Nicholas FORTESCUE [24137]
- Marriage (1): Katherine SKINNER [24138]
- Died: 1549
General Notes:
Nicholas was Groom Porter to Henry VIII.
Family of Cookhill and Wheatley. 15 CHAP. IV. The Fortescues of Cookhill and Wheatley. The pedigree in the Visitation of Worcester 1 in 1569, assigns to John two sons named Nicholas\emdash the first the Groom Porter, being by a nameless wife; the second Nicholas being by "the dau. of Skinner," second wife of John. In the Arms and Pedigrees of Devon Families 2 two sons Nicholas are recorded, one as legitimate, and the other as "bastard sonne." In like manner, the Visitations of Surrey, in 1530, 1572, i623,3 describe one as " base son," annexing his arms, which are those of Fortescue with a bordure to the shield. We may observe that Louis Fortescue, the judge, making his will in 1543, during the lifetime of both the Nicholases, leaves to his Brother " Nicholas," without the designation of the elder or the younger, " four marks in gold to make a cross for his wife," as if he acknowledged only one brother with that name. There is scarcely a doubt, however, of the fact that John of Spridlestone had two sons Nicholas; 4 because there are extant two wills, one dated in 1546, and proved in 1550, made by Nicholas Fortescue of "Spridlestone," mentioning his wife Elizabeth, his elder brother Richard, and his younger brother Lewis; another, dated in 1544, and proved in 1549, by " Nicholas Fortescue Groom Porter of the King's Most Honourable Chamber," made on the occasion of his " being appointed to attend the King's Grace in a voiage Royall into France." His wife Katherine is named, and a son William; and Mabell and Jane, his daughters, to each of whom he leaves forty pounds, " to be delivered to her at the day of her marriage, so that she be ruled and ordered in her saide marriage by my saide wife her mother." He bequeaths to his son "his manor of Wytheley, Co. Worcester," after his wife's death. The will is given in the appendix to this chapter. 1 Harl. MS. 1566. Visit. of Worcester. 2 See Harl. MS. 1538, fol. 87. 3 Harl. MS. 1561, fol. 14. 4 Two brothers with the same name often occur in old documents. PON the failure of the elder line of Spridlestone, as above described, that which sprung from Nicholas, a younger son of John Fortescue of Spridlestone by Alice Cockworthy, becomes the senior house. The pedigrees for the most part make Nicholas, the Groom Porter, and ancestor of the Fortescues of Cookhill, to be the second son of the aforesaid John
Research Notes:
Family of Cookhill and Wheatley. 15 CHAP. IV. The Fortescues of Cookhill and Wheatley.
Upon the failure of the elder line of Spridlestone, as above described, that which sprung from Nicholas, a younger son of John Fortescue of Spridlestone by Alice Cockworthy, becomes the senior house. The pedigrees for the most part make Nicholas, the Groom Porter, and ancestor of the Fortescues of Cookhill, to be the second son of the aforesaid John.
The pedigree in the Visitation of Worcester 1 in 1569, assigns to John two sons named Nicholas-the first the Groom Porter, being by a nameless wife; the second Nicholas being by "the dau. of Skinner," second wife of John.
In the Arms and Pedigrees of Devon Families 2 two sons Nicholas are recorded, one as legitimate, and the other as "bastard sonne." In like manner, the Visitations of Surrey, in 1530, 1572, i623,3 describe one as " base son," annexing his arms, which are those of Fortescue with a bordure to the shield.
We may observe that Louis Fortescue, the judge, making his will in 1543, during the lifetime of both the Nicholases, leaves to his Brother " Nicholas," without the designation of the elder or the younger, " four marks in gold to make a cross for his wife," as if he acknowledged only one brother with that name.
