Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Visitation of Devon 1564, 1620 and 1620 with additions

The Visitations of Devon in 1564 and 1620 can be found online. The page for Pincombe from Visitation of Devon for 1620 with additions I have also now found it online at Family History Archive. I have never found the Pincombe/Pyncombe/Pencombe family in the 1564 Visitation which lends credence to the idea that they became "known" because of the marriages that they made in the late 1500s and early 1600s namely, William Pincombe at East Buckland marrying Temperance Pollard (grandaughter of Sir Lewis Pollard (Judge)) and John Pincombe of Southmolton marrying Amy Doddridge (nephew was Judge Doddridge).

I have mostly been paying attention to the 1620 with additions Visitation and and failed to note that the original 1620 Visitation has the sons of the first Pincombe at North Molton in 1485 as Thomas, John and forename unknown. I wonder if there is an error in the revised 1620 Visitation with additions. The children if any of the unknown Pincombe are not listed and most interesting John and Christopher Pincombe of Southmolton are both listed as sons of John rather than having two John Pincombes with each having one son namely John with John and John with Christopher which is how the Revised Visitation reads.

There is a plus and minus to this relook at the original 1620 Visitation. I still have this gap of years and a more positive note that John and Thomas were indeed brothers and not half-siblings. It would be interesting if the wife of the first John Pincombe could be found. Was the third son William? Since these Visitations are in the public domain I shall place a copy in this blog as images.
1620 Visitation (original)


1620 Visitation (original)

The 1620 Visitation with additions has the change in the first generation sons:

1620 Visitation (Family History Archive)























The original 1620 Visitation certainly puts a different focus on the Pincombe family with respect to the first Pincombe at North Molton. Could one conclude that there was only one John Pincombe brother to Thomas in the second generation? Finding the names of the wives of John and Thomas and the unknown sibling would be a great next step in looking at this family in the early 1500s. (The will of Johane Pencombe does appear to make her the wife of Thomas.) There is always the possibility that the first Pincombe at North Molton came as a young page with Lord Zouch. That is a thought that has recently crossed my mind. He could be a young lad of ten or twelve years of age which would make the time frame more reasonable with respect to the time at which his children were born and likely married. Although I have looked at the original 1620 Visitation several times in the past it shows how you can miss items the first time through. I got into the habit of using the 1620 with additions because I had it as an *.pdf. I have now downloaded the two pages of the original 1620 as images.

While I have the family history archive site open looking at the original 1620 Visitation I shall check out some of my other Devon lines.Although this revised 1620 Visitation with additions is interesting, it is the old story of being wary of copied material. My decision to go back and look at the earlier original Visitations may have saved me a few hours of thought in the direction of the first Pincombe at North Molton having married twice :)
.








Monday, August 29, 2011

Pincombe family at North Molton

Principally I purchased the Parish Registers of North Molton to look at the Pincombe family there especially given that these registers go back to 1539. I expected to find quite a few entries for the Pincombe family in the 1500s and was somewhat incorrect in that regard. However I did find some entries. At the end of 1568 I now have transcribed 645 baptisms, 140 marriages and 307 burials. The burials are a surprise really as I have found with most other parishes that I have transcribed that the baptisms and burials were much more equal.

Looking at the Pincombe family -

Baptisms:
Pyncombe    Agnes    daughter    Pyncombe    William    1543    June    6
Pyncombe    Mary    daughter    Pyncombe    William     1547    Dec    8
Pyncombe    Marye    daughter    Pymcombe    John      1555    July    8
Pyncombe    Marye    daughter    Pyncombe    John        1555    Feb    3
Pyncombe    Johane    daughter    Pyncombe    John        1561    Apr    5
Pyncombe    Marye    daughter    Pyncombe    John        1563    Jan    18

Marriages:
Kingdon    Phillip          Pincumbe    Margret            1539    Nov    15
Pyncombe  John          Hodge    Emet            1560    Jul    1
Locke    William          Pyncombe    Ales            1561    Nov    29
Pyncombe William      Gregorye    Margret            1564    Nov    26
Squire    William          Pyncombe    Margerett    1567    May    26
Squire    George          Pyncombe    Mary            1567    Jul    20

Burials:
Pyncombe    Marye    daughter    Pyncombe    John    1555    Dec    7
Pyncombe    Marye    daughter    Pyncombe    John    1563    Feb    3
Pyncombe    Elizabeth    wife    Pyncombe    William    1563    Feb    18
Pyncombe    William                        1564    Sep    13
Pyncombe    William                        1565    Mar    25

The results thus far from the North Molton Parish Register continue to encourage me to see that there were other lines of Pincombe at North Molton than what is accounted for in the Visitations. The baptisms of two Maryes in 1555 (one was buried before the other was baptized) and they are listed as daughters of John. This may or may not be John Pincombe son of William Pincombe married to Emotte Snowe as Johane Pencombe in her will mentions her son John with one daughter and Johane was already born as the daughter of John Pincombe and Emot Hodge who married in 1560. It is always possible that he was married twice and both daughters died and there is the death of a daughter Mary 3 Feb 1563 but the will of Johane Pencombe was dated 7 May 1563 and since this is old style February follows May instead of preceding it.

The marriages include Margaret Pincombe marrying in 1539, Alice Pincombe marrying in 1561, Margaret Pincombe marrying in 1567 and Mary Pincombe marrying in 1567. From the will of John Pincombe the elder (dated 25 Jul 1604 and found in my blog 4 Aug 2011) we know that he had two daughters Alice married to Roger Webber and Agnes married to unknown Selye so I am able to eliminate these two as being one of the marriages in the North Molton Parish Register.

In the will of Johane Pencombe she names her two son in laws (see my blog 31 Jul 2011) as John Locke and John Jasse. Well the marriages lines for Ales Pyncombe read William Lock as her husband. There are no children mentioned for the Locke marriage and only one child for the Jasse marriage. As well this family lived at East Buckland which also had a Church but the Parish Registers do not begin until later in to 1600s.

The William Pincombe who marries Margret Gregorye 26 Nov 1564 is he a widower? The marriage lines do not yield that information. There is a William Pincombe who has buried a wife Elizabeth 18 Feb 1563. Is he the father of Agnes baptized 1543 and Mary baptized 1547? Is he the William buried 25 Mar 1565 and who is the William buried 13 Sep 1564? William becomes a fairly common name in the Pincombe family but there isn't a William mentioned in the Visitations until the third generation and this William baptizing children in the 1540s at North Molton would have had to be in the 2nd generation. The Mary who married George Squire 20 Jul 1567 could be Mary daughter of William Pincombe baptized 8 Dec 1547. Perhaps that would have William himself born around 1515 +/- 5 years since there was a daughter Agnes baptized to William Pincombe at North Molton in 1543. Another interesting fact is that both John (one of them) and Thomas Pincombe named a son William. There isn't a William Pincombe baptized at North Molton up to 1568.

Why two burials for William Pincombe? Was there a son William born and baptized elsewhere and then the father William was buried in 1565?

Who is Margaret Pincombe who married PhilipKingdon 15 Nov 1539. Her birth would also have been in the 1515 +/- 5 range. Was she a sister to Thomas, John and John Pincombe known sons of the unknown Pincombe who came to North Molton in 1485 (by the Visitation of Devon).

A lot of questions from this first few years of Parish Registers at North Molton.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

North Molton Parish Registers - Burges and Tapp families

Continuing on with the transcription of the North Molton Devon Parish Registers and at the end of 1558 I now have 446 baptisms, 87 marriages and 210 burials. The family names are fairly consistent with very few new additions thus far. Not many Pincombe records thus far which was as I had earlier read them but at that time I didn't have my Tapp and Burges information and I can also hope to find more about these families.

The Tapp family goes back to Roger Tapp who was baptized 6 Oct 1595 at North Molton and he married Margarett Burges who was baptized 24 Jul 1597 at North Molton. Fortunately the marriage of John Tapp and Anne Thomas provided me with the names of their parents (a rare enough occurrence in the early registers but Bishops Nympton where they married had a priest who duly recorded the parish of the bride or groom if they were not of Bishops Nympton in the early 1600s).

Margaret Burges was the daughter of John and Ann Burges. Ann thus far is unknown with respect to her surname but John was baptized 29 Oct 1576 at North Molton and the son of Matthew and Margaret Burges. Matthew in turn was the son of Paul Burges and was baptized 7 Apr 1546 at North Molton.  I can now extract all the children in these families to see if I can discover anything further on the Burges family. Finding a new family surname is always rather interesting especially now that I have done my Family Finder test at FT DNA. Expanding on the names by doing the collateral lines may help me with some of my brickwalls.

This is an interesting village with the baptisms being almost double the burials. It is a large areas in terms of manors/farms and some people have come to North Molton for baptisms from other parishes and this includes:

Brinacott
Brinsworthie
Elworthie/Ewerye
Flitton
Hunston
Molland
North Radderie
Radner
South Raderie
Upcott
Walscott

The year 1559 has been completely missed and not obviously so as the end of 1558 appears just above the beginning of 1560. No comment is made by the priest on the omission of the year 1559. The handwriting for 1558 and 1560 is virtually the same. A mystery that likely  has no solution.

I have extracted the Burges entries below from 1539 to 1558 for any one interested in the Burges family of North Molton. Paul Burges left a will in 1579 which was lost in the bombing of Exeter in WWII unfortunately. Thomas Burges left a will in 1584 which is located at the National Archives. I wonder if these two men were brothers and have included both of their families below.

