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Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet

Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet, 13 September 1604 – 7 April 1661, was an English religious Independent, author, and landowner from Cheshire. He was Member of Parliament for Cheshire at various times between 1628 and 1653, and during the First English Civil War, commander of Parliamentarian forces in the North Midlands.

Sir
William Brereton
Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet
Member of Parliament
for Cheshire
1628
In office
November 1640 – April 1653
English Council of State
In office
December 1652 – February 1653
Personal details
Born13 September 1604
Handforth
Died7 April 1661(1661-04-07) (aged 56)
Croydon Palace
Resting placeSt John Baptist Churchyard, Croydon Minster
Spouse(s)Susanna Booth (1623–1637)
Cicely Mytton (1641–1649)
RelationsWilliam, Baron Brereton (1611–1664)
ChildrenOne son, three daughters
Parent(s)William Brereton (1584–1610); Margaret Holland (1585–1609)
Alma materBrasenose College, Oxford
OccupationLandowner and soldier
Military service
Allegiance England
Years of service1643 to 1646
RankMajor-General
CommandsCommander, Parliamentarian forces Cheshire
Battles/wars

In the 1630s, he travelled extensively through France, the Dutch Republic, Scotland, and Ireland; his travel journals from 1634 and 1635 were published in the 19th century. His records and letters from the Civil War are a primary source for Parliamentary local administration in the period, as well as the internal divisions that led to the Second English Civil War.

Despite a lack of prior military experience, he proved an energetic and capable soldier, and was one of the most powerful men in England when the First Civil War ended in 1646. However, he gave up his local offices, and although nominated as a judge, refused to attend the trial of Charles I in January 1649. He was elected to the English Council of State in 1652 and 1653 but rarely attended, living in semi-retirement in London. He resumed his seat for Cheshire when the Long Parliament was reinstated in 1659, until its dissolution in March 1660, and died on 7 April 1661.

Personal details Edit

 
The family home, Handforth Hall, Cheshire

Brereton was born 13 September 1604 at the family home, Handforth Hall, eldest son of William Brereton (1584–1610), and Margaret Holland (1585–1609). Orphaned at the age of six, he was made a ward of his maternal grandfather, Richard Holland of Denton (1549–1618).[1]

As well as Handforth Hall, he inherited over 3,000 acres from his parents; in 1623, he married Susanna Booth, fourth daughter of another substantial local landowner, Sir George Booth, of Dunham Massey Hall, Cheshire.[2]

George Moxon became his chaplain after being ordained in 1626.[3]

Before her death in 1637, they had four children; Susanna (1627, after 1661), Thomas (1632–1674), Frances (1635–1676), and Catherine (c. 1637 – after 1661). He took a second wife in 1641, Cicely Mytton, a wealthy Staffordshire widow, who died in 1649, and they had a daughter, Cecilia (c. 1642–1704). His will left Catherine and Cecilia £1,000 each.[1]

Career; pre-1642 Edit

He graduated from Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1621, and as was then common, studied law at Gray's Inn prior to his marriage in 1623.[1] It was here that he became friends with John Bradshaw, a lawyer from Cheshire who served as judge during the Trial of Charles I in January 1649.[4]

Like his maternal grandfather and father-in-law, Brereton was a zealous Puritan, a generic term for anyone who wanted to reform, or 'purify', the Church of England. The most prominent were Presbyterians, who wanted to bring its doctrine and structure into line with the Church of Scotland, and included Parliamentary leaders like John Pym and John Hampden. Based on his support for the Congregationalist radical, Samuel Eaton, and the reforms advocated by Sir Henry Vane the Younger in 1641, Brereton appears to have sympathised with those who rejected the concept of state-ordained religion.[5]

Appointed Deputy lieutenant for Cheshire, he was an unusually active Justice of the Peace, or JP, attending over 80% of sessions held between 1625 and 1641; in the same period, only one other person managed over 40%. In 1627, he was made a baronet in return for funding 30 soldiers in Ireland for three years.[2] In the 1628 Parliament, Brereton was elected MP for Cheshire; Charles I dissolved Parliament in 1629, and did not call another until 1640, instituting a period of Personal Rule sometimes called the "Eleven Year Tyranny".[6]