There is scarcely a doubt, however, of the fact that John of Spridlestone had two sons Nicholas; 4 because there are extant two wills, one dated in 1546, and proved in 1550, made by Nicholas Fortescue of "Spridlestone," mentioning his wife Elizabeth, his elder brother Richard, and his younger brother Lewis; another, dated in 1544, and proved in 1549, by " Nicholas Fortescue Groom Porter of the King's Most Honourable Chamber," made on the occasion of his " being appointed to attend the King's Grace in a voiage Royall into France." His wife Katherine is named, and a son William; and Mabell and Jane, his daughters, to each of whom he leaves forty pounds, " to be delivered to her at the day of her marriage, so that she be ruled and ordered in her saide marriage by my saide wife her mother." He bequeaths to his son "his manor of Wytheley, Co. Worcester," after his wife's death. The will is given in the appendix to this chapter.
Now, although there is no allusion here to Spridlestone, or to any brothers, yet as the Groom Porter is everywhere, with a single exception called son of John of Spridlestone, we must believe him to be such, and consequently that he was brother to the other Nicholas, who in his will styles himself "of Spridlestone." The Groom Porter, styled in several documents Sir Nicholas, married Katherine, daughter of Robert Skinner, Lord of the Manor of Shelfield in Warwickshire. In 1537, 29 Henry VIII., he was appointed Keeper of the Park of Malwyke under the Lord Denbighe.
He, for his services to Henry VIII., received from that king, in the thirty-fourth year of his reign (1542), on the dissolution of the religious foundations, a grant of the lands of the Nunnery of Cokehill in Cookhill and Church Lench, in Worcestershire, situated or the range of hills dividing that county from Warwickshire, a few miles west of Alcester "These lands," says Nash, writing in 1782, "Henry the Eighth gave to his servant Nicholas Fortescue ancestor to the present Captain Fortescue, who was one of those that went round the world in the Centurion."
I was informed by the lineal descendant and representative of Sir Nicholas, the Rev. Edward Knottesford Fortescue, Dean of Perth Cathedral, writing in 1864, that the manor and estate remained in his family for eight generations, until the time of John Fortescue who married Miss Mary Glover, who sold the property early in the present century "The old house is now (1864) partly used as a farm house, and traces of the walks and gardens still remain." At the same time with this grant Sir Nicholas received another in the parish of Campden, in Gloucestershire, very near to where, a century before, Chancellor Fortescue had bought his estate of Ebrington. This was also part of the property of the Coke nuns, and was called in consequence, Nun-heys, 6 from "hai"," a hedge, park, or inclosure. All these grants were to "Nicholas Fortescue, and Catharine his wife, and to the heirs male of the said Nicholas." These lands were held of the king by knight's service in chief.
There is a warrant of the year 1544, "for the delivery of an allowance of ten shillings a-day to Nicholas Fortescue Groom of the King's House,"7 to which Sir Nicholas's signature is attached. Sir Nicholas, in the 35th Henry VIII., 1543, bought from Maude Lane, the manor and estate of Whethele, or Wheatley, in Warwickshire near to Cookhill. He died August 28, 1549 (being the same date as that of a codicil of his will), leaving his son and heir, William, aged nine years
From an entry in the Court of Wards, it appears that the preferment of Groom Porter was granted to Henry Whelar, Gent., one of the Grooms of the King's Chamber, who granted his interest to Katherine Fortescue, widow, mother of the ward, and that the " Ward and marriage of William Fortescue," her son, was, together with the land descending, sold to the said Katherine for £2O. This William, who married Ursula Newport, in compliance with the will of his brother-in-law Walter Newport, dated 34 Elizabeth (1592), which bequeathed a sum of money for the purpose, settled a rent charge of £2O. a-year for ever out of his manor of Wetheley for a school for the poor at Awseter (Alcester).
William Fortescue died January 6, 1605.
An inquisition post mortem, taken July 24, 1607, finds that he died intestate, leaving his wife Ursula Fortescue surviving. He had two sons, Nicholas and John, and a daughter, Dorothy. Each of the sons inherited a portion of the landed estates of their father, and both appear to have lived at Cookhill.
