Harvey, Dor.

Harvey, Dor.

Female

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Harvey, Dor. (daughter of Harvey, Richard and Highe, Margaret).

    Family/Spouse: Hartgill, William. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Harvey, Richard was born about 1480 in Somersetshire, England (son of Harvey, Humphrey and Atwater, Agnes); died on 4 Jan 1526.

    Notes:

    Collinson, John, The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset: With a Map and Engravings, Volume 2, Cruttevell, 1791, page 120-121

    BROCKLEY.
    THIS is ſmall pariſh in the ſecond ſubdiviſion of the hundred, nine miles ſouth
    weſt from Briſtol, and three north from Wrington, in the turnpike-road from
    Briſtol to Yatton and Congerſbury. The ſituation is very pleaſant, and conſtſts of
    great variety of ſurface; and from ſome parts the proſpects are very beautiful.
    About quarter of mile eaſtward of the church is very fine romantick glen,
    called Brockley-German', about half mile in length, and very narrow; each ſide being
    ſteep ſlope formed of rugged rocks mixed with timber-trees, yews, foreſt and other
    ſhrubs, that grow out of the crcvices of the ſtone. In the deepeſt part the trees are
    very lofty, and the rocks almoſt inacceſſible to the height of near three hundred feet,
    projecting in many places through, and towering above the tops of the branches, with
    -a rude and aſtoniſhing grandeur. The ſteep aſcent and rugged ſurface of the rocks
    on each ſide are rendered very romantick by the fantaſtically twiſted forms of the
    roots of many trees and ſlirubs which ſpring from the crevices, and ſpread their branches
    in the moſt pictureſque manner. Along the bottom is fine grave] walk, and nearly in
    the center of the Combe is neat cottage, where many reſort to drink tea in the ſummer
    ſeaſon. If this ſpot had the advantage of water, it would be ſecond Matlock on
    ſmaller ſcale, but not leſs romantick and beautiful.

    ...

    By an inquiſition taken at Langport 17 Oct. 20 Hen. VIII. it appeared that Richard
    the ſon and heir of Humphry Harvey died Jan 4., 17 Hen. VIII. ſeized of one third of
    the manor of Brockley, five meſiiiages, one cottage, one windmill, one dove-houſe,
    five gardens, twenty-three acres of arable, fifteen of meadow, eighty-eight acres of
    wood, and tenpence rent in Brockley, together with the advowſon of the church.
    Which premiſes were certified to be holden of the King as of his barony of Wigmore
    by knight's ſervice. Nicholas Harvey, his ſon and heir, was then of' the age oſ eleven
    years." Sir James Perceval was truſtee of the family eſtates in Brockley, Backwell, and
    Barrow, for the uſe of Richard Harvey above-mentioned.d Of this family of Harvey
    the manor of Brockley was at length purchaſed by Thomas Pigott, of the kingdom of
    Ireland, eſq; who married Florence, widow of Thomas Smyth, of Long-Aſhton, eſq;
    and it is now the property of his deſcendant the preſent John Pigott, eſq; who has
    pleaſant ſeat near the church.

    Richard married Highe, Margaret. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Highe, Margaret
    Children:
    1. Harvey, ESQ. Nicholas was born in 1515; died in 1586.
    2. Harvey, Thomas
    3. 1. Harvey, Dor.
    4. Harvey, Anne


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Harvey, HumphreyHarvey, Humphrey was born in 1455 (son of Harvey, Nicholas and Scoville, Elizabeth); died on 5 Mar 1516 in England; was buried in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    History of Parliament ... 1439-1509: . Biographies of the Members of the Commons House, page 447:
    Hervey (Harvey), Humphrey (1455-1516); of Bristol. M.P. Wells 1483 Jan, 1485-6, 1489-90. S. of Nicholas Hervey M.P. (1425-71) by Elizabeth (Scofield); m. (1) Agnes da. of John atte Water of Wells M.P., and (2) Elizabeth Hawkys, widow who survived him. 2

    Witnessed a Wells deed 1480, 2 but never admtd. to freedom of Wells; a feoffe for thomas Seynour in Beckingham, Som., 1489, 3 J.P Somerset , 11 July 1488 to 5 Mar. 1512; on Somerset comns. 1494 to 1505; exor. of the will of his father-in-law, John Atwater, 1500. 4

