Edward of Wheathampstead b bef
1417 d 1488
The progenitor of the Hertfordshire Brockett dynasty,
Edward inherited the estates in 1477 late in life
from elder brother Thomas. For the 50 years since his parents
died and while Thomas was in Hertfordshire, Edward had most
likely managed the Yorkshire Appleton estate of Brockethall
Manor. Edward also bought land in Essex in 1438,
so was born 1417 at the latest. His marriage
to Elizabeth Thwaites in 1450 gave him half of Steton,
near Appleton, and many children. The last three decades of
his life were lived through the Wars of the Roses.
Brockethall Manor was less than an hour on horseback from
York, the stronghold of the Yorkists, and even closer to Towton
where one of the decisive early battles was fought. His lands
are detailed in the inquisition on his death and in his will.
1. Early years
Imagine Edward growing up in the manor house in Appleton,
being sent to school in York, and perhaps as a late teenager
accompanying his father
on one or more of his trips to Westminster. He was much younger
than brother Thomas,
who would have been down in London during Edward's childhood
and then on his Hertfordshire estates by the early 1430s.
As a younger son, Edward most probably stayed in
Yorkshire, so when his father and mother died 1435
and 1437 he probably deputised for brother Thomas as Lord
of Brockethall Manor in Appleton. The Hertfordshire Brockett
Hall did not exist in Edward's lifetime, yet Glover
called him 'of Brokethall'.
Nonetheless, in 1438 Edward acquired the manor of
Hooks and half the manor of Pinnacle with 2 others
(VCH Essex vol 5, p 160). Pinnacles is
at grid reference TL4209 and there is a Hook End at grid reference
TQ5899 (Ordnance Survey Gazeteer). The land was near brother
Thomas' estates and was perhaps a foothold for Edward in the
south during this time of decline in York (Pollard 1990 pp
48-52). There was no Broket family at the time able to acquire
such landholdings other than that of Thomas and Dionisia.
Edward would have had to have been 21 for this acquisition,
placing his birth by 1417 at the latest.
The handsomely written and sealed parchment charter (E 326/9183)
names the coholders as Robert Symond and Walter Gorfen.
Fine and Patent Rolls between 1399 and 1509 show that the
joint venture was with an older, established man and a younger,
up-and-coming one in the king's household. Robert Symond acted
as mainpernor to land commitments in Essex 1417 and 1422probably
how Edward's father met himand Walter Gorfen became
King's Steward of the lordship of Neuport, Essex in 1441 and
rose to be Auditor for South Wales 1450-56.
Edward later sold his interest in these Essex manors, since
neither his testament nor IPM 50 years later mentioned land
in Essex. The deed:
| E 326/9183 - Latin
original |
1.
Sciant presentes & futuri quod nos Iohannes
Kyrkeby & Iohanna vxor eius dedimus concessimus
& hac presenti Carta nostra confirmauimus
Roberto Symond' Waltero Gorfen
2. & Edwardo Broket Manerium de Hokes ac Medietatem
Manerij de Pynnacle cum eorum pertinencijs
& piscariam separalem in aqua de la leye quondam
Walteri
3. Langeriche & Margarete vxoris
eius necnon omnia alia terras & tenementa
prata pascua pastura Mariscos communas
pasture piscarias aquas vias semitas redditus
reuersiones
4. seruicia homagia releuia Eschaeta
& sectas Curie ac pasturam pro vno Tauro
& viginti vacas in marisco vocato Halyfeldmerssh' cum
omnibus & singulis pertinencijs
5. suis in villis & parochijs de Waltham
sancte Crucis & Nasyng' in Comitatu Essex
ac in villis de Chesthunt & parua Wormeley in Comitatu
Hertford / Habenda
6. & tenenda predicta
Manerium de Hokes ac medietatem Manerij
de Pynnacle cum eorum pertinencijs
& piscariam separalem in aqua de la leye . necnon
omnia alia terras &
7. tenementa prata pascua
pastura mariscos communas pasture
piscarias aquas vias semitas redditus reuersiones
seruicia homagia releuia Eschaeta & secta
Curie ac pasturam
8. pro vno Tauro & viginti vacas
in marisco vocato Halyfeldmerssh' cum omnibus
& singulis pertinencijs suis in villis &
parochijs ac in Comitatibus predictis
vt predictum est
9. prefatis Roberto Waltero &
Edwardo heredibus & assignatis eorum
in perpetuum. De Capitalibus dominis
feodi illius per seruicia inde debita & de iure
consueta . Et nos vero predicti
10. Iohannes & Iohanna & heredes
nostri predicta Manerium
de Hokes ac Medietatem Manerij de Pynnacle cum
eorum pertinencijs & piscariam separalem
in aqua de la leye . necnon omnia
11. alia terras & tenementa
prata pascua pastura mariscos communas
pasture piscarias aquas vias semitas redditus
reuersiones seruicia homagia releuia Eschaeta
& sectas Curiarum ac
12. pasturam pro vno Tauro & viginti
vacas in dicto marisco vocato Halyfeldmerssh'
cum omnibus & singulis pertinencijs
suis in villis parochijs in Comitatibus
predictis vt supradictum
13. est prefatis Roberto
Waltero & Edwardo heredibus &
assignatis eorum contra omnes gentes Warantizabimus
& in perpetuum defendemus . In cuius rei
testimonium
14. huic presenti Carte nostre
Sigilla nostra apposuimus . Hijs testibus
Thoma Gloucestre Armigero Iohanne Edward' Roberto
Hambury Iohanne Fyssher Roberto Parker
15. Waltero Herbert Petro Purchas & alijs
Datum apud Waltham sancte Crucis predictam
tricesimo die mensis Nouembris Anno regni Regis Henrici
sexti
16. post conquestum Anglie decimo septimo
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ffroddesham
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| E 326/9183 - English
translation |
1.