The eldest, Nicholas afterwards Sir Nicholas, called in the Composition Papers " son and heir," was resident at Cookhill in the year of his father's death, a document being preserved in the State Paper Office relating to some armour found in his house there in November of that year, the month of the famous Gunpowder Treason.
It will be remembered that Cookhill was in a part of the country with which the conspirators Catesby and Winter were connected, and to which they and their associates betook themselves on the failure of the plot.
Fortescue declares that the armour in question had been in the house five years, "that he had not seen Winter for eight years," and that he had not been summoned to join the rising. There is also a letter from Chief Justice Anderson and Sheriff Warburton to the Privy Council, dated March 26, 1606, complaining "that Mr. Fortescue of Warwickshire, though summoned to appear before them, had not come forward to be examined." These suspicions, to which probably every Roman Catholic in that part of England was more or less exposed in that time of public alarm, do not appear to have hindered his advancement, which, according to the writer in Biographia Britannica, he owed in a great measure to his own merits
"He was a person", says the author," of so dextrous an address, that when he came into notice he came into favour, and when he entered the Court, had not only the chamber but the closet of a Prince open to him ; a gentleman that did much in his person. and, as he would say, 'let reputation do the rest.' He and Sir Edmund Fortescue were always observed so wary, as to have all their enemies before them." We find Sir Nicholas receiving into his house at Cookhill a well-known Benedictine monk of that day-David Baker, born in 1575, who, it is said, "did retire himself into the house of Sir Nicholas Fortescue, and did then zealously continue his second conversion, or attempt upon internal prayer."
Early in the reign of James I. he became one of the Commissioners of the Household and Navy. He was knighted by James at either Whitehall or Theobald's,2 February, 1617. He also obtained the office of Surveyor-General of "tenements, and hereditaments" in his own County of Worcester, which, in : resigned in favour of his son Edmund. He held at the same time, and until the 21st of May, 1625, when he resigned it, the office of a Chamberlain of the Exchequer, to which office he had been appointed on the 26th of February, 1618, upon the death of Sir John Points. His colleague, the other Chamberlain, was Sir Nicholas Carewe. The grant, which is extant, confers upon him the office for his life," with all its emoluments rights as fully and perfectly as they were enjoyed by any of his predecessors, Thomas late Lord de la Ware, George Younge, Sir William Killigrewe, Sir Walter Cope, or Sir John Points." It may be remarked that Sir Nicholas is styled in the document "Armiger," and not "Miles;" so that the date of his knighthood given in Nichol's Progresses, viz. February 2nd, 1617, is too early by a year.
In the years 1622 and 1623 we find him actively employed on several special Commissions. First, in the former year he is a Commissioner with the Keeper of the Great Seal, the Lord Manners, and others, for inquiry into defective titles to lands granted by the Crown. Again, in March, 1623, he serves on a Special Commission with the Lord Treasurer (the Earl of Middlesex), and others, to inquire into "the depredations and robberies daily committed on the sea by pirate-robbers, calling themselves men-of-war." Again, he is on a Special Commission, dated May 9, 1623, with six others, " To inquire into the discords, discontentments, and sundry misgovernments of the English Colonies and Plantations in Virginia and the Summer Islands ; "the preamble reciting that the aforesaid Colonies" are of special importance as being the first foreign Colonies planted by our English nation, and tending to the propagation of God's Glory, and Christian Religion, and the enlargement of the dominions of our Crown."
And at the same time, he is one of the Commissioners "to inquire into the state of Ireland, and to consider all petitions and complaints of grievances, and all projects concerning matters that may arise within our Realm of Ireland."
He married Prudence, daughter of William Wheteley of Holcome in Norfolk, Esquire, sometime Prothonotary of the Common Pleas, by whom he had issue five sons, namely,- William, his son and heir, born in 1603, died in January, 1649; second, Francis, of the Inner Temple ; third, Edmund, Sewer to the Queen, and succeffor to his father as Surveyor-General of Crown Lands; fourth, Nicholas, a Knight of Malta; fifth, John; and two daughters,-Martha, married to Nicholas, son of Sir Edward Lewis, of The Vanne, in Glamorganshire ; and second, Prudence.