 
Modern example of a duck decoy, similar to those installed by Brereton

In the summer of 1634, Brereton visited the Dutch Republic and later published a detailed account of his travels. He installed the Dutch system of duck decoys on his lands, leading to disputes with his neighbours, who claimed it interfered with their hunting and hawking.[1] Another journal covered his trip through North East England, the Scottish Lowlands, [7] and Ireland in 1635. He later visited France, and possibly Northern Italy, although these writings have not survived.[8]

Despite his opposition in principle to taxes levied without Parliament, he paid Ship Money and took little part in the political debates that dominated the late 1630s. His main interests were religious and he strongly opposed Archbishop Laud's reforms to the Church of England. In 1640, he was re-elected for Cheshire in both the Short and Long Parliaments, and appointed to a number of Parliamentary Committees on religion. In early 1641, he organised a petition from Cheshire demanding the expulsion of bishops from the Church of England, and also supported the removal of church monuments.[5]

First English Civil War Edit

 
 
Chester
 
Hopton Heath
 
Malpas
 
Lichfield
 
Middlewich
 
Nantwich
 
Handforth
 
Stow-on-the-Wold
class=notpageimage|
Brereton's war 1642 to 1646; key locations mentioned in article

Following the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion in October 1641, Brereton supervised the transport of troops and supplies from Chester to Ireland.[4] When the First English Civil War began in August 1642, this made him an obvious choice for commander of Parliamentarian forces in the area. However, most of the Cheshire gentry was Royalist, including his cousin, William, Baron Brereton, and he was forced to withdraw to London.[2]

Along with a number of other regions, at the beginning of the war some prominent Cheshire notables attempted to remain neutral, and in December 1642 issued the Bunbury Agreement, which demanded an end to fighting in the area.[9] This proved impossible to enforce and in March 1643, Parliament sent Brereton back to Cheshire with 500 men, where he linked up with 2,000 local volunteers. Despite lacking military experience, he soon proved an energetic and resolute commander, winning two minor but significant victories at Middlewich and Hopton Heath. Establishing his headquarters at Nantwich, he soon attained superiority over Arthur Capell, Royalist commander in Shropshire, Cheshire, and North Wales.[10]

Over the next few years, Brereton waged an aggressive and relentless campaign throughout the North Midlands, one of his key subordinates being Colonel Robert Venables, a long-time family connection and friend, who later served in Ireland. Their activities forced the Royalists to divert resources from other areas, as Chester was essential for funnelling men and material from their supporters in Ireland and North Wales.[11]

In October 1643, Capell was replaced by Lord Byron, who assembled an army of over 5,000, many of them veterans from the war in Ireland. Defeated at Second Middlewich in December, Brereton appealed to Sir Thomas Fairfax for support. At Nantwich in January 1644, their combined force routed Byron, who lost over 1,500 men, most of his artillery, and baggage train and spent most of the next two years blockaded in Chester.[12]

At Malpas in August 1644, Brereton added to his reputation by routing Royalist cavalry under Marmaduke Langdale who had escaped from the defeat at Marston Moor. Combined with his influence in the region, this meant Brereton was one of the few to be exempted from the February 1645 Self-Denying Ordinance, under which army officers could not also be MPs. Chester finally surrendered in February 1646, and in March Brereton fought in the last major battle of the war at Stow-on-the-Wold.[13] He then besieged Lichfield, one of the last Royalist strongholds in England, which capitulated in July 1646.[2]

More than 2,000 of his letters from this period survive, and are one of the most important sources for understanding Parliamentary administration during the war. They also provide insights into its internal politics; Brereton was a member of the 'War Party', those who viewed military victory as essential before any negotiations with Charles. The 'Peace Party' included Denzil Holles, one of the Five Members whose failed arrest in January 1642 was a major step on the road to war.[14]