Baptisms
Burges    John    son            Burges    Johane    1539    Jun    29
Burges    John    son    Burges    Paule            1540    Apr    8
Burges    Elizabeth    daughter    Burges    Thomas            1540    Aug    19
Burges    William    son    Burges    John            1541    Sep    20
Burges    William    son    Burges    Thomas            1541    Jan    12
Burges    Anstes    daughter    Burges    Paule            1544    Oct   
Burges    Mathewe    son    Burges    Paule            1546    Apr    7
Burges    English    son    Burges    Thomas            1547    Jan    11
Burges    Peter    son    Burges    Thomas            1553    Apr    9
Burges    Phillip    son    Burges    Thomas            1554    Mar    6
Burges    John    son    Burges    Richard            1555    Mar    2
Burges    Ellen    daughter    Burges    Richard            1555    Mar    2
Burges    John    son    Burges    Thomas            1556    Mar    4
Burges    William    son    Burges    Thomas            1556    Mar    4
Burges    John    son    Burges    Thomas            1557    May    12
Burges    Agnes    base daughter            Burges    Johane    1558    Mar    20

Marriages
Burges    Richard    Hodge    Marye        1554    Nov    20
[Lowdye] Andrew    Burges    Johane        1547    Nov   
Bray    James    Burges    Agnes        1555    Jun    16
Kerbye    Harrye    Burges    Alyce        1552    Jan    18
Hodge    Christopher    Burges    Ellen    1558    Jan    15

Burials
Burges    Johane                        1540    Aug    6    widow
Burges    Ales    wife    Burges    Thomas            1543    Jan    27   
Burges    John                        1547    Aug    20    Clerk, Vicar
Burges    Johane    daughter    Burges    Mychalel            1547    Mar    6   
Burges    John    son    Burges    Thomas            1553    Mar    22   
Burges    John                        1555    Oct    14   
Burges    John    son    Burges    Richard            1555    Nov    30   
Burges    Ales                        1556    Apr    14    widow
Burges    John    son    Burges    Thomas            1556    Mar    4   
Burges    William    son    Burges    Thomas            1556    Mar    4

The Tapp family too has caught my interest and I have not yet located old wills for this family at North Molton.

Baptisms
Tapp    Chosen    daughter    Tapp    John            1540    July    6
Tapp    Robert    son    Tapp    John            1543    Mar    31
Tapp    Johane    daughter    Tapp    William            1545    Sep    10
Tapp    Johane    daughter    Tapp    John            1547    Feb    21
Tapp    Johane    daughter    Tapp    Peter            1551    Dec    20
Tapp    Dorothye    daughter    Tapp    John            1552    July    6
Tapp    Thomas    son    Tapp    John            1552    Nov    12
Tapp    Anstes    daughter    Tapp    Water            1552    Mar    12
Tapp    Emet    daughter    Tapp    Peter            1553    Mar    5
Tapp    Siblye    daughter    Tapp    John            1554    Feb    3
Tapp    Henrye    son    Tapp    Water            1556    Jun    19
Tapp    Johane    daughter    Tapp    John            1558    Sep    29

Marriages
Tapp    John    Beare    Elizabeth        1556    Oct    20
Greade    Gregorye    Tapp    Ales        1542    Sep    30    bride of Hunston

Burials
Tapp    Anstes    daughter    Tapp    Water            1552    Mar    13   
Tapp    Johane                        1556    May    2    widow
Tapp    Johane    wife    Tapp    John            1556    May    20   

I have never received any correspondence on the Burges family but occasionally I receive an email asking about my Tapp family. I think they were probably tradesmen/craftsmen.


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Pincombe Family at North Molton, Bishops Nympton, Molland

One of the last wills from my earliest purchases of wills from Documents on Line at the National Archives is written by William Pincombe of Molland and he mentions the Pincombe Family at North Molton, Filleigh, Bishops Nympton and his own line at Molland. He doesn't mention cousin in this relationship but already he would be 3rd cousin to the mentioned individuals and perhaps considered them to be somewhat distant. I do not have any first cousins and few second cousins so that third cousins seem close to me but looking at their mutual ancestors all descendant of William Pincombe and Emotte Snow and the numbers were quite large in that this couple had nine children still alive in 1602 when William leaves his will and the youngest was over 21. The potential for a large number of descendants could have made 3rd cousins quite distant in the family groupings although the relationship would still presumably have been known in the 1630s. Since I do not know all of my 2nd cousins other than by name it is quite possible that I would not think of them as cousins in the sense of 1st cousins - I can see that now although as a child I thought a 2nd cousin was very close.

I am continuing to work on the Parish Registers for North Molton and have completed 1547 with 178 baptisms, 41 marriages, and 78 burials. The registers are somewhat difficult in spots in this earliest register but it is so lucky to have a register going back to 1539. At the time that I purchased North Molton I bought Parish Registers 1, 2, 3 and 13. At some point I may purchase more of them depending on the frequency of my surnames in that parish as I move towards the present. I also have the Parish Registers for Molland, Merton, Rose Ash and they too are are projects that I am keen on starting. Although I have read through them and extracted my family notes I find that just reading the register I miss entries on occasion and so transcribing them gives me a better overall picture of my family lines in these particular villages.

The Pincombe family was at North Molton as there is a baptism for Marye daughter of William Pincombe 8 Dec 1547. Since William Pincombe (married to Emotte Snowe) does not mention a daughter Mary I am left to ponder if this is their daughter and were they married by 1547 although their second eldest son (according to the Visitation) wasn't born until 1566. I suspect this is not William Pincombe married to Emotte Snowe and in that case who is he?

We know from the Visitation that the Pincombe family is first at North Molton where Lord Zouch held the manor. This has led to my premise that either the first Pincombe married twice or there is a missing generation. I am tending more towards the first Pincombe marrying twice but no evidence of either actually other than the names of the children:  John, John, and Thomas. We know that one of the two John Pincombes married into the Dodderidge family and that eventually the family daughtered out and Gertrude set up a large Pincombe Trust which is still in existence today. Entailed land would have gone to a descendant further back but if the land that was acquired was from the wife of the first Pincombe then that would not be the case and Gertrude would have been free to sell or otherwise discharge all holdings since she and her sisters were the surviving heirs and any land that was entailed would have gone to the Tuckfield family which it did. In particular this furtherest back John would have needed to be an only child or the necessity of assigned proper descent to property would have arisen and it does not appear to have done so. The wills certainly lend credence to this thought.

I am then left with the knowledge from the Visitations that this John Pincombe who eventually lived at South Molton had two sons John and Christopher both of whom had large land holdings. Gertrude being descendant of John. I have not yet traced Christopher's line but it also appears to daughter out much earlier. Is it possible that William is a third son? Why he wasn't mentioned in the Visitation though is a mystery although he does continue at North Molton. Reviewing the tax rolls once again:

Surname    Forename    Parish    Year    Property
Pyncombe     Christopher  South Molton    1544 Subsidy    10
Pyncome       John            South Molton     1544 Subsidy    13
Pynkeham     Philip          Tawstocke          1544 Subsidy    8
Pencombe    Richard       Bideford              1544 Subsidy    5
Pencombe    Thomas       East Buckland     1544 Subsidy    9
Pencombe    Alice (wid)  North Molton      1545 Subsidy    5
Pencombe    John           North Molton       1545 Subsidy    4
Pencombe    Richard      Kings Nympton     1545 Subsidy    1

Pencombe    William      North Molton        1545 Subsidy    6

We can see Christopher and John at South Molton (Is the John at North Molton their father?). There is a William at North Molton and Thomas is still at East Buckland (father of William Pincombe married to Emotte Snowe). Alice at North Molton is a widow. There is also a John at North Molton. Definitely there are too many Pincombe entries when one compares this list with the Visitation of Devon genealogy tree for the Pincombe family of North Molton. It is a slowly unraveling mystery. Who is William Pincombe at North Molton in 1545; whose son is he? As I work my way through the North Molton Parish Register I hope to find some answers.


Sunday, August 21, 2011

Will of Thomas Pincombe dated 8 Nov 1651 (PROB 11/228 - Image Reference 266/208)

This next will for the Pincombe family was written by Thomas Pincombe husbandman at North Molton 8 Nov 1651. This Thomas Pincombe was the father of Bartholomew Pincombe who left his will dated 4 Dec 1656 (see blog 7 Aug 2011). One of my purposes in looking at this set of wills at this time was to link the families.

William Pincombe and Emotte Snowe (see blog 30 Jul 2011) had seven sons and my original premise for this family was that William's sons had fanned out from East Buckland and Filleigh and many of the Pincombe families found in the 1600s in areas as far away as Barnstaple, Bideford and even Plymouth were descendants of this William. However, finding the wills on the Genuki Devon website for the Pincombe family members in the 1500s this was an incorrect premise and it seemed like a good time to finally transcribe all of the Pincombe wills in my possession (I had only read them as I discovered when I went back to read the transcriptions) and discuss them with respect to the earlier Pincombe one name study and my own thoughts on the possibility of this being a singleton family name in Devon.

In the will below written by Thomas he provides one linking clue when he mentions the property at Molland Sarazin which he is now giving to his son Thomas Pincombe. He does not appear to hold all of the property that had been mentioned in the will of his father William and indeed the property had been left to Symon, Richard (my ancestor who lived at Bishops Nympton) and Thomas. Notably the earlier blog read:

William Pincombe of East Buckland and Filleighe in his will dated 20 Dec 1602 (see my blog 30 Jul 2011) left the property known as Over Mollande Sarazin to his three sons Symon, Richard and Thomas.

21  .....  if Symon Pyncombe, Richard Pyncombe and Thomas Pyncombe my sonnes
22    so longe lyve, or anie of them so longe lyve, all that the hall of the Tenement and Barton commonlie
23    called Over Mollande Sarazin, the entire, and house adioyning to the northe part of the said halle
24    the chambers over the saide halle and the house within the said halle, one chamber over the said house
25    and the shippinge in the easte part of the saide house. And all that parte or portion of the Towne
26    place there which is lymitted and appointed by meerts and bonds, the garden by southe the yokinge
27    house. One close of lands called the Southedowne, one other close of lande called the bottoms close
28    and dyvers other closes platts and quilletts of lande, meadowe, woods, wayes and other hereditam[en]ts
29    within the appurtennces in Northmolton in the countie before said, ...

Richard Pincombe (my ancestor) died in 1648 and this Thomas had died by 1653. Unfortunately their dates of birth can only be quessed at although they are younger sons and the birth of their older brother William is known to be in 1566. Symon, Richard and Thomas follow William in birth order so have lived likely to a good age for the times. Richard married by 1598 (or earlier) and so was likely born by 1575. Finding the ages of these children is important to me in that I strongly feel that a generation may be missing or that the initial Pincombe at North Molton married twice.

In the will below Thomas mentions William Pincombe of Filleigh and I am still not sure which William Pincombe this is. Likely it is William Pincombe married to Bridget Worth but I need to collect further evidence in this regard.