    D. 5 Apr. 1516, when Richard, aged 35, was his s. and h.; will, dat. 4 Mar., pr. 14 Apr. 1516. To br bur. in All Hallows, Bristol. Jane Champneys, widow, his sis.-in-law, John Maudeley of Nonnery, clothier, and John Mawdeley ofWells, clothier, to give the lands of Henry Chester, late of Bristol, draper. The same exors. together with Rivhard his son (written by John Collys of Bristol, notary). 5

    2 Hervey Dictionary, No. 2032.
    3 Cal. Inq. Hen. VII, i. No. 537.
    4 P.C.C., 17 Moone.
    5 P.C.C., 16 Holder

    Note: P.C.C is "Prerogative Court of Canterbury"

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    Prior to the reign of Henry VIII. (which began A. D. 1509) several families bearing the name Harvey, and said to be descended from a common ancestor, were settled in Somersetshire,(+) England; in which county at that time many manors were held (according to Domesday Book) under and by virtue of grants made by William the Conqueror to his brother Robert Earl of Morton, and to others of the King's Norman followers. [See "The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset," by the Rev. John Collinson, Bath, 1791.]

    ______________________________________________________________

    The architectural antiquities of the city of Wells by John Henry Parker, 1866:

    William Gascoigne, Esq., of Bridgwater, who was elected one of the representatives in parliament for that town in 1413, and whose son, "William Gascoigne, lived in Wells, and represented the city in parliament, having been chosen to fill that office in 1447. In 1417, William Gascoigne the elder purchased one-third of the manor of Newton Placey, in the parish of North Petherton, near Bridgwater, of John de Garton, a descendant of Emma, one of the three sisters and co-heiresses of Sir Richard de Placetis, from whose family the name of the manor, Placey, or Placetis, was derived. William Gascoigne, the son, married Johane, daughter of Robert Bavent, and widow of Humphrey* Scovell, lord of the manor of Brockley, Somerset, and by whom she had three daughters, her co-heiresses. Elizabeth, the third daughter, married Sir Nicholas Harvey, whose son and heir, Humphrey Harvey, was elected member of parliament for "Wells in 1482, and 1488. He was a man of great wealth and importance, having married Agnes, daughter of John Attewater, Esq., of Wells, whose extensive estates in Wells and other parts of Somersetshire he thus acquired. As a proof of the local influence of this John Attewater, it may be mentioned that he was M.P. for Wells 23 Edward IV. and 1 Richard II., and Mayor of the city no less than ten times between the years 1453 and 1485.

    *note from M. Hervey: to be consistent with "The Visitations of the County of Somerset, in the Years 1531 and 1573, Together with Additional Pedigrees, Chiefly from the Visitation of 1591" this should read "widow of Joh. Scoffeilde"


    Buried:
    Alhalowes Parish Church

    Humphrey married Atwater, Agnes. Agnes (daughter of Atwater, John) died before Jun 1500. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Atwater, AgnesAtwater, Agnes (daughter of Atwater, John); died before Jun 1500.

    Notes:

    The architectural antiquities of the city of Wells by John Henry Parker, 1866:

    William Gascoigne, Esq., of Bridgwater, who was elected one of the representatives in parliament for that town in 1413, and whose son, "William Gascoigne, lived in Wells, and represented the city in parliament, having been chosen to fill that office in 1447. In 1417, William Gascoigne the elder purchased one-third of the manor of Newton Placey, in the parish of North Petherton, near Bridgwater, of John de Garton, a descendant of Emma, one of the three sisters and co-heiresses of Sir Richard de Placetis, from whose family the name of the manor, Placey, or Placetis, was derived. William Gascoigne, the son, married Johane, daughter of Robert Bavent, and widow of Humphrey Scovell, lord of the manor of Brockley, Somerset, and by whom she had three daughters, her co-heiresses. Elizabeth, the third daughter, married Sir Nicholas Harvey, whose son and heir, Humphrey Harvey, was elected member of parliament for "Wells in 1482, and 1488. He was a man of great wealth and importance, having married Agnes, daughter of John Attewater, Esq., of Wells, whose extensive estates in Wells and other parts of Somersetshire he thus acquired. As a proof of the local influence of this John Attewater, it may be mentioned that he was M.P. for Wells 23 Edward IV. and 1 Richard II., and Mayor of the city no less than ten times between the years 1453 and 1485.

