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William Chester (mayor)

Sir William Chester (1509 – c. 1574) was one of the leading English Merchants of the Staple and Merchant Adventurers of the mid-16th century, five times Master of the Worshipful Company of Drapers (and twice more for part-years),[1] Lord Mayor of London in the year 1560–61 and Member of Parliament for the City of London.[2][3] He should not be confused with his contemporary, William Chester, merchant of Bristol, M.P.[4]

Origins and early career edit

Parentage edit

Born about 1509, William Chester was the second son of John Chester, citizen and Draper of London, and his second wife Joan, née Hill,[5] sister of the London citizen and Haberdasher John Hill (died 1516).[6] By his first marriage John Chester had a daughter Alice (Grene), living in 1542 a widow and nun. Joan had previously been married to Richard Welles, Mercer, who died in 1505,[7] and she had a son Anthony Welles, living in 1513. John and Joan Chester had two sons, Nicholas and William. John died in 1513,[8] his annual obit being kept by the Drapers on 26 May at St Thomas of Acon,[9] and by 1515 Joan remarried to Sir John Milbourne,[10] Master of the Drapers' Company in that year,[11] who had been Sheriff of London in 1510 and became Lord Mayor in 1521.[12] There were no children by the marriage of Sir John and Dame Joan Milbourne.

In business: Drapers and Merchant Adventurers edit

William was educated at Peterhouse College in the University of Cambridge,[13] but did not proceed to a degree. On leaving the University he entered at once into trade as a draper and Merchant of the Staple. He was made free of the Drapers' Company by patrimony in 1529,[14] and in the path set by his stepfather (who died in 1536,[15] his obit being kept on 5 April at the Crutched Friars[16]) he and his brother Nicholas built their position within it, appearing as Freemen Householders of the Company in the Chapterhouse list of 1537.[17] A Warden first in 1542-43,[1] William Chester with Thomas Blower assisted William Roche (then Lord Mayor) in taking possession from Sir Edward North of the mansion of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, which had been purchased by the Drapers for their Company Hall following Cromwell's attainder.[18]

In 1544 the art of refining sugar was first practised in England by Cornelius Bussine and four partners, of whom Chester was one. These adventurers set up two sugar bakeries which continued without rivals for twenty years and brought great profit to the proprietors.[19] Dame Joan Milbourne dying in 1545, she was buried in St Edmund's, Lombard Street, where her son erected a monument in 1563. By his mother's will (of which he was executor and chief beneficiary)[20] Chester received a considerable addition to his fortune. This probably enabled him to weather the storm which befell the English Merchant Adventurers in that year, when the Emperor Charles V placed an embargo on English merchandise. Secretary William Paget, writing from Brussels early in 1545, remarked: 'Some in dede shall wynne by it, who owe more than they have here, but Mr. Warren, Mr. Hill, Chester, and dyvers others a greats nombre are like to have a great swoope [i.e., loss] by it, having much here, and owing nothing or little'.[21] His second term as Draper Warden was in 1546-47, and his third in 1549-1550, on each occasion in the Masterhood of John Sadler.[1]

Civic responsibilities edit

The Act for suppression of Chantries having been revived in the first year of Edward's reign, in March 1551 Mr. Chester reported to the Drapers that the repurchase of the lands and benefits of their obitts would amount to £1402.6s. payable to the City's Trustees (Richard Turke, William Blackwell and Augustine Hynde).[22] Closely involved in the refoundation of the Hospitals, and serving as Treasurer of St Thomas' Hospital,[23] he was appointed in 1552 one of twelve persons, led by Sir Martin Bowes and Bishop Ridley, to petition the King on behalf of the City for the grant of Bridewell Palace for the reception of vagrants and mendicants.[24] Chester made generous private benefactions towards the reconstruction of Christ's Hospital,[25] making "the bricke wals and way on the backe side, which leadeth from the said new Hospitall, unto the Hospitall of Sainte Bartholomew".[26]

Chester was elected an Alderman of London for Farringdon Ward Without in January 1552-3.[27] It was however as a senior Merchant of the Staple or Merchant Adventurer that he was among those summoned by the Duke of Northumberland to countersign the Letters Patent for the Limitation of the Crown,[28] when the death of King Edward was anticipated.

The Marian period edit

Masterhood and shrievalty edit

Chester was elected on 5 August 1553 to his first term as Master of the Company,[29] and (with the alteration of religious policy on the accession of Queen Mary) was for 1554–55 Sheriff of London with David Woodroffe as his colleague,[27] in the mayoralty of Sir John Lyon. In their term the Marian persecutions began in earnest: they were obliged to superintend executions of Reformers, in first place the distinguished divines John Rogers and John Bradford. Chester's humanity towards the sufferers was highly praised by John Foxe and contrasted with Woodroffe's harshness.[30] Before giving Dr Rowland Taylor into the custody of the Sheriff of Essex, Chester intervened to allow him a leave-taking from his wife, and offered her his own house in which to await.[31]

In 1541 Chester had taken as apprentice Lawrence Saunders, a Cambridge graduate, who longed to return to his religious studies. Chester released him from his bond, and during Edward's reign Saunders preached in the Midlands until appointed to All Hallows, Bread Street in 1553.[32] Although warned against taking up his benefice he did so, and preached against the Roman errors. He was arrested on Bonner's orders, imprisoned in London, condemned as a heretic at St Mary Overie, and burned at Coventry in February 1555.[33] Chester, a governor of Christ's Hospital, also took a sustained interest in the career of Edmund Campion, and sponsored him as a scholar to St John's College, Oxford.[34] In December 1557, John Bury, his wife's nephew, dedicated to him a translation of the Parænesis to Demonicus by Isocrates.[35]