Thomas in his will below mentions his three children and their children : 1. Bartholomew Pincombe married now to Johane and his daughters Frauncis and Rechord (by his first wife Frances), the son John is not mentioned as he was born in 1654; 2. Thomas married to Johane with sons William, Thomas, John, Richard and Robert (I believe this Richard to be the Richard at Chittlehampton married to Jane Bond and must continue to draw out evidence to support this premise); 3. Grace married to Richard Hannanerd with daughter Katherine mentioned in the will below. At some point in the past I have a vague memory of finding this name to actually be Hannacott but it does not look like that spelling in the will below. I shall have to find the record that mentions this family related to the Pincombe family. It is a rather dim memory unfortunately. Although initially I had planned to transcribe the records of North Molton first before transcribing this will the discovery of Molland Sarazin in the will gave me this neat relationship with the earlier will of William and so I decided to immediately transcribe the will and can add in the North Molton parish records later.

The will of Thomas Pincombe:

Recorded: 19 August 2011
Source: Public Record Office, London, UK, PROB 11/228 - Image Reference 266/208
Place: North Molton, Devon, England
Type of Record: Will
Dated: 8 Nov 1651  (probated 23 Sep 1653)
Read: File d:/01-workingfile/family/ThomasPincombe-208.pdf
Condition: fairly clear, light, old English writing

[in margin] [Testator] Tho: Pincombe

1    The last Will and Testament of Thomas Pincombe
2    the elder of the parish of Northmoulton in County of Devon husbandman made
3    the Eighth day of November in the yeare of our Lord God One Thousand sixe
4    hundred fiftie and one in manner and forme followinge, First I bequeath
5    my soule to Almightye God my maker and Redeemer and my bodye to the Earth
6    from whence it came, Item I give and bequeath unto the poore people of
7    the
    [page 2]
8    the parishe of Northmoulton Fortie shillings; Item I give and bequeath unto
9    Bartholomewe Pincombe my sonne Five pounds and to be paid unto him with
10    in one yeare after my decease, Item I give unto Thomas Pincombe my sonne
11    one peece or parcell of grounde commonly called or knowne by the name of
12    Dobs Downe beinge parte of the Bartine of Molland Sarizine dureinge the life
13    of Bartholomew Pincombe my sonne and the life of Grace Hannanerd my daughter
14    Item I give and bequeath to Johane Pincombe the wife of Bartholomew Pincombe
15    that nowe is one cowe and to be delivered unto her by my Executors within one
16    monethe after my decease, Item I give unto Frauncis Pincombe and Rechord
17    Pincombe daughters of the foresaide Bartholomew Pincombe one Ewe sheepe
18    a peece and to be delivered unto them within one moneth after my decease,
19    Item I give unto Johane Pincombe the wife of the foresaid Thomas Pincombe one
20    cowe and to be delivered unto her within one yeare after my decease, Item I give
21    unto William Pincombe Thomas Pincombe John Pincombe Richard Pincombe
22    and Robert Pincombe one Ewe sheepe a peece and to be delivered unto them
23    within one moneth after my decease, Item I give unto Katherine Hannanerd
24    the daughter Richard Hannanerd one Ewe sheepe and to be delivered unto
25    her within one moneth after my decease, Item I give unto Johane Pincombe
26    my kinswooman that is now dwellinge with mee one Ewe sheepe and to bee
27    delivered unto her within one monthe after my decease, Item I give unto
28    William Penrose and Johane his now wife the _lee house that is next adioy
29    neinge to the Court gate and all my garden bee north - same house and
30    space without the Courthedge bee East the court gate to sett a reeke belonginge
31    to his house and to be yeilden up unto him within one weeke after my decease
32    duringe my terme that I have in the same if he and shee doe make thryre
33    dwellinge - therein payeinge twelve pence a yeare. Item I give unto John
34    Hunnacotte of Landkey and William Pincombe of Fillye the halehouse and
35    all the rest of the houses there not before given and the Souther Camland
36    and the souther little meadowe and the garden the garden and meadowe it
37    is bee southe the dwellinge house and my part of the wood belongeinge to
38    the same tenement to the use and profitt of my daughter Grace and her
39    children and to noe other use which houses - and ground were
40    sometime in the possession of William Penrose. Item I give unto John Hunnacott
41    and William Pincombe all the rest of that Tenement not before hand given
42    at the end of five years next after my decease for fiftye yeares if my daughter
43    Grace or any child or children soe long shall continue to the use of my daughter
44    Grace and her children and to noe other use nor purpose and my will further is that
45    if my daughter Grace and her children doe happen to dye all. That Tenement
46    shall remayne to my Executor and to his use and to noe other persons whatsoever
47    All the rest of my goods and Chattells not before hand given nor bequeathed
48    I give and bequeath unto Thomas Pincombe my sonne, him I doe make and
49    ordayne to be my whole Executor of all my goods and Chattells of this my
50    present last will and Testament In witness whereof I have hereunto sett my
51    hand and seale even the day and yeare first above written and I doe intreate
52    John Hunnacott and Robert Edbrooke my beloved freinds to be my overseers
53    to see my last will performed. The signe and seale of Thomas Pincombe
54    Wittnesses hereafter named Robert Smyth the signe of Johane Beere
55    This Will was proved at Westminster before
56    the judges for probate of Wills and grauntinge Administrations the three
57    and twentieth day of September in the yeare of our Lord God one Thousand
58    six hundred Fiftie and three by the Oath of Thomas Pincombe the sonne
59    and sole Executor named in ye said will To whome Ad[mini]s[trat]ion was committed of all and singuler the
60    the goods chattells and debts of the said deceased he beinge first sworne well
61    and trulie to Administer the same.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Rashleigh Family of Devon and Cornwall

After capturing the document on the Rashleigh family I decided that I can learn more about the South Molton Pincombe family in documents of the Rashleigh family. Sometimes the routes by which I have obtained information on lines of my family have been quite circuitous. I almost appear even to myself to be off on a far away tangent but end up gleaning sufficient information to let me understand a section of my family that I couldn't have done without the extraneous information.

I also have the South Molton parish registers and when I complete North Molton I will probably begin to work on them along with Abbotts Ann which I had to set aside for the summer.

It is somewhat warm here today but the nights are lengthening noticeably now as we are into the dog days of summer. Today it is overcast and looking quite dull out. The dandelions are returning with the shorter days and I shall spend a few hours capturing them in our lawns. My gardening though is coming to a close. Thank goodness! I like to see the beauty of the plants but I do not think I am cut out for a lot of gardening. At least I recognize more weeds now as the summer advances!

 The text of the Rashleigh Family article follows in its entirety. The book is now out of copyright and amazingly this is just a short article in the Devons Notes and Queries which is up to 11 volumes now that I have discovered. Well worth looking at if you have Devon ancestry and it isn't often you find a lot of information on North Devon ancestry. Sometimes I think I am the only person in the world really looking at the Pincombe lines there. There is another researcher looking at our Rowcliffe family, no one yet for the Charley family and so it carries on back.

Devon Notes and Queries, Volume IV, Part VI, April 1907.

James G Commin Exeter (Pages 201 - 215)

117. RASHLEIGH OF DEVON. The family of Rashleigh
is, says Colonel Vivian in his Visitations of Cornwall, most
probably descended from John Bray, alias Raysshelegh, or
Rashleigh, of Barnstaple, temp. Rich. II., and Mr. Kelland,
in the Western Antiquary (iv., 176) speaks of him as the
first Rashleigh who can be traced. The pedigree, however,
is carried a generation earlier by a deed dated the first
Saturday after Michaelmas, 1390, preserved amongst the
Barnstaple records (Barnstaple Records, by J. R. Chanter
and Thomas Wainwright, ii., 186), by which Matilda, widow
of Robert Raschelegh, granted to John Bray, her younger
son, all her lands, tenements, rents and services in Barnestapol
and Nyweport episcopi.[1]; Matilda must presumably
have been the daughter and heiress of a Barnstaple property-owner,
and the reason for the mother's gift to her younger
son no doubt was that the elder had on his father's death
inherited the property at Rashleigh, in the parish of Wemworthy,
from which the family derived their name. The
christian name of the elder brother does not appear. His
descendants continued to reside at Rashleigh until after
the death of John Rashleigh, who died 14th December, 1503,
whose heiress, Ibota, married Thomas Clotworthy, of Clotworthy,
and carried the property into that family. At the
Inquisition after the death of this John Rashleigh taken at
Exeter Castle on the 18th November, 1504, before William
Legh, the escheator, and a jury consisting of Richard
Trobrygge, junior, Richard Dour, John Evannys, Walter
Stephyn, William Croker, John Dever, John Whyte, Thomas
Brogton, John Stephyn, Humphry Voysey, Richard Norlegh,
John Sowton, and Edward Richard, the jury found that
being seised of a messuage, 300 acres of land, 100 acres of
furze and heather, 20 acres of meadow, and 40 acres of
wood, in the manor of Raschelegh, and of 1 tenement, 40
acres of land and 2 acres of meadow, in Chyplegh, in his
demesne, as of fee, he on the 24th October, 1488, enfeoffed
John Hengescote, Richard Wode, Thomas Rowley, clerk,
and Robert Marshall and their heirs, who thereupon granted
the said premises to the said John Rayschelegh and Alice
his wife and the heirs of John for ever ; that the premises
in Rayschelegh were held of the Lord of Ormond in
free socage and were worth per annum 40 shillings, and
that the premises in Chyplegh were held of Peter Eggecombe,
Knight of his castle of Totton by Knight's service,
and were worth per annum 13s. 4d. ; and that Ibota Raysshelegh
was John's heir, and was of the age of two years and
more. In Vivian's Visitations of Devon Ibota, or Abbot, is
called the daughter and heir of Thomas Rashleigh, so it
would appear that John had a brother Thomas, who
predeceased him.

