s.2. Sir Francis WORTLEY, ged. 24/08/1617

s.2.  Sir  Francis, ged. 24/08/1617, Tankersley, Yorkshire, Engeland (Age 22 13 Charles I), oorl.  14/03/1666, begr. 30/03/1666, St. George Chapel, Windsor x 1646 met Frances FAUNTE of Foston, geb. 1615, Leicestershire, begr. 22/01/1683/84, St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Holborn, Middlesex,  d.v. Sir William Faunte van Freeston en Lucy Harington.

Francis was die seun van Francis Wortley en Grace Brouncker.

(Foster, Joseph:  Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire, Vol. 2, West Riding. London. 1874)

Sir Francis, die tweede Bart of Wortley het in die regeringstyd van Koning Charles I (1625-1649) en Koning Charles II (1660-1685) geleef.  Koning Charles I was op 30 Januarie 1649 op Whitehall tereggestel.   Hoewel die Parliament van Skotland op 6 Februarie 1649 in Edinburgh aangekondig het dat Charles II Koning van Groot-Brittanje en Ierland was, het die Engelse Parliament 'n wet gemaak wat so 'n proklamasie onwettige maak.  Engeland het die tydperk binnegegaan wat bekend staan as die English Interregnum of die English Commonwealth (Statebond), en die land was in 'n de facto republiek wat deur Oliver Cromwell gelei is.   Uit die 'Index of names and places: W', in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642-1660, ed. C H Firth and R S Rait (London, 1911), pp. 378-398 word die volgende lede van die Wortley-familie gelys:   Wortley (Whartley, Whirley, Wirley, Worley, Worthley, Wyrley):   Sir Francis, Bart.;  Sir Edward, Knt.;  Henry;  John;  en Sir John, Knt.  Cromwell het vir Charles II op 3 September 1651 by die Slag van Worcester verslaan en Charles het na die vasteland van Europa gevlug en het die volgende nege jaar in ballingskap in Frankryk, die Verenigde Provinsies en die Spaanse Nederlande deurgebring.  (Wikipedia)  Die politieke krisus wat na die dood van Cromwell in 1658 gevolg het, het die Restoration of the monarchy tot gevolg gehad.  Charles II was gevra om na Engeland terug te keer.  Na 1660 is alle dokumente so aangepas asof hy sy pa as koning in 1949 opgevolg het.  The bodies of the key men who ordered the execution of Charles I - Oliver Cromwell, John Bradshaw and Henry Ireton - were exhumed and their heads stuck on poles on one of the Hall's towers. Cromwell's remained there for more than 20 years.  (http://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/building/palace/westminsterhall/government-and-administration/trial-of-charlesi/)

William Faunt was the son and grandson of men who, bred in the law, became counsellors and servants of the aristocracy. William Burton describes him as ‘attorney at law and fellow of the Inner Temple ... one who ever carried himself just and upright, a learned man’.  A younger son, Faunt succeeded his father after his elder brother had been disinherited; but the estate was probably inconsiderable and there is no trace of it in his own inquisition post mortem. He continued to act as a lawyer for the Leicestershire gentry, for his name appears as attorney in land transactions in the late 1520s and early 1530s.  As did so many of his sort, Faunt owed his introduction to public affairs to Cromwell, who employed him as agent and watchdog in Leicestershire.  A few years later he married a daughter of George Vincent and thus joined the group of gentlemen who supported the 2nd Earl of Huntingdon. From the later 1540s he began the series of purchases by which he built up a considerable estate; he also bought a number of small parcels for each of the sons as they were born. Under Edward VI he began to serve on the midland circuit, of which he remained a member until his death.  The connexion probably had much to do with Faunt’s return for Leicester when Strelley was a knight of the shire. A Hastings supporter who had nothing to fear from the tottering Duke of Suffolk, Faunt also offered the capital advantage of court favour.  Two years later Faunt outmatched his first achievement, and his first colleague, by attaining the senior knighthood of the shire. On this occasion his orthodoxy may have had more to do with his election, and not surprisingly his name is absent from the roll of Members of this Parliament who voted against one of the government’s bills. This was to be Faunt’s last appearance in the House.  Faunt died on 4 Sept. 1559. By his will, proved two months later, he left a considerable landed estate in trust for his heir and his other sons, and lands to his executors for a certain number of years to provide dowries for his daughters. Moreover, he charged his heirs ‘neither to enclose nor improve the pastures and commons in Newton Burdett from the poor inhabitants as they should answer before God’, and stipulated that all his tenants were to have their farms without fine or increase of rent. Believing that he left sufficient provision for all his sons, he yet commanded his wife that should they all survive the second should be trained as a lawyer and the two younger apprenticed to friends in London. It is a testimony to his many friendships that, on the event of his wife’s death or re-marriage, almost every leading personage in the county was to have one of his children to educate and instruct. As it turned out, his brother-in-law Edward Vincent obtained the wardship of the heir, and his widow seems to have fulfilled most of his intentions for the upbringing of the younger children.  (http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/faunt-william-149596-1559)
  