The funeral certificate in the College of Arms, records that " The Right Worshipfull Sir Nicholas Fortescue, of Cookhill, in the Co. of Worcester, Knight, departed this mortal life, at his lodging in Fetter Lane, London, the second of November, 1633 ; and was thence conveyed to his house aforesaid, and interred in a chapel belonging to the said house the twentieth of the same moneth."
The chapel was that belonging to the old nunnery before mentioned, "Near the tomb of Isabel, Countess of Warwick,"4 says Nash, "lays the body of Sir Nicholas Fortescue, Chamberlain of the Exchequer, who was beloved, and died lamented." The following letter from Sir Nicholas to a friend in the country, Sir William Pitt, at Hartley Westpall, giving him the news of the day, has survived :- Sr The returne of yo carrier is soe suddaine as you may marvayle if you sometymes misse of aunsuer, for if I should drive forth as oftentyme I doe he would be gone afore my returne, but yo laste & this by chaunce found me & you shall have such an accounte as in this shorte tyme I can give you . The reafon y' noe more common souldiors were slayne was for that at the first charge in playne termes they ranne soe beastly away as some drowned themselves & Captaynes & Coronell Spry was soe foresaken as he was driven to stand to it withe very few, soe you have already heard of that busines as much as I dare send you for there is noe other messenger come & for my parte I give little credit to or towne talke/ I can send you nothinge of that is done at Wyndsor as yeat for none of them are retourned only we have it heere that my lord of Holland is very speedyly to goe wth 2 or 3000 men to the Duke & the Earle of Carlile is to goe to the duke of Lorrayne as it is heere sayd to accomodate the Businesses betweene the King of Bohemia & the Emperour. We heare that that duke Rohun hath gotten an army of 18000 of the religion in Languedoc and that the French Kinge will finde some trouble there as well as in other paces by the duke Memorancie and other his discontented lords who take advantage of these troublesome tymes, we have a confident reporte that the French king is dead & many heere say that his brother will proove then he [?ic In orig.]. But I beleyve it not, it is true he hath beene very sicke & hath had a swellinge in his tongue & throate that hathe much vexed him. Touching the shorteninge of the kings progresse methinkes it should not be very troublesome to you for he comes noe neerer ; nm then Aldershot, his courte is small & removes but shorte and not often as you see by this note enclosed/ Sr Ihon Wolstenholme is in wont of towne but soe soone as I shall meete wth him I will acquainte him w th what you have written. In the meane time returning my hartiest salutations to you & yor company I reste Yor faithfull & ever assured Friend NICH : FORTESCUE. FETTER LANE, This 20 th of August 1627. Addressed To the Right worh my very deare Freend Sr Willm Pitt Knt at Hartely Waspell these be dd wth speed.
By the inquisition poft mortem held November 8, 12 Car. I., it appears that Sir Nicholas died seized of lands in the manors of Wheatley and Cookhill. His eldest son William, styled a "Popish recusant," succeeded to the former manor, which was afterwards sequestered for his recusancy. He is also called "of Cookhill." He married Joane daughter of Thomas Wilde, of Glasely, in Shropshire, leaving by her three sons and one daughter, and died January, 1649, aged 46 years.
There is no record of any defendants from the sons of this William Fortescue, nor from any of his brothers. Nicholas Fortescue, fourth son of Sir Nicholas, the Chamberlain of the Exchequer, became a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem; he was a devoted Roman Catholic, and about the year 1637, having been commissioned by Queen Henrietta-Maria consort to Charles the First to endeavour to revive the " English tongue " of that order at Malta, he petitioned the Grand Master, Lafcaris, for admission to its ranks, praying him to appoint commissioners to examine the "proofs of his nobility," and to hear his proposals for restoring and giving life to the English Tongue. His request was granted, and the commissioners reported favourably to the Grand Master and Council on the projected revival, but seemed to doubt the possibility of raising the sum required to meet the expected outlay, namely, twelve thousand crowns.