All present and future men are to know that we John Kyrkeby
and Joan his wife have given and granted and by this present
charter of ours have confirmed to Robert Symond, Walter
Gorfen
2. and Edward Broket the manor
of Hokes and half the manor of Pynnacle with
its appurtenances and fishery in sole ownership in Aqua
de la leye, formerly belonging to Walter
3. Langeriche and Margaret his wife and
all other lands and holdings, meadows, grasslands, pastures,
marshes, common rights of pasture, fisheries, waters,
ways, paths, incomes, reversions,
4. services, homages, reliefs, escheats
and suits of court and pasture for one bull and twenty
cows in the marsh called Halyfeldmerssh with all and singular
its appurtenances
5. in the vills and parishes of Waltham
Holy Cross and Nasing in the county of Essex
and in the vills of Chesthunt and Lesser Wormeley in the
county of Hertford. To have
6. and to hold the said manor of Hokes
and half the manor of Pynnacle with its appurtenances
and fishery in sole ownership in Aqua de la leye and all
other lands and
7. holdings, meadows, grasslands, pastures,
matshes, common rights of pasture, fisheries, waters,
ways, paths, incomes, reversions, services, homages, reliefs,
escheats and suits of court and pasture
8. for one bull and twenty cows in the
marsh called Halyfeldmerssh with all and singular its
appurtenances in the vills and parishes of the said counties
as is aforesaid
9. to the aforementioned Robert Walter
and Edward, their heirs and assigns for ever. Of the chief
lords of that fee by the services owed therefrom and rightly
accustomed. And we, the aforesaid
10. John and Joan and our heirs [will
guarantee (l.13)] the said manor of Hokes and half the
manor of Pynnacle with its appurtenances and fishery in
sole ownership in Aqua de la leye and all
11. other lands and holdings, meadows,
grasslands, pastures, marshes, common rights of pasture,
fisheries, waters, ways, paths, incomes, reversions, services,
homages, reliefs, escheats and suits of court and
12. pasture for one bull and twenty cows
in the marsh called Halyfeldmerssh with all and singular
its appurtenances in the vills and parishes of the said
counties as is abovesaid
13. to the aforementioned Robert Walter
and Edward, their heirs and assigns will
guarantee (see l.10) against all peoples and for ever
defend [their right]. In witness of which thing
14. we have put our seal to this present
charter, these being witnesses Thomas Gloucestre Esquire
John Edwards Robert Hambury John Fyssher Robert Parker
15. Walter Herbert Peter Purchas and
others dated at the aforesaid Waltham Holy Cross 30 November,
the year of the reign of King Henry the sixth
16. after the conquest of England the
seventeenth (1438). |
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ffroddesham
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Edward married Elizabeth THWAITES in 1450
in his mid 30s; in keeping with the system of primogeniture
perhaps, where only the first born was usually able to marry
before c 25. Elizabeth would have been younger, dying 19 years
after Edward in 1507.
They had 7 or 8 known children.
