Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

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John Brandon

Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 11 aug 2005 20:11:50

Here are some references (probably) to John Gifford's friends, the
Breedons and Gladmans --


from "Southampton Archives Services: Smyth Collection" --

Land in Chesham Bucks - ref. D/CB/7

FILE - Conveyance (feoffment) - ref. D/CB/7/1 - date: 20 February
7 Jas I (1610)
hit[from Scope and Content] By William Carter of Great Chesham,
Bucks, yeoman to Thomas Breedon of C. yeoman for £70 of 2 closes
called Chalkeslades, c. 10 acres in C.


from "Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies: Title deeds and papers
of the Duncombe family" --

FILE - Marriage Settlement - ref. DE/B664/29126 - date: 10th
June 1620/1
hit[from Scope and Content] 1 Thomas Breedon of Gt Chesham,
Bucks, yeoman.
hit[from Scope and Content] 2 Thomas Grover of Codmore,
Chesham, yeoman, & Thomas Haulsey of Gt Gaddesden, Herts, yeoman. In
consideration of marriage of son Benaiah Breedon with Judith Haulsey
(daughter of William Haulsey [Halsey]) Thomas Breedon to Thomas Grover
& Thomas Halsey - messuage in Churchend, Chesham


from "House of Lords Record Office: House of Lords: Journal Office" --

FILE - Main Papers - ref. HL/PO/JO/10/1/232 - date: 7 May
1647 - 25 May 1647
hit[from Scope and Content] 13 May 1647 -- Application for an
order for Dr. Aylett to institute and induct Elkanah Gladman to the
vicarage of Wing, Bucks. Lords Journals, IX. 190.


from "Oxford University, Bodleian Library, Special Collections and
Western Manuscripts: Carte Papers" --

FILE - Papers relating to the revenue of Ireland, as MS. Carte 52 -
ref. MS. Carte 53 - date: 1678-83
item: The humble Address of John Stone, Thomas Breedon, and Daniel
Burgess, Commissioners for receiving the arrears of the late Farm [of
his Majesty's Revenue in Ireland]: written from [Dublin] - ref. MS.
Carte 53, fol(s). 100 - date: 15 March 1678
hit[from Scope and Content] The humble Address of John Stone,
Thomas Breedon, and Daniel Burgess, Commissioners for receiving the
arrears of the late Farm [of his Majesty's Revenue in Ireland]... to
his Grace, James, Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, on
occasion of two orders delivered to them,... bearing date 6 February
1677 [O.S.].

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 11 aug 2005 20:25:03

Possibly also the following:

from "Northamptonshire Record Office: Langham (Cottesbrooke)
collection" --

JONES OF RAMSBURY (OXON); DEEDS

FILE [no title] - ref. L(C) 409 - date: Michaelmas 1707
hit[from Scope and Content] James Grey bart. and Hester his wife,
Zacheus Breedon gentleman, Charles Brumpstead deforciants.


from "Southampton Archives Services: Smyth Collection" --

Land in Chesham Bucks - ref. D/CB/7

FILE - Conveyance (feoffment) - ref. D/CB/7/2 - date: 9 July 1668
hit[from Scope and Content] By Thos Breedon of C. fellmoyer,
Benjamin B. of Elstowe Beds, clothier & Zacheus Breedon of C.clothier,
to Richard Holl of C. shoemaker for £201 of 3 closes of land and
pasture, called Chaulkegladds (previously 2 closes) with a little
orchard, recently planted.


John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 15:16:44

From volumes 34 of the List and Index Society's _Special
Series_:



p. 105 [Presentation to Benefices]

02/11/1632

Zacheus Breedon, B.D. presented to rectory of Crouton, Northants.
(Peterborough)

p. 141 [Dispensations]

06/10/1631

Zacheus Breedon, B.D. may be absent from the rectory of Croughton for 3
years during which he is to repair the parsonage house, which is
ruinate & decayed, & the cure of souls is to be sufficiently officiated
by a licensed preacher. (Peterborough)

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 19:02:05

Elkanah Gladman was the minister at Wing, Buckinghamshire, and Capt.
Thomas Breedon's son Elkanah (a grandson of the Rev. Gladman) was
baptized there, as well.

There is a Charles Temple with wife Anne who had children baptized at
Wing in the 1667-1676 time frame. Does anybody know who this person
was?

The extracted IGI is showing a Charles Temple, baptized 16 March 1639
at Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire, son of "... Temple."
Possibly the father was simply called "Mr. Temple" in the parish
register, as the minister at Bourton-on-the-Water in this period was
Thomas Temple, a member of the family of Temple of Stowe. See Brian P.
Levack's _The Civil Lawyers in England, 1603-1641_ for more on this
particular Thomas Temple (unless my memory is faulty). (Levack
mentions rumors of Temple's scandalous behavior, and states that his
wife was a sister of Sir John Andrews; this is a mistake, as one of
Temple's own sisters was the wife of Andrews).

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 20:20:40

This is only very tangentially related ... but check out the chart
showing "[t]he relationship between the Temples, Whalleys and
Cromwells" at

http://www.thurrock-community.org.uk/hi ... ides2.html

There is an extracted record in the IGI for the marriage, 14 May 1618,
at Covenham St. Mary, Lincoln, of Thomas Templ and Elizabeth Whalley.
Is this just a coincidence? ...

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 21:37:56

Okay, okay, I swear this is my last erratic dump of
only-slightly-related or possibly-not-related-at-all material.

However, it illustrates the maddeningly-tangled connections of the
Stowe Temples. (Remember that the Temples of Frankton [relatives] had
also intermarried with Busbridges.)