They find that Fortescue had established "his nobility to their satisfaction," and recommend that he be admitted to the order with the rank of "Cavaliere," and say that they have named him as a novice to await the proper time for taking the habit, and for making the prescribed profession; allowing him meantime to wear, hung from his neck, the golden cross of the order, both within and without the convent, subject to the approval of his Holiness Pope Urban the Eighth, and of Cardinal Barbarino, Protector of the Order. This report is dated the 26th of February, 1638.
In January of the following year (1639) he appears to have presented himself to the Grand Master; for we find a letter of recommendation and introduction in his favour from the Pope, and another from Cardinal Barbarino, both addressed to the head of the order, Lascaris, who, with his Council, approved and confirmed the report of the commissioners in the next month (February 25).
The negotiation never advanced beyond this stage. The spirit of the time in England had little sympathy with an institution whose usefulness had passed away with the object for which it was founded, and the unfortunate queen of Charles the First had soon more pressing affairs to think of. Pozzo, the Historian of the Order, thus closes his account of the transaction:- " Tutte quest cose furono dal Gran Maestro e Configlio approvate e confirmate sotto il di 25 di Febbraio, ma si come il trattato no haveva maggiori fondamenti ch' in deboli e lontane speranze, cosi in breve svani, tanto pił ch' occorsero di poi le gravissime turbolenze d' Inghilterra che posero non solo in conquasso e ruina le cose di Cattolici di quel Regno; ma per 1'affettione dimostrata condussero nella catastrofed' una funestissima tragedia l'istessa casa Reale."
Sir Nicholas took up arms for the king on the outbreak of the great Civil War, and was killed, in 1644, at Preston in Lancashire, according to some authorities, or at the battle of Marston Moor in Yorkshire, if we follow the statement of Whitaker, who says that he died of wounds at the latter place. "The Loyal Martyrology " contains the following notice under the head of " Loyal Confessors:"-"Sir Nicholas Fortescue, a Knight of Malta (see the justness of the king's caufe, which invited strangers from so far countries to take his part), was slain in Lancashire in defence of the Royal cause."
The original document containing "the proofs" of Sir Nicholas' "nobility" still exists; its present possessor is Mr. John James Watts, who, with much kindness, has allowed me to inspect it, and to have it copied in facsimile. It is a parchment roll, with a knight on horseback emblazoned in colours at the top, with the following inscription:-
"Hęc effigies representat Nobiliffimum Virum Dominum Richardum a Forti-scuto equestris ordinis, qui comitatus est Gulielmum Normanniae Ducem dictum vulgo Conquestorem in expeditione Anglicana, et propter res ab eo fortiter ac fędiciter gestas, ibidem a dicto Conquęstore donatus est Castello in Comitatu Devoniensis dicto Winston cum agris adiacentibus ubi primo sedem pofuit anno salutis 1069."
There is also a drawing of a seal of which a woodcut is given further on, with this inscription over it:-
"Hęc Figura refert sigillum antiquum Familise Forti-Scutorum nuperrimč repertum a Nobilissimo viro fideli Forti-Scuto de Filly Equitiaurato inter numismata Johannis Terdefkhen Belgi, qui habitat Lambheth trans Thamefin Londoni."
The arms of the eight families forming the necessary number of quarterings for "noble " descent are given, namely, Fortescue, Skinner, Newport, Hales, Whetley, Pepis, Skinner (as No. 2), Billing. A second row of shields for the children of Sir Nicholas Fortescue and Prudence Whetley.