Now to go back to John Bray, the younger son of
Robert Raschelegh. His original surname was no doubt
that of his parents Raschelegh only, and he probably acquired
the alias of Bray from his residence. He may be identified
with the John Rasleigh who entered into a Recognisance
in the Court of the Mayor of Barnstaple, 47 Edw. III.
(B.R. ii., 49), and must have been a middle-aged man when he
in 1387 joined with other brethren of the Guild of St. Nicholas
in the grant of a tenement and garden in Barre (now
Bear) Street, Barnstaple (B.R., ii., 171). He appears to have
not long retained his mother's gift, since in 1394 Thomas
Rashleigh received from the Borough Accountant a certain
quit rent of 2s. payable in respect of the Butchers' House
or of the Guildhall at Barnstaple, which in 1390 was paid
to John, [2] the inference being that John had between the
two dates made over part at least of his property to or
for the benefit of his son Thomas. The Escheator's
Inquisition mentioned below, taken on the 29th October,
1529, confirms this inference, for there the jury found that
John Juvenell Chaplain and William Spencer being seised
of 6 messuages, 7 gardens, 4 curtilages, 1 kitchen, 1 room
with seats (selaria), 1 coal-house (domus carbonalis), 4 acres
of arable land, 3 acres of meadow, and 8 shilling-rents and
9 penny-rents (octo solidat. reddit. et novem denariat.
reddit.), in the Borough of Barnastapol, and of two tenements,
1 garden, 1 barn, 2 acres of land, 2 acres of pasture,
5 acres of meadow, and 9 shilling-rents, in Newport Bishop,
in their demesne as of fee, did by a charter dated the
Thursday next after the feast of St. Mary Magdalene, 1397,
grant to Thomas Rayshelegh, by the name of Thomas
Braye, alias Rayshelegh, and to Johan [3] his wife and the
heirs of the body of Thomas, all the premises by the
description of  "all the messuages, lands, tenements, rents,
reversions and services which we hold by the gift and
feoffment of John Braye, alias Rayshleigh, in Barnstaple
and in Newport aforesaid except one tenement in Bouteport
which we have already granted back to the same John Braye,
alias Rayshelegh."

In 1402 Thomas and several others were each fined 3d.
in the Court of the Mayor of Barnstaple for not having
complied with the order of the Court to repair the pavement
in front of their houses; and in 1411 Thomas granted
a tenement at Lycwycheton (Litchdon) to Nicholas Deghe
(B.R., i., 159; ii., 187).

An inquisition respecting the property of Thomas was
taken on the Tuesday before the feast of Pentecost, 7
Henry V., by virtue of the King's writ. The writ is badly
decayed and only a fragment remains, and the Inquisition
is also in parts illegible. The place where it was held and
the names of the Escheator and half the jury are gone. The
names left are . . . Takell, Richard Whatlok, . . . heastecote,
Andrew Paas, John Eston, Thomas Codyng and John Pree.
It was taken during the life of Thomas, for the present
tense is used; the jury say that the tenants "hold" (not
" held ") of him. Instead, too, of the common ending of an
inquisition post mortem to the effect that the aforesaid so and
so held no more lands on the day he died the inquisition
concludes thus : "and which lands and tenements I have
taken by the authority of the aforesaid mandate into the
hand of the Lord King, and the same Thomas had no
more lands or tenements on the day of the recognizance of
the. aforesaid debt or afterwards which can be appraised or
seised into the hand of the said Lord King."

The inquisition purports to have been sealed by the jury
only : they found that Thomas Rasshelegh's property consisted
of the reversions of 5 houses, held by Thomas Holman [4],
Richard Barbour, John Touker, John Myrymouth, and another
illegible, of a house and garden, tenant's name illegible, of
2 other gardens held by Margery Milward and Clement
Webber, of a close of land held by John Donnilond, and
2 meadows held by Bernard Skyber and John Goldsmyth [5],
all the foregoing property being situate in the ville of
Barnestaple and held of Mr. Rashleigh for the lives of the
tenants at certain rents. The rents of the houses are
illegible except two which were 9s. 8d. and 5s. 6d.

Then came the reversions of a marsh and a close of
land in the Ville of Bishops Tawton, held similarly by John
Stykk and John Ledeheade for life. Then followed 10
houses, a shop and a vault (camera), in Barnstaple, held by
Thomas Smyth, Johanna Warde, John Vynhawe, Robert
Lucas, John Souter, Johanna Colcote, Ledewic Walshman,
Alicia Shepster, Johanna Peper, John Baker, and William
Hertescote [6] at the will of the said Thomas Rasshlegh, and
worth per annum 6s. 8d. clear. If we are to judge
by the total of the annual value of the property afterwards
given, this was the aggregate value of the eleven holdings,
though it seems more likely that each house was worth the
sum named. Next 6 houses in Barnstaple are mentioned
subject to rent charges ranging from 6d. to 6s. in favour
of Mr. Rasshelegh and his heirs, the house held by the
Mayor and community of the town at the already mentioned
quit rent of 2s. being one of them, and the other owners
being John Symond, William Taillor, Johanna Merymouth,
John Wyse and Simon Burgeys. Next is mentioned a house
in Nyweport Episcopi, owned by William Colebeare, subject
to a like rent charge of 3s. 8d. ; then the reversions of a close
of land and a marsh, another close, 2 houses and another
close, all in the same ville, and held by John Rowe, Hugo
Smith, John White, and Peter Deth, of Thomas Rasshelegh for
life at rents. Next three rent-charges of 2s., 6d., and 6d.,
payable out of houses in Barnstaple, owned by John Styry,
John Deth and Adam Crokker, and 2 houses there of which
the said Thomas was seised in his demesne as of fee, worth
per annum 2s. net, and finally 7 houses in Nymet Bowe [7]
each held of Mr. Raysshelegh by knight service and payment
of a yearly rent, the rents ranging from 1s. 6d. to
6s., and the tenants' names being Richard Whitlok, Margery
Walewayn, William Grilleston, Walwin atte Beare, John
Yeo, William Burnard and John Touker. And the jury
said that all the aforesaid tenements, rents and services were
worth per annum £8 2s. 6d. net. The inquisition having
been taken during the life of Thomas says nothing about
his heir. The descent from him is, however, supplied by
the inquisition on the death of John Rayscheleygh, to which
we shall next come. We there find it stated that by reason
of the said settlement of 1397 the premises thereby given
descended to this John in fee tail as the heir of the above mentioned
Thomas, he being the son of his son, also named Thomas.

The name of Thomas Rayshleigh (the father of John) occurs
amongst the Barnstaple Records as the grantor in 1469 of 6s.
rent from a tenement outside the south gate of Barnstaple [8] ;
and the date of one of the grants of property made by
John and stated in his inquisition. The inquisition
on the death of John was taken at Barnstaple on the
29th October, 1529, before Thomas Hext, armiger, the
escheator and a jury whose names are illegible in the
Chancery copy, and not given in the Exchequer file. The
jury found the facts already stated respecting the settlement
of 1397 and the descent to John, also that his grandfather's
wife, Johan, survived her husband.

They then went on to give particulars of several charters,
12 in number, granted by the said John Rayshelegh of
premises in Barnstaple, Newport and the manor of Bishops
Tawton, the dates ranging from 1490 to 1525, one a grant
in fee on condition that the grantee should re-erect a
"bruynghouse," or "bruhouse," on the premises within
four years, a condition which was not fulfilled ; 5 grants
for a life or lives ; 5 demises for terms of years, varying
from 40 years to 80 years, and one for a term of years
determinable with lives. One of the demises, dated 1st
February, 1512-13, was to Thomas Rayshelegh, a son of
the grantor, by Cecilia his former wife, of a meadow and
marsh adjoining in Newport Episcopi, near Cowebrigge (or
Conebrigge ?), which John Andrew then held to hold to
Thomas and his assigns for the term of 40 years, "which
estate Walter Salisbery [9] now holds by livery from the said
Thomas Rayshelegh." The other grantees were Richard
Harry, waxmaker, Richard Gay [10], Johan his wife, and their
two daughter Margaret and Letitia, John Wayt and
Laurencia his wife, Robert Frenston, John Deyman, Agnes
his wife and their son Edmond, William Vanne and Isota
his wife, Alexander Merifield, Johan his wife and John
their son, Richard Haydon, "gentilman," and Agnes his
wife, Philip Comer [11], and Nicholas Willighby. Other names
of adjoining owners and tenants mentioned are The Priory
of the blessed Mary Magdalene of Barnestapol, the feoffees
of the chapel of Saint Anne, of Barnestapol, the feoffees of
Saint George of Barnestapol, Lewis Pollard, knight, lately
one of the Justices of the King's Bench, Robert Perot, of Pill, [12]
Robert Comer, senior [13], John Palmar, John Hill, John Primett,
John Copleston, of Yealmeton, Henry Freer, John Arnoll,
Richard Jacobbe, and the heirs of Boys. Streets and localities
mentioned are High strete, Joye strete, Maydyn strete Grenelane
and Whitepit lane, in Barnstaple, land and a lane both
called Pulcars, in the suburbs of Barnstaple, Rumsham, a
suburb of Newport, and Le Bondelane, in the manor of
Tawstock. The strand of the river in Barnstaple is called
" litus maris." And the Jury also said that by a charter
dated the 29th June, 1526, John Rayshelegh gave to Roger
Rayshelegh [14] clerk, certain tenements in the Borough of
Barnestapol, Newport Episcopi and the manor of Tawton
Episcopi, and to the before named Philip Comer, Richard
Gay, and Thomas Rayshelegh and Philip Rayshelegh, all
his messuages, lands, tenements, rents, reversions and
services in Barnstapol, Newport Episcopi and Tawton
Episcopi, except one garden in Barnstapol, which the said
John Rayshelegh thitherto held to hold the same to the
aforesaid Roger Philip, Richard Thomas and Philip, their
heirs and assigns for ever, with the intent to carry out the
last will of the said John Rayshelegh in manner as appeared
in the schedule to the said charter annexed as followed;
and his will was that the said Roger and his co-feoffees,
their heirs and assigns, should stand seised of the premises
to the use of the said John Rayshelegh for his life and
after his decease should stand seised of one tenement in
which the same John Rayshelegh at the time of sealing the
same charter of feoffment and schedule then dwelt with the
curtilage, and of one stable with the curtilage lying in Wilstrete
and certain other specified premises to the use of
Alice, wife of the same John Rayshelegh during her life
in lieu of dower, and that the said Alice should repair and
maintain the said tenement in which the said John Rayshelegh
then dwelt at her own expense during her life ; and
after her decease he willed that the said Roger and his cofeoffees
and their heirs should stand seised in all the
premises of the aforesaid Alice to the use of the right
heirs of the said John Rayshelegh ; and further he willed
that the said Roger and his co-feoffees and their heirs should
stand seised of all the rest of his messuages, lands, tenements,
and rents in Barnestapol, Newport Episcopi and
Tawton Episcopi, to discharge his debts, and after the
debts were paid should levy and receive the rents, issues
and profits for the marriage use of his daughters Wilmot
and Agnes, until they should have received the sum of
eight pounds to be divided equally between them ; and if
either of his daughters died before marriage the survivor to
have the whole of the said sum, and if his said daughters
should have necessity for the said money before marriage
they should have part. And he also willed that if Wilmot
and Agnes should die before they married or under the age
of fifteen years, then 20s. of the said sum of £8 should be
expended over their funeral, and another 20s. should be
paid to his daughter Agnes Munday and her children, and
20s. to his son Thomas Rayshelegh, and £5 balance of
the said £8 should be paid to a priest to pray yearly for
the salvation of the testator's soul, his wife, his father,
mother and children, and for all the souls of the dead.

