William of Hitchin II Yeoman ?c 1528-1563
Elder son of William
I of Hitchinand Maltster like himWilliam was head
of the only Broket family in Hitchin in the 1560s.
William's father appears to have apprenticed William to his
friend Robert Nicholls, Merchant Taylor and Citizen of London.
The career ended perhaps by William I's death in 1556. The
Merchant Taylor's Company's Index to Freeman recorded
William Brocket the younger freed 16 Jul 1557
by master Robert Incott (sica mistranscription
for NichollGuildhall Library microfilm 324). Freedom
was usually planned to coincide with the age of 21, but William
may have been about 28/29. No other contemporary William
the younger is known.
The parish records date from 1562 and record only the baptism
of William's son Edward the same year and
his own burial on 5 Sep 1563. His will however shows that
he also had an elder son William
alive 1563who spent his life in Hitchin as a Yeoman
and Maltster in turn. But after his own father's will of 1556/7
William II's younger brother Edward
was only recorded again in 1594.
The following copyhold transaction of 8 Jun 1555 at Hitchin
Manor court (HALS 60313 Hychyn Foren) admitting 'Margaret
his wife' to the Bery Barnsa field in Hitchinshows
that William married twice, for his will
mentioned wife Alice Papwurthe.
Latin original with interlineated English
translation:
| 1.
Ad Curiam ibidem tentam viij die
Iunij Anno Regnorum Philippi et Marie
Regis et Regine primo et secundo
venit Willelmus Brokett tenens
domini customarius et |
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At the court held
there [Hitchin] on 8 June 1 and 2 Philip and Mary William
Brokett customary tenant of the Lord came and |
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| 2.
cognouit quondam sursum redd' extra
Curiam in manus domini ei facta per Johannem
Trustram de duobus grangijs cum curtilagio
adiac' vocatur le |
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acknowledged formerly
having surrendered outside the court into the hand of
the lord through John Trustram two granges and an adjacent
kitchen garden called the |
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| 3.
bery barns simul cum vnum
parcell' terram vbi parcus
domine huis manerij quondam scituat
fuit iac' inter vnum grang' dict' grang'
ex parte |
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Bery Barns
together with a plot of land where the park of the Lady
of this manor [the Queen] was formerly situated lying
between a grange called Grange on the side |
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|
4. borialis
et venelle vocatur portmillane
ex parte australis vnius capitis
inde abbutt' super tenamentum Ricardi
Bradwater versus occidentalis nuper
|
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north and a lane
called Portmillane on the south side of a headland abutting
there above Richard Bradwater's tenement towards the west
recently |
| |
|
5. in tenura Willelmi
Euersden cum pertinentijs
Ad opus et usum Margarete uxoris
eius et assignorum suorum
Cui dominus per Senescalum
|
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held by William Eversden
with the appurtenances To the use and behoof of Margaret
his wife and her assigns to whom the Lord by
his steward |
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| 6.
suum concessit inde seisinam per
virgam habendum sibi et assignatis
suis A die date huius Curie usque ad finem
termini xl ta annorum |
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thereby gave possession
by [the symbolic handing over of] a stick to have to her
and her assigns [to mark the change of occupant (Stuart
1992 p10)] from the given day of this court continuously
for a fixed term of 40 years |
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| 7.
proxime sequentum ad voluntatem
domini secundum consuetudinem
manerij predicti per redditum
xs per Annum & alijs seruicijs inde
prius debitis et confessis Et |
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next following at
the will of the lord fixed by local custom of the said
manor for a rent of 10s p a and other services, which
up to then had been owed and acknowledged. And |
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| 8.
dat domino de fine ut prius in rotulis
Curiae fecitque fidelitatem et admissa
est inde tenens /:./ |
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she gave the Lord
as a fine as [was paid] in the past in the court rolls
and she did fealty and was then admitted tenant [of the
property]. |
Why William should transfer property to his wife, when wives
did not usually own property and it devolved to them by law
on their husbands' death, is not known.
Laslett (1983 p 82) calculated the mean age of bridegrooms
in the Diocese of Canterbury 1619-60 at 26.65. Assuming then
that William married Margaret just before this copyhold
transaction aged about 26, he may have been born
c 1528.
Margaret m1 William Brockett II m2 Alice PAPWURTHE
... of Hitchin Yeoman |
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b c 1528 d 1563 |
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_________________________|
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William III of Hitchin Edward of Dunton Yeoman
Yeoman m 1593 Katherine bap 1562 d 1598 m Parnell
| HANSCOMBE | TANNER
| |
_______|________ ________|_______
| | | |
| | | |
Edward Elizabeth
William Edward
Hanscombe John
John Robert
Alice all of Dunton
Thomas
George
Matthew
Agnes
all of Hitchin
|
On the octave of Michaelmas 1561 William
Brokett and Richard Bydyll sold 160 acres of land, 20 acres
of meadow and 40 acres of pasture in Weston and Clothallc
4 m E of Hitchinto William Hyde jnr Gent (CP25/2/155/2102
ll 7-10).
William rightly called himself 'yeman' (yeoman). He
left 2 houses in Hitchin, both with land attaching
and both his sons after him were substantial yeomen. One was
the house in Bridge Street he had inherited from his father
in 1558along with its table and querne [a circular stone
or pair of stones for grinding corn by hand (Hey 1998 p 386)]and
the other house he had perhaps bought or built in exchange
for the lands in Wratton his father had left him. William
also left legacies in cash of £43 6s 8d
plus some valuable individual items. A messuage in neighbouring
Guilden Morden in the 1820s could cost less than £40,
but William was not as wealthy as his father had been.