    Children:
    1. Harvey, Turner was born in 1485 in England; died after 1585 in England.
    2. 2. Harvey, Richard was born about 1480 in Somersetshire, England; died on 4 Jan 1526.
    3. Harvey, William was born before 1485.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Harvey, Nicholas was born in 1425 in Calstock, Cornwall, England (son of Harvey, Richard and Lanhidrake, Margaret St. Bony of); died on 4 May 1471 in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England; was buried in Bradford, Torridge District, Devon, England.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: of Eastbury-in-Godalming, Surrey

    Notes:

    History of Parliament ... 1439-1509: . Biographies of the Members of the Commons House, page 447:
    Hervey (Harvey), Humphrey (1455-1516); of Bristol. M.P. Wells 1483 Jan, 1485-6, 1489-90. S. of Nicholas Hervey M.P. (1425-71) by Elizabeth (Scofield); m. (1) Agnes da. of John atte Water of Wells M.P., and (2) Elizabeth Hawkys, widow who survived him. Witnessed a Wells deed 1480, but never admtd. to freedom of Wells

    History of Parliament ... 1439-1509: . Biographies of the Members of the Commons House, page 448:

    HERVEY, Sir (?) NICHOLAS (I425- 71); of Eastbury in Godalming, Surrey. Recorder of Bristol. Lawyer. M.P. Launceston 1449 (I); Hindon 1459, 1467-8. Lancastnan.

    S. of Richard Hervey, M.P. Lostwithiel, who was s. of Robert Hervey of Lostwithiel; m. Elizabeth, da. and coho of John Scofield. He lived at Eastbury, Surrey, which manor belonged to the family of Brocas and his wife's sis. m. Humphrey Brocas. As these ladies, Elizabeth and Eleanor: were das. and cohs. of John Scofield of Brackley near Bristol, the editor of the Hervey Dictionary concludes that the Members for Launceston and Rindon were identical with the Nicholas Hervey who was Recorder of Bristol and the Sir Nicholas Hervey slain at Tewkesbury.3

    J.P. Surrey, of the quorum, 4 July 1458 to 24 Dec. 1460; on Surrey comns., issued by the Lancastrian party in 1459 and 1460; on a Devon comn. in 1464, and Bristol comns. in 1468 and 1469. He was sued by a priest called Henry Ward as " of Betteshanger" for falsifying deeds of lands in Northboume, Kent, in 1453, and a Nicholas Hervey, gent., was a feoffee for lands in Hants in 1469 .
    In Warkworth's Chronicle (p. 18) Sir Nicholas Hervey was killed at Tewkesbury. , 4 May 1471. He may have been knighted immediately before the battle.

    3. Hervey Dictionary, No. 2029.

    _______________________________________________________

    From "The architectural antiquities of the city of Wells" by John Henry Parker, 1866:

    William Gascoigne, Esq., of Bridgwater, who was elected one of the representatives in parliament for that town in 1413, and whose son, "William Gascoigne, lived in Wells, and represented the city in parliament, having been chosen to fill that office in 1447. In 1417, William Gascoigne the elder purchased one-third of the manor of Newton Placey, in the parish of North Petherton, near Bridgwater, of John de Garton, a descendant of Emma, one of the three sisters and co-heiresses of Sir Richard de Placetis, from whose family the name of the manor, Placey, or Placetis, was derived. William Gascoigne, the son, married Johane, daughter of Robert Bavent, and widow of Humphrey* Scovell, lord of the manor of Brockley, Somerset, and by whom she had three daughters, her co-heiresses. Elizabeth, the third daughter, married Sir Nicholas Harvey, whose son and heir, Humphrey Harvey, was elected member of parliament for "Wells in 1482, and 1488. He was a man of great wealth and importance, having married Agnes, daughter of John Attewater, Esq., of Wells, whose extensive estates in Wells and other parts of Somersetshire he thus acquired. As a proof of the local influence of this John Attewater, it may be mentioned that he was M.P. for Wells 23 Edward IV. and 1 Richard II., and Mayor of the city no less than ten times between the years 1453 and 1485.

    *note from M. Hervey: to be consistent with "The Visitations of the County of Somerset, in the Years 1531 and 1573, Together with Additional Pedigrees, Chiefly from the Visitation of 1591" this should read "widow of Joh. Scoffeilde"

    Buried:
    Bradford, All Saints Churchyard

    Died:
    He died in the Battle of Tewkesbury, War of Roses.

    Nicholas married Scoville, Elizabeth. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Scoville, Elizabeth (daughter of Scoville, John and Bavent, Joane).