And he further willed that his said son Thomas should
have £4 out of the said rents, issues and profits whenever
he should have need thereof "for his solace and consolation"
at the discretion of his feoffees ; and that Thomas Munday [15]
who married his daughter should have £4.

And he further willed that his said feoffees, in whom he
had special faith and hope, should have for their diligence
and labour 3s. 4s. for overseeing his last will. And the
will ended with an ultimate remainder to the use of the
grantor's right heirs for ever. And further the jury said
hat the said John Rayshelegh was seised of a shop, one
toft, 13 gardens, 5 acres of land, 3 acres of pasture, and two
shilling-rent in Toriton Magna, and of one acre of land in
Toriton Parva, and of 3 shilling and 2 penny-rents in Nymet
Bowe, in his demesne as of fee ; and that after his death
the said premises in Toriton Magna, Toriton Parva and
Nymet Bowe, descended to a certain John Rayshelegh,
as heir of the aforesaid John, namely as son and heir of
Robert Rayshelegh, son and heir of the aforesaid John. And
further the jury said that the aforesaid premises in the
borough of Barnestapol, were held of the Lord King
as of his castle of Barnestapol as parcel of his
duchy of Exeter, by the rent of 2¼d., and fealty
and by attendance on the Court held at the said
Castle for all services in free socage, and were worth per
annum 20s. ; and that the premises in the "Borough" of
Newport Episcopi, were held of John Bishop, of Exeter, as
of his Manor of Tawton Episcopi, by the rent of 9s. 4d.
per annum, and fealty and attendance on his court at
Newport Episcopi, twice per annum, for all services in free
socage, and were worth per annum 13s. 4d. : and that the
aforesaid close lying in Tawton Episcopi which the said
Nicholas Willighby then held were held of the Bishop by
fealty only in free socage and was worth per annum 2s. ;
and that the premises in the manor of Tawton Episcopi
which the aforesaid Richard Gay and Johan his wife then
held were held of the said Bishop by fealty and by attendance
on his Court at the aforesaid Manor in free socage
and were worth per annum 10s. ; and that certain of the
premises in Toriton Magna were held of Henry, Duke of
Richmond, by the rent of 3s. and attendance on his Court
at the Castle of Toriton Magna in free socage, and were
worth per annum 40s. ; and that the aforesaid 3 acres of
pasture in Toriton Magna were held of the same Duke of
Richmond by knight's service, and were worth per annum
2s. ; and that the aforesaid acre of land in Toriton Parva
was held of Lewis Dawele by the rent of ¾d. per annum
in free socage and were worth per annum 12s. ; and that
the aforesaid 3 shilling and 2 penny-rents in Nymet Bowe
were held of Lord Fitzwarren in free socage "and were
worth per annum in all their issues clear of deductions
nothing" ; and that the said John Rayshelegh, the father
of the said Robert, died the 12th June then last past, and
that the said John Rayshelegh, the son of the said Robert,
was his next heir and was of full age, namely, 25 years
and more.

A writer in the Genealogist (n.s. iii., 188) says: "I have
seen a descent in the De Banco Rolls which sets out that
one Thomas Bray who lived in the time of Henry VI. was
otherwise called Rayshelegh, and that his son and heir was
great great grandfather to one John Bray, alias Raysheley,
who flourished in Devonshire in the middle of the sixteenth
century." If this is accurate (which seems doubtful) the
pedigree afforded by the inquisition of 1529 has missed a
generation which would have to be supplied between the
first two Thomases. Robert, the eldest son, and John, the
grandson, are not mentioned in the testator's will, no doubt
because the heir was otherwise provided for. To Philip,
though mentioned, no gift was made, probably for a similar
reason. Neither does the will describe Philip as a son,
though he must have been so, for Philip Rashleigh of Fowey
who founded the still flourishing Cornish family died 14th
June, 1551, [16] and cannot therefore have belonged to the same
generation as John, who died at a great age in 1529, nor
can he be identified with the Philip hereafter mentioned,
the son of Robert, for he was still alive on 4th August, 1566,
the date of the will of John, the son of Robert. So he
must fit in here as a brother of Robert, and since Colonel
Vivian says he was a second son, he would come between
Robert and Thomas. Thomas' name was naturally mentioned
among the trustees before his, because Thomas had
been previously mentioned in the will. Parson Roger may
or may not have been also the testator's son.

The name of John Rayshleigh, the testator, occurs more
than once in the Barnstaple Records (i. 189, ii., 189). The
following item in the Town accounts (B. R., ii. 110):
" 1552-3, paid to two sawyers to saw the timber which Mr.
Rayshleigh gave the town, 1s. 4d.," refers to John, the
testator's grandson. So also possibly does this entry in the
marriage register of Barnstaple, "1553, 16 Jan., Oliver
Norwood & Edyth, s'vant of John Bray [17]." This John, the
grandson, died the 8th January, 1566-7, and on the 3rd
October following an inquisition was taken at the Castle of
Exeter before Richard Strowde, armiger, the Escheator " after
the death of John Rassheley, generosus, and Alice his wife," by
the oath of William Halland, armiger, Richard Copleston,
armiger, Thomas Carye, armiger, Henry Fortescue, armiger,
Edward Ameredith, armiger, Richard Hale, armiger, George
Fo____ , John Lawman, generosus, John Wood, generosus,
John Beare, generosus, John Bastard, generosus, Michael
Moyse, generosus, Richard Esbrick, generosus, and Henry
Dyer, generosus. They said that the said John Rasshelegh
some time before and at the time of his death was seised in
his demesne as of fee of 6 messuages, 7 gardens, 4 curtilages,
1 kitchen, 1 room with seats, 1 coal-house, 4 acres of arable
land, 3 acres of meadow, and 8 shilling and 9 penny-rents in
Barnstaple ; also of 2 tenements, 1 garden, 1 barn, 2 acres of
land, 2 acres of pasture, 5 acres of meadow, and 9 shilling rents
in Newport Episcopi; and of 1 close of land and 2
closes of land and marsh in Tawton Episcopi ; and further of
12 messuages, 1 shop, 1 toft, 13 gardens, 5 acres of land, 3 acres
of pasture, and 2 shilling-rents in Torryton Magna, and of
1 acre of land in Torryton Parva; also of 3 shilling and
2 penny-rents in Nymett Bowe, and so seised, made his
testament and last will dated the 4th August, A.D. 1566,
then produced to them, and thereby, among other things,
bequeathed to Alice Rassheley his wife, the land which he
had in Barnestaple in the tenure of David - with all his land
lying by Cambridge (?Cowebridge) formerly in the tenure of
William Salsburye [18], with all the lands which William
Dawkyns [19] and John Parker then held in Newport and
Tawton Episcopi, together with the lands which he had in
Torryton Magna and Taduport to hold to the said Alice for
her life, and after her decease he bequeathed and willed
all the land which he had in the county of Devon to William
Rassheley, his brother in tail male, with successive remainders
over in tail male to Thomas Rassheley - of Southmolton,
Walter Rassheley, of Manshew (Meshaw?) and
Philip Rassheley, [20] with remainder over to the female heirs
of him the said John Rasshelegh, namely the sons of his
three sisters, Elenor Tubb,[21] Alicia Voose, and Thomasin
Harris and their heirs for ever.

And after the death of the said testator the said Alice
by virtue of the said will entered into amongst other things
all the said premises, and after her death all and singular
the premises remained and accrued to the same William
Rasshelegh in fee tail. And further the Jury said that
the premises in Barnstaple were held of John Chechester,
knight as of his Castle of Barnstapol as parcel of the
Duchy of Exeter by the rent of 2¼d., and fealty and attendance
at the Court at West . . . ., and were worth per
annum 20s., and that the premises in Newport Episcopi
were held of Francis Earl of Bedford as of his manor
of Tawton Episcopi by the rent of 9s. 4d., and fealty and
attendance at his court at Newport Episcopi twice a year,
and were worth per annum 13s. 4d. ; and that a certain
close in Tawton Episcopi was held of the said Earl of Bedford
as of his said manor by fealty and was worth per annum 2s.
and that the said two closes and marsh in Tawton Episcopi
were held of the said Earl by fealty and attendance at his
Court, and were worth per annum 10s. ; and that the premises
in Torryton Magna were held of the heirs of ______ Basset
as of his castle of Torryton Magna by a rent of 3s., and
attendance at his court at the said Castle, and were worth
per annum 40s.; and that the premises in Torryton Parva
were held of John Davelle, armiger, by the rent of ¾d. per
annum, and were worth per annum 12d.; and that the
aforesaid rents in Nymett Bowe were held of Lord Fitzwarren
and were worth per annum nothing ; and that the said
John Rassheley died the 8th January then last past, and
the said Alice died the 2nd July last past.

We next fall back upon the Barnstaple Records. There
amongst rents paid by the Bridge-wardens in 1578 appears
" Item to the heirs of Raishleigh xiid" (B.R., ii., 233).

In 1584 the above-mentioned William Rashleigh, described
as of Southmolton, gentleman, and Peter Rayshlegh, of the
same place, yeoman, who, as we shall see by the next
deed, was the eldest son of William) mortgaged lands in
Barnstaple and Bishops Tawton to John Pincombe the
younger, of Southmolton, clothier. In 1587 "William
Raishleigh, of Southmolton, and his son and heir Peter
Raishleigh granted a yearly rent of 2s. issuing out of the
Guildhall, and another of 12d., issuing out of certain
lands for the reparation of the Long Bridge"; and in the
accounts of the Collectors and Receivers of Barnstaple there
is an entry of the payment of the purchase money "Paid
to William Raishleigh and Peter Raishley, of Southmolton,
for the purchase of a yearly rent of 3s., which they received
from certain lands and tenements within the town, by Mr.
Mayor's commandment £2 13s. 4d.," and the purchase is
again referred to in the town accounts 1614-5 "the High
rent bought of the Rashleis, of Molton, 2s." (B.R., ii., 228,
129 and 134.) John Raishleigh (Peter's son) entered his
pedigree at the Visitation of London, 1634, and the following
is a copy :

BREAD  STREET  WARD.
(For the Armes see Devonshire.)

