Oldalképek
PDF
ePub

Blackfriars.

THE JACOBS WELL IN BLACKFRYARS.

#

A Jacobs Well Alley was in Thames Street, and Larwood and Hotten refer to a Jacobs Inn in Red Cross Street. The allusion, they say, being to the well at which Christ met the woman of Samaria"Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again."

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

GRAPES

H. E. A.

Bow Street (Westminster).

Mr.

IN BOW STREET, WESTMINSTER.
Not recorded in Williamson.
W. Gilbert's specimen reads:-

[merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]

A bunch of
grapes.

R. A. G.

Compare another token, probably issued from this house, described at W. 389.

Broken Wharf (Thames Street). WHITE LYON AT BROKEN WHARF.

Comp. W. 433:

I. 8.

and figured on the tomb of Thomas Teasdale in Glympton Church, Oxfordshire.

[ocr errors]

Teas

Visiting the church, I sketched the arms from the tomb. I took the shield to be, Argent a chevron between three garbs sable, but on referring to the History of Glympton,' written by Canon Barnett, and printed by the Oxford Record Society in 1923 for its members I found that the Teasdale monument and shield give A chevron between three pineapples vert. Lysons spells the name dale,' and says that Thomas Teasdale was the first scholar on the Roysse foundation of Abingdon School, and by his will left £5,000 to Baliol College, Oxford, for scholars to be chosen, by Christ's Hospital, from Abingdon School. This is recorded on the Glympton monument. His birthplace is given Sandeforde Deaneley in Berkshire, which is evidently meant for Stanford Dyngley, but so far as I know (and I used to go there often) there is no memorial of Teasdale or record of There is also Sandford, R. A. the family there. near Abingdon. His baptism is given as 1547, and his death as 1610.

A.

H. E.

R.P.

=

WILL. DOD. AT. YE. WHIT. LYON A
lion rampant.
W.E.D.
BROKEN. WHARFE =
Budge Row.

ᎪᎢ

[blocks in formation]

G.

C.

I. M.

IN . BUG. ROW. 1649 = I. M. C.
AMBROSE HEAL.

(To be continued).

TEASDALE AND HIS WIVES. One day I received a curious looking shield impaled. The arms, Argent a chevron between three garbs sable, was in my dictionary as Blage, Bennington, Derby, Gerieres, Jordan, Blake, etc.; but none of these applied to the case, and eventually I found that the arms were those of Teesdale, Teasdale or. Tesdale,

as

Now comes the interesting point, namely, that some one, with a scant knowledge of heraldry, decided that the arms impaled on Teasdale's tomb represented two wives. Νο record, however, remained other than that on the tomb, to the effect that his sorrowful wife Maude erected it; so the point was Who was Maude, wife of Thomas Teasdale, before her marriage to him? Was she a maid or a widow?

The shield was sent to me to identify, and without knowing the point at issue, I was able at once to say that her maiden name was Stone, a family who bore the arms, Sable three fleurdelis or; on a chief of the second two bars gemell of the first. Burke gives these arms as of Gloucestershire, and, curiously, the Harleian Visitation of that county, gives a pedigree of Stone, with a totally different shield. The name Stone was fairly common another in Berkshire, but coat-of-arms was granted to the Stone family of Berkshire. Still, as I have found the Heralds were not averse to granting a new shield of arms, without troubling to find out if the family had ever been armigerous, it is quite possible that in Maude Teasdale's case no need arose for any coat-of-arms, till she put up the monument to her husband in Glympton Church in 1610, and that the artist who designed the tomb apportioned to her this peculiar shield, said also to have been borne by a family of the same name living in Kent.

However, these arms on the tomb decide the fact that Thomas Teasdale had only one wife, and that her maiden name was Stone. She was doubtless of the same family as Elizabeth Stone, wife of William Wheate, who bonght Glympton in 1633. Burke gives another different coat-of-arms for Teasdale, so that the tomb presents a rather interesting series of heraldic puzzles.

E. E. COPE.

CHANGING LONDON. 1. MULGRAVE HOUSE, FULHAM.-This interesting house, in the Hurlingham Polo grounds at the eastern end of Ranelagh Gardens, has recently been demolished, the building materials being sold by auction on 1 Dec., 1927. Until the reign of George II its site was market gardens. On 7 Oct., 1740, the Bishop of London granted to the King's Printer nine acres of ground on a building lease. Amongst its other residents were Sir Francis Gosling, Earl of Rochford, Sir John Jervis, Viscount Ranelagh, and Signor Mario and his wife (1858-63).