Post 1646 Edit

 
State apartments of Croydon Palace, now part of a private school

Historian John Morrill writes that in 1646, Brereton was 'one of the most powerful and influential men in England'.[15] As a reward for his services, Parliament granted him possession of Eccleshall Castle, seat of the Bishop of Lichfield, and Croydon Palace, owned by the Archbishop of Canterbury. After Pride's Purge in December 1648, he retained his seat in the Rump Parliament, and was appointed to the High Court of Justice for the trial of Charles I in January 1649, although he did not attend.[2]

Despite being elected to the English Council of State in 1651 and 1652, during the Commonwealth he lived in semi-retirement in Croydon Palace. The precise reasons are unclear, although it has been suggested he was disillusioned by the post-war religious and political settlement.[16] In the 1656 election, he unsuccessfully stood for Cheshire in opposition to the list proposed by Major-General Bridge.[2]

When the Long Parliament re-assembled in 1659, he took his seat once more but did not stand for the Convention Parliament. After the 1660 Restoration, he was obliged to return the church properties awarded in 1646 but was apparently allowed to stay on at Croydon at Croydon Palace where he died on 7 April 1661. His body was originally conveyed to St Mary's Church, Cheadle, Cheshire for burial, but whilst the funeral cortège made its way northwards a horse stumbled crossing a river in spate and the coffin was temporarily lost. It was finally extricated from the water and was returned to Croydon. Parish records show he was buried in Croydon Minster.[2]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Kyle 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Morrill 2013.
  3. ^ "Pynchon, John. Notes on sermons by George Moxon | Congregational Library & Archives". www.congregationallibrary.org. Congrgational Library. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  4. ^ a b Keay 2023, p. 15.
  5. ^ a b Morrill 1985, p. 316.
  6. ^ Arnold-Baker 1996, p. 270.
  7. ^ Brown 1891, pp. 132–158.
  8. ^ Brereton 1844, p. vii.
  9. ^ Wheeler 2021, p. 43.
  10. ^ Hutton 2003, p. 62.
  11. ^ Hutton 2003, pp. 125–126.
  12. ^ Robinson 1895, p. 147.
  13. ^ Royle 2004, p. 366.
  14. ^ Sharp 2000, p. 53.
  15. ^ Morrill 1985, p. 319.
  16. ^ Morrill 1985, p. 332.

Sources Edit

  • Arnold-Baker, Charles (1996). The Companion to British History (2015 ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1138928831.
  • Brereton, Sir William (1844) [written 1634–1635]. Marsh, Edward (ed.). Travels in Holland, the United Provinces, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Chetham Society.
  • Brown, Hume P., ed. (1891). "Sir William Brereton". Early Travellers in Scotland. Douglas.
  • Keay, Anna (2023). The Restless Republic. William Collins. ISBN 978-0008282059.
  • Hutton, Ronald (2003). The Royalist War Effort 1642–1646. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415305402.
  • Kyle, Chris (2010). Thrush, Andrew; Ferris, John (eds.). BRERETON, Sir William, 1st Bt. (1604-1661), of Handforth Hall, Cheshire in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604–1629. HMSO. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  • Morrill, John (1985). "Sir William Brereton and England's Wars of Religion". Journal of British Studies. 3 (24): 311–332. doi:10.1086/385837. JSTOR 175522. S2CID 143990745.
  • Morrill, John (2013). "Brereton, Sir William, first baronet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/3333. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Robinson, AM (1895). Cheshire in the Great Civil War (PDF). Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  • Royle, Trevor (2004). Civil War: The Wars of the Three Kingdoms 1638–1660 (2006 ed.). Abacus. ISBN 978-0-349-11564-1.
  • Sharp, David (2000). England in Crisis, 1640-60. Heinemann. ISBN 978-0435327149.
  • Wheeler, Hadyn (2021). Clubmen 1645; Neutralism in a revolution. Minster Press. ISBN 978-1899499946.