Peter Raishleygh, of Barstaple in Co. Devon, married Mary,
da. of Richard Westerne, of South Moulton, in Co. Devon.
Their sons:  John Raishleygh of London a 1634 and
William Raishleygh, second sonne.

(signed) JNO. RAISHLEIGH.

In 1615, this John Raishleigh, described as of London,
merchant, gave to " the relief of the poore of the Towne of
Southmolton for ever," £100. This sum, with another £100
was on the 1st December, 1649, expended in purchasing of
Sir Hugh Pollard, Bart., the fee simple of an estate of
56 acres, called Snapdown, in the parish of Warkleigh, and
the Charity is still in existence. This information is derived
from Mr. Cock's Records of Southmolton, whence are also taken
the following notices of Mayors of that town, viz. : 1596,
Arthur (or Anthony [22]) Rasheleigh; 1615, 1624 and 1633,
Christofer Rasheleigh. In the Parish Registers of Southmolton
occur the following entries:

"January, 1601, Christopher Rashleigh maried (sic) An Pinekome, the 17."

Baptisms. -
28th November, 1602, Dorothie, the daughter of Christopher Rashley ;
26th September, 1606, Susanne, the daughter of Christopher Rashlye ;
20th May, 1611, Elizabeth, daughter of Christopher Rashley;
26th May, 1621, Dorothie, the daughter of Christopher and Anne Rashlye ;
1st September, 1625, Temperance, the daughter of Mr. Christofer Rashleigh.

Burials. -
30th May, 1619, Dorothy fil., Mr. Rashley ;
18th July, 1620, Cicell, the daughter of Christopher Rashley;
20th April, 1631, Dorothy Rashly.

Ann Pincombe whom Mr. Christopher Rashleigh married,
belonged to an armigerous family connected with Southmolton
and its neighbourhood, commencing in the Visitation of 1564
with " _____ Pynecombe, of Northmolton, who came thither
with the Lord Zouch about the beginninge of the raigne of
K. Henry 7th." Her youngest daughter Temperance was
presumably called after Temperance, daughter of Hugh
Pollard, and great granddaughter of Sir Lewis Pollard the
Judge, who married William Pynecombe, of Southmolton
and East Buckland, one of the Coroners of Devon ; from
which we may perhaps conclude that Anne Rashleigh was a
sister of this William, and a daughter of William Pynecombe,
of Filley and East Buckland, who married a daughter
of Snowe, of Anstey.

On 11th January, 1627-8, a License was granted in
the Diocese of Exeter for the marriage of Gregory Morrell,
of Tiverton, and Suzanna Rashley, of Southmolton.
On the 7th July, 1628, Anne Rashley was married at
Southmolton to Henrye Badcock. In or about the year
1632, Elizabeth Rashleigh married Alexander Marshall,
Rector of Loxbeare, by whom she left issue. She and
her mother, then a widow, are mentioned in his Will,
dated 16th April, 1653, and proved by her at Westminster,
in July, 1653 ; and her name appears as complainant
for herself and Hugh her infant son, in a
Chancery suit of the 11th February, following against
Zacharie Cudmore and others, in respect of the advowson
of the Church of Loxbeare. On l0th July, 1641, Thomas
Badcock married Mary Rashley, at Southmolton, and in
1646 Oliver Teppin married Katherine Rashleigh. Christopher
Rashleigh may be assumed to have been a son or
grandson of Thomas, of Southmolton, mentioned in the
inquisition of 1567, or of his brother Philip, who, with
the other inhabitants of Southmolton, gave consent to a
bye-law in 1600, and is probably the man who married the
eldest daughter of Thomas Leigh, of Southmolton, and
his wife Dorothy, née Clotworthy. Arthur Rashleigh
the mayor of Southmolton in 1596, perhaps constituted
the intermediate generation. [23] As Christopher Rashleigh
had no male issue, descendants of his daughters would
be entitled to quarter the arms of the Devonshire Rashleighs.

Sir Bernard Burke gives these arms as Ar. a
cross sa.j in chief 2 Taus of the second; and with this
Risdon and Lysons agree. There is however a coat of
arms in the east window of Exeter Cathedral, Ar. a cross
gules between 4 crescents sa., and this is said to have been the
reputed coat of the Devonshire Rashleighs. The Cornish
chough in the arms of the Cornish branch arrived, I suppose,
after the migration to Cornwall. It would be interesting
to know what the arms are on the seals of the deeds
preserved at Barnstaple.

According to Lyson's (Devon ii, 249), " The Manor of
Goodleigh being parcel of the Duchy of Lancaster and extending
into the parishes of Swimbridge, Marwood and
Ilfracombe, was sold by the Crown to the Rashleigh family,
of whom it was purchased by R. N. Incledon, Esq., the
present proprietor." [24] There is no trace of this property in
the inquisitions. What was the date of the sale by the
Crown, and to whom was it made ? One would like to know
who the wives of the Rashleighs were. The advent of the
Barnstaple, Bishops Tawton, Nymet Tracey, and Torrington
properties at different dates may furnish a clue.

JAMES C. MARSHALL.

Endnotes:

[1] i.e., Newport, a suburb of Barnstaple, in the parish of BishopsTawton. Mr. Wainwright has kindly sent me a copy of a Deed of

Settlement dated Monday next after the Feast of St. Catherine, 1374, by which David John Chaplain, gave to Robert de Rayshlegh and Matilda, his wife, all his lands, tenements, rents and services in Barnestapol and Nyuport Episcopi, which he had of their gift and feoffment. To hold to the said Robert and Matilda for life with remainder to John de Rayshlegh and Johan, his wife, in fee tail, and in default of their issue to Matilda. The ultimate remainder to Matilda indicates that the settled property originally came from her.

[2] Gribble's Memorials of Barnstaple, 273 and B. R. ii., 81. TheButchers' House was apparently in some way connected with the Guildhall, perhaps under it.

[3] Johan Rayshelegh was apparently the daughter of John Colyn, of Hole, or South Hole, in the parish of Georgeham, by his wife Alice, daughter of Richard Stapiscot and Alice, daughter of Gilbert de Hole. On 30th November, 1402, a license was granted to Alice, relict of John Colyn ; also to Thomas Rayscheleigh and Joan his wife, to celebrate Divine service in their mansion of Hole in Georgeham (Hamme Sancti Georgii. Bishop Stafford's Register, and see Risdon's Survey). The wills referred to below shew Rashleighs still at Georgeham 300 years later. On 20th September, 1413, John Rayschelegh, chaplain, was licensed to serve the chapel of St. Edmund the Bishop, in the manor of Coleton, in the parish of Chumleigh.

[4] A Thomas Holman was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1406. 1419 and 1420.

[5] A John Goldsmith was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1426, 1428 and 1430.

[6] William Hertyscot was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1423, 1425, 1432,1436 and 1448.

[7] Nymet Tracy, or Bow, was at one time a member of the Barony of Barnstaple (see the Hundred Rolls, Edw. I., Memorials of Barnstaple, 65 and 66.

[8] In the grant he is described as son and heir of Thomas Raysshelegh, of South Hole, deceased, and annexed to the Deed is a piece of parchment with the following puzzling inscription : "Pedigree" (pes graduum) "of Thomas Raysshelegh" (i.e., the Thomas R. described as deceased), vizt- The same Thomas Raysshelegh is brother of Thomas.'(Apparently there were two brothers of the same name). " Son of John, son of John Burell and Matilda his wife." The solution may be that the pedigree should perhaps have said that John was son of Matilda Rashleigh, who secondly married John Burell.

[9] Walter Salisbury was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1530 and 1539.

[10] Richard Gay was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1533 and 1542.

[11] Philip Colmer was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1526.

[12] Risdon writes : "Pill had anciently lords so named, which place by the daughter of Michael de la Pill, in the age of King Edward the Second, came to Robert Fulk, of Halmeston, from whose co-heir married to Thomas Perot, after some successions in that tribe, Travers descended of an ancient family in Hampshire was invested therewith." He also says, "Newport, in this parish of Bishops Tawton was anciently a borough, and had a Mayor, as appeareth by a deed dated the fourth of Henry the Sixth, whereunto Thomas Perot was a testis, by the title of Mayor of Newport." As to the Mayors of Newport see Barn. Rec. ii., 177.

[13] Robert Colmer, senior, was Mayor of Barnstaple in 1509 and 1517.

[14] A Roger Rashleigh was parson at Bishops Nympton in 1536.

[15] Perhaps connected with the family of Munday which came into Cornwall from Derbyshire about this time.

[16] Visitations of Cornwall by Colonel Vivian, where he gives a full pedigree of the Cornish family.

[17] If this John Bray is not identical with John Rashleigh, then the only two individuals to whom I find the alias of Bray given are John Bray, or Rashleigh, temp. Rich. II., and his son Thomas, who in the inquisition of 1529 is stated to have been described in the Charter of 1397 as Thomas Bray, alias Rayshlegh.

[18] William Salisbury was Mayor of Barnstaple, 1558.

[19] William Dawkins was Mayor of Barnstaple, 1563 and 1574.

[20] The testator does not call Thomas, Walter and Philip his brothers unless the hiatus after Thomas Rassheley contained as it probably did the words "fratri meo," but they undoubtedly were so, as the estates given them take precedence of the gift to his nephews.

[21] The Tubbs were an armigerous family, and Elienor's marriage is mentioned in Vivian's Visitations of Cornwall, "George Tubb of Trengoffe in Warleggan married Eleanor, dau. of Robert Rasheley of Hole, co. Devon." She was buried at Warleggan, 8th June, 1591.

[22] In his list of Mayors Mr. Cock gives the name "Arthur," but on page 11 he apparently calls the same man "Anthony."

[23] The following Wills, etc., are or were at Exeter in the Court of the Archdeaconry of Barnstaple. The first six are I believe missing:

1597, Nov. 10. Thomas Raishly, Nimet Regis (Kings Nympton, 4 or 5 miles from Southmolton.

1607, March 27 __________ Raishleigh, Gorgeham.

1611, June 10 __________ Raishley, Nimet Regis.

1615, August 1. Johan Rayshley, Nimet Regis (Account).

1620, March 7. James Rayshley, Georgeham.

1631, August 30. Alice Rashleigh, Southmolton.

1662, May 9. Christopher Rashley, Georgeham (Administration).

1667, August 10. Alice Rashley, Georgeham (ditto).