2. SPITAL-SQUARE, E.-The quaint seventeenth century Huguenot houses, 22, 23, 25, in this square, are to disappear for an extension of Spitalfields Market. They have for a long time been used as tailors' workshops. They contain pine-panelled rooms (1699), and some beautiful plaster ceilings decorated with mythological subjects.

[ocr errors]

J. ARDAGH.

[ocr errors]

PETS.-The estimation in which eminent people hold animals is a rather interesting topic. (I am not thinking of the melancholy passion for cats sometimes evinced by the deranged). In the number of the Journal of the Friends' Historical Society which was noticed in Memorabilia,' at cliii. 451, I noticed (p. 20) an account of John Morton of Philadelphia (d. 1828), who was president of the Bank of America, and can therefore not be suspected of any want of balance. "He had," the account states, for pets three hens and a rooster, of which he was very fond. He took care of them himself and they returned his affection, knew his place of business and his hours, and when the time came for him to return home, they would march to meet him. It was a common sight in the neighborhood to see the old gentleman, in his Quaker costume of the day, followed by his four pets, one by one solemnly walking along from the Bank to his home on Front Street."

F. R.

Readers' Queries.

ROGER WADE AND WARREN

L'ISLE.

DE

"crowd

In the Muniment Room at Berkeley Castle, Gloucestershire, there is pre1316, 10 Edw. II, being a defeasance of a served an interesting document dated 29 Aug., bond executed by Roger Wade player," in favour of Warren de l'Isle, in respect of a sum of £120 which had been lent by Roger Wade to Warren de l'Isle, and the document has attached a very interesting seal of Roger Wade which seal represents the earliest authentic representation of the Welsh crwth, or fiddle.

A short article on this seal was written and printed by MR. EDWARD HERON-ALLEN in 1895, and apparently published in The Violin Times, and he gives the following particulars of the above-mentioned Roger Wade and Warren de l'Isle :

musician of some note in the neighbourhood of This Roger Wade must have been a bard or Berkeley Castle, i.e., close to the border of South Wales, which was the home of the instrument whose connection with which he proudly perpetrates upon his seal, in spite of the fact that Edward I had shortly before this issued an Act of Parliament prohibiting the Welsh and had further ordained a general massacre of bards from pursuing their profession in Wales, that body. Nevertheless I find no record of him among the musicians enumerated by Edward Jones, though the connection of the Lords de l'Isle and Dudley with Wales finds mention among his profuse ana.

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

The Warren de l'Isle who appears in this deed as borrower from the fiddler-usurer, was by the accounts of him in Dugdale's Monasa person of considerable consequence, to judge ticon and Burke's Extinct Peerage.' He is described as Warine de l'Isle, Baron d'Isle," son of Robert de l'Isle who was a son of Alice. daughter of Henry, a younger son of Warine Fitzgerald as the descent sheweth. Which I and, in the beginning of Edward II, was conWarine was in the Scottish wars, temp. Edward

stituted Governor of Windsor Castle and Warden of the Forest.

In

For some years subsequent to this period he was engaged in Scotland, but joining Thomas Earl of Lancaster against the Spencers, 1320-21, he was taken prisoner and hanged at York, 1327 it was found that he died seized of the with Lord Mowbray and several others. Manors of Bouden, Kingston and Fauflore in Berkshire, Mundiford in Norfolk and Kislingbury in Northamton, leaving a son Gerard, aged twenty-three and his wife Alice, sister and His heiress of Henry Baron Teyes, surviving. and descendant married Thomas Lord Berkeley, great-granddaughter only surviving ancestor of the Barons Fitzhardinge. I should be glad of any further informa

[ocr errors]

tion as to Roger Wade, and in what records I SIR THOMAS WHITE AND THE am likely to find further particulars about him, also references to the Welsh Bards of the period and their social standing. The name Wade is undoubtedly an English name, and can be traced back to early times in Gloucestershire.

Is it not unusual for a fiddler minstrel to possess a seal, and to be in a position to advance a large sum of money at such an early date as 1316? NEWTON WADE.

Newport, Mon.
LETTERS OF JUNIUS:

GRENVILLE ARCHIVES.-In an extract from The Times of Jan. 1, 1828, which was reproduced in that newspaper on Dec. 31 last, mention is made of five letters deposited in the archives of the Grenville family at Stowe, "which establish beyond the possibility of doubt the real authorship of Junius." It is stated that "this eminent individual " was politically connected with George Grenville, the grandfather of the then Duke of Buckingham, "from whom these autograph proofs have descended to the present possessor. Have these letters ever been published, and if so, where?