Will of
William Brokett of Hitchin, Yeoman
Dated 4 Sept 1563, proved 7 Dec 1563 (Archd. Hunts.) |
1. In the name off god Amen The iiij
2. 4th day of September in the yere of oure
3. lord god a M CCCCC lxiii And in the fyfte
4. yere of the reigne of oure most gracious
5. Souerayn lady q Elizabeth by the grace of
6. god quene of Ynglande Fraunce and Irelande
7. defender of the feith Witnesseth that I William
8. Brokett of hichyn in the countie of
herford
9. yeman beinge in good and perfitte
memorye
10. laude and prayse be to allmyghtie god
11. my savyour and redemere make and
12. ordeyn this my last Will and testamente
13. in manere and forme folowynge First
14. I bequeithe my soull vnto god the father
15. the sonne and holy ghost and my body to be
16. buryede in the churche yard of seynt
Andrewe
17. in hichyn Item I geue vnto the poure mens
18. boxe vjs viijd Item I geue vnto William
Brokett
19. my sonne and his heires my
house that I dwell
20. in beinge in Bankcrofte streate and all the
landes
21. boith fre and copie that belonge therto for euer
22. Item I geue vnto my seid sonne a longe table
23. of fyrre bordis with a frayme to the same
24. table stonding in the hall and all the payntid
25. clothis in the seid hall with all the glase in
26. the wyndowis abought the housse Also Item
27. I geue also vnto my seid sonne xx libra
in redye
28. money and one siluer spone with the qwerne
29. to grynde malte withall to be deliueride and
30. paid vnto my seid sonne at the age of xxti
31. yeres by my executrice Item I geue vnto
32. Edwarde Brokett my sonne and his
herys
33. my housse in the Brigge streate and all the
34. lande that belongithe thervnto for euer and
xx libra in
35. redye money and one siluer sponne to be paid
36. vnto hym at the age of xxti yeres by the
37. handes of my executrice And I will that the
38. one be the otheres heire Item I geue
and
39. bequeithe vnto Edwarde Marshalles two
40. children and Thomas Chamberes thre chil
41. dren vjs viijd either of them to be paide
42. vnto them at the age of xvj yeris by the
43. handes of my executrice Item I geue
vnto
44. my ij maydis seruauntes vjs viijd either
of
45. them to be paid vnto them Immediatlie after
46. my dethe Item I will that Alice my
wiff
47. haue boithe my houssis and all the lande
a
48. forseid vntill my ij sonnys cume to the age
49. aforseide and to sette and keape my
twoo
50. sonnys at schole And also she to keape the
51. seid houssis in good reparacions And yf
52. boith my sonnys dye before the seid age
53. than I will my wiff to haue boith the seid
54. houssis and all the lande aforseid durynge
55. hir liff Item I will that yf my seid chil/
56. dren fortune to dye bifore the age aforseide
57. that then I will the seid money geuen vnto
58. them to be at my wiffes disposicion
to geue
59. at hir pleasure The residue of all my
60. goodes and cattalles as well moueablis
as vnmo
61. ueablis my dettes paid and my legacies fulfellid
62. and my body honestlye buryede I geue vnto
63. Alice my wiff whom I make and ordeyn
64. to be my true and lawfull executrixe
of this
65. my last will and testamente even as she
66. will answere before god at the day of Juge
67. mente And I will that my Father in lawe
68. William Papwurthe and Laurence
Manfelde
69. to be my Ouerrseares of this my last
will and
70. testament And for ther payns I geue vnto
71. either of them vjs viijd In witnesse of
72. this my last will and testament Mr Tun//
73. stall Vicare of hichyn John hugchynson
74. Edwarde Marshall Robert Lyne Thomas
75. Robbisson Robert Clarke and John gaddisden
76. with dyuerse other. |
Children: Sons William
and Edward were both infants in 1563. He
willed his wife 'to sette and keape my twoo sonnys at schole'
(l 49). Edward
was only about a year oldbap Hitchin 1562so William
would have only been a couple of years older. It seems there
were no daughters.
Overseers:
- William Papwurthe was wife Alice's father.
The Papworths were woolstaplers in Hitchin (Hine 1929 vol
2 p 526).
- Laurence Manfelde
was another relation of William by marriage, but a much
younger man. He was a witness to the will of William's son
Edward of Millow in Dunton in 1598, in which Edward called
Laurence's youngest daughter Johanna 'cosen'.
Johanna was about 18 at the time and was the only legatee
outside Edward's immediate family. If cosen meant 1st cousin
then Laurence would have married a sister of William II.
Laurence died in 1602 in Ashwell. His will was nuncupative
and mentioned little other than the name of his
wife Joane, and that he had 3 daughters, the youngest
of whom should receive most. Wife Joane could have
been one of William I's unnamed other daughters
under 20 in 1556. But although the baptisms of Laurence
and Joane's children are in the Hitchin records, their marriage
is not.
William I of Hitchin
_________________|______________
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| | ?|
William II other Joane m Laurence MANFELDE
of Hitchin children ?under 20| overseer of William II's will
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will pr 1563 in 1556 | witness to Edward of Dunton's will
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| | d Ashwell 1602
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|_____________ ____________|_____________________
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William III Edward Rafe Alis Mary Johanna bap 1580
of Hitchin of Dunton bap 1568 bap 1571 bap 1577 'cosen' in Edward
will pr 1598 bur 1580 of Dunton's will
All baptisms in Hitchin m 1609 George NASH
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Alternatively, if cosen is taken to mean a 2nd cousin, Laurence's
mother could have been a sister of William I.
Witnesses to the will:
- Thomas Chambers was probably the husband of William's
sister Elizabeth.
- John Gaddesden had been an executor of William I's will,
and all that that entailed.
- Ralph Tunstall MA was vicar of the Parish Church 10 June
1563 until he resigned in 1570 (Hine 1929 vol 2 p 445).
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