Muscovy and Antwerp edit

Although not named an officer or assistant in King Philip and Queen Mary's 1555 Charter to the Muscovy Company,[36] Chester was of the founding fellowship[37] under Sebastian Cabot as Governor and George Barne, William Garrard, Anthony Hussey[38] and John Southcote as Consuls. Chester was a joint owner of the ships Primrose (with Andrew Judde, William Castelin and Anthony Hickman) and John Baptist (with Andrew Judde). He witnessed the exchange of royal gifts with the Russian ambassador in London in 1557, and afterwards with Judd, Hussey, Garrard and Barne sent report of the death of Richard Chancellor to George Killingworth and others in Russia by a mercantile fleet in which both ships sailed.[39]

In 1556 Chester was elected to his second term as Master of his Company,[1] and transferred to the ward of Billingsgate.[27] On 7 February 1556/7 he was knighted, together with Sir Thomas Offley, Lord Mayor, by Queen Mary at Greenwich.[40] This unusual honour for an alderman (especially one being of contrary religion) is said to have been bestowed because he was a merchant of great account in the city of Antwerp, whereby he furnished King Philip with great treasure and sums of money upon his arrival in England.[41] In that year his eldest son William Chester was made free of the Drapers' Company.[42] Following the fall of Calais it fell necessary for Mary to license Chester and other Merchants of the Staple (including aldermen Judd, Offley, Woodroffe, Leigh and Lodge) to ship to Bruges in Flanders, and to pardon their disregard of the statutes during the previous year.[43]

Chester the Elizabethan edit

At the onset of Elizabeth's reign Chester, now a very wealthy man, with various others participated in a loan of £30,000 to the Crown and was granted rights to receive interest at ten per cent. With them he received grants of reversions and rents in 1560.[44] He transferred to the ward of Bassishaw in 1559, vacant by the death of alderman John Machell, and embarked upon his third term as Master of the Drapers' Company.[27] Chester and his Wardens brought to Chancery decree a claim concerning a twenty-year-old legacy in the Company's trust of 12,000 gold ducats, provision for the orphaned kin of a Welsh merchant in Seville. The case was still in progress in 1566.[45]

He was appointed a royal commissioner (1559 and 1562) to implement Acts of Parliament for uniformity of prayer,[46][47] to regulate the grievances of prisoners in the Ludgate,[48] and to restore the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Crown.[49] For the City he was made a commissioner for purchasing the site of Gresham's Royal Exchange, and contributed £10 towards the fund. In June 1560, with Sir William Garrard and Thomas Lodge (then Sheriff), he was among the principal mourners at the public funeral of Anthony Hussey.[50] Hussey's will (in which he further endowed Edmund Campion) shows his closeness to Chester, before whom his final codicil was declared in 1560, but his executors were Thomas Lodge and Benjamin Gonson.[51]

Mayoralty edit

On 23 July 1560 occurred the funeral of his first wife, Dame Elizabeth Chester, daughter of Thomas Lovett of Astwell Castle, Northamptonshire. By her he had six sons and eight daughters, three of whom died in infancy. It was a very grand ceremony, with a procession of 100 men in new gowns and women likewise, aldermen and heralds with pennons, and singing clerks to St Edmund, Lombard Street, the street and church hung with black cloth and armorials.[52] Thomas Becon gave her funeral sermon. For her monument Chester composed Latin verses of valediction.[53] Amid these solemnities he was elected Lord Mayor (in succession to Sir William Hewett), assuming office towards the close of that year, and on 3 October his sons Thomas and John were admitted to freedom of the Drapers' Company by patrimony.[54] In April 1561 obsequies were resumed when Dame Alice Hewett died and was buried at St Martin Orgar with an immense procession of mourners, heralds, the livery of the Clothworkers, and the aldermen with Chester the Lord Mayor in their midst.[55]

Sir William Chester, Sir Thomas Offley and Sir Thomas Leigh head the list of those incorporated as Merchants of the Staple of England in Elizabeth's Charter of 1561,[56] and John Marshe, Emanuel Lucar, Leigh, Garrard and Chester lead those newly reincorporated to the freedom of the Merchant Adventurers of England in July 1564.[57] The commission upon uniformity of prayer, and for right religious observance and the reinstatement of deprived ministers, was renewed,[58] and Chester was appointed to another to investigate the counterfeiting of currency.[59] In Elizabeth's second parliament, which met on 11 January 1562/3, he sat as one of the representatives of the City of London.[2] In March 1563, with Sir William Garrard, Sir Thomas Offley and Sir Christopher Draper, he represented the aldermanry at David Woodroffe's funeral.[60] His fourth term as Master Draper was in 1563-64.

Mercantile activities edit

He was an investor in the 1562–63[61] and 1563[62] trading adventures to Guinea, led by the factor Robert Baker, and also in the 1564–65 expedition,[63][64] all of which were for mercantile trade returning to England. In these ventures he was associated with Sir William Garrard, Sir Thomas Lodge, Anthony Hickman, Lionel Duckett and others, but he is not named by Richard Hakluyt as being among the promoters of the voyages involving human trafficking from Guinea to the West Indies in the same years.[65] The Guinea mercantile trading voyages met with various misfortunes. With Martin Bowes and William Garrard Chester led a royal commission to inquire into the petition of Sir Thomas Lodge, Lord Mayor, at the time of his bankruptcy.[66] Anthony Jenkinson obtained for Garrard, Lodge, Chester and others safe conduct and privileges for trading by Obdowlocan of Tabaristan in 1563. Their names recur in the grant of privileges by the Shah of Persia, communicated by Arthur Edwards from Astrakhan in 1566 and 1567 to Garrard and Chester as Governors of the Muscovy Company, then receiving its new Charter.[67] Queen Elizabeth spoke of Chester in a dispatch of 27 September 1571 as one of her greatest and best merchants trading with the Shah.