BASK

EVAN COTTON. ASKERVILLE, OF CROWSLEY PARK, OXON. In the pedigree, given by Burke in his County Families,' Philip Baskerville married Agnes, daughter of John Hamlyn, Esq., co. Wilts. They had a son, who married, and he had a son, who also was named John. This John Baskerville was buried at Malmesbury, having married a wife called Rebecca. The date of the death of the second John Baskerville was November, 1681. Can anyone help me to ascertain the names of the wives of these two John Baskervilles? M. CUNLIFFE OWEN. In a bundle of dinner bills about the year 1800, there is invariably an extra charge for currant jelly of 7s. 6d. Was jelly in more common use and more expensive at that time?

CURRANT JELLY, c. 1800.

[ocr errors]

A. W. O.

'M1 EMBER OF THE IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT," 1802. In a document of 1802 a M.P. is described as above. Was that a common designation?

KIBBLEWHITES OF SOUTH FAWLEY, BERKS. In the many MS. pedigrees relating to the founder of St. John's College, his mother, Mary, is said to be a daughter of John Kibblewhite of South Fawley, Berks, and one of her brothers, John of Mayden. Where is this place? Is it the name of a farm at Fawley?

Recently I have come across the will of his mother, who married Thomas Everard of Reading, after the death of her first husband, William White; also the will of his sister Oxford and then William Mathew of the Mary, who married first John Bridgman of same city. Thomas Kibblewhite of Basildon, who died 1580, a son of John of Mayden, had a son John of Shinfield, Berks, living there 1586. there for many years? Were the family at Shinfield living

At the requiem for Avice, the first wife of Sir Thomas, the chief mourner was Lady Laxton, and Master Roper led her. As her surname is unknown, does the fact of Lady Laxton performing this office suggest a close relationship?

I have seen it suggested that the canton, a lion rampant, in the arms, suggests she may have belonged to the Kendrick family of Berks. In the will of his mother, Mary Everard of Reading, dated 15 Sept., 1540, the name Watlington occurs.

A. STEPHENS DYER.

[blocks in formation]

CAPT.
A. W. O.

"SALTERNS," PORTSEA ISLAND.

Can anyone give details of the history of the Salt Barn on the above Salterns? J. HUTT.

C. Roy HUDLESTON.

[merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

DR. PAULUS PIPER. I confess that I invoke the aid of N. & Q.' with some trepidation, as an ignorant beginner moving what seems clearly controversial matter. am anxious to know what value is to be

I

attached to that edition of the Libri Confraternitatum Sancti Galli Augiensis Fab ariensis and the Index thereto which were brought out in 1884 by Dr. Paulus Piper, and have several times been brought before readers of N. & Q.' by MR. ALFRED ANSCOMBE. MR. ANSCOMBE avers that much light is thrown on names, and through personal names on place-names, by this Index, and he complains of neglect to use it on the part of the workers of the Place-name Society. It would be of real help if some reason could be rendered by some competent person for or against taking account of Piper's Index. The authority of Professors Mawer and Stenton necessarily weighs very heavy but, while accepting it one would be grateful for guidance on the subject.

[merged small][ocr errors]

IGNORAMUS.

Can I get any information cencerning the Rev. Joseph Entwistle, the boy preacher, 1767-1841, over and above what is in the D. N. B. vol. xvii., in the article by Ed. Erskine. SEARCHER.

Replies.

PAROCHIAL LIBRARIES.
(cliii. 405, 480).

AS Sa pendant to MR. ARCHIBALD SPARKE'S informing paper under this heading at the second reference, and as I note his omission of the subjoined, I may be permitted to add it to his list.

ton-cum-Lenchwick parish, 22 miles northIn August, 1910, I was in charge of Norwest of Evesham, during which time I wrote a history of the church, parish and parochial library, which was inserted in The Antiquary of May, June, and August, 1911, under the title of A Noteworthy Parish and Library.' Excerpts from the last instalment may be conveniently transferred to these columns, which was commenced in this wise:

[ocr errors]

I was poor when I came to the living; it cost me from time to time much money to purchase books; my successors, peradventure, may experience the same convenience; I will therefore, as much as in me lies, prevent it by bequeathing my library in the nature of an beirloom to the living.

[ocr errors]

in

an

The donor of the heirloom was the Rev. Peter Cassy, M.A. (eleventh Vicar, 1726-1784). The books, ranging in size from portly folios to diminutive duodecimos, housed apartment in the old vicarage known as the Parish Room, rest on shelves arching the fireplace, and are surmounted by an inscription in gilt lettering, composed and placed thereon by the Rev. W. C. Boulter (sixteenth Vicar, 1891-1902): Hos libros in usum Successorum legavit Petrus Cassy, A. M, annos LVII hujus Parochie Vicarius, qui obiit a.d.

