Thomas Baynham of Clearwell (1422-1500)

Born: 1422 at Mitcheldean

Parents: Robert Baynham and Margaret Abrahall

Married: 1458 to Margaret Hody and 1470 to Alice Walwyn

Died: 1500 at Clearwell

Thomas, my eleven times great-grandfather, was born at Mitcheldean, Gloucestershire on 9th April 1422.

He married Margaret Hody, daughter of Sir John Hody, at Stowell, Somerset in 1458, presumably at St. Mary Magdalene Church, when he was 36 and she was 34. They had two sons – Alexander in 1459 and William in c.1463.  Margaret is thought to have died later in the 1460s.

Thomas married Alice Walwyn, daughter of William Walwyn of Bickerton, at ………………. Church in ………………..in 1470, when he was 48 and she was 18. They had six children: Isabel in 1471; Elizabeth in 1474; Anne in 1475; Jane in 1476; Christopher, my ten times great-grandfather, c.1478; Agnes (Susanna) in 1482. Alice died in 1518, aged 66.

Thomas also had an illegitimate daughter, Maud.

Thomas died at Clearwell on 16th February 1500, aged 77.

Thomas was born on 9th April 1422 at Mitcheldean in Gloucesterhire, the eldest child of Robert Ap Eynon (or Einon) and Margaret Abrahall, and was baptised on 1st June at the parish church of St Michael.

He was just 14 years old when his father Robert died – the Inquisition Post Mortem for Robert, taken on 22nd October 1436, found that “Thomas Baynam, his son and next heir, is aged 14 years 5 months and 3 days”. So Thomas was too young to inherit and would have been a ward until his coming of age at 21.

On 12th February 1438, William Brownyng was appointed “to have the  marriage of Thomas, son and heir of Robert Baynam, late tenant in chief, paying for the same 100 marks in hand at the receipt of the Exchequer”. It appears that William Brownyng (or Brounyng) was sometime Escheator for Gloucestershire as he had taken the Inquisition Post Mortem for Thomas’ father Robert two years earlier.

1438 - Appointment of William Brownyng 'to have the marriage of Thomas son and heir of Robert Baynham'

On 13th July 1443 a Writ de Etate Probanda was issued, to set up an inquisition of proof of age for Thomas – to evidence that he was now 21.

1443 - Writ de etate probanda

The inquisition was taken on 21st January 1444, by Escheator Delariver. It records:  “the jurors swear that he was born at Mitcheldean on the feast of St Nichomedis [1st June] 1422 and baptised on the same day in the church there, and was aged 21 on the same feast, 1443. They know and recall this for the following reasons.

John Estcourt, knight, aged 55 and more, saw Richard Wethyr, rector of the church, lift Thomas from the font. Thomas Rous, knight, aged 70 and more, knows because his daughter Katherine married John Yong at Mitcheldean on the same day. Richard Garon, aged 58 and more, on the same day bought a white horse with a black foot for 5 marks from Robert Baynam at Mitcheldean. Richard Kemyll, aged 55 and more, on the same day took at farm a bovate of land in Mitcheldean from Robert Baynam for 21 years, paying 6s. 6d. yearly. William Pricke, aged 52 and more, carried Thomas in his arms to and from the church. Thomas Hoke, aged 70 and more, knows because his son Edward was born on the same day at Mitcheldean. John Venne, aged 62 and more, on the same day at Mitcheldean was gravely wounded in the shin by an arrow shot by Richard Bonynton. Guy Dobyns, aged 49 and more, rode to Longnor to fetch Joan Karles and brought her to Mitcheldean to lift Thomas from the font. John Halle, aged 55 and more, fell from a black horse at Mitcheldean and broke his arm on the same day. John Mody, aged 62 and more, was espoused to Alice Payn at Mitcheldean on the same day. Walter Bayly, aged 73 and more, carried chrism to the font for the baptism. William Willys, aged 64 and more, was hired by Robert Baynam on the same day to build him a new grange in a tenement at Mitcheldean”.