(Fetherton, John ed.:  The visitation of the county of Leicester in the year 1619, taken by William Camden.  London.  1870)

Sir Francis, die tweede baronet, was die enigste seun en erfgenaam van sy vader, Sir Francis, by sy eerste vrou, Grace Brouncker.  Hy het opleiding aan Gray’s Inn in 1640 ontvang.

As early as the days of Henry VI , we are reminded by Sir John Fortescue " that knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the Kingdom often " place their children in these Inns of Court, not so much to make the laws " their study, much less to live by their profession, having large patrimonies " of their own, but to form their manners." In the Registers of these Inns we consequently find information which elsewhere we seek in vain, relating to families and individuals in every portion of the realm; the fact, moreover, that this information is contained in a legal register, invests it with an authority superior to that of the treasured Heralds' Visitations, while it enjoys with them the advantage of dealing with the aristocratic classes. For, to quote from Feme's Glory of Generosity (London, 1586): — "Nobleness of blood, joyned with virtue, compteth the person as "most meet to the enterprizing of any publick service ; and for that cause it was, not " for nought, that our antient Governors in this land, did with a special foresight and "Wisdom, provide, that none should be admitted into the Houses of Court, being "Seminaries, sending forth men apt to the Government of Justice, except he were a "gentleman of blood."  (https://archive.org/stream/registerofadmiss00gray/registerofadmiss00gray_djvu.txt)

Admission to Grays Inn – 1640 - Francis Wortley, Esq., son and heir of Francis W., of Wortley, co. York

Toe die Engelse Burgeroorlog in 1642 uitbreek het die jong Francis, net soos sy pa aan die kant van die Royalists gestaan.  Ou Sir Francis en sy seun het ‘n argument gehad, wat tot gevolg gehad het, dat die jong Francis na Italië gevlug het.   Die argument het gegaan oor 'n sekere man, genaamd Bailie, van Dodworth, wat met die Engelse Burgeroorlog, teen sy wil in die koning se diens was.  Hierdie man het gedros en toe hulle hom vang, het die jong Francis hom, sonder die uitspraak van ‘n court-martial aan ‘n boom naby Wortley Hall opgehang.  Ou Sir Francis was baie kwaad oor sy seun se haastige optrede.  Om sy vader se woede te vermy, het hy na Italië gegaan.  Francis (Jr.) het vir 'n geruime tyd oorsee gewoon.

Om geld vir die Parliament in te samel, het die Committee for Compounding with Delinquents die waarde van die eiendom van die koningsgesinde ondersteuners bepaal en hulle beboet teen ‘n koers wat afgehang het van hul graad van ‘delinquency’, sowel as hul godsdiens en beroep. Die boete het gewissel tussen 'n derde en twee derdes van die beskuldigde se bates.
http://www.chivalryandwar.co.uk/Resource/The_Bravest_Cavalier.pdf)  Die laat 1640's was nie 'n maklike tyd vir die Kavaliers van Suid-Yorkshire nie.  Hulle landgoede is in beslag geneem en hulle moes met die Parliamentary Committee for Compounding  onderhandel vir die afkoop daarvan.