And the descent is vouched by John Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury, and Sir John Fortescue of Salden, who are styled "consanguinii" of Sir Nicholas. The production of the document at the Papal Court is certified by the signature "Cęsar Columna," dated at Rome, January 1, 1639. The date of the death of Sir Nicholas is not known, nor is there a record of any marriage. John Fortescue, second son of William Fortescue and Ursula Newport, was, equally with his elder brother Sir Nicholas, styled of Cookhill and Wheatley. He took an active part in the great rebellion as a Royalist leader, for which he was heavily fined by the Parliament, imprisoned, and forced to compound for his estates for £234. On the 29th of March, 1649, he "took the Act of Abjuration;" notwithstanding which we find him soon after the Restoration, in the year 1663, receiving a grant of "the remainder invested in the Crown of the Messuage and Chapel of St. Giles, Co. Warwick, and Cookhill Priory, CO. Worcester, long pertaining to his ancestors;" as well as of other lands granted by Henry VIII. to Nicholas Fortescue, because he, " the said John Fortescue, has been active in promoting the Restoration, and has suffered for his loyalty." He married Jane,2 daughter of D'Ewes, of Welbourne, who died in 1674. The issue of this marriage was, 1st, John, 2ndly, Francis, who left a son Francis, a Roman Catholic Priest, who died at Douay; and two daughters.
John, the eldest son, sold the estate of Wheatley, and, having disinherited his eldest son, Nicholas, left at his death, in 1692, his estate of Cookhill to his second son, William, who married, in 1697, Katherine, daughter of Sir Richard Braune, and died in 1706.
His eldest son, John, married Theodosia Braune, and died in 1758, leaving his son and successor, Captain John Fortescue, who entered the Royal Navy in 1739, and was in Lord Anson's ship, the "Centurion," during his first voyage round the world in the year 1740, and saw much service under Lord Howe. He died in the year 1808.
His eldest son, also John, sold the estates of Cookhill; and his two sons, John and Henry, leaving no male issue, the elder line of the descendants of Sir Nicholas, who had the grant of Cookhill from Henry VIII., became extinct.
The burying-place of the family for many generations was the chapel at Cookhill. It was restored by Captain John Fortescue, the circumnavigator, who was the last of the family that was buried there.
The representation of the family now devolved upon Francis Fortescue of Alveston Manor House, only surviving son of Francis Fortescue, who was third son of John Fortescue of Cookhill, by Theodosia Braune. The estate of Bridgetown, with the manors of Alveston and Teddington, were bequeathed to him by his father's coufin, John Knottesford; and on his coming of age, he, by a condition of the will, took the name of Knottesford.
Mr. Francis Knottesford-Fortescue, born in 1772, married in 1805, Maria, only daughter of the Rev. George Downing, Rector of Ovington and Prebendary of Ely Cathedral. He died in 1859, and was father of the late Rev. Edward Bowles Knottesford-Fortescue, Dean of Perth Cathedal, who resumed Fortescue as his last name.
Dean Fortescue married first in 1838, Frances Anne, fourth daughter of Ven. Archdeacon Spooner, Rector of Elmdown. That lady died in 1868, having issue by her husband, . Edward Francis, who succeeded his father; Mary; John; Lawrence; George; Vincent; Charles Ninian, who died in 1855. He married secondly in 1871, Gertrude, daughter of the Rev. Sanderson Robins, Vicar of St. Peter's, Isle of Thanet, and by her had Clara Mary Katherine; Adrian Henry, and Gertrude Raphael. Dean Fortescue died August 18, 1877, aged sixty-one years, and was succeeded by his eldest son Captain Edward Francis Knottesford-Fortescue, born in 1840, a Captain in the army, Hon. Major of the 1st Warwickshire Militia, and a Justice of the Peace for Warwickshire. Alveston Manor House, of which he is the proprietor, was formerly called Bridgetown House; it is close to Stratford-on-Avon in Warwickshire, about twenty miles distant from Cookhill. The house was built as a hospital for the sick monks from Worcester, and was sold upon the dissolution of that monastery.
