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Elizabeth Bulstrode

Female Abt 1678 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth Bulstrode was born about 1678 (daughter of Whitlocke Bulstrode and Elizabeth Dyneley).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Whitlocke Bulstrode was born in 1651 (son of Sir Richard Bulstrode and Joyce Dyneley); died in 1724 in Hounslow, Middlesex, England; was buried in 1724 in Priory Chapel, Hounslow, Middlesex, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Of: The Inner Temple, London, England
    • Occupation: Lawyer

    Whitlocke married Elizabeth Dyneley in 1675 in London, England. Elizabeth (daughter of Samuel Dyneley) was born in 1654 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Dyneley was born in 1654 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England (daughter of Samuel Dyneley).
    Children:
    1. Dyneley Bulstrode was born in Mar 1675 in London, England.
    2. 1. Elizabeth Bulstrode was born about 1678.
    3. Ann Bulstrode was born in 1692 in London, England.
    4. John Bulstrode was born about 1692.
    5. Richard Bulstrode was born in 1694; died in 1770.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Sir Richard Bulstrode was born in 1617 in Astley, Warwickshire, England (son of Edward Bulstrode and Margaret Chamberlain); died on 10 Mar 1710 in St. Germain, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Of: Bulstrode Park, Buckinghamshire, England
    • Occupation: Lawyer Soldier and Diplomat

    Notes:



    Sir Richard Bulstrode
    ----------------------------------
    A soldier, diplomatist, and author, born 1610; died 1711, was the second son of Edward Bulstrode by Margaret, daughter of Richard Ashley, chamberlain of the queen's household and member of the Inner Temple. He was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and while at the university was the author of a poem on the birth of the Duke of York. At twenty-three years of age he entered the Inner Temple and in 1649, at his father's request and through his interest, was made a bencher. During the Civil War he was loyal to the king, serving in the Prince of Wales's regiment and holding at times the post of adjutant. He was later promoted to the rank of Adjutant-General of Horse, and still later to be Quartermaster-General. He was appointed to take charge of the funeral of Lord Strafford and became responsible for the expenses attending it; on being pressed by his creditors he fled to Bruges. He subsequently underwent a short term of imprisonment, which was terminated by the payment of the debt by Charles II. On his return he was appointed auditor of a Scotch regiment then serving in the Netherlands and in 1673 was appointed agent at the court of Bruges. He was temporarily recalled two years later, and on 1675 was knighted and again sent to Brussels, this time as resident, where he remained until the accession of James II when he was made envoy. When the revolution of 1688 compelled James to leave England, Bulstrode accompanied him to the court of Saint-Germain, where he remained until his death. Among his writings are: " Original Letters written to Earl of Arlinton, with an account of the Author's Life and Family " , " Life of James II " , " Memoirs and Reflections on the Reign and Government of Charles I and Charles II " and a large number of elegies and epigrams.
    THOMAS GAFFNEY TAAFFEE
    Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas
    From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright ? 1913 by the Encyclopedia Press, Inc
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    The Dictionary of National Biography wrongly records Sir Richard's mother, Margaret, as the daughter of Richard Astley, chamberlain of the Queen's household and that Sir Richard was born in 1610. He himself wrote that he was born in the year 1617 - 7 years before James the first dyed. James I died on 27th March 1624. Add. MSS 3885 f129 1689
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    Unlike his father and most other members of his family (several of whom were also lawyers and some members of Parliament) Richard sympathised with King Charles, joining the Royalist forces at the outbreak of the Civil War, but, in later life wrote:

    " I was then very young and in a labyrinth, not knowing well which way to go, but at last I resolved to go to Whitehall [Palace] with some gentlemen of the Inner Temple, being then newly come thither from Cambridge, where I had been bred in Pembroke Hall. I was brought up to London by my father from Coventry, where we then dwelt. "

    Richard was later to achieve distinction as a soldier, lawyer, diplomat and historian and to be knighted by Charles II for his services.
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    Further reading:-
    Richard Bulstrode: Memoirs and Reflections upon the Reign and Government of King Charles I and King Charles II, containing an account of several remarkable facts not mentioned by other historians of those times wherein the character of the Royal Martyr and of Charles II are vindicated from 'fanatical aspersions.1721
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    Richard took part in the siege of Warwick Castle from 7th to 23rd August 1642, on which he recorded: Our endeavours for taking it were to little purpose for we only had two small pieces of cannon which were brought from Compton House, belonging to the Earl of Northampton, and those were drawn to the top of the church steeple and were discharged at the castle, to which they could do no hurt, but only frightened them within the castle, who shot into the street, and killed several of our men. This was the first Action I was ever in and, being upon an unruly Horse, he ran away with me amongst the Enemy, while we pursued them to the Bridge, in which Hurly I lost my Hat.