Last years edit

His last move as alderman, from 1566 to 1573, was to the Langbourn ward,[27] in which stood his house in Lombard Street close by the George Inn.[68] On 2 May 1567 the Senate of the University of Cambridge awarded him an honorary M.A. degree. In 1567 he served out the incomplete term of Draper Mastership for William Beswick (who died in that year[69]),[1] and in November, at St Lawrence Pountney, took to his second wife Beswick's widow Joan, daughter of John Turner of London. This union affirmed their Offley kinship, since Joan's daughter Agnes had married William Offley and Chester's daughter Jane was wife of Richard Offley, Merchant Taylors, both half-brothers of Sir Thomas.[70] He then served his own fifth full term as Master of the Drapers in 1567–68, and lastly in 1568–69 completed the term of Richard Champion, who died in November 1568.[1]

In 1571 he was appointed to the special commission of oyer and terminer for the trial for high treason of John Felton, who had published the Papal bull of Regnans in Excelsis against Queen Elizabeth.[71] Dame Joan died in 1572 and was buried on 23 December in St Lawrence's church beside her first husband. Chester became a Fellow-commoner of his college, and subscribed to a petition to amend the university statutes on 6 May 1572. Soon afterwards he retired from business and resigned from the aldermanry. He devoted his last years to the pursuit of classical and theological learning at the University of Cambridge.[72]

Departure edit

The date of his death is not exactly known, and was formerly thought to have been during the 1590s, but is now known to have been before 1574.[73] A litigation noted in the King's Remembrancer, Barons' depositions, dated in the Hilary term of 16 Elizabeth (1574) refers to 'the goods of Sir William Chester deceased, late alderman of the city of London.'[74] (Nicholas Mewes, who became free in 1576, had served William Chester junior: William Wilmer, who had served with one William Chester, completed his term that year with Ambrose Saunders,[75] brother of the martyr Lawrence.) His mansion in Lombard Street, which he had leased to Richard Offley, was later sold to Sir George Barne (who died in 1593) by William Chester, his son and heir.[76] In 1595 a grant of Administration of Sir William's estate was made to his son John Chester.[77] Sir William Chester died at Cambridge, but was buried in London in his vault in St. Edmund's, Lombard Street.

Family edit

The children of Sir William Chester and his first wife, Elizabeth Lovett, are shown as follows.[78] They had sons:

  • William Chester of London, son and heir, Constable of Wisbech Castle, married Judith, daughter and coheir of Anthony Cave of Chicheley, Buckinghamshire. They had one son and heir, Anthony Chester. William and Judith were married in 1558, the year after William was made free of the Draper's Company.[42] Judith (born 1542) was cousin to William on the Lovett side: her grandfather Thomas Lovett (1495–1523) was elder half-brother to William Chester's mother. William and Judith resided mostly in London but Anthony became master of Chicheley, which remained in the Chester family for many generations.[79][80] Judith died in 1570, and William remarried to Anne, daughter of Robert Frere, of the family of the manor of Blanketts, Claines, Worcestershire:[81][82] they had two further children.[83]
  • Thomas Chester, B.A. in the University of Oxford, was made free of the Draper's Company on 3 October 1560 by patrimony.[84] He was appointed Bishop of Elphin in the reformed Church of Ireland in 1580 or 1582, and died at Killiathan in 1584.
  • John Chester, was made free of the Draper's Company on 3 October 1560 by patrimony.[85] He married in 1566 to Elizabeth. She died without surviving issue and was buried at Quainton, Buckinghamshire in 1593, and John Chester died at St James, Clerkenwell in 1603. John was granted administration of his father's estate in 1595.
  • Daniel Chester (living 1568), died unmarried.
  • Francis Chester (living 1568), died unmarried.

and daughters:

  • Francisca Chester, married (before August 1550) Sir William Chester's apprentice Robert Tempest, citizen and Draper of London, Merchant Adventurer and Merchant of the Staple of Calais, who died without issue in 1551. Among his bequests he left £300 for the foundation of a school for the poor children of Calais. His will[86] is an important source of genealogical information, and he is named in Sir William Chester's inscription on his wife's tomb. Francisca died in 1559,[87] in which year Sir William Chester challenged the claim of Anna Harrison, alias Adeson, Tempest's natural sister, in the administration of Tempest's will.[88]
  • Emme Chester, married (January 1562) John Gardener of London, grocer, a colleague of Sir William's in the sugar refinery business.
  • Jane Chester, married before 1568 Richard Offley 'the Merchant', Merchant Taylor (Master of that Company in 1572 and 1582), younger half-brother and factor in Calais to Sir Thomas Offley at the time of its loss to the French. Richard was 'a great shipper of wools', and obtained good sales worth £5000 on the eve of the fall. They are said to have had several children who were brought up in godly fashion and in good manners of life, and received instruction from their grandfather Chester. Richard died soon after his brother Sir Thomas and was survived by his wife.[89]
  • Susannah Chester, married John Trott of London, citizen and Draper. They had two sons and numerous daughters. John died in 1601 and Susannah survived him.
  • Frances Chester married Francis Robinson, citizen and Grocer of London.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f A.H. Johnson, The History of the Worshipful Company of the Drapers of London, 2 vols (Clarendon Press, Oxford 1915), II, pp. 470-71 (Internet Archive).
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  60. ^ Diary of Henry Machyn, pp. 303-04 (Internet Archive).
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  66. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, Elizabeth I, Vol. III: 1563–1566 (1960), items 488 and 489, p. 120 (Internet Archive).
  67. ^ Goldsmid (ed.), Principal Navigations, III Part ii (1886), pp. 283-84, 304-05, 319-25 (Internet Archive).
  68. ^ Note, in Nichols (ed.), The Diary of Henry Machyn, p. 381 (Internet Archive).
  69. ^ Will of Willeam Beswicke, Draper of London (P.C.C. 1567, Stonard quire).
  70. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, p. 36 and note (Internet Archive).
  71. ^ Fourth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, February 28, 1843, (By Command, HMSO London 1843), p. 265 (Google).
  72. ^ Welch 1887.
  73. ^ L. Branch, Faith and Fraternity: London Livery Companies and the Reformation 1510-1603 (Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden 2017), at p. 110 (Google).
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  75. ^ Records of London's Livery Companies Online: Apprentices and Freemen, 1400-1900, ref: DRML3688 (londonroll.org).
  76. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, p. 38 (Internet Archive).
  77. ^ Index to Acts of Administration in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, III: 1581–1595, British Record Society Vol. 76 (1954), 1595.135.
  78. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, pp. 38-41 (Internet Archive). (Robert Cooke, Clarenceux), Visitation of London 1568, p. 1.
  79. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, pp. 41-88 (Internet Archive).
  80. ^ See short summary in P. Collins and S. Fischer, 'The story of Chicheley Hall' (Reports), Notes and Records of the Royal Society Vol. 65 issue 2 (2011), pp. 183-96 (royalsociety).
  81. ^ H.S.G., 'Pedigree of Freer or Frere of "The Blanketts", Worcestershire', in J.G. Nichols (ed.), The Herald and Genealogist, V (J.G. Nichols and R.C. Nichols, London 1870), pp. 427-29 (Internet Archive).
  82. ^ See 'Parishes: Claines', in A History of the County of Worcester, Vol. 3 (V.C.H., London 1913), pp. 300-08 (British History online accessed 17 May 2017).
  83. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, at p. 68.
  84. ^ Records of London's Livery Companies Online: Apprentices and Freemen, 1400-1900, ref: DREB6694 (londonroll.org).
  85. ^ Records of London's Livery Companies Online: Apprentices and Freemen, 1400-1900, ref: DREB6692 (londonroll.org).
  86. ^ Will of Robert Tempest, Draper and Merchant of the Staple at Callais of London (P.C.C. 1551, Bucke quire).
  87. ^ Waters, Chester of Chicheley, I, at pp. 39-40, including abstract of Robert Tempest's will.
  88. ^ Sentence of Robert Tempest (P.C.C. 1559).
  89. ^ 'A Manuscript relating to the family of Offley', at pp. 85-86 (Internet Archive).

