House & Family History: Aston Hall was a tall, classical brick house that featured twin hipped roofs. The income from this source may have helped to pay for his ambitious rebuilding of the old medieval and Elizabethan manor house at Aston with an up-to-date house on a new site in the park, in about 1668. He died 24 August 1772. About this project, and what's coming next, An essay on the character of Sir Willoughby Aston, http://www.berkshirehistory.com/castles/wadley_house.html, (222) Aston of Tixall Hall, Barons Aston of Forfar, (221) Aston of Aston Hall, Aston-by-Sutton, (375) Baring of Membland House and Lambay Castle, Barons Revelstoke, (533) Beit of Russborough House, baronets, (522) Wrixon-Becher of Ballygiblin, Creagh, Assolas and Castle Hyde, baronets, (472) Bamford of Hawthornden Manor, Wootton Lodge and Daylesford House, (441) Bateman of Oak Park, Altavilla and Bertholey House, (426) Barttelot of Stopham House, baronets, (529) Bedingfeld (later Paston-Bedingfeld) of Oxburgh Hall, baronets, (175) Arkwright of Willersley Castle and Hatton House, Irish Landed Estates and Historic Houses c1700-1914, Aston Hall, Aston-by-Sutton. 1578), son of Thomas Egerton of Leek (Staffs), and 2nd, by 1584, Sir Edward Tyrrell (1551-1606), kt., of Thornton (Bucks) and had issue three sons and six daughters; buried (as Elizabeth Tyrrell) at Thornton, 26 June 1631; (7) Mary Aston; perhaps the woman of this name who married Thomas Hanson of Blewbury (Berks) and had issue, although some accounts say she died without issue; (8) Eleanor Aston; married James Whitlock; (9) Winifred Aston; married Peter Derby of Bebington (Cheshire), lived near Liverpool; (10) Ellen Aston; married George Mainwaring esq of Ightfield (Staffs). Sir Willoughby Aston sold the estatein 1764 to his brother-in-law, Charles Pye of Faringdon House, who had Thomas Strong of Stanford-in-the-Vale remodel the house for him four years later, in 1768. 1942), born 16 June 1942; married 1st, Oct-Dec. 1966, John B. Haycraft and had issue three sons, and 2nd, Oct-Dec 1983, Graham J. Ollis; (2) Andrew Hervey Talbot (b. Hervey took the name Aston under a private Act of Parliament in 1743, and on his wife's death in 1755 the estates passed to their only surviving son, Henry Hervey Aston (1741-85), who came of age in 1762. (. Henry Pickering married Mary King in 1746 in Bloomsbury, later taking his family to Manchester, from where he travelled around several counties in the north of England and in North Wales to carry out commissions, and he appears to have died in mid-December 1770 in Skipton in Yorkshire. The genealogy of the family is traced below from the early 15th century, but the account given is very deficient until the mid 17th century because of the unfortunate deficiency of key parish register sources. Col. Aston was killed in a duel in India in 1798, but in 1802 his widow brought Repton back to undertake further work, with the support of one of his sons and James Wyatt; their proposals were sketched in the back of the original Red Book. Walter de Winton (1832-78) of Maesllwch Castle, Glasbury (Brecons.) Guide. Aston House Farmhouse comprises a spacious 5-bedroom house with 4 reception rooms and adjoining brick outbuilding and lawned garden to front and side elevations. A minor point: Anne Willoughby (c1614-1688) was the sole heiress of her mother (Elizabeth Knollys) but one of three heiresses of her father, Sir Henry Willoughby. Henry Hervey (1700-48), fifth son of the 1st Earl of Bristol. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Chester. The Fountain Bar and Stables Lounge serve an extensive daytime menu with drinks, soup of the day, hot and cold sandwiches, drinks, sourdough pizza and sharing platters. His widow died in London, 24 January 1823; her will was proved 21 February 1823. It boasts a series of period rooms which have furniture, paintings, textiles and metalwork from the collections of the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery. Charlton Morris consists of 3 teams of search specialists, each covering a different industry. In these fantastic value rooms youll find everything you could want for a blissful nights sleep. Following the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the Manor was granted to Sir William Paget. Northwich 4 5,848 . 