Report.  His delinquency that he was in actual war against the Parliament; he submitted and came to London, petitioned 15 Mar 1646, took the Oath the same day and the Covenant  4 Apr 1646 before William Barton.  (Clay, John William, ed.:  Yorkshire Royalist Composition Papers: Or the Proceedings of the Committee ... )  Sir Francis (jr.) is   £671/13s/4d  beboet vir die feit dat hy in die oorlog teen die Parlement geveg het.  (Cooper, Stephen:  When night-dogs ran.  A Yorkshsire poacher and his family, 1642-1699)

Francis trou in 1646 met Frances FAUNTE of Foston.  He m. Frances, da. and coheir of Sir William Faunte, of Poston, co. Leicester, by Lucy, da. of Sir James Harrington, of Ridlington.  (Cokayne, George Edward:  Complete baronetage.  Vol. I.  1611-1625. 1900)

17 Desember 1646. Petition. That before June last he presented his petition and by reason of the Oxford compounders his composition hath been retarded and since he hath about 3 weeks taken a wife most part of whose estate is not yet discovered desires to include in his former particular what estate comes to him by his marriage.  (Clay, John William, ed.:  Yorkshire Royalist Composition Papers: Or the Proceedings of the Committee ...)

3 Maart 1648.  He is seized in right of his wife Frances daughter of Sir William Faunte Knt deceised in the moiety of a tenement with lands called the Spittle in Lutterworth, co Leic worth yearly 40;  there is owing to his wife 4386 by several persons, owing to her as executrix to her sister Bridget Faunt most of them desperate 1900 due to her as executrix to her mother and to go to grandchildren 2980 but he saith all his wife’s estate is out of his hands and desires respite to compound for it when he shall recover it.  (Clay, John William, ed.:  Yorkshire Royalist Composition Papers: Or the Proceedings of the Committee ...)

Augustus 1650.  State of the case of Francis Wortley as it stands before the Committee wherein the direction of the house is desired. He petitioned to compound 4 Apr 1646, but afterwards married Francis Faunt, he desired to compound for his own estate only and to leave his wife's till he should recover it. The Committee refused this and the report was laid aside and no fine set. The 1st Aug 1649 being past the time limited, discovery was made by Col. Sydenham and Col. Bingham of 2000 li owing by one Staresmore to the wife of Francis Wortley not compounded for.  It was adjudged by the late Committee to be a discovery and the debt was sequestered.  (Clay, John William, ed.:  Yorkshire Royalist Composition Papers: Or the Proceedings of the Committee ...)

31 Des 1651.  Fined 300 1'  for an estate in reversion one moiety to be paid in 14 days the remainder in 6 weeks.  8 Jan 1652. Ordered that the fine on the estate of 300" be fixed at 50".  N.B. There are a great many papers scattered through the volumes as to his wife's estates.  (Clay, John William, ed.:  The proceedings of the committee for compounding with delinquents during the commonwealth.  Vol. III.  Edited by John William Clay, F.S.A. Member of the councils of the Yorkshire archaeological and harleian societies, printed for the society, 1896)

Die laat 50ger en vroeër 60ger jare van die 17de eeu het groot politieke en godsdienstige veranderinge gebring.  Francis het sy pa in 1652 as baronet opgevolg.  Ten spyte van die politieke woelinge van 1649-60, kon sommige families ‘n relatief stil lewe lei, al was hulle Royalists. The Cavaliers now came back into their own.  Sir Francis Wortley the elder had died, after his imprisonment in the Tower of London, but he was succeeded by his son, the second Sir Francis, who, found himself in possession of a noble estate, despite all the sufferings and losses which he and his father had experienced in the civil wars.  Charles II rewarded those who had been loyal to the Stuart cause during the Interregnum.  (Cooper, Stephen:  When Night-dogs ran, a Yorkshire Poacher and his family, 1642-1699. 2012)