william, brereton, baronet, september, 1604, april, 1661, english, religious, independent, author, landowner, from, cheshire, member, parliament, cheshire, various, times, between, 1628, 1653, during, first, english, civil, commander, parliamentarian, forces, . Sir William Brereton 1st Baronet 13 September 1604 7 April 1661 was an English religious Independent author and landowner from Cheshire He was Member of Parliament for Cheshire at various times between 1628 and 1653 and during the First English Civil War commander of Parliamentarian forces in the North Midlands SirWilliam BreretonMP JPSir William Brereton 1st BaronetMember of Parliamentfor Cheshire1628In office November 1640 April 1653English Council of StateIn office December 1652 February 1653Personal detailsBorn13 September 1604HandforthDied7 April 1661 1661 04 07 aged 56 Croydon PalaceResting placeSt John Baptist Churchyard Croydon MinsterSpouse s Susanna Booth 1623 1637 Cicely Mytton 1641 1649 RelationsWilliam Baron Brereton 1611 1664 ChildrenOne son three daughtersParent s William Brereton 1584 1610 Margaret Holland 1585 1609 Alma materBrasenose College OxfordOccupationLandowner and soldierMilitary serviceAllegiance EnglandYears of service1643 to 1646RankMajor GeneralCommandsCommander Parliamentarian forces CheshireBattles warsFirst English Civil War First Middlewich Hopton Heath Second Middlewich Nantwich Malpas Chester Stow on the Wold Third siege of LichfieldIn the 1630s he travelled extensively through France the Dutch Republic Scotland and Ireland his travel journals from 1634 and 1635 were published in the 19th century His records and letters from the Civil War are a primary source for Parliamentary local administration in the period as well as the internal divisions that led to the Second English Civil War Despite a lack of prior military experience he proved an energetic and capable soldier and was one of the most powerful men in England when the First Civil War ended in 1646 However he gave up his local offices and although nominated as a judge refused to attend the trial of Charles I in January 1649 He was elected to the English Council of State in 1652 and 1653 but rarely attended living in semi retirement in London He resumed his seat for Cheshire when the Long Parliament was reinstated in 1659 until its dissolution in March 1660 and died on 7 April 1661 Contents 1 Personal details 2 Career pre 1642 3 First English Civil War 4 Post 1646 5 References 6 SourcesPersonal details Edit The family home Handforth Hall CheshireBrereton was born 13 September 1604 at the family home Handforth Hall eldest son of William Brereton 1584 1610 and Margaret Holland 1585 1609 Orphaned at the age of six he was made a ward of his maternal grandfather Richard Holland of Denton 1549 1618 1 As well as Handforth Hall he inherited over 3 000 acres from his parents in 1623 he married Susanna Booth fourth daughter of another substantial local landowner Sir George Booth of Dunham Massey Hall Cheshire 2 George Moxon became his chaplain after being ordained in 1626 3 Before her death in 1637 they had four children Susanna 1627 after 1661 Thomas 1632 1674 Frances 1635 1676 and Catherine c 1637 after 1661 He took a second wife in 1641 Cicely Mytton a wealthy Staffordshire widow who died in 1649 and they had a daughter Cecilia c 1642 1704 His will left Catherine and Cecilia 1 000 each 1 Career pre 1642 EditHe graduated from Brasenose College Oxford in 1621 and as was then common studied law at Gray s Inn prior to his marriage in 1623 1 It was here that he became friends with John Bradshaw a lawyer from Cheshire who served as judge during the Trial of Charles I in January 1649 4 Like his maternal grandfather and father in law Brereton was a zealous Puritan a generic term for anyone who wanted to reform or purify the Church of England The most prominent were Presbyterians who wanted to bring its doctrine and structure into line with the Church of Scotland and included Parliamentary leaders like John Pym and John Hampden Based on his support for the Congregationalist radical Samuel Eaton and the reforms advocated by Sir Henry Vane the Younger in 1641 Brereton appears to have sympathised with those who rejected the concept of state ordained religion 5 Appointed Deputy lieutenant for Cheshire he was an unusually active Justice of the Peace or JP attending over 80 of sessions held between 1625 and 1641 in the same period only one other person managed over 40 In 1627 he was made a