1784); attending a private school at Twickenham (Middx) in 1784. Earlier Houses: The 17th century house replaced an earlier house on the site. Spokes. Browse by Records Creators Aston family, baronets, of Aston Hall This page summarises records created by this Family The summary includes a brief description of the collection (s) (usually. He was married to a cousin of the King and was employed on sensitive diplomatic work as well as carrying out his duties as huntsman, falconer and park-keeper. In 1789 he was president of the Tarporley Hunt. His widow was buried at Aston, 4 January 1635/6. This site uses cookies. The house may also have been extended in the next generation by Sir Edward Unton, who through his marriage in 1555 to the widowed Duchess of Warwick (aunt of King Edward VI) became connected to the royal family. ; JP for Kent, 1606-12 and for Middlesex, 1608-12; appointed keeper of various royal parks, including St James' Park, London; married 1st, before 1596, Marjorie (d. 1606), daughter of Andrew Stewart, Lord Ochiltree, by whom he had several sons (who all died young) and four daughters; married 2nd, Cordelia, daughter of Sir John Stanhope of Elvaston (Derbys) and sister of the 1st Earl of Chesterfield, and had issue one son who died young; died 1612. This is likely to have come about because Sir Wolstan, a widower, had married Henry's first cousin Theodosia Wright in 1740, Theodosia being a daughter of Purefoy Aston and Sir Henry Wright of Mobberley in Cheshire. Location: Alvaston Hall is located 40 minutes south-east of Chester, and 30 minutes west of Stoke-on-Trent. Aston Hall A late 17th Century house built by Sir Willoughby Aston with a park landscaped by Humphrey Repton. If you haven't already found it, this page will fill in much of the 1800s at Wadley House:https://archive.org/details/genealogicalhera01byuburk/page/658/mode/2up?view=theater. His first wife died 9 August 1606 and was buried at Runcorn (Cheshire). He married, 24 January 1857 at St James, Westminster (Middx), Mary Matilda (1832-74), daughter of Richard John Whitman, and had issue: (1) Harriet Cecil Talbot (1857-1937), born Oct-Dec 1857; married, 23 January 1878 at St James, Westminster, William Henry Gramshaw (1849-1926), stockbroker, and had issue two daughters; died 25 August 1937; will proved 5 October 1937 (estate 231); (2) Algernon Charles Talbot (1859-88), born 16 January 1859; married, 19 January 1886, Edith Ellen (1861-1951), daughter of William Bunce Greenfield and had issue one daughter; died 27 July 1888; (3) Gwendoline Mary Talbot (1861-1948), born 9 March 1861; married, 1880, Harry Wyndham Jefferson (1848-1918) and had issue one son and three daughters; died, 25 February 1948; will proved 12 August 1948 (estate 65,926); (5) Charles Aston Talbot (1864-1904), born 24 July 1864; hotel proprietor; married 1st, 22 March 1893, Elizabeth Mary (1861-95), daughter of Thomas Best of Didsbury (Lancs), and 2nd, Apr-Jun 1899, Elizabeth Jane Swinton, but had no issue; died at Dowros Bay Hotel (Co. Donegal), 26 November 1904; will proved 8 February 1905 (estate 1,680); (6) Muriel Ethel Talbot (1867-90), born 21 December 1867; married, 10 July 1890 as his first wife, Luigi Angelo Gavatti Verospi (b. See why it was listed, view it on a map, see visitor comments and photos and share your own comments and photos of this building. I have letters in my possession Dating as far back as 1845 To Richard Aston from his parents Peter & Mary. Cost of calling Warner: Calls cost no more than calls to geographic numbers (01 or 02) and must be included in inclusive minutes and discount schemes in the same way. Aston Hall is an 18th-century country house, now converted to residential apartments, at Aston-on-Trent, Derbyshire. The resemblance of the garden front to the slightly larger but contemporary Longford Hall is notable. He died unexpectedly while travelling in France in 1744, and his estates passed to his eldest sister, Catherine (1705-55), and her husband, the Hon. [4] She was a noted temperance campaigner and she gave Derby its first children's playground. Francis Gastrell (d. 1772), vicar of Frodsham, who owned Shakespeare's New Place at Stratford-on-Avon and had it demolished; moved to Lichfield and eventually inherited both Stowe House and Stowe Hill from her sisters Elizabeth and Magdalen, but both houses were sold after her death; died at Lichfield, 30 October 1791 and was buried at Frodsham; Anne Aston (b. [9][10] The hospital closed in about 1993[9] and more recently the hall has been restored, renovated and converted into residential apartments. . John Aston (c.1667-1710), born about 1667; a Captain in the Royal Navy; died without issue and was buried at Aston-by-Sutton, 12 October 1710; (3) Willoughby Aston (c.1668-93); married, 6 October 1691 at St James, Duke's Place, London, Elizabeth Lewin, and had issue two daughters; buried at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Westminster (Middx), 30 November 1693; (4) Mary Aston (1669-1734), baptised at Madeley (Staffs), 28 July 1669; married 1st, 4 June 1698 at Aston, Sir John Crewe (d. 1711), kt., of Utkinton Hall (Cheshire), and 2nd, 19 November 1713 at St Andrew by the Wardrobe, London, Dr. Hugh Chamberlain of Alderton and Hinton, but had no issue; died 8 April 1734 and was buried at Tarporley (Cheshire); (5) Robert