Credit edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWelch, Charles (1887). "Chester, William". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 10. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

william, chester, mayor, william, chester, 1509, 1574, leading, english, merchants, staple, merchant, adventurers, 16th, century, five, times, master, worshipful, company, drapers, twice, more, part, years, lord, mayor, london, year, 1560, member, parliament, . Sir William Chester 1509 c 1574 was one of the leading English Merchants of the Staple and Merchant Adventurers of the mid 16th century five times Master of the Worshipful Company of Drapers and twice more for part years 1 Lord Mayor of London in the year 1560 61 and Member of Parliament for the City of London 2 3 He should not be confused with his contemporary William Chester merchant of Bristol M P 4 Contents 1 Origins and early career 1 1 Parentage 1 2 In business Drapers and Merchant Adventurers 1 3 Civic responsibilities 2 The Marian period 2 1 Masterhood and shrievalty 2 2 Muscovy and Antwerp 3 Chester the Elizabethan 3 1 Mayoralty 3 2 Mercantile activities 3 3 Last years 3 4 Departure 4 Family 5 References 6 CreditOrigins and early career editParentage edit Born about 1509 William Chester was the second son of John Chester citizen and Draper of London and his second wife Joan nee Hill 5 sister of the London citizen and Haberdasher John Hill died 1516 6 By his first marriage John Chester had a daughter Alice Grene living in 1542 a widow and nun Joan had previously been married to Richard Welles Mercer who died in 1505 7 and she had a son Anthony Welles living in 1513 John and Joan Chester had two sons Nicholas and William John died in 1513 8 his annual obit being kept by the Drapers on 26 May at St Thomas of Acon 9 and by 1515 Joan remarried to Sir John Milbourne 10 Master of the Drapers Company in that year 11 who had been Sheriff of London in 1510 and became Lord Mayor in 1521 12 There were no children by the marriage of Sir John and Dame Joan Milbourne In business Drapers and Merchant Adventurers edit William was educated at Peterhouse College in the University of Cambridge 13 but did not proceed to a degree On leaving the University he entered at once into trade as a draper and Merchant of the Staple He was made free of the Drapers Company by patrimony in 1529 14 and in the path set by his stepfather who died in 1536 15 his obit being kept on 5 April at the Crutched Friars 16 he and his brother Nicholas built their position within it appearing as Freemen Householders of the Company in the Chapterhouse list of 1537 17 A Warden first in 1542 43 1 William Chester with Thomas Blower assisted William Roche then Lord Mayor in taking possession from Sir Edward North of the mansion of Thomas Cromwell Earl of Essex which had been purchased by the Drapers for their Company Hall following Cromwell s attainder 18 In 1544 the art of refining sugar was first practised in England by Cornelius Bussine and four partners of whom Chester was one These adventurers set up two sugar bakeries which continued without rivals for twenty years and brought great profit to the proprietors 19 Dame Joan Milbourne dying in 1545 she was buried in St Edmund s Lombard Street where her son erected a monument in 1563 By his mother s will of which he was executor and chief beneficiary 20 Chester received a considerable addition to his fortune This probably enabled him to weather the storm which befell the English Merchant Adventurers in that year when the Emperor Charles V placed an embargo on English merchandise Secretary William Paget writing from Brussels early in 1545 remarked Some in dede shall wynne by it who owe more than they have here but Mr Warren Mr Hill Chester and dyvers others a greats nombre are like to have a great swoope i e loss by it having much here and owing nothing or little 21 His second term as Draper Warden was in 1546 47 and his third in 1549 1550 on each occasion in the Masterhood of John Sadler 1 Civic responsibilities edit The Act for suppression of Chantries having been revived in the first year of Edward s reign in March 1551 Mr Chester reported to the Drapers that the repurchase of the lands and benefits of their obitts would amount to 1402 6s payable to the City s Trustees Richard Turke William Blackwell and Augustine Hynde 22 Closely involved in the refoundation of the Hospitals and serving as Treasurer of St Thomas Hospital 23 he was appointed in 1552 one of twelve persons led by Sir Martin Bowes and Bishop Ridley to petition the King on behalf of the City for the grant of Bridewell Palace for the reception of vagrants and mendicants 24 Chester made generous private benefactions towards the reconstruction of Christ s Hospital 25 making the bricke wals and way on the backe side which leadeth from the said new Hospitall unto the Hospitall of Sainte Bartholomew 26 Chester was elected an Alderman of London for Farringdon Ward Without in January 1552 3 27 It was however as a senior Merchant of the Staple or Merchant Adventurer that he was among those summoned by the Duke of Northumberland to countersign the Letters Patent for the Limitation of the Crown 28 when the death of King Edward was anticipated The Marian period editMasterhood and shrievalty edit Chester was elected on 5 August 1553 to his first term as Master of the Company 29 and with the alteration of religious policy on the accession of Queen Mary was for 1554 55 Sheriff of London with David Woodroffe as his colleague 27 in the mayoralty of Sir John Lyon In their term the Marian persecutions began in earnest they were obliged to superintend executions of Reformers in first place the distinguished divines John Rogers and John Bradford Chester s humanity towards the sufferers was highly praised by John Foxe and contrasted with Woodroffe s harshness 30 Before giving Dr Rowland Taylor into the custody of the Sheriff of Essex Chester intervened to allow him a leave taking from his wife and offered her his own house in which to