    Richard, who served in the Prince of Wales Regiment of Horse, wrote: I was engaged in all the wars with King Charles the first and received a terrible wound from a pole axe in my head at Edge Hill which was the first great battle between the King and his rebellious subjects which was fought on 23rd October 1642.
    *******************************************************************

    Richard married Joyce Dyneley on 21 Feb 1648 in Saint Martin's In The Fields, Westminster, London, England. Joyce (daughter of Edward Dyneley) was born in 1627 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England; died on 29 Apr 1677. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Joyce Dyneley was born in 1627 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England (daughter of Edward Dyneley); died on 29 Apr 1677.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Of: Charlton Manor, Evesham, Worcestershire, England
    • Parentage: Dau Edward Dyneley of Charlton Worcs

    Children:
    1. Edward Bulstrode was born in 1650; died in 1718 in Upper Deal, Kent, England; was buried in 1718 in Upper Deal, Kent, England.
    2. 2. Whitlocke Bulstrode was born in 1651; died in 1724 in Hounslow, Middlesex, England; was buried in 1724 in Priory Chapel, Hounslow, Middlesex, England.
    3. Richard Bulstrode was born on 20 Nov 1654 in London, England.

  3. 6.  Samuel Dyneley was born about 1625.
    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth Dyneley was born in 1654 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Edward Bulstrode was born on 10 Jul 1586 in Horton, Buckinghamshire, England (son of Edward Bulstrode and Cecilia Croke); died in Apr 1659 in London, England; was buried on 4 Apr 1659 in Inner Temple Church, Westminster, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Occupation: Between 1620 and 1650; Lawyer and J.P.
    • Office: 1655; Cromwell's Chief Justice of North Wales

    Notes:



    Memorials to two of Edward's grandsons, Edward Bulstrode, who was buried at Upper Deal church in Kent in 1718, and his brother, Whitelocke Bulstrode (not to be confused with cousin Bulstrode Whitelocke), who was buried in the Hounslow Priory chapel in Middlesex in 1724, each record that their grandfather was Edward Bulstrode of Soley End, near Astley in Co. Warwick, also of the Inner Temple, London, Esquire, sometime Chief Justice of North Wales. Soley End or Sole End, as it is now known, was a hamlet mentioned in the Doomsday Book, but is now represented only by the ancient Sole End Farm and a large house nearby, called Cow Lees.
    ********************************************************************** **** ********
    According to Wood's " Atheniae Oxienses " , 1632-95, Edward Bulstrode in the time of the grand rebellion, siding with the Presbyterians, and taking the covenant, was, by the endeavours of his nephew Bulstrode Whitelocke, a leading man in the long parliament, and a favourite of Oliver, made one of the justices of North Wales. Bulstrode Whitelocke records that, on 21st January 1646, I attended this committee and procured them to name my uncle Mr. Edward Bulstrode, a reader in the Inner Temple, to be a judge in Wales for which he was a fit and learned person. Edward was so appointed on 15th June 1649, the year of Charles I's execution.
    ********************************************************************** **** ********
    Edward was the author of: " A Golden Chain: or a Miscellany of Divers Sentences of the Sacred Scriptures, and of other Authors, collected and linked together for the Soul's Comfort " , 1657, and of " Reports of divers Resolutions and Judgments " , in three parts, 1657, 1658, 1659. Thomas Fuller's " History of the Worthies of England " , under " Writers on the Law " , records that:

    Edward Bulstrode, Esq., (born in this county [Bucks.] bred in the studies of our municipal laws in the Inner Temple and his Highness's justice in North Wales) hath written a book of divers resolutions and judgments, with the reasons and causes thereof given in the Court of the King's Bench in the reign of King James and King Charles, and is lately deceased.
    In 1712, Edward was referred to as a very learned Lawyer as appears by his book of Reports, a Work of great esteem to this Day.
    ********************************************************************** **** *********
    Bulstrode Whitelocke records that, on 21st January 1646, I attended this committee and procured them to name my uncle Mr. Edward Bulstrode, a reader in the Inner Temple, to be a judge in Wales for which he was a fit and learned person. Edward was so appointed on 15th June 1649, the year of Charles I's execution.
    ********************************************************************** **** *********

    Buried:
    Buried Adjacent to the Pulpit

    Edward married Margaret Chamberlain about 1616. Margaret (daughter of Richard Chamberlain and Unknown UNKNOWN) was born about 1590 in Astley, Warwickshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Margaret Chamberlain was born about 1590 in Astley, Warwickshire, England (daughter of Richard Chamberlain and Unknown UNKNOWN).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Parentage: Dau Richard Chamberlaine of Astley Castle

    Notes:



    Astley Castle had been formerly owned by Lady Jane Grey's father, the Duke of Suffolk, whose estates were forfeited to the Crown on his execution in 1554. In 1557, the manor was granted to Richard Chamberlain's grandfather, Edward, second son of Sir Edward Chamberlain of Shirburn Castle in Oxfordshire. Richard Chamberlain, Edward Bulstrode's father-in-law, was responsible for extensive reconstruction of Astley parish church in 1607.
    ********************************************************************** **

    Notes:



    On 10th January 1623, an agreement was signed between:

    Richard Chamberlayne of Astley, in the County of Warwick, Esquire, of the one part, and Edward Bulstrode of the Inner Temple, London, Esquire, Margaret Bulstrode, wife of the said Edward (and daughter of the said Richard) and Richard Bulstrode, son of the said Edward and Margaret, of the other part, whereby, in consideration of the sum of one hundred and fifty pounds of good and lawful money of England,

    Edward purchased, on a 99 years lease, a dwelling house and an estate,
    Lying and Being in the Several Parishes of Astley, aforesaid, and Bedworth in the said County of Warwick.

    The estate comprised :
    one Messuage or Tenement Anciently called Emeries and divers Closures, Crofts, Parcels of Land, Pastures, Meadows, Coppice and Groves with the said Messuage or Tenement used or unto the same belonging and appertaining. All with parcels and known by the several names of the Longcroft, the Middlecroft, the Pear tree Piece, the Croyfield the Leafield, the Soleyfield, the Middlefield, Stanhurst Meadows, one little Coppice or Grove called Lacock Grove, the Spring Lees, the Cow Lees pasture or the over Cow Lees, the Nether Cow Lees, one other little Coppice or Grove called the Cow Lees Grove, the Cow Lees Close, or pasture, lying and abutting next unto and upon the Spring Lees at the one end, and the over Cow Lees, at the other end, with all and singular Houses, Barns, Gardens, Orchards, Lands, Meadows, Feeding Pastures, Crofts, Groves, woods, underwoods and commons and all other the appurtenances whatsoever to the said Messuage or tenement belonging or therewith used or occupied .?? This estate, lying midway between Astley church and Bedworth church, was part and parcel of the Marriage portion of the said Margaret and for the better preferment and advancement of the said Margaret in her said marriage and for divers other good causes and considerations.

    Children:
    1. 4. Sir Richard Bulstrode was born in 1617 in Astley, Warwickshire, England; died on 10 Mar 1710 in St. Germain, France.
    2. Henry Bulstrode was born about 1620 in Astley, Warwickshire, England; died in 1717 in Westminster, London, England.
    3. John Bulstrode was born about 1624; died in Dec 1656; was buried on 24 Dec 1656 in Inner Temple Church, Westminster, London, England.
    4. Thomas Bulstrode was born about 1628 in Bedworth, Warwickshire, England; died between 1680 and 1707.
    5. Francis Bulstrode was born about 1630 in Bedworth, Warwickshire, England.

  3. 10.  Edward Dyneley was born about 1590.
    Children:
    1. 5. Joyce Dyneley was born in 1627 in Charlton, Worcestershire, England; died on 29 Apr 1677.