    Notes:

    The architectural antiquities of the city of Wells by John Henry Parker, 1866:

    William Gascoigne, Esq., of Bridgwater, who was elected one of the representatives in parliament for that town in 1413, and whose son, "William Gascoigne, lived in Wells, and represented the city in parliament, having been chosen to fill that office in 1447. In 1417, William Gascoigne the elder purchased one-third of the manor of Newton Placey, in the parish of North Petherton, near Bridgwater, of John de Garton, a descendant of Emma, one of the three sisters and co-heiresses of Sir Richard de Placetis, from whose family the name of the manor, Placey, or Placetis, was derived. William Gascoigne, the son, married Johane, daughter of Robert Bavent, and widow of Humphrey* Scovell, lord of the manor of Brockley, Somerset, and by whom she had three daughters, her co-heiresses. Elizabeth, the third daughter, married Sir Nicholas Harvey, whose son and heir, Humphrey Harvey, was elected member of parliament for "Wells in 1482, and 1488. He was a man of great wealth and importance, having married Agnes, daughter of John Attewater, Esq., of Wells, whose extensive estates in Wells and other parts of Somersetshire he thus acquired. As a proof of the local influence of this John Attewater, it may be mentioned that he was M.P. for Wells 23 Edward IV. and 1 Richard II., and Mayor of the city no less than ten times between the years 1453 and 1485.

    *note from M. Hervey: to be consistent with "The Visitations of the County of Somerset, in the Years 1531 and 1573, Together with Additional Pedigrees, Chiefly from the Visitation of 1591" this should read "widow of Joh. Scoffeilde"

    Children:
    1. 4. Harvey, Humphrey was born in 1455; died on 5 Mar 1516 in England; was buried in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

  3. 10.  Atwater, John was born in 1425; died in 1500; was buried in Wells, Somerset, England.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Wells, Somerset, England

    Notes:

    The architectural antiquities of the city of Wells by John Henry Parker, 1866:

    William Gascoigne, Esq., of Bridgwater, who was elected one of the representatives in parliament for that town in 1413, and whose son, "William Gascoigne, lived in Wells, and represented the city in parliament, having been chosen to fill that office in 1447. In 1417, William Gascoigne the elder purchased one-third of the manor of Newton Placey, in the parish of North Petherton, near Bridgwater, of John de Garton, a descendant of Emma, one of the three sisters and co-heiresses of Sir Richard de Placetis, from whose family the name of the manor, Placey, or Placetis, was derived. William Gascoigne, the son, married Johane, daughter of Robert Bavent, and widow of Humphrey Scovell, lord of the manor of Brockley, Somerset, and by whom she had three daughters, her co-heiresses. Elizabeth, the third daughter, married Sir Nicholas Harvey, whose son and heir, Humphrey Harvey, was elected member of parliament for "Wells in 1482, and 1488. He was a man of great wealth and importance, having married Agnes, daughter of John Attewater, Esq., of Wells, whose extensive estates in Wells and other parts of Somersetshire he thus acquired. As a proof of the local influence of this John Attewater, it may be mentioned that he was M.P. for Wells 23 Edward IV. and 1 Richard II., and Mayor of the city no less than ten times between the years 1453 and 1485.

    _______________________________________________
    History of Parliament ... 1439-1509: . Biographies of the Members of the Commons House, page 27:

    Attwater (Water, atte), John (1425-1500); of Wells. cloth-maker, M.P. Wells 1453-4, 1460-1, 1483 (June), 1483 (Oct.),

    Made a freeman 1444; witness a deed as burgess of Wells, 1451; mayor of Wells ten times between 1453 and 1485, never returning himself; on a Wells jury 1462; pledge for freeman repeatedly 1457 to 1493;3 pardoned, 16 Dec 1471, as of Wells, merchant and cloth-maker.
    D. 1500; Will of John atte Water, dat. 23 June, pr. 18 Nov. 1500 4

    3 Wells City Charters, Som. Rec. Soc. pp. 146- 162 .
    4 To be bur. in Trinity church, St. Cuthbert's, Wells. Bequests to Dr. Walter Champneys to Thomas Champneys and Jane his w. (my da,) and their four children, to Margaret Reynon, another da.; and Thomas Reynon her s., to Humphrey Harvey and Agnes his w. another da. Masses for souls of Jane and Emma his late wives. Exors,:Dr. Walter Champneys, Humphrey Harvey and Alayn Wise (P.C.C. 17 Moone).

    Note: P.C.C is "Prerogative Court of Canterbury"

    Buried:
    Trinity church, St. Cuthbert's,

    Children:
    1. 5. Atwater, Agnes died before Jun 1500.
    2. Atwater, Jane
    3. Atwater, Margaret