Captain Fortescue married in 1870, Alicia Margaretta, daughter of the Rev. J. Tyrwhitt, Vicar of Whitechurch, and Prebendary of Salisbury. They have issue, Frances Gabriela, born 1871; Maria Johanna Baptista, born 1873; John Nicholas, born 1874; and Faithful Edward, born 1878.
From the foregoing descent it appears that Captain Knottesford-Fortescue, is now the representative of the eldest existing line of the Fortescues, the branch which he represents being senior to all the others in the male line of descent.
APPENDIX TO CHAP. IV. A. The Will of Nicholas Fortescue, Groom-Porter to King Henry VIII. In the the name of God, amen, the ixth day of July in the yere of our Lorde Godd, 1544, and xxxvjth yeare of the reigne of our Soveraigne Lorde Henry the eight by the grace of God Kinge of Englande, Fraunce and Irelande defendor of the faith and in earthe of the churche of Englande and also of Irelande the supreme hedd, I Nicholas Fortescue grome porter of the Kinges most honorable Chamber being appointed to attende upon the Kinges Majestie in this his graces voyage royall into Fraunce entending to sett in ordre and disposicion such poore substaunce and living as God hath lent me at my departure whatsoever shall become of me do ordeyn, make and declare my last will and testament in manner and forme hereafter following. And first I bequeath and recomende my soule to handes and will of almightie God my maker and redeemer and my body to the earthe, also I and bequethe unto Katheryne my welbeloved wife my manor of Wytheley with th'appurtenaunces in the countie of Worceter, and all my landes and tenementes in Wytheley in the same be for terme of her life. Item I give and bequethe to my sonne William a bason and Ewer of silver and parcell gilt. Item I give and bequethe to Mabel my doughter fourtie poundes to be delyvered to her at the day of her mariage so that she be ruled and ordered in her saide mariage by my saide mother. Item I give and bequethe to my doughter Jane, fourtie poundes to be delivered to her at the day of her mariage, so that she in likewise be ordered by her said mother, And if it of them fortune to dye before mariage, Then I will that her said portion shall goo and remaine to the survivor of them towardes her better preferment in mariage she being ruled and ordered therin as if aforsaide and if they bothe happen to dye before marriage then I will that my wife shall have and retain saide somes to her owne use. Item I will that my saide sonne William shall have after that he shall come to the full age of xxj yeres, foure poundes yerely paide unto hym by my said wife during her life towardes his fynding. Alfo I will that my servauntes William Mylles, Christopher Bankes, John Humfrey, William Oking, William Patefon, Morice Bulle and Markes Wynter being in my service at my departure of this transitorye worlde shall have every of them one yeres wages with the quarter of the yere that I dye in, to be compted one of the iiij quarters of the yere, Also I will that within a convenient tyme after my dethe fyve poundes in redy money be distributed and bestowed emonges poor householders dwelling in Sainct Martyns paryshe besides Charing crosse or elles where by the discrecon of myn executrix. Item I bequethe and give to Margerye Foreman a blacke gowne requyringe her to praye for me. Item I give and bequethe to John Rowland page to the robes a ringe worthe twentye shillinges. Item I give and bequethe to my frend Mr . Wentworth, clerke of the kechen Mr . Thomas Worth and Mr . Stephen Darrell and every of them a ring of the price of xiijs . iiijd . for a remembraunce. Also I give and bequethe to my sister in law Alice Wolmer a ring of the value of xiijs . iiijd . The residue of my goodes and cattalles as plate redy money, juelles, apparell, household stuf, leasses and other goodes, moveable and unmoveable, my debtes paide and my saide legacies and bequestes duely performyd I will, give and bequethe fully and holly to the saide Katherine my wife whome I ordeyn and make my onely executrix trusting verely and also hartely desiring and requyring her in consideracon that