baronet in return for funding 30 soldiers in Ireland for three years 2 In the 1628 Parliament Brereton was elected MP for Cheshire Charles I dissolved Parliament in 1629 and did not call another until 1640 instituting a period of Personal Rule sometimes called the Eleven Year Tyranny 6 Modern example of a duck decoy similar to those installed by BreretonIn the summer of 1634 Brereton visited the Dutch Republic and later published a detailed account of his travels He installed the Dutch system of duck decoys on his lands leading to disputes with his neighbours who claimed it interfered with their hunting and hawking 1 Another journal covered his trip through North East England the Scottish Lowlands 7 and Ireland in 1635 He later visited France and possibly Northern Italy although these writings have not survived 8 Despite his opposition in principle to taxes levied without Parliament he paid Ship Money and took little part in the political debates that dominated the late 1630s His main interests were religious and he strongly opposed Archbishop Laud s reforms to the Church of England In 1640 he was re elected for Cheshire in both the Short and Long Parliaments and appointed to a number of Parliamentary Committees on religion In early 1641 he organised a petition from Cheshire demanding the expulsion of bishops from the Church of England and also supported the removal of church monuments 5 First English Civil War Edit Chester Hopton Heath Malpas Lichfield Middlewich Nantwich Handforth Stow on the Woldclass notpageimage Brereton s war 1642 to 1646 key locations mentioned in article Following the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion in October 1641 Brereton supervised the transport of troops and supplies from Chester to Ireland 4 When the First English Civil War began in August 1642 this made him an obvious choice for commander of Parliamentarian forces in the area However most of the Cheshire gentry was Royalist including his cousin William Baron Brereton and he was forced to withdraw to London 2 Along with a number of other regions at the beginning of the war some prominent Cheshire notables attempted to remain neutral and in December 1642 issued the Bunbury Agreement which demanded an end to fighting in the area 9 This proved impossible to enforce and in March 1643 Parliament sent Brereton back to Cheshire with 500 men where he linked up with 2 000 local volunteers Despite lacking military experience he soon proved an energetic and resolute commander winning two minor but significant victories at Middlewich and Hopton Heath Establishing his headquarters at Nantwich he soon attained superiority over Arthur Capell Royalist commander in Shropshire Cheshire and North Wales 10 Over the next few years Brereton waged an aggressive and relentless campaign throughout the North Midlands one of his key subordinates being Colonel Robert Venables a long time family connection and friend who later served in Ireland Their activities forced the Royalists to divert resources from other areas as Chester was essential for funnelling men and material from their supporters in Ireland and North Wales 11 In October 1643 Capell was replaced by Lord Byron who assembled an army of over 5 000 many of them veterans from the war in Ireland Defeated at Second Middlewich in December Brereton appealed to Sir Thomas Fairfax for support At Nantwich in January 1644 their combined force routed Byron who lost over 1 500 men most of his artillery and baggage train and spent most of the next two years blockaded in Chester 12 At Malpas in August 1644 Brereton added to his reputation by routing Royalist cavalry under Marmaduke Langdale who had escaped from the defeat at Marston Moor Combined with his influence in the region this meant Brereton was one of the few to be exempted from the February 1645 Self Denying Ordinance under which army officers could not also be MPs Chester finally surrendered in February 1646 and in March Brereton fought in the last major battle of the war at Stow on the Wold 13 He then besieged Lichfield one of the last Royalist strongholds in England which capitulated in July 1646 2 More than 2 000 of his letters from this period survive and are one of the most important sources for understanding Parliamentary administration during the war They also provide insights into its internal politics Brereton was a member of the War Party those who viewed military victory as essential before any negotiations with Charles The Peace