William West, 1st Baron De La Warr of the second creation (c. 1520 – 30 December 1595) was the
elder son of Sir George West (d.1538), second son of Thomas West,
8th Baron De La Warr, by his third wife, Eleanor Copley, and
Elizabeth Morton, widow of Robert Walden, and daughter of Sir Robert Morton of Lechlade, Gloucestershire.[1][2][3] He was nephew and adopted heir of his uncle of the half blood, Thomas West,
9th Baron De La Warr, eldest son of the 8th Baron's second wife,
Elizabeth Mortimer.
Inheritance
According to Riordan:[4]
[In 1549 the 9th Baron] placed a private
bill before parliament to disinherit his nephew William West, first Baron De La
Warr (c.1519–1595). The latter was the son of the ninth baron's half-brother
Sir George West of Warbleton (d. 1538) and his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir
Robert Morton of Lechlade, Gloucestershire. His uncle was childless, and had at
some time adopted William as his heir. However, West tried to gain the de la
Warr estate early by poisoning his uncle. The attempt was unsuccessful and he
was in the Tower by October 1548. He was disinherited by an act of parliament
in 1550, although he had been reinstated as heir by the time of his uncle's
death.
Despite the fact that he had been
reinstated as heir by his uncle, when the latter died in 1554 William West was
unable to inherit the barony of de la Warr as a result of the Act of Parliament
of 1550 which had deprived him of all honours. Two years later he was involved
in the Dudley, and on
30 June 1556 was arraigned at the Guildhall on charges of treason, to which he
responded as 'William, Lord de la Warr', forcing the heralds to prove during
the trial that he was not entitled to the barony and therefore not entitled to
a trial by his peers in the House of Lords. He was convicted of treason.
However the death sentence was not carried out, and in 1557 he was pardoned by Queen Mary. He fought at the siege of St. Quentin in
that year, and in 1563, early in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,
was restored in blood. On 5 February 1570 he was knighted, and on the same day
created Baron De La Warr, which was regarded as a new creation of the title.[4]
Peerage
West took part as a peer in the trials and convictions of Thomas
Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk and, later, his son, Philip
Howard, 20th Earl of Arundel.
He was junior peer in his lifetime, as
latest created. However, his son and descendants have been seated with the precedence of
1299, as though they had inherited his uncle Thomas's title. By the modern
rules of the House of Lords, his
uncle's title fell into abeyance between the
daughters of William West's second uncle, Sir Owen West, or their heirs; however, as Cokayne notes,
such rules are at best modern approximations to actual medieval practice. What
seems clear is that some, but not all, writers treat the letters patent as clarifying the descent of the
ancient title, rather than creating a new one, hence William is sometimes
referred to as 10th baron.
Personal life
He married Elizabeth Strange and was the
father of one son, Thomas West,
2nd Baron De La Warr, and three daughters, Jane, Elizabeth, and
Mary. Jane West married firstly Thomas Wenman, secondly James Cressy, and
thirdly Thomas Tasburgh
(c.1554 – c.1602), of Hawridge, Buckinghamshire.[5]
West was succeeded as Baron De La Warr by
his son Thomas West,
2nd Baron De La Warr.[6]
Marriages and issue
West married firstly, before 1555,
Elizabeth Strange, the daughter of Thomas Strange of Chesterton, Gloucestershire, by whom he had two sons and
three daughters:[7]
- Thomas West, 2nd Baron De La Warr.
- William West, who emigrated to Virginia in 1610, was killed later that year by Indians near the falls of the James River, and died unmarried and without issue.
- Mary West, who married Richard Blount, esquire, of Dedisham in Slinfold, Sussex, by whom she had five daughters.
- Jane West, who married firstly, 9 June 1572, Thomas Wenman, esquire, son and heir of Sir Richard Wenman, by whom she had three sons, Richard Wenman, 1st Viscount Wenman, Ferdinand Wenman and Sir Thomas Wenman, and a daughter, Elizabeth Wenman, who married Sir Thomas Tredway; secondly James Cressy of Wilton, Buckinghamshire, by whom she had a daughter Lettice Cressy, who married Sir John Tasburgh; thirdly, as his second wife, Thomas Tasburgh, esquire, of Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, by whom she had no issue; and fourthly, as his second wife, Ralph Sheldon, esquire, of Beoley, Worcestershire (d. March 1613).
- Elizabeth West, who died unmarried.
1.
No comments:
Post a Comment