The king had returned from Wales and established himself at Oxford where there was a strong garrison but ever vacillating he withdrew secretly and proceeded to Newark to throw himself into the arms of the Scots Covenanter army there Oxford capitulated in June 1646 following the final siege and by the end of September 1646 Charles had neither army nor garrison in England following the surrender of Thomas Blagge at Wallingford Castle after a siege conducted by Fairfax In January 1647 the King was delivered up by the Covenanters to the commissioners of England s parliament Fairfax met the king beyond Nottingham and accompanied him during the journey to Holdenby treating him with the utmost consideration in every way The general said Charles is a man of honour and keeps his word which he had pledged to me 5 With the collapse of the Royalist cause came a confused period of negotiations between the Parliament and the King between the King and the Scots and between the Presbyterians and the Independents in and out of Parliament In these negotiations the New Model Army soon began to take a most active part The Lord General was placed in the unpleasant position of intermediary between his own officers and Parliament In July the person of the King was seized by Cornet Joyce a subaltern of cavalry an act which sufficiently demonstrated the hopelessness of controlling the army by its Articles of War 5 Gold medal depicting Thomas Fairfax in profile 1645 National Portrait Gallery London Fairfax was more at home in the field than at the head of a political committee and finding events too strong for him and that his officers were rallying around the more radical and politically shrewd Cromwell he sought to resign his commission as commander in chief He was however persuaded to retain it He thus remained the titular chief of the army party and with the greater part of its objects he was in complete sometimes most active sympathy Shortly before the outbreak of the Second Civil War Fairfax succeeded his father in the barony and in the office of governor of Hull In the field against the English Royalists in 1648 he displayed his former energy and skill and his operations culminated in the successful siege of Colchester after the surrender of which place he approved the execution of the Royalist leaders Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisle holding that these officers had broken their parole At the same time Cromwell s great victory of Preston crushed the faction of the Scots Covenanters who had made an engagement with the king the Engagers 4 John Milton in a sonnet written during the siege of Colchester called upon the Lord General to settle the kingdom but the crisis was now at hand Fairfax was in agreement with Cromwell and the army leaders in demanding the punishment of Charles and he was still the effective head of the army He approved if he did not take an active part in Pride s Purge 6 December 1648 but on the last and gravest of the questions at issue he set himself in deliberate and open opposition to the policy of the officers He was placed at the head of the judges who were to try the King and attended the preliminary sitting of the court but absented himself after this The most likely explanation is that when he saw that they were serious about intending to execute the king he declined to have anything to do with this 8 In calling over the court when the crier pronounced the name of Fairfax it is said that his wife Anne Fairfax shouted from the gallery that he had more wit than to be there Later when the court said that they were acting for all the good people of England she shouted No nor the hundredth part of them This resulted in an investigation and Anne was asked or required to leave the court 9 8 It was said that Anne could not forbear as Bulstrode Whitelocke says to exclaim aloud against the proceedings of the High Court of Justice 4 In February 1649 Fairfax was elected Member of Parliament for Cirencester in the Rump Parliament 10 Anne was later approached to intercede on the King s behalf to prevent his execution 9 Fairfax s last service as Commander in chief was the suppression of the Leveller mutiny at Burford in May 1649 He had given his adhesion to the new order of things and had been reappointed Lord General but he merely administered the affairs of the army when in 1650 Scots Covenanter Kirk Party eventually declared for Charles II and the Council of State resolved to send an army to Scotland in order to prevent an invasion of England Fairfax resigned his commission Cromwell desired to see him continue as Commander in chief as did those planning the war but Fairfax could not support the war Cromwell was appointed his successor Captain general and