Thomas’ first marriage was to Margaret Hody in 1458, at Stowell in Somerset – presumably at St. Mary Magdalene Church. She was the daughter of Sir John Hody (d.1441), Lord Chief Justice of England  [ add more on Sir John Hody ].  They had two sons, Alexander in 1459 and William in 1463.  It is possible that Margaret died in childbirth.

In 1470 Thomas married Alice Walwyn, daughter of William Walwyn [refer to Alice’s pedigree ].

Thomas had inherited two thirds of the Manor of Dene Magna (now Mitcheldean) from his father,Robert Baynham, when Robert died in 1436; this part was once owned by Thomas’ great-great-great-grandmother Johanna de Dene, the elder daughter and senior co-heir of William de Dene IV who died in 1319. The other part of the Manor was inherited by Thomas’ second wife Alice Walwyn; this part had been owned by the younger daughter and second co-heir of William de Dene IV, Isabella. With her, Alice also brought Clearwell Court and surrounding lands so after his marriage to her in 1470, Thomas passed his share of the Mitcheldean Manor, including lands at Westbury-on-Severn, to his eldest son Alexander and went to live on the Clearwell Estate.

Thomas and Alice’s first child was a daughter, Anne.. She married Henry Clifford but had no children with him. Later she married William Trye (1468-1524), son of Wliiam Trye and Isabel Berkeley; they had one son, Edward (1494-1526). Anne died in 1511.

Brass to Elizabeth Baynham and Robert Russell at Strensham

Their second daughter Elizabeth would later marry Robert Russell of Strensham in Worcestershire (1460-1502) and become the great-grandmother of Thomas Russell (1570-1634), overseer of the will of William Shakespeare.

After the death of Robert Russell, Elizabeth married Robert Throckmorton of Coughton Court in Warwickshire (1451-1518) who died in Italy on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. She died in 1511 and was buried in the church of St. John the Baptist at Strensham where there is a brass to her and Robert on the north wall of the chancel.

“here lyeth Robert Russell of Strensham, esquire sometyme lord of this manor, and Elizabeth his wife, which Robert deceased the 28th day of June in the yere of our Lord 1502 on whose soules Jesu have mercy amen”.

A third daughter Isabel was born at Clearwell. In c.1490 she married Sir Giles Brydges of Coberley in Gloucestershire who died in 1511. In the following year, as Isabel Brugge or Bruggges of Coberley she was included in a royal pardon by King Henry VIII at the beginning of the third year of his reign.

One of their children, John Brydges (1493-1557) became Baron Chandos of Sudeley in 1554 and High Sheriff of Wiltshire; as Lieutenant of the Tower of London he at various times had custody of Thomas Wyatt, Lady Jane Grey and Princess Elizabeth Tudor.

Isabel is buried in St. Giles’ church at Coberley, where there is a brass bearing the arms of Brydges & Baynham.

[ insert pic of Coberley brass ]

Sir John Brydges, aged 21

My ten times great-grandfather was their only son Christopher, who was born about 1478 – when Thomas was 56.  Another daughter, Agnes (Susanna), married Ralph Butler of Badmington in Gloucestershire (1480-c.1523), son of John Butler and Elizabeth Langston in 1510; she produced a son John in 1512.  Thomas and Alice’s last child was another daughter named Jane. She married Fulke Walwyn (1467-1509) and produced a daughter.  Thomas also had an illegitimate daughter, Maud who married William Wyrrall (d. 1577) of Bicknor in Gloucestershire and had four sons and five daughters; Maud died in 1563.

The first reference to Thomas acting in an official role is recorded in a grant of licence on 1st March 1451 to Edmund Ferrers to enter the manor of Teynton which states that ” … because the manor is held in chief by knight service, as was found after the death of William Ferrers, knight, by an inquisition taken at Tewkesbury, co. Gloucester, on 30 September last [1450] before Thomas Baynam, escheator in the county, the manor was taken into the king’s hands;”  in 1450 Thomas was 28.