await 31 In 1541 Chester had taken as apprentice Lawrence Saunders a Cambridge graduate who longed to return to his religious studies Chester released him from his bond and during Edward s reign Saunders preached in the Midlands until appointed to All Hallows Bread Street in 1553 32 Although warned against taking up his benefice he did so and preached against the Roman errors He was arrested on Bonner s orders imprisoned in London condemned as a heretic at St Mary Overie and burned at Coventry in February 1555 33 Chester a governor of Christ s Hospital also took a sustained interest in the career of Edmund Campion and sponsored him as a scholar to St John s College Oxford 34 In December 1557 John Bury his wife s nephew dedicated to him a translation of the Paraenesis to Demonicus by Isocrates 35 Muscovy and Antwerp edit Although not named an officer or assistant in King Philip and Queen Mary s 1555 Charter to the Muscovy Company 36 Chester was of the founding fellowship 37 under Sebastian Cabot as Governor and George Barne William Garrard Anthony Hussey 38 and John Southcote as Consuls Chester was a joint owner of the ships Primrose with Andrew Judde William Castelin and Anthony Hickman and John Baptist with Andrew Judde He witnessed the exchange of royal gifts with the Russian ambassador in London in 1557 and afterwards with Judd Hussey Garrard and Barne sent report of the death of Richard Chancellor to George Killingworth and others in Russia by a mercantile fleet in which both ships sailed 39 In 1556 Chester was elected to his second term as Master of his Company 1 and transferred to the ward of Billingsgate 27 On 7 February 1556 7 he was knighted together with Sir Thomas Offley Lord Mayor by Queen Mary at Greenwich 40 This unusual honour for an alderman especially one being of contrary religion is said to have been bestowed because he was a merchant of great account in the city of Antwerp whereby he furnished King Philip with great treasure and sums of money upon his arrival in England 41 In that year his eldest son William Chester was made free of the Drapers Company 42 Following the fall of Calais it fell necessary for Mary to license Chester and other Merchants of the Staple including aldermen Judd Offley Woodroffe Leigh and Lodge to ship to Bruges in Flanders and to pardon their disregard of the statutes during the previous year 43 Chester the Elizabethan editAt the onset of Elizabeth s reign Chester now a very wealthy man with various others participated in a loan of 30 000 to the Crown and was granted rights to receive interest at ten per cent With them he received grants of reversions and rents in 1560 44 He transferred to the ward of Bassishaw in 1559 vacant by the death of alderman John Machell and embarked upon his third term as Master of the Drapers Company 27 Chester and his Wardens brought to Chancery decree a claim concerning a twenty year old legacy in the Company s trust of 12 000 gold ducats provision for the orphaned kin of a Welsh merchant in Seville The case was still in progress in 1566 45 He was appointed a royal commissioner 1559 and 1562 to implement Acts of Parliament for uniformity of prayer 46 47 to regulate the grievances of prisoners in the Ludgate 48 and to restore the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Crown 49 For the City he was made a commissioner for purchasing the site of Gresham s Royal Exchange and contributed 10 towards the fund In June 1560 with Sir William Garrard and Thomas Lodge then Sheriff he was among the principal mourners at the public funeral of Anthony Hussey 50 Hussey s will in which he further endowed Edmund Campion shows his closeness to Chester before whom his final codicil was declared in 1560 but his executors were Thomas Lodge and Benjamin Gonson 51 Mayoralty edit On 23 July 1560 occurred the funeral of his first wife Dame Elizabeth Chester daughter of Thomas Lovett of Astwell Castle Northamptonshire By her he had six sons and eight daughters three of whom died in infancy It was a very grand ceremony with a procession of 100 men in new gowns and women likewise aldermen and heralds with pennons and singing clerks to St Edmund Lombard Street the street and church hung with black cloth and armorials 52 Thomas Becon gave her funeral sermon For her monument Chester composed Latin verses of valediction 53 Amid these solemnities he was elected Lord Mayor in succession to Sir William Hewett assuming office towards the close of that year and on 3 October his sons Thomas and John were admitted to freedom of the Drapers Company by patrimony 54 In April 1561 obsequies were resumed when Dame Alice Hewett died and was buried at St Martin Orgar with an immense procession of mourners heralds the livery of the Clothworkers and the aldermen with Chester the Lord Mayor in their midst 55 Sir William Chester Sir Thomas Offley and Sir Thomas Leigh head the list of those incorporated as Merchants of the Staple of England in Elizabeth s Charter of 1561 56 and John Marshe Emanuel Lucar Leigh Garrard and Chester lead those newly reincorporated to the freedom of the Merchant Adventurers of England in July 1564 57 The commission upon uniformity of prayer and for right religious observance and the reinstatement of deprived ministers was renewed 58 and Chester was appointed to another to investigate the counterfeiting of currency 59 In Elizabeth s second parliament which met on 11 January 1562 3 he sat as one of the representatives of the City of London 2 In March 1563 with Sir William Garrard Sir Thomas Offley and Sir Christopher Draper he represented the aldermanry at David Woodroffe s funeral 60 His fourth term as Master Draper was in 1563 64 Mercantile activities edit He was an investor in the 1562 63 61 and 1563 62 trading adventures to Guinea led by the factor Robert Baker and also in the 1564 65 expedition 63 64 all of which were for mercantile trade returning to England In these ventures he was associated with Sir William Garrard Sir Thomas Lodge Anthony Hickman Lionel Duckett and others but he is not