Commander in chief of all the forces raised or to be raised at authority of Parliament within the Commonwealth of England 4 Interregnum Edit The Most Excellent Thomas Fairfax Captin Generall of the Armyes etc etching 1640s National Portrait Gallery London During the Commonwealth of England in 1654 Fairfax was elected MP for the newly created constituency of West Riding in the First Protectorate Parliament 10 He received a pension of 5 000 a year and lived in retirement at his Yorkshire home of Nunappleton until after the death of the Lord Protector in 1658 Nunappleton and Fairfax s retirement there are the subject of Andrew Marvell s country house poem Upon Appleton House The troubles of the later Commonwealth recalled Lord Fairfax to political activity and in 1659 he was elected MP for Yorkshire in the Third Protectorate Parliament 10 Restoration EditFor the last time Fairfax s appearance in arms helped to shape the future of the country when George Monck invited him to assist in the operations about to be undertaken against John Lambert s army In December 1659 he appeared at the head of a body of Yorkshire gentlemen and such was the influence of Fairfax s name and reputation that 1 200 horse quit Lambert s colours and joined him This was speedily followed by the breaking up of all Lambert s forces and that day secured the restoration of the monarchy For these actions along with his honourable conduct in the civil war he was spared from the wave of Royalist retributions In April 1660 Fairfax was re elected MP for Yorkshire in the Convention Parliament 10 He was put at the head of the commission appointed by the House of Commons to wait upon Charles II at the Hague and urge his speedy return His actions assisted the Stuart Restoration Fairfax provided the horse which Charles rode at his coronation 4 Later life EditThe remaining eleven years of the life of Lord Fairfax were spent in retirement at his seat in Yorkshire His wife died in 1665 9 and Fairfax died at Nun Appleton Priory in 1671 He was buried at Bilbrough near York 4 Bibliography EditFairfax had a taste for literature He translated some of the Psalms and wrote poems on solitude the Christian warfare the shortness of life etc 11 During the last year or two of his life he wrote two Memorials which have been published one on the northern actions in which he was engaged in 1642 44 and the other on some events in his tenure of the chief command At York and at Oxford he endeavoured to save the libraries from pillage and he enriched the Bodleian with some valuable manuscripts His correspondence was edited by G W Johnson and published in 1848 49 in four volumes 12 The metaphysical poet Andrew Marvell wrote Upon Appleton House To My Lord Fairfax nominally about Fairfax s home but also his character as well as England during his era 13 Family Edit Lead bust of Thomas Fairfax c 1650 National Portrait Gallery London Fairfax married Hon Anne de Vere daughter of Horace Vere 1st Baron Vere of Tilbury and Mary Tracy on 20 June 1637 They had a daughter Hon Mary Fairfax 30 July 1638 20 October 1704 14 who married George Villiers 2nd Duke of Buckingham 4 Fairfax was succeeded as Lord Fairfax by a cousin Henry Fairfax 4th Lord Fairfax of Cameron 15 Analysis EditAs a soldier he was exact and methodical in planning in the heat of battle so highly transported that scarce any one durst speak a word to him 16 chivalrous and punctilious in his dealings with his own men and the enemy Honour and conscientiousness were equally the characteristics of his private and public character But his modesty and distrust of his powers made him less effectual as a statesman than as a soldier and above all he is placed at a disadvantage by being both in war and peace overshadowed by his associate Cromwell who was politically talented and able to manipulate public antipathy against Charles to lead to his execution something Fairfax never wanted 4 In fiction EditFairfax played by actor Dougray Scott is a pivotal character in the 2003 film To Kill a King 17 as well as in Rosemary Sutcliff s 1953 historical fiction Simon being portrayed as inspiring and fair 18 He also appears as a central character in Sutcliff s 1959 novel The Rider of the White Horse which gives an account of the early stage of the Civil War from the point of view of his wife a and in Howard Brenton s 2012 play 55 Days 19 Douglas Wilmer portrayed him in the 1970 Ken Hughes film Cromwell 20 He was played by Jerome Willis in the 1975 historical film Winstanley 21 He appears in Michael Arnold s novel Marston Moor which includes an account of Fairfax s adventures in the eponymous battle 22 He was also a central character played by Nigel Anthony in the 1988 BBC Radio production of Don Taylor s play