Na sy pa se dood (1652) het Sir Francis by St Hellen’s well, naby Monk Bretton gewoon.  ‘n Ene mnr Skelton, wildbewaarder van die Wortleys, wat sedert 1650 in diens van Sir Francis Jr.  was, het hom as was 'n klein maer man met geel hare, wat baie gedrink en skynbaar melankoliek was, beskryf.  Ook dat hy troubled in mind was.  In die sewentiende eeu was die Engelse burgers berug vir drink en dronkenskap.  Ale was die algemene drankie.  Tee en koffie was nie beskikbaar voor Charles II se bewind nie en min mense het dit gedrink.  Water was onveilig en ale was deel van die stapelvoedsel vir volwassenes en kinders, selfs met ontbyt. Dit was onvermydelik dat die gebruik van alkohol hoog was en dat sommige mense meer gedrink het as wat goed was vir hulle.

In die middle van die sewentiende eeu was die mense ook baie bygelowig.  Around 1650, Sir Francis Wortley the younger’s gamekeeper claimed that he often saw the ghost of a boy or girl walk along the gallery over the kitchen in his master’s house at St Ellen’s Well near Monk Bretton, while in the same house there was a room called the yellow chamber “thro’ which, if anyone attempted to carry a candle in the night, it would burn blue and go out immediately.”   (Cooper, Stephen:  When Night-dogs ran, a Yorkshire Poacher and his family, 1642-1699. 2012)

1653-1655 The leasing of Wortley Manor by Thomas and Robert Beverley to Francis Taylor and his sons.  (http://brbl-zoom.library.yale.edu/viewer/1123594)

1660.  Sir Francis het die Office van Deputy Lieutenant in the West Riding, Yorkshire, temp Car. II. en Justice of the Peace in the West Riding, Yorkshire, temp Car. II  beklee.  Sir Francis Wortley, Bart. Who serv’d Deputy-Lieutenant, Justice of the Peace and all other Offices suiting his condition in the West Riding of Yorkshire, in the Reign of K Cha.2 .  (Collins, Arthur:  The Baronettage of England: Being an Historical and Genealogical account of baronets from their first institution in the reign of King James I. Vol 1.  London 1720)

1662  Feb 22.   Petition from Sir Francis Wortley for same of divers tenements, &c., in the several towns and places called Marske, Fulford Ings, Halsham, Darton, and Ruston, co. York, as formerly granted to one Mr. Smith.  ('Minute Book: February 1662', in Calendar of Treasury Books, Vol 1, 1660-1667, ed. William A Shaw (London, 1904), pp. 327-332)   Marske-by-the-Sea is a village in the unitary authority of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire.  Fulford lies on the southern edge of York just over a mile from the centre of the city.  Fulford Ings, the open land bounding the river Ouse. Halsham is a village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire.   Darton is a large village in the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley (part of South Yorkshire, England), on the border with West Yorkshire.  Ruston Parva, a parish, in the union of Driffield, wapentake of Dickering, E. riding of York.

Letter from George Barnby, Gunthwaite, Yorkshire to Sir Thomas Wentworth, bart., at "his Lodgings at mistress Wentworths a widdow in Swan alley in Colemantreete", 1663/4 March 24.  Requests that he intercede with Sir George Savile, later Marquis of Halifax, to stop the building of a town mill at Oxspring, Yorkshire by Sir Francis Wortley, bart.  (http://findingaids.folger.edu/dfocavendish.xml)

1663.  Thomas Burdett het op 28 April 1663 in die hof verskyn.  Onder die regters wat sy saak aangehoor het was die ou Kavaliers, Sir Francis Wortley (jr.) en Francis Vevile van Chevet.  Both these men were members of the gentry and, Wortley had inherited his father’s extensive deer parks.  They were not likely to take a sympathetic view of the poacher and his tade.  (Cooper, Stephen:  When Night-dogs ran, a Yorkshire Poacher and his family, 1642-1699, 2012)