The marriage brought Edward half of Steton, which
John Thwaites gave as a marriage dowry with his daughter,
thereby making an alliance with the leading local family (BL
Harley 794 ff 73r, 74notes taken by Roger Dodsworth
antiquarian, d 1654, from mss of Thomas 3rd Lord Fairfax,
d 1671; MJ Harrison 2000 pp 73, 257):
- Know &c' that I John Thwaites have
given &c' confirmed to Edward Brocket
- & to Elizabeth Thwaites my
son & to the heires of their bodyes all the landes
&c' which
- I late had of the gift of John Gra knight in Steueeton
neare Bolton Percy
- To have &c' And if it happen the foresaid Edward
& Elizabeth to die without heire
- of their bodyes Then all &c' should returne for ever
to mee the foresaid John
- and to my heires Witnesses William Rither knight
John Stapleton William ffairfax William Thwait
- William Norton Esquires and others 29 h 6. page 265 of
my Lord ffairfax evidences
- Elizabeth daughter of John Thwaites was
marryed to Edward Brocket with whom he
- had half of Steeton in le Ainsty intayled vpon
them
In return for such dowries, the groom's family guaranteed
the bride a juncture, an annuity in case of her widowhood
(L Stone 1977 p 72), as mentioned in Edward's will.
Glover says Elizabeth was of 'Loftes in Yorksh',
presumably the Lofthouse near Wakefield, c 15 m SW of Appleton.
The brief will of John Thwaytes of Lofthouse, bur Harwod 22
Jan 1461, pr Oct 1469 leaves the residue to his co-executors
(one being his wife Isabelle) and otherwise mentioning only
their unmarried daughter Alice (York Registry Wills
vol 4, microfilm 914 f 140). The pedigree of Thwaytes of Marston
at the back of BL Harley 794 does not correspond with this
John, nor with the arms given to Elizabeth in Harley
807: Argent 3 fleur de lys gules a fesse gules 3 rings
argent.
In his will Edward left 'my vj childerne
eche of theim a pece of siluer'. 3 were sons, of full agethe
last 2 thereforeRobert and Williamborn at the latest
1466 and 1467. Harley 807, followed
by Berry and Clutterbuck, recorded 7 children,
but only 2 were daughters. Perhaps their 3rd surviving daughter
was another Elizabeth. Two sons were
called Thomas in an attempt to continue the name of Edward's
father and brother, and probably grandfather. The 1st Thomas
was therefore probably the 1st son. The 3 pedigrees did not
place the names in the same order; some of this was clearly
in order to give visual balance to the charts on the page, but
the Brokett descent in BL ms Add
29438 (which only listed heirs) said 'Thomas Brokett Esqr [Edward's]
son & heir dy'd without issue male' and called John the
2nd son.
- Thomas. All evidence suggests that this
Thomas died unmarried. The alledged marriage
of Joan, daughter of Sir William Neville, Lord Fauconberg
to a 'Mr. Thos. Brocket, of co. Herts' is to be rejected,
compared and perhaps linked with a flawed attempt to make
Dionisia more explicitly a Fauconberg heiress.
- John. Edward's heir,
becoming head of the dynasty in Hertfordshire after Edward
died in 1488.
- Thomas. Recorded as marrying Elizabeth
CALTHROP or Calthorpe, heiress, Thomas appears
to have stayed in Yorkshire. Calthrop is not a Hertfordshire
namethere are no old Hertfordshire wills of that namewhereas
one of the coats of arms in the windows of 16th C Steeton
Hall were of Calthorpe (another was of Thwaites, MJ Harrison
2000 p 263). They had a daughter Margaret,
but who apparently had no issue.
- Elizabeth. According
to Harley 807 Elizabeth married DOCRAY,
but according to the Hertfordshire Berry and Clutterbuck
she married Thomas FISHER of Hertfordshire.
The Visitation
of Hertfordshire 1572 and 1634 for 'Docwra of Putteridge'
(Metcalfe 1886 Appendix II 139) recorded Roger,
2nd son of Peter Docwra of Yorkshire, marrying Elizabeth
'daughter to Edward Brocket of Brocket Hall, co. York'.
The 1860 Gateshead Pedigree followed Metcalfe. But
the chronology is problematic. According to Metcalfe,
between Roger and John
(d 1531) there were 3 generations: Roger, Reignold,
Richard, James, John. Even assuming as little
as 21 year generation gaps, this would place Roger's
birth in the early 1400s, while Elizabeth could not
have been born before 1451. Two solutions could be:
1.
The Elizabeth who married Roger Docwra was the
daughter of an earlier Brocket of Brocket Hall.
There was only oneEdward's father Thomas
(c 1370-1435), but if he had a daughter Elizabeth,
she probably married a Hesylrigg. Thomas, however
was probably himself not born much before Roger,
so perhaps Elizabeth was a Yorkshire relative
of the line that established Brocket Hall, and
Metcalfe's 'of Brocket Hall' was a heraldic
improvement.
2. To follow Harley 807 which
simply said, 'Elizabeth married unto Docray'
and conclude that Elizabeth married another
Docwra after 1450. |
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- Elizabetha
second one?who married HAZELRIGG.