Aston (c.1670-1721); a citizen and fishmonger in London; married, 14 February 1688, Elizabeth Whitcomb (1664-1708); buried at St Nicholas, Cole Abbey, London, 15 December 1721; (6) Magdalen Aston (1672-1746), baptised at Aston, 14 April 1672; married, 31 December 1695 at Aston, Thomas Norris (1653-1700) of Speke (Lancs) and had issue one son and one daughter; buried at Cropthorne (Worcs), 25 November 1746; (7) Frances Aston (1673-77), baptised at Aston, 17 April 1673; died young and was buried at Aston, 10 March 1676/7; (8) Gilbert Aston (c.1674-76); died in infancy and was buried at Aston, 27 May 1676; (9) Richard Aston (1675-1741) [for whom see below under Aston of Wadley House]; (10) Elizabeth Aston (1676-1756), baptised at Aston, 12 December 1676; lived in London and later at Bath (Somerset); died unmarried; will proved 22 April 1756; (11) Christian Aston (b. The city of Newcastle-upon-Tyne and its hinterland have been home to a number of prominent families by the name of Anderson between the 16t Bamford, Baron Bamford In the 18th and early 19th centuries, the Bamfords were a Roman Catholic family of millers, builders and toolmakers i Bateman of Oak Park This family traces its origins to the mid 17th century, when Major Rowland Bateman (with whom the genealogy below begin Barttelot of Stopham The Barttelots (the name has been spelled in many different ways, including Bartlett, but Barttelot has been the standa Paston-Bedingfeld, baronets This family shared a common ancestry with the Bedingfields of Fleming's Hall and Ditchingham, in that both Atwood of Sanderstead Court The family of Atte Wode is recorded as living at Coulsdon in Surrey as early as 1246, where their houses in Arkwright of Willersley The Arkwrights are notable because the scale of the fortune amassed by Sir Richard Arkwright (1732-92), kt. <p>An officer in the Rifle Brigade (Ensign, 1854; Lt. 1854; retired as Capt., c.1858) who served in the Crimea. As a result the estate was vested in Trustees and let during the later 19th century. The house was designed by John Thorpe and constructed by Sir Thomas Holte, and it became the very first historic country house to become municipally owned. He died in Oxford, 9 August, and was buried at Aston, 14 August 1869; his will was proved 20 August 1869 (effects under 5,000). Wyatt's alterations produced the house shown in the photographs here. He died without issue in 1815, and on his widow's death in 1823 their property was divided between his sisters and her surviving relations. of Mobberley (Cheshire) and had issue, ancestors of the Wright family of Mottram St. Andrew; buried at Mobberley (Cheshire), 3 February 1768; (20) Helena Aston (b. 3/4 Ashton Hall Farmhouse. 1693), baptised at Aston, 12 October 1693; married, 1716, Robert Jenks esq. He died 24 November and was buried at Faringdon, 28 November 1741. In the 1920s, the Birmingham Corporation was having financial troubles and had to choose between saving Aston Hall and the nearby Perry Hall. Aston Hall is open to the public during spring, summer and autumn months, following extensive renovation from 2006 to 2009. 1737), born 27 July and baptised at St. Marylebone (Middx), 9 September 1737; died young; (5) Henry Hervey (later Aston) (1741-85) (. The Cheshire and Warwickshire estates passed to Sir Thomas Aston (1704-44), 4th bt., who married at the beginning of 1736 but was widowed little more than a year later, and left childless. (1) Sir Thomas Aston (1600-45), 1st bt. Hancock did, however, leave the terrace in place, but after the estate was sold to Ernest Terah Hooley in 1878 the grounds were landscaped again by William Barron & Sons, eliminating most of the surviving vestiges of the Willoughby House. GV II* Farmhouse and cottage: early C17, cottage added later C17, top . In 1593 Sir John's younger brother, Michael, built a new chapel (now the parish church) and also a secondary seat (known as Risley Lodge) on the hill to the north-east of the house. The house contained some 59 rooms plus outbuildings. An inventory of 1596, taken after the death of Sir Henry Unton, the English Ambassador to France, gives a clear picture of what was then one of the great mansions of Berkshire. HC79.I6 H33 1796+ Oversize]; memorial of facts relating to his fatal duel, 1798 [National Army Museum, 1968-07-147]. built in 1668 and as first designed it was probably of two storeys with hipped roofs and attics. This opened in 1972 and gave the city centre a direct link with the M6 motorway. When Sir Willoughby died in 1772, the remaining Risley estate was sold almost at once by his son and heir, Sir Willoughby Aston (1749-1815), 6th and last bt., who like his father lived chiefly in London, although he seems to have rented a number of properties in Hampshire in the late 18th century. What's included in the