God s Revolution 23 Notes Edit a b In the winter of 1642 43 Parliamentary victories were few and far between One of the more notable was the capture of Leeds on 23 January 1643 by Parliamentary forces under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax The London news broadsheets published the exploits and one of them suggested that Fairfax was the Rider of the White Horse the allegory was immediately clear to those of a Puritan leaning as it was a passage in the Book of Revelation 19 11 And I saw heaven opened and behold a white horse and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True and in righteousness he doth judge and make war and hence implying to the Puritan supporters of Parliament that Fairfax was a hero doing God s work Hopper 2007 p 174 Citations Edit a b Plant 2005 Sir Thomas Lord Fairfax 1612 1671 Cotterill 2004 p 110 footnote 22 cites Gibbs 1938 p 4 Fairfax Thomas FRFS626T A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c d e f g h Chisholm 1911 p 131 a b c d e f Chisholm 1911 p 130 Cooke D 2004 The Civil War in Yorkshire Fairfax Versus Newcastle Casemate Publishers p 52 ISBN 1844150763 Retrieved 3 August 2019 Sir Thomas Fairfax summed up the Battle of Seacroft Moor as the greatest loss we ever received Hutchinson A 11 June 2019 A Z of Leeds Yorkshire Evening Post Retrieved 3 August 2019 B is for Beechwood Ancestral home of a Leeds dynasty which has links to Kate Middleton and Sir Thomas Fairfax who helped win English Civil War for Oliver Cromwell Today the mansion is used as offices but it was once the family home of the Luptons a b Wedgewood C V The Trial of Charles I a b c Eales Jacqueline Fairfax nee Vere Anne Lady Fairfax Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 66848 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d Helms amp Cruickshanks 1983 Fairfax amp Reed 1909 Firth 1889 p 149 Marvell Andrew Upon Appleton House to my Lord Fairfax Luminarium Retrieved 6 August 2017 Mosley 2003 p 1373 Henry Fairfax 4th Lord Of Cameron Harrison Genealogy Repository Retrieved 6 August 2017 Chisholm 1911 p 131 quotes Whitelocke Thomas Fairfax at IMDb Books by Rosemary Sutcliff Retrieved 6 August 2017 55 Days Retrieved 6 August 2017 Cromwell at IMDb Winstanley at IMDb Arnold Michael 2015 Marston Moor Book 6 of The Civil War Chronicles London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 1848547643 God s Revolution BBC Retrieved 6 August 2017 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Fairfax 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron Cotterill Anne 2004 Digressive voices in early modern English literature Oxford University Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 19 926117 8 cites Fairfax Thomas Reed Edward Bliss 1909 The poems of Thomas third lord Fairfax from Ms Fairfax 40 in the Bodleian library Oxford New Haven Conn Pub under the auspices of Yale university Gibbs M A 1938 The Lord General A life of Thomas Fairfax Drummond p 4 Helms M W Cruickshanks Eveline 1983 Fairfax Thomas 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron S 1612 71 of Nun Appleton Yorks in Henning B D ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1660 1690 Boydell and Brewer Hopper Andrew 2007 Black Tom Sir Thomas Fairfax and the English Revolution illustrated ed Manchester University Press pp 174 ISBN 9780719071096 Mosley Charles ed 2003 Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knightage vol 1 107th ed Wilmington Delaware U S A Burke s Peerage p 1373 Plant David 21 June 2005 Sir Thomas Lord Fairfax 1612 1671 british civil wars co uk retrieved 17 May 2011 better source needed Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Firth Charles Harding 1889 Fairfax Thomas 1612 1671 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 18 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 141 149 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Fairfax of Cameron Thomas Fairfax 3rd Baron Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 130 131 Parliament of EnglandVacantTitle last held bySir Theobald GorgesJohn George Member of Parliament for Cirencester1648 With Nathaniel Rich Succeeded byNathaniel RichMilitary officesNew titleoffice created Commander in Chief of the Forces1645 1650 Succeeded byOliver CromwellCaptain General Lord General 1645 1650Honorary titlesVacantTitle last held byThe Viscount Savile Custos Rotulorum of the West Riding of Yorkshire1660 1671 Succeeded byThe Duke of BuckinghamHead of State of the Isle of ManPreceded byJames Stanley Lord of Mann1651 1660 Succeeded byCharles StanleyPeerage of ScotlandPreceded byFerdinando Fairfax Lord Fairfax of Cameron1648 1671 Succeeded byHenry Fairfax Retrieved from https en 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