I have assured all my hole londes and possession to her for a joynter during her life that she se this my last will and testament in every poynt to be well and truely accomplished and performed, And also that she be loving and naturall to her saide children and myne. And overseers hereof I ordeyne and make my trustie and derely beloved frend Mr . Fitz William gentilman usher of the princes pryvy chamber hartely desiring him to se this my last will and testament fulfilled and executed and to put his helpe and assistance thereunto. And for his paynes therin I give to hym a gelding of the price of five markes. In witnes wherof I have herunto subscribed my name and sette my seale. NICHOLAS FORTESCUE. Ultima Voluntas, In the name of God Amen the xxviijth daie of August in the yere of our Lorde God a thousand five hundreth fourtie and nyne I Nycholas Fortescue grome porter of the Kinges most honorable chamber in th'accomplisment and further declaracion of my last will made the ixth day of July in the yeare of our Lord God 1544 concerning my maner of Wytheley with th'appurtenances specified in my saide will, I will and bequeathe the same with all my landes and tenements in Wytheley to Katheryne my wife so terme of her lyfe, and after her decease to remayne to my sonne William Fortefcue and the heyres of his body lawfully begotten and for lack of suche yssue I will the said maner and all and singuler the premisses shall remayne to my doughter Mabell Fortescue and to the heyres of her body lawfully begotten, and for defaulte of such issue I will the saide maner and all and singuler the premisses shall remayne to my doughter Jane Fortescue and to the heyres of her body lawfully begotten, and for defaulte of such yssue I will the saide maner and all and singuler the premisses shall remayne to Master William Fitz-William and to his heires for ever. In prefencia mei Johannis Bell, cle'ci hoc testamentum lectum et approbatum per dictum testatorem unacum codicillo Richard Haywood. Proved together with a codicil at London on the 2yth day of September, A.D. 1549 by the oath of Katherine the relict and executrix in the above will nominated.
APPENDIX TO CHAP. IV. B. Funeral Certificate, copied from the original in the College of Arms, by T. Planché, Esq., Rouge Croix, July 1864 The right worshipfull Sir Nicholas Fortescue of Cookehill in ye county Worcester Knight Departed this mortall life at his lodging in Fetter Lane London ye 2d of November 1633 and was thence conveyed to his house aforesaid and interred in a Chapell belonging to the said house ye 20th of ye same moneth. He mar: Prudence ye Da. of ... Whetley of Holcome in ye county of Northn . Esq., sometyme Prothonotary of ye Comon pleas by whom he hath yssue 5 sonnes and two daughters, viz1 Wm Fortescue Esqre his sonne and heire mar: to Joanee Da: of Tho: Wilde of Glaseley in ye county of Salop Esqre by whom he hath yssue 3 sonnes John eldest sonne about 11 yeares of age, Francis 2nd sonne, William 3d sonne, and Mary a dau : about 13 yeares of age. Francis 2d sonne defunct, Edmund 3d sonne, Nicholas 4th sonne, and John 5 sonne ; all of them as yet unmaried. Martha eldeft Da : to ye defunct mar : to Nicholas Lewis, 3rd son of Sir Edward Lewis of the Vanne in the county of Glamorgan K' by whom he hath yssue y' now lives only Martha a dau. Prudence youngest Da : to ye defunct as yet unmaried. The said Sir Nicholas Fortescue did by last Will and Testament nominate Sir Basell Brooke of Madeley in the county of Salop Kl . Frauncis Plowden of Shiplake in the county of Oxon : Walter Brooke of Lapley in the county of Staff: & William Lake of London Esqre. to be his executors. This Certificate was taken by George Owen Rougcroix ye 29th of November 1633 to be recorded in the Office of Armes and certified to be true by the subscripcon of BASILL BROOKE W. BROOKE FRA: FORTESCUE
Ref: https://abcdocz.com/doc/1214806/cookhill-and-wheatley---fortescue-family-genealogy
Nicholas married Katherine SKINNER [24138] [MRIN: 8681], daughter of Robert SKINNER of Sheffield [24139] and Unknown.
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