1674, March 5. Joan Rashley, Georgeham (Testament).

1688, March 1. Francis Rashley, Georgeham (Administration).

1688, December 7. Peter Rashley, Ilfracombe (Testament).

l695, June 7. Jane Rashley, Georgeham (ditto).

A Robert Rashleigh, of Coombe (Ilfracombe ?), married on 8th June, 1674, Joanna, daughter of Christopher Clobery, of Bradston.

[24] Lysons wrote in 1822.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Will of Temperance Pincombe dated 7 Mar 1636 (probated 15 Jun 1637) - PROB 11/174 - Image Reference 379/332

The will of Temperance Pincombe identified the exact same children as the will of her husband William Pincombe so John Pincombe at Oxford and son of William Pincombe of Filleigh is not part of this family. Discovering that family line may be possible only with the Manor Records - a project for the future.

Temperance also mentions the Rashleigh family. Her husband William identified Christopher Rashleigh as his cousin. In my googling of the Rashleigh and Pincombe families as a + unit I discovered a fifteen page writeup in Devon Notes and Queries which I have captured to read through. This particular article (117. Rashleigh of Devon. Devon Notes and Queries, Volume IV, Part VI, April 1907. James G Commin Exeter (Pages 201 - 215)) refers to the Pincombe family into which Christopher Rashleigh married into on 17 Jan 1601 as follows:

"In the Parish Registers of Southmolton
occur the following entries: "January, 1601,
Christopher Rashleigh maried (sic) An Pinekome, the 17."
Baptisms. 28th November, 1602, Dorothie, the daughter of
Christopher Rashley ; 26th September, 1606, Susanne, the
daughter of Christopher Rashlye ; 2oth May, 1611, Elizabeth,
daughter of Christopher Rashley; 26th May, 1621, Dorothie,
the daughter of Christopher and Anne Rashlye ; ist September,
1625, Temperance, the daughter of Mr. Christofer
Rashleigh. Burials. 3oth May, 1619, Dorothy fil., Mr.
Rashley ; i8th July, 1620, Cicell, the daughter of Christopher
Rashley; 2oth April, 1631, Dorothy Rashly.
Ann Pincombe whom Mr. Christopher Rashleigh married,
belonged to an armigerous family connected with Southmolton
and its neighbourhood, commencing in the Visitation of 1564
with " Pynecombe, of Northmolton, who came thither
with the Lord Zouch about the beginninge of the raigne of
K. Henry 7th." Her youngest daughter Temperance was
presumably called after Temperance, daughter of Hugh
Pollard, and great granddaughter of Sir Lewis Pollard the
Judge, who married William Pynecombe, of Southmolton
and East Buckland, one of the Coroners of Devon ; from
which we may perhaps conclude that Anne Rashleigh was a
sister of this William, and a daughter of William Pynecombe,
of Filley and East Buckland, who married a daughter
of Snowe, of Anstey."

From William (of Filley and East Buckland married to Emmote Snow)'s will (my blog dated 30 Jul 2011) his children were identified as John, William, Symon, Richard, Thomas, Lewis, Peter, Johane and Katherin. The birth date of William (second eldest son) was identified from the Visitation of Devon 1620 as 1566. The two daughters are not identified as married however and this will was written 20 Dec 1602. Why would he not have identified his daughter Ann if he had one as married to Christopher Rashleigh? How old were Johane and Katherine his identified daughters. He doesn't list any of his children as under 21. The second eldest son William is identified in the Visitation of Devon of 1620 as being 54 years of age and hence born in 1566. William (second eldest son) is then 36 at the time of the writing of the will. William (died 1602) in his will does identify two of his sons with children (John with three daughters and Richard with one son (my ancestor)). He does use the term "accomplishe one and twentie yeares of age" with regard to a legacy to Elizabeth Colliscotte so presumably his children are all over 21.

His son William (married to Temperance Pollard)'s will (see blog 12 August 2011) identifies Christopher Rashleigh as his cousin. If he was married to his father's sister then he would have been his uncle. The relationship is somewhat more distant but still congenial in that Temperance Pincombe (wife of this William (will dated 1625)) refers to one of the daughters of Christopher Rashleigh and Ann Pincombe (as listed above).  I do have the Parish Registers for South Molton and eventually will transcribe them. Since she is related to the family with the coat of arms then that places her into the family of John Pincombe merchant at South Molton. Surprisingly she does not appear on the Visitation of 1620 but also I did not find an individual page for the Rashleigh family in the 1620 Visitation of Devon. 

It doesn't really seem logical not to even mention the Rashleigh family if his daughter Ann married Christopher Rashleigh. Since Ann was descended from the line with the armorial bearings than it must be John Pincombe's line at South Molton and the wills appear earlier on my blog (1 August 2011 and 4 August 2011). This is the line that received the armorial bearings from the College of Arms but that must be earlier than the 1616 listed on the Chart from the earlier researchers unless the author of this Rashleigh article, James C Marshall, was mistaken in listing her as being descended from the Pincombe family with the armorial bearings. In later years it would appear that she was thus descended because the line did receive a coat of arms. Obviously I need to learn more about the Coat of Arms of the Pincombe family.  That may lead me to the parents of Ann Pincombe married to Christopher Rashleigh.

The will of Temperance Pincombe follows:

Recorded: 13 August 2011
Source: Public Record Office, London, UK, PROB 11/174 - Image Reference 379/332
Place: South Molton, Devon, England
Type of Record: Will
Dated: 7 Mar 1636  (probated 15 Jun 1637)
Condition: photocopy, fairly clear, light, old English writing

[in margin] T[estator] Temperance Pincombe


1    In the name of God Amen the Seaventh day of March
2    in the yeare of our Lord God one Thousand sixe hundrede thirtie sixe I Temperance
3    Pincombe of South Molton in the Countie of Devon widdow being sick of body but of perfect
4    remembrance thanks be to Almighty God doe make this my last will and Testament in
5    manner ande forme following that is to saie First I bequeath my soule to Almighty God my
6    maker and Redeemer trusting by the meritts and mercies of Jesus Christ to obteyne everlasting
7    bliss in the world to come And my body in hope of a glorious resurrection I comitt unto
8    Christian buriall in the Church of Southmolton aforesaid Item I give unto Mr. John Corin
9    Twentie shillings and I give towardes the repara[t]ion of the Church of Southmolton Tenne
10    shillings Item I give to the poore people of Southmolton foure poundes to be distributed
11    amongest them on the day of my buriall Item I give unto William Pincombe my sonne
12    and Bridgett Pincombe my daughter in lawe fortie poundes And unto Elizabeth Pincombe
13    Bridgett Pincombe and Temperance Pincombe my Grandchildren severallie twentie poundes and
14    one payre of sheets a peece to be paid unto them by my executor hereafter named and by him to be
15    employed for them till it shall please god that they be maryed or doe accomplishe the age of one &
16    twentie yeares And if either of them shall dye before that tyme then such her por[t]ion shall
17    remayne amongest the rest that shall survive Item I give unto Alice Pollard my kinswoman
18    Fourtie shillings unto Sara the daughter of Johane Hill Tenne shillings and one sheepe, unto
19    Samuell Tucker and his three daughters fortie shillings to be devided equally amongest them
20    unto Elizabeth the daughter of Mr John Coren Tenne shillings unto Susan Morrell Twentie
21    shillings unto her sonne John Morrell Tenne shillings unto Grace Rashley twentie shillings unto
22    Temperance Rashley Twentie shillings and one sheepe and unto Katherine Rashleigh Tenne shillings
23    Item I give unto Elizabeth Bidgood my servant Tenne shillings unto Baldwin Wilce Twentie
24    shillings unto Johane the wife of Humfrey Buckingham Twentie shillings unto Mary Hill
25    Twentie shillings unto Johane Thorne fortie shillings unto Christian Mogford my servant
26    Tenne shillings and unto Nicholas Hunt Tenne shillings The rest of all my goodes & chattells
27    not before given I give and bequeath unto William Pincombe my Grandchild And I make
28    him my whole and sole executor of this my last will and Testament And my intent is that
29    my said sonne William Pincombe shall have the whole managing of my estate for the good
30    of my executor And I desire Henry Worth Es[quir]e Mr. John Worth and Mr. Christopher
31    Rashley to see this my last will performed and to that end I make them my Overseers; In
32    witnes, whereof I have hereunto sett my hande and seale. Signed d[__]ie Temperance
33    Pincombe [signed] Signed and sealed in the presence of Christopher Rashleigh [signed] Bald[wi]n Wilce [signed]
34    Anne Badcock [signed]

Noteworthy in this will, the references to Grace Rashly, Temperance Rashly and Katherine Rashleigh does not entirely fit the names of the children of Christopher and Ann Rashleigh mentioned in Devon Notes and Queries quoted above (notably the names were:  Suzanne, Elizabeth and Temperance Rashleigh.

I have managed to miss one will in all of this that I had meant to do and this will is for the father of Bartholomew Pincombe of North Molton (see blog of 7 August 2011). Part of the reason for this is the desire on my part to work on the Richard Pincombe of Poughill will and the misinformation that entered into the earlier Pincombe study. Richard of Poughill did not have any children but Richard of Chittlehampton did marry Jane Bond and they did have children at Chittlehampton. The Pincombe family of Poughill does not appear at Chittlehampton. The Richard Pincombe at Chittlehampton is a son of Bartholomew Pincombe of North Molton.