price of every break? John Aston (d.1615, married Maud Needham of Shropshire). Please check with your supplier. , daughter of Sir John Poultney, kt., of Misterton (Leics), who was co-heir of her brother, John Poultney; and 2nd, Anne (c.1614-88), daughter and co-heiress of Sir Henry Willoughby, bt. * The younger Sir Arthur Aston was among 3,000 Royalists massacred by Cromwell's forces after the capture of Drogheda in 1649; it is said that he was beaten to death with his own wooden leg. The new house was. The house was severely damaged after an attack by Parliamentary troops in 1643. Dating evidence from the [nearby] Aston Cursus, Willington Cursus, and associated earlier and later funerary barrows have normally been attributed to the Middle and Later Neolithic, however, the Early Neolithic pits across the site, although infrequent, demonstrate human activity in this landscape as early as the 4th millennium BC. Dr. Henry Hervey (who took the surname Aston by private Act of Parliament in 1743) (1700-48), rector of Shotley (Suffk), 1743-48, fifth son of John Hervey, 1st Earl of Bristol, and had issue: (1) Elizabeth Frances Hervey (later Aston) (1731-74), baptised at Sudbury (Suffk), 24 March 1731; married, 5 January 1754 at Buxhall (Suffk), John Plampin (1728-1805) and had issue two sons and one daughter; died 2 October 1774; (2) Catherine Maria Hervey (later Aston) (1733-79), baptised at Lichfield (Staffs), 14 June 1733; married, 1 May 1751 at St George's Chapel, Albemarle St., Westminster (Middx), Richard Hussey (d. by 1768), and had issue one daughter; will proved 3 February 1779; (3) Henrietta Hervey (later Aston) (b. He died in 1492. in 1697. Value, 88. Thomas Pennington (later Legh) (d. 1743) and had issue one son, ancestor of the Legh family of Norbury Booths Hall (Cheshire); died after 1752; (21) Letitia Aston (b. and Nicholas Kingsley. Patron, Sir A. Aston, Bart. Sir Willoughby married, in 1664 or 1665, Mary Offley, the child of a prominent Royalist family in Staffordshire. ; raised in Scotland; master huntsman in Scotland, by 1580; gentleman of the bedchamber to King James VI & I, 1587-1612, in which capacity he undertook various diplomatic missions to England and the continent; Master Falconer, 1603-12; Master of the Wardrobe, 1605-12; knighted, 18 April 1603; MP for Cheshire, 1604-10? ; possibly the person of this name educated at Grays Inn (admitted 1602/3); married Elizabeth, daughter of John Shuckburgh of Birdingbury (Warks) and widow of Humphrey Stafford, and had issue a daughter; (1.4) Frances Aston; married 1st, John Hocknell esq. He was Sheriff of Cheshire in 1601. Soon afterwards the estate was granted to Queen's College, Oxford, which still owns it, although it has been continuously leased to prominent local families. It boasts a series of period rooms which have furniture, paintings, textiles and metalwork from the collections of the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery. She died 6 February 1845. Sir Thomas Aston (d.1613, married Elizabeth Mainwaring of Shropshire and Mary Unton of Shropshire). This copy was mistakenly reattributed to Velzquez when sold in 1867, then to Valds Leal when in the collection of F. W. Cosens, Lewes, who purchased it in 1875. In 1764 he also sold the Wadley House estate to his brother-in-law, Charles Pye of Faringdon House, and he lived thereafter chiefly in London, although he also retained (and indeed rebuilt) a town house in Derby. Aston by Sutton through time. 1753), baptised at Risley (Derbys), 10 December 1753; died unmarried before 1808; (7) Sophia Aston (d. 1808); married, 2 April 1783 at Worcester, John Pritchard and had issue one son and one daughter; died at Framlingham (Suffk) about February 1808. Were convinced that luxury doesnt get much better than this. In 1864, the house was bought by Birmingham Corporation, becoming the first historic country house to pass into municipal ownership, and is still owned by Birmingham City Council. 1909), but had no issue; died 27 January 1955 and was buried at Bartlow; will proved 28 May 1955 (estate 156,466); (4) Cecil Muriel Talbot (1890-1902), born 6 November 1890; died young, 21 November 1902. Warner has been awarded the official stamp of approval from VisitBritain in recognition of our measures in place to maintain cleanliness and social distancing and adhere to government and industry COVID-19 guidelines. A side-note on the family of Sir Willoughby Aston 2nd Bt: Sir Willoughby's youngest surviving daughters were Charlotte bn 1679 and Purefoy bn 1690.Charlotte married John Pickering of Thelwall Hall near Warrington in 1695 and their youngest child, Henry, was born somewhere between 1706 and 1720. The house was severely damaged after an attack by Parliamentary troops in 1643 &. 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