_Samples of Chancery Pleadings and Suits: 1627, 1685 ..._ (Lists &
Indexes, vol. 257), p. 38 --

Houghton v Temple

P[laintiffs]: John Houghton, clerk, Little Chesterford, Essex, cousin
(&, he claims, next heir) of the late John Houghton of Liverpool,
Lancashire, gent. (JH); Thomas Houghton, doctor in phisick, Newark,
Notts, JH's administrator. D[efendants]: Sir Alexander Temple, kt,
d[efendant]2's 3rd husband; Dame Mary Temple, relict & administratrix
of John Busbridge of London, linen draper (JB), her first husband ....
ad nauseum ... [date of answer: 6 May 1628] ...

I think Nichols' _Leicestershire_ does show that one of Alexander
Temple's two (? or three) wives had two previous husbands.

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 22:27:27

Opps, I lied ...

Maybe this is connected (from IGI).

-- St. Dunstan, Stepney --

11 Dec. 1600 John Houghton to Margaret Reve
9 July 1604 John Busbridge to Mary Reeve

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 12 aug 2005 22:36:56

Also,

-- St. Bride Fleet Street --

14 July 1590 Thomas Penyston to Mary Sommer
4 Dec. 1602 Allexsander Temple to Marie Penystone

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 16 aug 2005 21:42:31

Here is yet another Regicide related to the Temples of Stowe ...


An assortment of quotes from the ODNB sketch of Thomas Hammond the
regicide:

Hammond, Thomas (c.1600-1658), parliamentarian army officer and
regicide, was the third son among the five children of Dr. John Hammond
(c. 1555-1617), physician to the royal household under James I, and
his wife, Mary (or Marie) Harrison. Thomas's eldest brother, Robert,
was the father of Lieutenant-Colonel Robert (Robin) Hammond, Charles
I's gaoler in the Isle of Wight during 1647-8, and Oliver Cromwell's
cousin through the Hampden family. His youngest brother was the eminent
Anglican divine Henry Hammond. His only sister, Mary (or Marie),
married Sir John, father of the more famous Sir William Temple.
....
Evidence of his radicalism is found in 1644 when, as lieutenant-general
of the ordnance in the army of the eastern association, he testified
against his own commander-in-chief, Edward Montagu, second earl of
Manchester, in the latter's celebrated clash with his
lieutenant-general of horse, Oliver Cromwell. It is not surprising that
Hammond was appointed to the corresponding post in the New Model Army
from the spring of 1645.
....
Hammond was clearly in very poor health when he made his will in 1657,
and he died in 1658, not long before the protector, his old colleague
and then commander. The liberal if optimistic provisions for his family
made in his will (proved 27 April 1658) were all destroyed by the
events of 1660. The former church and crown lands which he had acquired
were automatically forfeit; the residue of his property was confiscated
by his retrospective attainder as a regicide. His widow, Martha, and
seven surviving children must have had to make their own ways in the
world, unless they received help from their in-laws, the Temple family,
after whom one of Hammond's sons was named. His famous Anglican brother
had died on the eve of the Restoration.


Although, technically, children cannot have in-laws, I take this to
mean that Hammond's wife Martha was nee Temple (note that Hammond's
sister was also married to Sir John Temple).

Actually, the wife of Thomas Hammond was Susannah Temple, daughter of
John Temple of Frankton (a branch of the Stowe Temples). The extracted
IGI shows the following marriage at Frankton, Warwickshire:

25 April 1636, Thomas Hammond to Susanna Temple

See also _Calendar of the State Papers Relating to Ireland_, vol. 4
(_Adventurers for Land, 1642-1659_), pp. 124-25:

[18 Nov. 1642.] L200 of the L1,000 paid in in his [John Hampden's]
name for the Irish adventure properly belongs to [Lieut.-General] Thos.
Hamond, of Franckton, in Warwick.
....
[4 July 1649.] Assignment by Lieut.-General Thos. Hammond.
Assigning the share of Hampden's adventure
which belongs to him ... to John Temple, of Gray's Inn.

p. 182:

John Temple, of Frankton, in Warwickshire, subscribed L200 for the
Irish adventure.
....
Assignment by John Temple, of Gray's Inn. Assigning the
within-mentioned sum to Wm. Sankey, citizen and goldsmith of London.
....
Assigning to Sankey, as above, a share of L200 in the Irish adventure,
which he holds by assignment dated 4 July, 1649, from Lieut.-General
Thos. Hamond. This share was originally taken as part of the share of
L1,000 taken in the name of Col. John Hampden.


Possibly Martha Hammond was his second wife, and a member of some other
family.

The John Temple who married Hammond's sister was a member of the
Irish Temple family (said, traditionally, to be distant relatives of
the Temples of Stowe [but I think this is not certain]).

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 17 aug 2005 14:27:35

See A2A, "Archive of the Roberts family of Boarzell in Ticehurst"

Personal

Correspondence of the Roberts family, the Temple family, the
Busbridge family, the Farnden family and other correspondence

FILE - Robert Hay to Mrs Susan Hammond at Frankton; giving
condolences on the death of her mother and son and the imminent death
of her father Mr Temple - ref. DUN 51/59 - date: [c1642]

John Brandon

Re: Breedons / Gladmans on A2A

Legg inn av John Brandon » 17 aug 2005 14:28:55

Also,

FILE - [Mary Temple] at Capt Hammond's house in St James Street, Covent
Garden, London to her sister[-in-law Ann Busbridge]; their removal to
Coventry and subsequently to Frankton, and then to London to escape the
trials of the war; ordnance taken out of Banbury Castle and assaults on
Warwick Castle - ref. DUN 51/56 - date: 18 Aug [1642]

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