Thomas Baynham (then) Escheator
1451 - Licence to Edmund Ferrers

Thomas presented to the Church of Dene Magna three times – once in 1469 and twice in 1485.

[ when did he fund the new chapel in the church? ]

On 2nd June 1470, aged 48, he joined his first commission – he was appointed to a Commission of Array “in the forest of Dene”. The other appointees were “John, earl of Worcester, John Barre, knight … and William Walweyn” (his father-in-law?).

1470 - Commission members for Forest of Dene
1470 - Commission of Array

Around this time ‘Thomas Beynam of Mitcheldean’ appears as plaintiff with others, ironmasters, in a case in the Court of Chancery, Six Clerks Office, brought against John Acton, steward of Kidderminster; it concerned an action of trespass brought by John Forde of Coventry against the complainants “because their servants stopped at Newenham [Newnham, in the Forest of Dean], a quantity of Spanish iron consigned to him” and included a petition for a writ of certiorari.

Baynham vs Acton

Thomas and Alice’s first child was a daughter, Anne.. She married Henry Clifford but had no children with him. Later she married William Trye (1468-1524), son of Wliiam Trye and Isabel Berkeley; they had one son, Edward (1494-1526). Anne died in 1511.

On 30th June 1471 he was appointed to his first Commission of the Peace for Gloucestershire.

Similar appointments followed throughtout the 1470s, 1480s and 1490s; and finally in 1499, the last commission to be held before his death.

On several of these commissions he was joined by his three sons – Alexander, William and Christopher.

1471 - Commissioner of the Peace for the first time

Thomas was appointed Sheriff of Gloucestershire for the first time on 9th November 1471 (recorded as ‘Thomas Baynam’).

On 7th March 1472 he was appointed to another Commission of Array, this time for the county of Gloucestershire.

1472 - Commission members for Gloucestershire

A repeat appointment followed on 18th June 1473.

1472 - Commission of Array

Thomas became Sheriff of Gloucestershire for a second time on 5th November 1477 (recorded as ‘Thomas Beynam esq’).

In 1478 he received his first appointment as Warden of the Forest of Dean and Constable of  St. Briavels Castle – a grant in survivorship to Anthony Woodville, Earl Rivers, and Thomas Baynham; this tenure lasted until 1481.

[ Cal Pat 1476-1485, p. 261 & p. 405 ]

His next role was on a Commission of Oyer and Terminer, to which he was appointed on 5th July 1479 – “Commission of oyer and terminaer to Richard Grey, knight, son of the king’s consort Elizabeth, queen of England, Thomas Lytelton, knight, Richard Croft, knight, Thomas Braynton, Thomas ap Morgan of Gloucestre, Thomas Baynham, Roger Bodnam and Robert ap Jenkyn touching certain offences committed within the parts of South Wales and the marches of the same by John Herbert alias John Bastard”.

1479 - Commission of Oyer and Terminer

In 1481 Thomas’ position as Constable of St Briavel’s Castle was extended – a further grant in survivorship to Anthony Woodville, Thomas Baynham and Robert Poyntz; this tenure lasted until 1483.

On 31st August 1483 his position as Constable of St Briavel’s Castle was extended again, this time jointly with a Richard Williams – “Grant, during pleasure, to the king’s servant Richard Williams, esquire, one of the ushers of the king’s chamber, and Thomas Baynam, esquire, of the office of constable of Seint Brevellys in the forest of Dene, with the accustomed fees from the issues of the forest at the hands of the receiver there or the bailiff of Newland, parcel of the same, and all other profits”.

1483 - Constable of St. Briavels Castle

The same year, on April 27 he was one of seven men to receive a commission for Gloucestershire, “to assess certain subsidies granted to the late king [Edward IV] by the commons of the realm in the last Parliament at Westminster from aliens … and to send their inquisitions to the treasurer and barons of the Exchequer and to appoint collectors so that the sums shall be answered for at Whitsunday”.

1483 - Commission to assess subsidies from aliens

In 1484 he was appointed to two more Commissions of Array for Gloucestershire – on 1st May and 8th December; his eldest son Sir Alexander was also a member of both commissions.