MDCCLXXXIV."

[ocr errors]

In March, 1895, Mr. Boulter contributed a note in these columns (8 S. vii. 241) entitled: Peter Cassy's Books, at Norton, near Evesham,' in which he states that "there is a printed list: A Parochial Library, for the use of the Vicars or Curates, residing and officiating in the Church and Parish of Norton & Lenchwick, left by P. Cassy, Vicar of the same,' 8vo., eight leaves, no imprint or date. I have not heard of any copy other than that in the Vicarage. It is the compilation of an ignorant person, and is inaccurate and of very little service. It shows about 362 volumes. In each volume is a printed label: For the Parochial Library of Norton & Lenchwick, by P. Cassy, Vicar." Doubtless it is a small collection of unimportant books in an obscure place, but it deserves to be recorded with other

་་

[ocr errors]

'Parish' and 'Church' libraries already stranger. If he were in his eighteenth year in mentioned in N. & Q.' 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th, 7th March, 1719, he could not have been in his Series." eighty-seventh year in October, 1784.

I made my own inventory of this fascinating library, cataloguing some 360 volumes, the major part consisting of Anglican divinity of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, though agreeably varied by books of poetry, anatomy, medicine, travel, biography, etc. The following represent the cosmopolitan tastes of this collector:

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

Of course not; he was in his eighty-fourth year, but then the ungrammatical author of this doubly inaccurate epitaph did not know Foster's 'Alumni Oxonienses,' as he ought to have done, and so learned that his victim had matriculated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, March 12, 1718/19, in his eighteenth year. J. B. MCGOVERN, F.S.A. Scot., F.Ph.S. Redgarth, Clothorn Road, Didsbury.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

Fifth Kirk of Scotland giving a short account of London, the King's execution. Although this letter was quoted in my first article, it may be well to repeat it here:

6. Miscellanies. By the Right Noble Lord, the late Marquess of Halifax. London. Printed for Matt. Gilliflower at the Spread Eagle in Westminster Hall, 1700. (A review appeared in N. & Q.' 9 S. ii. 339, of Miss Foxcroft's Life and Letters of Sir of George Savile, Bart., first Marquis Halifax).

[ocr errors]

Several of the books have been added to the collection by subsequent Vicars, such as Nos. 4, 6, 46, etc., presented by the Rev. Narcissus G. Batt, renowned for his vast erudition (Vicar, 1854-1891). Most of them contain the names of previous owners, genSome, as Mr. erally University men. Boulter says, "it would seem, never came into the possession of Mr. Cassy's successors, and others have gone astray since." He then gives a list of sixty-one missing volumes (cf. 8 S. vii. 242). Habent sua fata libelli.

[ocr errors]

Peter Cassy lies in Norton Church, beneath an oval slate mural tablet, surmounted by an urn in the north transept, with this inscription: Underneath is inhumed, the Remains of the Revd. Peter Cassy, A.M., an Exemplary Pattern of all that could adorn the Man; or the Christian. He died the 10th day of October, 1784. In the 87th year of his Age. Beloved and Revered." This inscription,' adds Mr. Boulter, "with its bad grammar and its doubtful statement, must be the work of an inexpert

[ocr errors]

Right Revd and Honble

This day, about two of the Clock, in the afternoon, his majesty was brought out, at the window of the balcony of the Banqueting house of Whitehall, near which a Stage was set up, and his head struck off, with an axe; -wherewith we hold it our duty to inform you and so, being in haste, we shall say no more, at this time, but that we remain Your most afft friends to serve you Garden, Lothian Covent 30 Jany., 1648/9. For the Rt. Revd. The Comrs. of the Kirk of Scotland, met at Edinburgh.

Jo. Chaiselie

Ro. Blair.

The Commissioners who signed this letter were William, Earl of Lothian, Sir John This Robert Chaiselie, and Robert Blair. Blair who signed was probably the divine of that name who, in 1646, was appointed Moderator of the General Assembly, and who, when Cromwell visited Edinburgh in 1648, was one of the three divines sent to treat with him for a uniformity of religion in England.

If I might suggest a method of testing my opinion concerning the balcony, by observation, and supposed reconstruction of former conditions, I would propose to MR. BERESFORD that he should visit the Banqueting House and ascend to the landing outside the central doorway at the north end, through which the public now enter the Hall. Stand

« ElőzőTovább »