Die lewens van hierdie Sir Francis se voorgeslagte was dalk meer indrukwekkend as syne self, maar daar is ‘n interessante verwysing na hom op die webwerf van die Thoroughbred Heritage.  Hierdie webwerf spoor die geskiedenis van beroemde renperde, waaronder een bekend ​​as 'Ou Montagu, op.  Die webwerf noem dat die perd moontlik besit was deur the wealthy horse breeder Sir Francis Wortley.  Verdere verwysings maak dit duidelik dat Sir Francis inderdaad hierdie een is.  Hierdie perdteler-verwysing kan verduidelik waarom daar op 18de eeuse kaarte 'n verskeidenheid geboue, suid van die Old Hall getoon word, wat vermoedelik met die ontwikkeling van die tuine gesloop is.  Dit kon wel 'n perdestoet gewees het.

Dit wil voorkom asof Sir Francis beide Turnham Green sowel as Wortley Hall as permanente woonplekke aangehou het.  In 1590 Turnham Green common was the name of waste land of Sutton Court manor along the high road, west of the prebendal manor.  Although Turnham Green had fewer ratepayers than Old Chiswick in the 17th century, there were substantial houses by 1664, when those of Lady Wortley and Lady Margaret Cholmley contained 24 and 22 hearths respectively and when the first, with College House, was assessed as the fourth largest in the parish.  Lady Wortley was presumably the widow of Sir Edward Wortley, who had paid rates from 1649, and a Sydney Wortley was still at Turnham Green in 1683.  (http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol7/pp54-68)

Series 2: Wentworth family papers, 1627-1705

Letter from George Barnby, Gunthwaite, Yorkshire to Sir Thomas Wentworth, bart., at "his Lodgings at mistress wentworths a widdow in Swan alley in Colemantreete", 1663/4 March 24.  Requests that he intercede with Sir George Savile, later Marquis of Halifax, to stop the building of a town mill at Oxspring, Yorkshire by Sir Francis Wortley, bart.  On the address leaf there is a forwarding address in another hand: "ffor Mistress Mary Wentworth at the Cat & fidell in the strand beyond St Clemon's Church," a postal stamp with the date "Mr 25," and the note, "latin for gloues is grotetarum [sic]."  (http://findingaids.folger.edu/dfocavendish.xml)

'Hearth Tax: Middlesex 1666, Chiswick', in London Hearth Tax: City of London and Middlesex, 1666 vind ons ‘n inskrywing vir Sir Francis Wortley

Sir  Fra.  Wortley                 12           s               Emty; emptie
                                              6           s               Emty; another of his emptie

Inventories have survived for the Chiswick and the Yorkshire locations (PROB 11/320 Mico 47-91 Sentence of Francis Wortley 27 January 1665; PROB 11/322 Mico 139-184 Sentence of Sir Francis Wortley of Chiswick, Middlesex 27 June 1666; PROB 11/316 Hyde 1-56 Will of Dame Elizabeth Wortley of Chiswick, Middlesex 23 March 1665; Sr Fra: Wortley; PROB 32/1/30 Deceased: Wortley, Sir Francis, bart., of Wortley Hall, Yorks., resident in Turnham Green, Chiswick, Middx. (Earl of Manchester con Wortley et Lady Griffith) Inventory of goods at Wortley Hall and Holley Hall 1666 May 17 (1666 Apr. 2); PROB 32/1/36 Deceased: Wortley, Sir Francis, bart., of Wortley Hall, Yorks., resident in Turnham Green, Chiswick, Middx. (Earl of Manchester con Wortley et Lady Griffith) Inventory of goods in Yorks. 1666; PROB 32/1/48 Deceased: Wortley, Sir Francis, bart. Inventory of goods in Turnham Green, Chiswick, Middx. 1665/6 Mar. 16.  (http://marinelives-tools.wikispot.org/Hearth_tax:_Middlesex)

(http://senlachill.blogspot.com.au/2012/04/parliament-routed-at-turnham-green.html)