named by Richard Hakluyt as being among the promoters of the voyages involving human trafficking from Guinea to the West Indies in the same years 65 The Guinea mercantile trading voyages met with various misfortunes With Martin Bowes and William Garrard Chester led a royal commission to inquire into the petition of Sir Thomas Lodge Lord Mayor at the time of his bankruptcy 66 Anthony Jenkinson obtained for Garrard Lodge Chester and others safe conduct and privileges for trading by Obdowlocan of Tabaristan in 1563 Their names recur in the grant of privileges by the Shah of Persia communicated by Arthur Edwards from Astrakhan in 1566 and 1567 to Garrard and Chester as Governors of the Muscovy Company then receiving its new Charter 67 Queen Elizabeth spoke of Chester in a dispatch of 27 September 1571 as one of her greatest and best merchants trading with the Shah Last years edit His last move as alderman from 1566 to 1573 was to the Langbourn ward 27 in which stood his house in Lombard Street close by the George Inn 68 On 2 May 1567 the Senate of the University of Cambridge awarded him an honorary M A degree In 1567 he served out the incomplete term of Draper Mastership for William Beswick who died in that year 69 1 and in November at St Lawrence Pountney took to his second wife Beswick s widow Joan daughter of John Turner of London This union affirmed their Offley kinship since Joan s daughter Agnes had married William Offley and Chester s daughter Jane was wife of Richard Offley Merchant Taylors both half brothers of Sir Thomas 70 He then served his own fifth full term as Master of the Drapers in 1567 68 and lastly in 1568 69 completed the term of Richard Champion who died in November 1568 1 In 1571 he was appointed to the special commission of oyer and terminer for the trial for high treason of John Felton who had published the Papal bull of Regnans in Excelsis against Queen Elizabeth 71 Dame Joan died in 1572 and was buried on 23 December in St Lawrence s church beside her first husband Chester became a Fellow commoner of his college and subscribed to a petition to amend the university statutes on 6 May 1572 Soon afterwards he retired from business and resigned from the aldermanry He devoted his last years to the pursuit of classical and theological learning at the University of Cambridge 72 Departure edit The date of his death is not exactly known and was formerly thought to have been during the 1590s but is now known to have been before 1574 73 A litigation noted in the King s Remembrancer Barons depositions dated in the Hilary term of 16 Elizabeth 1574 refers to the goods of Sir William Chester deceased late alderman of the city of London 74 Nicholas Mewes who became free in 1576 had served William Chester junior William Wilmer who had served with one William Chester completed his term that year with Ambrose Saunders 75 brother of the martyr Lawrence His mansion in Lombard Street which he had leased to Richard Offley was later sold to Sir George Barne who died in 1593 by William Chester his son and heir 76 In 1595 a grant of Administration of Sir William s estate was made to his son John Chester 77 Sir William Chester died at Cambridge but was buried in London in his vault in St Edmund s Lombard Street Family editThe children of Sir William Chester and his first wife Elizabeth Lovett are shown as follows 78 They had sons William Chester of London son and heir Constable of Wisbech Castle married Judith daughter and coheir of Anthony Cave of Chicheley Buckinghamshire They had one son and heir Anthony Chester William and Judith were married in 1558 the year after William was made free of the Draper s Company 42 Judith born 1542 was cousin to William on the Lovett side her grandfather Thomas Lovett 1495 1523 was elder half brother to William Chester s mother William and Judith resided mostly in London but Anthony became master of Chicheley which remained in the Chester family for many generations 79 80 Judith died in 1570 and William remarried to Anne daughter of Robert Frere of the family of the manor of Blanketts Claines Worcestershire 81 82 they had two further children 83 Thomas Chester B A in the University of Oxford was made free of the Draper s Company on 3 October 1560 by patrimony 84 He was appointed Bishop of Elphin in the reformed Church of Ireland in 1580 or 1582 and died at Killiathan in 1584 John Chester was made free of the Draper s Company on 3 October 1560 by patrimony 85 He married in 1566 to Elizabeth She died without surviving issue and was buried at Quainton Buckinghamshire in 1593 and John Chester died at St James Clerkenwell in 1603 John was granted administration of his father s estate in 1595 Daniel Chester living 1568 died unmarried Francis Chester living 1568 died unmarried and daughters Francisca Chester married before August 1550 Sir William Chester s apprentice Robert Tempest citizen and Draper of London Merchant Adventurer and Merchant of the Staple of Calais who died without issue in 1551 Among his bequests he left 300 for the foundation of a school for the poor children of Calais His will 86 is an important source of genealogical information and he is named in Sir William Chester s inscription on his wife s tomb Francisca died in 1559 87 in which year Sir William Chester challenged the claim of Anna Harrison alias Adeson Tempest s natural sister in the administration of Tempest s will 88 Emme Chester married January 1562 John Gardener of London grocer a colleague of Sir William s in the sugar refinery business Jane Chester married before 1568 Richard Offley the Merchant Merchant Taylor Master of that Company in 1572 and 1582 younger half brother and factor in Calais to Sir Thomas Offley at the time of its loss to the French Richard was a great shipper of wools and obtained good sales worth 5000 on the eve of the fall They are said to have had several children who were brought up in godly fashion and in good manners of life and received instruction from their grandfather Chester Richard died soon after his brother Sir