Harley 807 placed her as Edward's sister.
- Robert. While his brothers were bequeathed
land in Hertfordshire, Robert
was bequeathed the manor of Jewleas, near Appleton.
Harley 807 dubbed him 'sine
prole' (without issue), but his son
and descendants were local lords of the main Broket manor
there till 1565. Harley 807's frequent sine prole
is genealogically unreliable and reflects inheritance concerns
of 3 generations later.
- William.
Bequeathed the Manor of Herons in Wheathampstead. Although
dubbed 'sine prole' by Glover like his brother
Robert, William was probably the father of William
Brockett, yeoman of Hitchin, died 1556.
- Alice
married to Thomas PERIENT Esq.
Much of the 2nd half of Edward's life was lived through the
Wars of the Roses (1453-1485) 32 years of
civil war between the Houses of Lancaster and York, and of
Percy and Neville. Although some describe it as a squabble
rather than a war, arguing that armies were in the field for
only 13 weeks in total, Brokets of Bolton Percy could
not have been unaffected.
Edward's home, Brockethall Manor in
Appleton, was less than an hour on horseback from York, the
stronghold of the Yorkists and a mere 4 miles across the river
Wharfe from Towton, where a major Yorkist
victory occurred in 1461 under the command of Sir
William Neville Lord Fauconberg. Although many of
the 'battles' were little more than skirmishes, the 18 months
preceding Towton was the longest during which the warfare
was in any sense continuous and the Lancastrian-Yorkist rivalry
in Yorkshire was hottest during the 6 months before Towton
(Kingsford 1926 pp 51-2).
The Brokets were the main rivals of the Abbots of Westminster
in Wheathampstead from the mid 15th C (Munby 1974 p 50). But
Edward figures very little in Chancery documents,
perhaps because he lived his life on the estates up in Appleton
till very late in life. In 1477 elder brother Thomas
died and Edward inherited his Hertfordshire estates
and moved south. Edward died 25 Jul 1488 (IPM).
Edward's will is a strong, confident statement from a leading
gentlrman of Tudor Hertfordshire. His great grandsonsprobably
owning not much more land than Edward himselfwere Sheriffs
of Herts and Essex. Edward was therefore of similar
social status a century before them. The will was proved at
the PCC 1488 (PROB 11/8), with wife, 3 sons and 3 daughters
surviving. His wife and 2nd son Robert were executors. There
were no overseers. Edward would have been buried in
the Brockett Chapel in Wheathampstead and a month
later the whole church was to be given over for a day's chanting
and praying in his memory (ll 13-16).
The will concerns 3 manors and an advowson.
They illustrate well the current system of primogeniture.
Half the manor of Almshoe and half the advowson were left
to eldest son John. The other halves were left to wife Elizabeth
for term of her life and then to devolve to John. Although
Almshoe was the largest of the 3 manors in the will, it was
not the main Wheathampstead Broket estatethat was Simonside,
which would have already been entailed to the eldest son (IPM;
Chauncy 1826 vol 2 pp 16, 183).
The other 2 manors for the 2 younger sons were small; Herons
possibly larger than Jewleas. To compensate
perhaps, Robert was to take over the lordship in Appleton.
The ancient moated site at Jewleas was low-lying and prone
to flooding (MJ Harrison 2000 p 70).
In the testament Edward made the following bequests:
| bequest |
line |
legatee |
| £3 |
10 |
parish church |
| 8d |
17 |
each priest for chanting at his anniversary mass |
| 6s 8d |
24 |
parish church of Wheathampstead |
| 8 marcs |
31 |
each year for 7 years for a chantry priest |
| silver piece |
33 |
each of his 6 children |
| 1 marc |
35 |
Robert and William |
| 3s 4d |
37 |
godchildren of gentlemen |
| 1 sheep |
38 |
other godchildren |
A mark was two-thirds
of a pound (13s 4d). The chantry priest's monthly salary was
two thirds of a marknearly 9s. The bequests to other
godchildren show that a sheep was worth less than 3s 4d. Edward
also bequeathed a large amount for the health of his soul
and those of his parents, brother, sister-in-law and wife.
Inquisition Post Mortem 1488C142/4:
pdf file.
Compare the IPMs of Thomas
and Elizabeth.
Edward's Yorkshire lands were not held in chief so they did
not require a second inquisition on his death. Edward bequeathed
the small Yorkshire manor of Jewleas to his second son and
co-executor Robert
in his will, but ownership of the main Appleton manor
would have descended by entail down the eldest line
till sold by Sir John II in 1565. Meanwhile descendants of
Robert occupied it as local lords in Appleton.
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