Sir Francis Wortley het in 1665 'n testament opgestel, maar het dit  eenkant gesit, met die bedoeling om 'n fair copy daarvan te maak.  Hy het nooit sover gekom om dit te doen nie. Wortley se testament was ongeteken en onbevestig, toe hy oorlede is.  This omission led in due course to labyrinthine legal proceedings and to some accounts a change in the law.  (Cooper, Stephen:  When Night-dogs ran, a Yorkshire Poacher and his family, 1642-1699.  2012)

Sir Francis het op 14 March 1666, by Turnham Green, naby London gesterf en is op 30 Maart 1666 by Westminster begrawe. Will pr. 1668. (Cokayne, George Edward:  Complete baronetage.  Vol. I.  1611-1625. 1900)  Hierdie Sir Francis het geen kinders by sy vrou gehad nie.  Hy het ook geen manlike nageslag gehad nie en was die laaste baronet van Wortley.  Sir Francis Wortley died and left his estate with "my manors of Ordsall, Babworth and Tylne" to his daughter, Anne.  (http://www.nottshistory.org.uk/monographs/ordsall1940/ordsall10.htm)

In 1666 a non-conformist minister, Oliver Heywood, wrote in his journal that Sir Francis Wortley of Wortley Hall in Yorkshire had died very lately,”having no child by his Lady, he having turned her off many yeares agoe, but hath left his estate to the Earl of Manchester’s second son if he will change his name to Wortley and marry a bastard that Sr Francis had by a common whore in London.  (Cliffe, John Trevor:  The World of the Country House in Seventeenth-century England)

In die 1700's het ryk en magtig mans vroue aangehou vir appearances en minnaresse vir vermaak. Nie net het die samelewing dit geduld nie, dit is selfs verwag, solank as wat die mans diskreet was. 'n Minnares om te vertroetel, was 'n vermaaklike speelding, en sy moes 'afleiding van sy sorge' aan die man verskaf en hom goed in die oë van die wêreld laat kyk. Die sexier die minnares was, hoe meer jaloers was die man se vriende. Die man wat met 'n mooi jong verleidster aan sy arm gespog het, het aan sy vriende bewys dat hy 'n man van mag en invloed was. Sy mog vir hulle oogknip, maar sy het aan hom behoort. Minnaresse wat die bloeityd van hul jeug verloor het of nie meer die lord interesseer het nie is dikwels weggegooi --- soms met klein lewenstoelaes of afskeidsgeskenke, en soms daarsonder.
(http://royalfavourites.blogspot.com.au/2014_09_01_archive.html)

With the second baronet, the house of Wortley passed away in a legitimate line, though otherwise, not so. He left the whole of his vast estates to his left-handed daughter, Anne Newcomen.  (Full text of the Old Halls, manors and families of Derbyshire).

Though Sir Francis was an author, he was not a sensitive soul.  He lived long apart from his wife,  Having no children by her, he made his illegitimate daughter Anne Newcomen his heiress conditionally on her future husband taking his name.  He intended, if he had lived to marry her into the Willoughby or the Berkeley family.  But Lord Sandwich P. 31. was one of his executors, charged with Anne’s protection and education and it was Sandwich’s son Sidney who married her.  (Isobel Grundy, Henry Marshall Tory Professor Isobel Grundy:  Lady Mary Wortley Montagu)

Sidney Montagu het die Wortley-naam aangeneem annexed to the condition of obtaining her in marriage, that her husband should assume the name of WortleyDit is opsigself baie ongewoon.  Buite-egtelike kinders en hul moeders is gewoonlik geïgnoreer of 'n toepaslike man was oortuig (dikwels omgekoop) om met die moeder te trou, wat 'n soort ordentlikheid aan die gebeure moes gee.  Mens kan net wonder hoekom Anne as sy erfgenaam benoem is en wat die verhouding tussen Sir Francis en haar ma was.  Onder sulke omstandighede sou die wettige naasbestaandes verwag het om te erf.  (Andrew, Nick:  The Wortleys of Wortley Hall)