Thomas and was survived by his wife 89 Susannah Chester married John Trott of London citizen and Draper They had two sons and numerous daughters John died in 1601 and Susannah survived him Frances Chester married Francis Robinson citizen and Grocer of London References edit a b c d e f A H Johnson The History of the Worshipful Company of the Drapers of London 2 vols Clarendon Press Oxford 1915 II pp 470 71 Internet Archive a b W J J Chester Sir William c 1509 c 95 of Lombard Street London in P W Hasler ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 from Boydell and Brewer 1981 History of Parliament online J D Alsop Chester Sir William c 1509 1595 mayor of London Oxford Dictionary of National Biography That supersedes the article by C Welch in the Old D N B which contains some inaccuracies M K Dale Chester William bef 1489 1558 of Bristol Glos in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 from Boydell and Brewer 1982 History of Parliament online Chester in J J Howard and G J Armytage eds The Visitation of London in the Year 1568 Harleian Society Vol I 1869 p 1 Internet Archive Will of John Hill Haberdasher of London P C C 1516 Holder quire Hill had one child Anne or Agnes Corbet Will of Richard Welles of London P C C 1505 Holgrave quire Will of John Chester Draper of London P C C 1513 Fetiplace quire W Herbert The History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies of London 2 vols Author London 1834 I p 452 Internet Archive The remarriage date is shown by an indenture of 1515 16 establishing a Fellowship at St Catherine s College Cambridge The seventh and second surviving volume of the Drapers Wardens Account Books commences after a lapse of six years in the Mastership of John Milbourne Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I p 403 note Google R E C Waters Genealogical Memoirs of the Extinct Family of Chester of Chicheley Their Ancestors and Descendants 2 vols Robson and Sons London 1878 I pp 23 25 Internet Archive J Venn and J A Venn Alumni Cantabrigienses Part 1 From the earliest times to 1751 I Cambridge University Press 1922 p 330 Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DREB 6690 londonroll org Will of Sir John Mylbourne Alderman of City of London P C C 1536 Hogen quire Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I p 451 Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I p 392 Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I pp 470 73 at p 473 Google John Strype A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster 1720 V xv The Temporal Government Refiners of Sugar p 244 HRI Online University of Sheffield Will of Dame Jane Milbourne Widow of London P C C 1545 Pynnyng quire J W Burgon The Life and Times of Sir Thomas Gresham 2 vols Robert Jennings London 1839 I pp 48 49 Google citing State Papers Foreign German Correspondence 3 March 1544 5 Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I pp 415 16 Internet Archive S V Morgan and W Lempriere John Howes MS 1582 Proceedings in the First Erection of the Three Royal Hospitals of Christ Bridewell and St Thomas the Apostle London 1904 at pp 30 33 41 46 Internet Archive W Waddington Considerations on the Original and Proper Objects of the Royal Hospital of Bridewell also the charters of the royal hospitals of Bridewell and Bethlem London 1798 see abstract in Review of new publications no 23 Gentleman s Magazine Vol 83 Part 1 January 1798 pp 55 57 Google W Trollope A History of the Royal Foundation of Christ s Hospital William Pickering London 1834 pp 339 40 Google J Stow ed A Munday The Survey of London contayning the Orignall Increase Moderne Estate and Government of that Citie begun by Iohn Stow Elizabeth Purslow for Nicholas Bourne London 1633 p 344 Internet Archive a b c d e A B Beaven The Aldermen of the City of London Temp Henry III to 1912 Corporation of the City of London 1913 II p 34 and note 48 Internet Archive Some relationships described in this work are unreliable Letters Patent for the Limitation of the Crowne from the transcript of Ralph Starkey in MS Harl 35 fol 364 in J G Nichols ed The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary Camden Society Vol XLVIII 1850 pp 91 100 at p 100 Google Herbert History of the Twelve Great Livery Companies I pp 422 23 note Internet Archive citing Court Books fols 543 44 John Foxe s The Acts and Monuments Online 1583 edition Book 11 p 1648 HRI University of Sheffield John Foxe s The Acts and Monuments Online 1570 edition Book 11 p 1739 HRI University of Sheffield J H Irving Lawrence Saunders the Martyr and His Friends Pickering and Inglis Glasgow 1903 p 14 amp passim download available at brethrenarchive John Foxe s The Acts and Monuments Online 1570 edition Book 11 page 1703 HRI University of Sheffield G Kilroy Edmund Campion A Scholarly Life Routledge 2016 pp 18 27 passim Google John Bury translator The Godly aduertisement or good counsell of the famous orator Isocrates intitled Paraenesis to Demonicus wherto is annexed Cato in olde Englysh meter In fletestreate at the signe of the Rose Garland by William Coplande London 1557 Full text at umich eebo E Goldsmid ed The Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation collected by Richard Hakluyt Preacher Vol III North Eastern Europe and Adjacent Countries Part II The Muscovy Company and the North Eastern Passage E amp G Goldsmid Edinburgh 1886 pp 101 112 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Philip amp Mary II 1554 1555 HMSO 1936 Kraus Lendeln 1970 pp 56 59 Hathi Trust R J W Swales Hussey Anthony 1496 97 1560 of London in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Boydell amp Brewer 1982 History of Parliament online See also Hussey Anthony in T F Mayer and C B Walters The Correspondence of Reginald Pole 4 A Biographical Companion the British Isles St Andrews Studies in Reformation History Ashgate Publishing 2008 p 291 93 Google E Goldsmid ed The Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation collected by Richard Hakluyt Preacher Vol III North Eastern Europe and Adjacent Countries