1481 - Thomas as Commissioner of Array (1st May)
1484 - Thomas as Commissioner of Array (8th December)

Repeat appontments followed in 1486. This time he was joined by Sir Alexander’s younger brother William.

1486 - Commissioner of the Peace for the first time

In 1489, again with his son William and six others (including Thomas Morgan, father-in-law of his youngest son Christopher), he received a commission “to deliver the goal of Gloucester castle”.

1489 - Commission to deliver the goal of Gloucester Castle

An indenture dated 4th September 1491 between Thomas Baynham and Morgan Thomas and his wife Lucy enfeoffed Thomas, Alexander and William Baynham, William and Reynold Hody and Thomas Basshe in various manors and other properties.

1491 - Indenture

In 1494 Thomas received a release and quitclaim of all lands and tenements, rents, reversions and services in the parishes of Newland and Staunton and elsewhere in the forest from his cousin Robert Beynam. Robert is described as ‘son and heir of William brother of Robert Beynam esquire, of the forest of Dene’; Thomas is described as ‘son of Robert Beynam, his cousin‘.

 

1494 - Release and quitclaim
Robert Baynham son and heir of William Baynham brother of Robert Baynham

So Robert the donor is the son of Thomas’ uncle William – this must be the William, son of John ap Eynon, born in 1402.

[ ????  He served again as Constable of St Briavel’s Castle in 1498-99, shortly before his death ]

Wall plaque in St. Michael's church

Thomas died on 16th February 1500 at Clearwell, aged 78.

He is buried in the church of St. Michael in Mitcheldean, where there is a wall plaque which commemorates him and his two wives. The ‘monumental brasses’ of his wives were moved onto the plaque from their original position in the North Aisle during a restoration of the church in 1853.

The inscription on the plaque reads:  Thomas ap Eynon (alias Baynham) esq, lord of the manor of Michel Dean was born 9th April 1422 & died 16th February 1499. The said Thomas married (1) Margaret daughter of Mr Justice John Hodye, mother of Sir Alexander Baynham, knight, his eldest son and heir (2) Alice daughter & heiress of William Walwyn esq, mother of Sir Christopher Baynham, knight, of Clowerwell. She married 2ndly with Sir Walter Denys, knight, & died the 10th day of October 1518. May God have mercy upon them. Amen.

The ancestral arms of the Baynham family were Gules, a lion passant ermine but Thomas is recorded as receiving a new grant of arms Gules, a chevron between three bulls’ heads caboshed argent, horned or, on the point of the chevron a crescent for difference and these are the ones which appear at the top of the plaque.

Following his death, no IPM was taken in Gloucestershire but there was one taken in Hereforshire which related entirely to the properties of his second wife Alice; it did however confirm his date of death.

Date of Thomas' death - 16th February [1500]
IPM

Alice survived Thomas and married Sir Walter Denys of Dyrham in Gloucestershire, as his fourth wife; he died in 1505. She survived him too and, as ‘Alice Denys —[ Thomas] — Baynam, esq., co. Glouc., widow‘, was included in a royal pardon by King Henry VIII on his accession in 1509.

She died in October 1518, aged 66.

1509 - Pardon to Alice Denys
Notes:

The IPM taken after the death of his father Robert states that Thomas was 14 years 5 months and 3 days old on 12th September 1436, the day that Robert died.

Thomas was baptised on 1st June 1422, but it is possible that he was also born on that day – see Holford, M. L. (ed.), Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, 21 to 25 Henry VI, 1442-1447 (Woodbridge, 2009), no. 145

The baptism entry in the Bishop’s Register says that he was baptised by the Rector, Robert Wethyr. However the list of rectors of St. Michael’s church contained in BGAS Transactions Vol 6 shows a William Wyther appointed as Rector on 19th April 1418

Thomas Baynham’s Inquisition Post Mortem was held on 12th June 1500

Alice Walwyn’s Will was proved on 4th February 1519