The Wortleys of Barnsley made some unsuccessful attempts to recover the ancient inheritance of their family when it was passed by will of the last baronet to an illegitimate daughter.  All hope of recovering the property having ceased, Richard Wortley of Barnsley, gentleman, was content to place two sons, Montague and Francis, as apprentices to cutlers at Sheffield.  The indentures of the former were enrolled in 1709 of the latter in 1710.  I wish I could add that they retrieved by successful commerce the fortunes of their ancestry  (Hunter, Joseph:  Hallamshire: The History and Topography of the Parish of Sheffield)

Ly. Wortley versus Vyner & al.

Upon hearing of Counsel on both Parts this Day at the Bar, upon the Petition of Dame Frances Wortley, late Wife of Sir Francis Wortley Baronet, deceased, being an Appeal for reversing a Decree made in the Exchequer Chamber, on the Behalf of Edmond Staresmore Esquire, concerning certain Lands and Tenements in Frowlesworth, in the County of Leicester, which Lands and Tenements were since the said Decree purchased by Sir Robert Vyner Baronet; and upon the Answer of the said Edmond Staresmore and Sir Robert Vyner put in thereunto:  After due Consideration had of what hath been offered by Counsel on either Part thereupon, it is Resolved and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament assembled, That the said Petition and Appeal of the said Dame Frances Wortley be, and is hereby, dismissed this House.

Sir Francis se weduwee, Frances Faunte was bur. from Holborn, 22 Jan. 1683/4, at St. Giles' in the Fields. WUl dat. 2 Oct. 1683, pr. 3 Jan. 1683/4. (Cokayne, George Edward, 1825-1911:  Complete baronetage. Vol I. 1611-1625 . 1900)

St Giles-in-the-Fields, also commonly known as the Poets' Church, is a church in the London Borough of Camden, in the West End.  The first recorded church on this site was a chapel of the parish of Holborn attached to a monastery and leper hospital founded by Matilda of Scotland, the wife of Henry I, in 1101. At that time, it stood well outside the boundaries of the city of London, though on the main road to Tyburn and Oxford. This chapel probably came to function as the church of the small village that grew up to provide services to the hospital. In 1391, Richard II sold the hospital, chapel, and lands to the Cistercian abbey of St. Mary de Graces, just by the Tower of London.  The monastery was dissolved in 1539.  However, the chapel survived as a local parish church. The early church fell into disrepair and a Gothic brick structure was built between 1623 and 1630.  (Wikipedia)  Foto:  St. Giles in-the-fields, a parish in the Holborn division of the hundred of Ossulstone and borough of Finsbury, county Middlesex, 1 mile W. of St. Paul's.  (Genuki)

Die woelinge van die sewentiende eeu en ook die feit dat die tweede Baronet Sir Francis sy vrou vir ‘n ander vrou verlaat het en haar op Wortley Hall sonder enige finansiële steun gelaat het, het daartoe gelei dat Wortley Hall in verval geraak het.  Teen die einde van die agtiende eeu was uitgebreide herbouing nodig.  (Newton, Richard: Wortley through the ages.  The History of the Long Term Development of the Landscape Surrounding Wortley Hall from the End of the Ice Age to the Modern Period.)

The (Wortley) village is most famous for the notorious highwayman Swift Nick (John Nevison, 1639 - 1684) who was born and raised there. It was really he (and not Dick Turpin) who made the infamous ride on horseback from London to York in order to establish an alibi for a robbery.  (Wortley, South Yorkshire.  http://www.cyclopaedia.fr/wiki/Wortley,_South_Yorkshire)

Doncaster:  Thomas Wortley Halfpenny, 1666, 1.42g/6h (N 5851; BW. 86. (https://www.dnw.co.uk/media/auction_catalogues/Tokens%2017%20Nov%2020.pdf)

Kind:

t.1.  Ann NEWCOMEN, geb. 02/09/1659 x Sidney MONTAGU.