Working on the Thomas Pincombe will means working on the Parish Registers of North Molton for which I have six fiche. The nights are starting to darken and the days less bright so I can start to feel the time of heavy transcription coming on. North Molton was certainly in my line of vision but tended to keep getting passed by in favour of my Blake one name Study. I shall commence the registers for North Molton before I transcribe the will of Thomas Pincombe at North Molton (written  8 Nov 1651 and probated 20 Sep 1653).This Thomas (by age) does have the potential to be a first cousin of my Richard Pincombe who died in 1648 at Bishops Nympton. Thomas Pencombe of Filleigh and East Buckland (and Johane his wife presumably) were said to have had five children: William (d 1602 of Filleigh and East Buckland) married to Emotte Snow, John of North Molton married to Emet Hodge 1 Jul 1560 at North Molton, Alice married to John Lock 29 Nov 1561 at North Molton, Richard (had a son Thomas and a daughter Helen who married Mathew Goule 19 May 1617 at Chittlehampton) and an unknown daughter who married John Jesse (sp) and had a son John Jesse.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Willl of William Pincombe dated 28 Jun 1625 - PROB 11/147 - Image Reference 501/397

The Visitations of Devon for 1620 and 1686 do assist with linking this William (testator in the will dated 28 Jun 1625)  married to Temperance Pollard with William of East Buckland (see my blog dated 30 Jul 2011). William was still unmarried when his father died in 1602. Under the Visitation we have William Pyncombe married to [Emotte] da[ughter] of Snowe of Antstey Devon with three of their sons listed John, Richard and William (John and Richard are listed because they were overseers of their brother William's will). William is listed with the following notations:

William Pynecombe of Southmolton and of of E[a]st Buckland in Devon,  Coroner of the same Countie 14 or 15 years together, aet 54, 1620. Will 28 June, pro[bated] 17 Dec 1625 P.C.C. (Clarke 138) and married to Temperance, da[ughter] of Hugh Pollard, 1 son of Robert Pollard, Esq[uire], brother to S[i]r Hugh Pollard, K[nigh]t, both sonnes to S[i]r Lewis Pollard, K[nigh]t, the Judge. Ex[ecu]trix of her husband's will. Will 7 Mar 1636/37, pro[bated] 15 June 1637. P.C.C. (Goare 94).

The information on William gives us his date of birth as 1566 since he is 54 years old in 1620. John is the eldest brother in this family so must have been born in 1564 or 1565 since their grandmother Johane does not mention the wife of William Pincombe or any children in her will of 1563. This makes for a neat timeline for this family. We know the father of this William was dead by 28 December 1602, married by 1564 and one wonders how old he would have been when he married. All of his siblings had at least one child and dates of baptism are unknown except for the daughter of John Pyncombe who was baptized Johane 5 Jun 1561 at North Molton.  That at least gives us an estimate of 1530s to 1540s for the births of the children of Thomas and Johane Pincombe. Then according to the Visitation the grandfather of these children who came to North Molton with Lord Zouch was an adult supposedly in 1485. Does that seem reasonable that this Pincombe would be having children in the early 1600s to 1610s when he would be 35 to 45? Well it could be especially if he married twice. A first marriage could have produced the one John Pincombe - the ancestor of Gertrude Pyncombe and would answer the question why no Pincombe relations. If they were all half siblings/half cousins and separated in age by a generation they may not have known each other by the second or third generation and Gertrude was five generations down from the original Pincombe who arrived at North Molton with Lord Zouch.  I am starting to rethink my earlier thought that there was an extra generation. A second marriage would also be very logical especially given naming two sons John. Although both of these sons lived at South Molton which is perhaps surprising!

I hadn't looked at the William Pincombe/Temperance Pollard family previously  with a timeline in mind and for them I do have a year of birth for William son of  William Pincombe and Emotte Snowe. The other item to ponder at this point is the will left by Emot Pincombe in 1620 according to the Devon Calendar of wills on Genuki Devon. Was this Emotte married to William Pincombe who died in 1602 or was this Emet Hodge married to John Pyncombe? If it was Emotte then she outlived her husband by 18 years and would have been in her 80s likely when she died (which isn't impossible as some people did live that long even back in the 1600s).

The children of William Pincombe and Temperance Pollard are then listed as

William Pynecombe, eldest sonne, aet 13, ano. 1620. Named in the wills of his father and mother, living 1637
 and married to Bridget, da. of Henry Worth of Washfield, mar. lic. 14, mar. 16 Feb 1628/29 at Washfield. Named in the will of her mother in law, living 1636. (The chart from the earlier researchers has a baptismal date of 16 Mar 1606. The IGI has a baptism (patron entry) 16 Mar 1605 at North Molton for a William Pyncombe son of William Pyncombe.)

John Pincombe, baptized 4 Aug 1610 (from the chart produced by the earlier researchers). Again the IGI has a baptism for a John Pyncombe 4 Aug 1610 at North Molton son of William Pyncombe (patron entry).

Only William is mentioned in his father's will (see below).

The children of William Pincombe and Bridget Worth:

William, Pincombe, bap 4 Feb 1620/30 at Washfield (executor of his grandmother's will) and married to Gertrude who was buried 8 Jan 1685/86 at South Molton.

Elizabeth, 1 da., bap. 17 Nov 1631 at Washfield, named in her grandmother's will, living 1637

Bridget, 2 da., named in her grandmother's will, living 1637.


Temperance, 3 da., named in her grandmother's will, living 1637

If John found in the Oxford Alumnus Roll is their son then he was born 1646. However they were not living at Filleigh. I shall need to search down through the Manor Books if they exist for this area; the parish registers for Filleigh and East Buckland do not begin until the latter part of the 1680s. I was not sure if John was a son of William Pincombe and Bridget Worth but the information from the Visitation would appear to discount his being their son.

Will of William Pincombe dated 28 Jun 1625 - PROB 11/147 - Image Reference 501/397

Recorded: 9 Oct 2005, Revised 12 Aug 2011
Source: Public Record Office, London, UK, PROB 11/147 - Image Reference 501/397
Place: South Molton, Devon, England
Type of Record: Will
Dated: 28  June 1625 (probated 17 Dec 1625)
Condition: photocopy, fairly clear, light, old English writing

[in margin] T[estator] William Pincombe

1    In the name of God Amen
2    the eight and Twentyth day of June Anno Domino one Thousand sixe hundred Twentyfive
3    I William Pincombe of South Molton in the County of Devon gent being of good and
4    perfect memory (god bee praised) doe make and ordayne this my last will and Testament in
5    manner and forme followinge viz[ a vi]t First I commend my soule into the hands of god my maker
6    hopeing assuredly through the onely meritts of Jesus Christ my Saviour to bee made p[ar]taker of  life
7    everlastinge And I commend my body to the earth where of it was made Item I give and bequeath to ye
8    poore of South Molton forty shillings And to the poor of East Buckland ten shillings Item I give
9    devise and bequeath unto Temperance my wife all my tearme and estate in the farme & of  Barton
10    called haiche otherwise hatch in Southmoulton w[hi]ch I clayme to hold by the demise of Arthur
11    Ackland Esq[uir]e and Ellinor his wife by theire deed indented beareing date the Tenth daie of May in the
12    fortyth yeare of the Raigne of o[u]r late Soveraigne Lady Queene Elizabeth in as large and ample
13    manner as the same is graunted unto mee by the said recytes and Indented Together with the said
14    deed Item I give and bequeath unto William Pincombe my Sonne the Tablebord in the hall at west-
15    cott in East Buckland All other my other standing bedsteeds and one other bedsteed there the sealinge of
16    the hall. the cupbord in the said hall and all shelves and Tymber of mine whatsoever now w[i]thin ye
17    houses of the said Tenement or elsewhere on the said Tenem[en]t called Westcott wheresoever Item
18    I give and bequeath unto my said sonne my second best bedsteed my second best featherbed p[re]formed
19    w[i]th my second best bed clothes my best Cloke my Rapier and poyinard with all my girdles and
20    hangings and all my bookes and my spruce deske to bee all delivered unto him within one moneth after
21    my decease Item I give and bequeath unto the said William Pincombe my Sonne my great brasse
22    kettle my greatest brasse pan, my greatest brasse caldron and my two Silver Bowles my best
23    bedsteed and best featherbed p[re]formed with the best bedclothes that I shall have at the tyme of my
24    death And my will is that his Mother shall have the use of theis dureing her life if shee soe longe live
25    unmarried And shall not sell or ymbesill the same or any p[ar]te thereof Item I give and bequeath to my
26    loveing kinswoman Temperance Uppington five pounds of lawfull English money Item I give devise
27    and bequeath unto my said wife the mesuage and Tenem[en]t wherein I now dwell in South Molton w[i]th
28    the Courtilage Backeside and Garden to the same belonginge and the backeside where the Rackes
29    stand and the Garden now in the possession of Andrew Wolcott To have and to hold unto the said
30    Temperance my wife for and dureing the terme of one and Twenty yeres if she soe longe happen to
31    live after my decease The remaynder of mine estate and terme in the premisses w[hi]ch shal[l ]be then to
32    come and unexpired I doe give devise and bequeath unto my said sonne William Pincombe w[i]th the
33    severall deeds of the same Provided allwaies and my will is that my said sonne William Pincombe
34    shall paye or cause to bee payd unto mine Executrix hereafter named the somme of forty pounds of
35    lawfull english money w[i]thin two yeres next after my decease by Twenty pounds a yere And if he the
36    said William my Sonne shall refuse soe to doe Then my will is that all these legacies by this my will
37    to him the said William my Sonne soe given and bequeathed shal[l ]be voyd and accrue unto the benefitt
38    of mine executrix as though they had never beene given or bequeathed unto him anythinge herein
39    conteyned to the contrary, in any wise notw[i]thstanding Item I further give and bequeath unto him my
40    said Sonne William Pincomb my Truncke covered w[i]th Sailes skines and my woodricke at
41    westcott w[hi]ch standeth by the East maynehouse there, All the residue of my goods and Chattles not
42    heretofore given and bequeathed I doe give and bequeath unto Temperance Pincombe my deare
43    and loveinge wife whom I doe ordayne and make my whole and sole Executrix of this my present last
44    Will and Testament And I doe appoynt overseers of the same my deere and much respected
45    cosin Mr. Christopher Rashleigh and my loveing Brothers John Pincombe and Richarde
46    Pincombe to see this my last will p[er]formed in all things And I give unto every of them for theire
47    paynes to bee taken therein ten shillings apeece In witnes whereof I the aforesaid William Pincombe
48    to this my present last will & testament myne hand and Seale have sett geeven the daie and yere
49    first above written in the presence of those p[er]sons whose names are here underwritten William
50    Pincombe Chr. Rashleigh Jo[sep]h Hurwood John Bradford by mee Mary Oliver

This is Richard Pincombe's of Bishops Nympton older brother (my direct ancestor). Richard has been chosen as an overseer by his brother William probably because he is the next in order after the eldest brother John. Simon is in "Foreign Parts" as we learned in the will of their father William Pincombe in 1602. Richard was the fourth son. This line is completely separate from the Pincombe line that lived at Poughill; there is no crossover with respect to mentioning cousins, etc. At this generation they are already second cousins and if there were two marriages they are only half second cousins. Given the distance that separates them it is not surprising that they are no longer in communication on such vital issues as overseers, etc.

The next will to transcribe will be for Temperance the wife of William Pincombe whose will I have transcribed in this blog.