Part II The Muscovy Company and the North Eastern Passage E amp G Goldsmid Edinburgh 1886 p 151 and pp 165 76 Internet Archive J G Nichols ed The Diary of Henry Machyn Citizen and Merchant Taylor of London Camden Society London 1848 Original Series Vol XLII p 125 Internet Archive G C Bower ed A Manuscript relating to the family of Offley in H W Forsyth Harwood ed The Genealogist Quarterly New Series XIX London and Exeter 1903 pp 2 11 83 88 149 53 at p 86 Internet Archive a b Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DREB6693 londonroll org Calendar of Patent Rolls Philip amp Mary Vol IV 1557 1558 HMSO London 1939 Kraus Nendeln 1970 p 300 Hathi Trust Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth Vol I 1558 1560 HMSO 1939 pp 353 54 and pp 431 37 Internet Archive The National Archives UK Chancery Final Decrees C 78 16 no 34 1 Elizabeth images 0071 75 C 78 26 no 34 and C 78 27 no 18 6 Elizabeth images 0045 76 with pedigrees Images in Robert Palmer s Anglo American Legal Tradition website University of Houston O Quinn Law Library Also C 4 30 22 Pleadings G W Prothero Select Statutes and other Constitutional Documents illustrative of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I Clarendon Press Oxford 1894 pp 227 35 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth Vol II 1560 1563 1948 pp 279 80 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth Vol I 1558 1560 1939 pp 29 30 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth Vol I 1558 1560 1939 p 118 Internet Archive Diary of Henry Machyn pp 236 37 Internet Archive Will of Anthony Hussey P C C 1560 Mellershe quire Diary of Henry Machyn p 240 and see Notes to the Diary at p 381 Internet Archive John Strype A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster 1720 II ix pp 156 57 HRIonline University of Sheffield The verses are shown in correct measure in Waters Chester of Chicheley I at p 35 Internet Archive The monument was destroyed in the Great Fire of London Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DREB6694 and DREB6692 londonroll org Diary of Henry Machyn p 256 Internet Archive A L Jenckes The Origin the Organization and the Location of the Staple of England University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia 1908 pp 66 74 at p 67 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth I Vol III 1563 1566 1960 item 922 pp 178 80 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth Vol II 1560 1563 HMSO 1948 pp 279 80 Internet Archive Cal Pat Rot Elizabeth Vol II 1560 1563 HMSO 1948 p 523 Internet Archive Diary of Henry Machyn pp 303 04 Internet Archive E Goldsmid Ed Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries of the English nation collected by Richard Hakluyt Vol XI Africa E amp G Goldsmid Edinburgh 1889 pp 167 70 Internet Archive R Kerr A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels Vol VII Blackwood and Ballantyne Edinburgh 1812 Part II Book III Chapter VII Section X pp 299 306 Internet Archive Kerr General History of Voyages VII pp 306 09 Internet Archive Goldsmid ed Principal Navigations XI pp 170 73 Internet Archive The first voyage of the worshipful and right valiant knight Sir John Hawkins made to the West Indies 1562 in E Goldsmid Ed Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries of the English nation collected by Richard Hakluyt Vol XV America part IV West Indies Voyages of Circumnavigation E amp G Goldsmid Edinburgh 1890 pp 123 25 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth I Vol III 1563 1566 1960 items 488 and 489 p 120 Internet Archive Goldsmid ed Principal Navigations III Part ii 1886 pp 283 84 304 05 319 25 Internet Archive Note in Nichols ed The Diary of Henry Machyn p 381 Internet Archive Will of Willeam Beswicke Draper of London P C C 1567 Stonard quire Waters Chester of Chicheley I p 36 and note Internet Archive Fourth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records February 28 1843 By Command HMSO London 1843 p 265 Google Welch 1887 L Branch Faith and Fraternity London Livery Companies and the Reformation 1510 1603 Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden 2017 at p 110 Google The National Archives UK item description E 133 1 199 Discovery Catalogue Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DRML3688 londonroll org Waters Chester of Chicheley I p 38 Internet Archive Index to Acts of Administration in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury III 1581 1595 British Record Society Vol 76 1954 1595 135 Waters Chester of Chicheley I pp 38 41 Internet Archive Robert Cooke Clarenceux Visitation of London 1568 p 1 Waters Chester of Chicheley I pp 41 88 Internet Archive See short summary in P Collins and S Fischer The story of Chicheley Hall Reports Notes and Records of the Royal Society Vol 65 issue 2 2011 pp 183 96 royalsociety H S G Pedigree of Freer or Frere of The Blanketts Worcestershire in J G Nichols ed The Herald and Genealogist V J G Nichols and R C Nichols London 1870 pp 427 29 Internet Archive See Parishes Claines in A History of the County of Worcester Vol 3 V C H London 1913 pp 300 08 British History online accessed 17 May 2017 Waters Chester of Chicheley I at p 68 Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DREB6694 londonroll org Records of London s Livery Companies Online Apprentices and Freemen 1400 1900 ref DREB6692 londonroll org Will of Robert Tempest Draper and Merchant of the Staple at Callais of London P C C 1551 Bucke quire Waters Chester of Chicheley I at pp 39 40 including abstract of Robert Tempest s will Sentence of Robert Tempest P C C 1559 A Manuscript relating to the family of Offley at pp 85 86 Internet Archive Credit edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Welch Charles 1887 Chester William In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 10 London Smith Elder amp Co Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Chester mayor amp oldid 1146395025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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