Party included Denzil Holles one of the Five Members whose failed arrest in January 1642 was a major step on the road to war 14 Post 1646 Edit State apartments of Croydon Palace now part of a private schoolHistorian John Morrill writes that in 1646 Brereton was one of the most powerful and influential men in England 15 As a reward for his services Parliament granted him possession of Eccleshall Castle seat of the Bishop of Lichfield and Croydon Palace owned by the Archbishop of Canterbury After Pride s Purge in December 1648 he retained his seat in the Rump Parliament and was appointed to the High Court of Justice for the trial of Charles I in January 1649 although he did not attend 2 Despite being elected to the English Council of State in 1651 and 1652 during the Commonwealth he lived in semi retirement in Croydon Palace The precise reasons are unclear although it has been suggested he was disillusioned by the post war religious and political settlement 16 In the 1656 election he unsuccessfully stood for Cheshire in opposition to the list proposed by Major General Bridge 2 When the Long Parliament re assembled in 1659 he took his seat once more but did not stand for the Convention Parliament After the 1660 Restoration he was obliged to return the church properties awarded in 1646 but was apparently allowed to stay on at Croydon at Croydon Palace where he died on 7 April 1661 His body was originally conveyed to St Mary s Church Cheadle Cheshire for burial but whilst the funeral cortege made its way northwards a horse stumbled crossing a river in spate and the coffin was temporarily lost It was finally extricated from the water and was returned to Croydon Parish records show he was buried in Croydon Minster 2 References Edit a b c d Kyle 2010 a b c d e f g Morrill 2013 Pynchon John Notes on sermons by George Moxon Congregational Library amp Archives www congregationallibrary org Congrgational Library Retrieved 4 June 2023 a b Keay 2023 p 15 a b Morrill 1985 p 316 Arnold Baker 1996 p 270 Brown 1891 pp 132 158 Brereton 1844 p vii Wheeler 2021 p 43 Hutton 2003 p 62 Hutton 2003 pp 125 126 Robinson 1895 p 147 Royle 2004 p 366 Sharp 2000 p 53 Morrill 1985 p 319 Morrill 1985 p 332 Sources EditArnold Baker Charles 1996 The Companion to British History 2015 ed Routledge ISBN 978 1138928831 Brereton Sir William 1844 written 1634 1635 Marsh Edward ed Travels in Holland the United Provinces England Scotland and Ireland Chetham Society Brown Hume P ed 1891 Sir William Brereton Early Travellers in Scotland Douglas Keay Anna 2023 The Restless Republic William Collins ISBN 978 0008282059 Hutton Ronald 2003 The Royalist War Effort 1642 1646 Routledge ISBN 978 0415305402 Kyle Chris 2010 Thrush Andrew Ferris John eds BRERETON Sir William 1st Bt 1604 1661 of Handforth Hall Cheshire in The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 HMSO Retrieved 19 June 2020 Morrill John 1985 Sir William Brereton and England s Wars of Religion Journal of British Studies 3 24 311 332 doi 10 1086 385837 JSTOR 175522 S2CID 143990745 Morrill John 2013 Brereton Sir William first baronet Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3333 Subscription or UK public library membership required Robinson AM 1895 Cheshire in the Great Civil War PDF Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire Retrieved 19 June 2020 Royle Trevor 2004 Civil War The Wars of the Three Kingdoms 1638 1660 2006 ed Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11564 1 Sharp David 2000 England in Crisis 1640 60 Heinemann ISBN 978 0435327149 Wheeler Hadyn 2021 Clubmen 1645 Neutralism in a revolution Minster Press ISBN 978 1899499946 Parliament of EnglandPreceded bySir Richard Grosvenor BtPeter Daniel Member of Parliament for Cheshire1628 1629 With Sir Richard Grosvenor Bt Parliament suspended until 1640VacantParliament suspended since 1629 Member of Parliament for Cheshire1640 1653 With Sir Thomas Aston 1st Baronet 1640Peter Venables 1640 1644George Booth 1646 1653 Succeeded byRobert DuckenfieldHenry BirkenheadPreceded byJohn BradshawRichard Legh Member of Parliament for Cheshire1659 With Sir George Booth Bt Succeeded bySir George Booth BtSir Thomas Mainwaring BtBaronetage of EnglandNew creation Baronet of Hanford 1627 1661 Succeeded byThomas Brereton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sir William Brereton 1st Baronet amp oldid 1172079604, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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