Wednesday, October 18, 2006

The Conspiracies

I am convinced that the lack of information about Governor Thomas Dale and Governor Thomas Gates has to do with one, or more, of the conspiracies that racked England after Henry VIII died as his intimates each tried to position for power.

The Seamer Rebellion – August 1549

Thomas Dale, Secretary of the Parish of Seamer in Yorkshire, with his brother John Dale and Robert Dale, and others led the Seamer Rebellion. The rebellion was against religious policies taken by Lord Protector Edward Seymour, but other books speak about a series of rebellions across England, created by John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, to undermine Seymour’s political position as Lord Protector. Thomas Dale and his brother John Dale were among a handful of others who were executed. Seamer Manor had been the home of Thomas Percy at a rebellion against Henry VIII a dozen years earlier, and that Percy was the grandfather of Sir George Percy of Virginia.

From about 1540, the Master Chef of Henry VIII was a John Dale, and he lived immediately adjacent Matthew Dale of London. But after the Seamer Rebellion, information about these Dales became almost non-existent.

Charles Somerset, Earl of Worcester (Raglan Castle)

| Henry Somerset Thomas Percy (SEAMER), executed 1537

| William Somerset | Mary Somerset = Edward Dale | Anne Somerset = Thomas Percy, 7th Northumberland | | Henry Percy, 8th Earl

| Edward Somerset George Percy | | Henry Percy, 9th Earl Northumberland

Queen Jane Grey – August 1553

Lady Jane Grey was Queen for only nine days in 1553 and executed early in 1554. Sir John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, stage managed the Queen Jane Affair, having married his son Guildford Dudley to Lady Jane. Sir John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Sir John Gates were executed for their roles. Son Guildford Dudley was executed, but sons Ambrose Dudley and Robert Dudley, the future Earl of Leicester managed to escape execution. Sir John Gates had the help of his brothers Geoffrey Gates and Henry Gates, but only Henry Gates survived execution. The same year that Elizabeth came to power, Sir Henry Gates was awarded the same Seamer Manor where we previously located the Dales. Henry Gates’ nephew, Geoffrey Gates was also executed, and he was the son-in-law of Dr. Thomas Wilson, whose patron was John Dudley.

The Dudley Conspiracy – December 1555

The Dudley Conspiracy was headed by Captain Henry Dudley in an attempt to force Queen Mary out of power, and bring Princess Elizabeth to the Monarchy. It hit close to home and Arthur Kingston of Saint Briavels and John Throckmorton of Tortworth were just some of those executed. Admiral William Wynter, Dudley's business partner, was implicated, but needed him naval defense.

Thomas Dale of Alford

Thomas Dale (died 1571) of Alford and his wife Anne Hamby (died 1578) held the Lincolnshire manors of Farlesthorpe, Strubby, and Legsby. Dale left Farlesthorpe and Strubby to his son Francis Dale, and Legsby and the parsonage of Carlton he left to son Edward Dale. Thomas Dale was married to Anne Hamby, daughter of George Hamby of Brocklesby Manor in Lincolnshire. Her brother, John Hamby, administered her husband’s estate. John Hamby also acquired the adjoining estate of Maltby from William Cavendish of Trimley, a kinsman of the explorer Thomas Cavendish (1564-1593), who circumnavigated the world.

The Hambys were from Brocklesby Manor, which was in an area of Lincolnshire known as Lindsey, and the 1st Earl of Lindsey was the son of Peregrine Bertie. Brocklesby Manor passed from the Hambys to Sir William Pelham, Leicester’s Marshall of the camp, and best friend in 1586 when Leicester was heading up the English war effort in the Low Countries, the same year that Governor Thomas Dale joined that army in the Low Countries.

Peregrine Bertie’s daughter Katherine was married to Lewis Watson of Rockingham Castle in Northampton, which once adjoined the massive royal estate of Collyweston. The Watson coat-of-arms, in nearby Rockingham Castle was quite similar to the coat-of-arms shown in the files of Matthew Dale of London. In 1596, a Roger Dale of Collyweston received two estates in Rutland, Manton and Tixover, and we now know this Roger Dale was associated with Governor Thomas Dale.

The second wife of Baron Rockingham was Eleanor Manners, daughter of George Manners of Haddon and his wife Grace Pierrepont. Grace’s sister, Elizabeth Pierrepont (died 1621), was married to the nephew of the 1st Lord Mar, Regent of Scotland, who raised King James. Mar’s son, Sir John Erskin, 2nd Lord Mar, was responsible for raising Prince Henry Stuart. Governor Dale was reported to have been a member of the retinue of the young Prince Henry and called him his “Glorious Master,” and if he were kin to this extended family, this might possibly explain how that came about.

Roger Dale, Collyweston & Birkhead Dale

Roger Dale of Collyweston

Roger Dale, who has long been thought related to Governor Dale, had two direct kin with the highly unusual name of Birkhead, and very near the Pierrepont estate, at Gamston Manor, a Reverend William Birkhead spent the decade of the 1620s in litigation against the lord of the Gamston Manor, John Holles, 2nd Earl of Clare. Grace Pierrepont remarried the earl’s son, Sir Gilbert Holles, 3rd Lord Clare, and it was noteworthy that Gilbert’s father was married to the daughter of Sir Horace Vere, Governor Dale’s old boss who purchased Clearwell Manor. This William Birkhead was also referred to as Birkitt and Birkett in those same journals. It was his older brother, the Puritan Edward Birkhead who we found at Twickenham, and it was Edward’s wife or sister who sold Thomas Skipwith land at Twickenham; Thomas was a brother-in-law to Major Edward Dale of Virginia history.

Birkhead Dale

Birkhead Dale first appeared in the will of a Roger Dale in 1553 where he mentioned his son, John Dale of Trentham, and his grandsons Roger Dale and Birkhead Dale. Then we again found Birkhead Dale as the son of Roger Dale (will administered 1622) of Tixover Manor in Rutland.

As we were reading through the disbursement journal[i] of the Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester we came across Sir Horace Vere, and others like the Earl of Essex, Leicester’s step son, who we knew were associated with Governor Dale. Lady Dale’s father, Sir Thomas Throckmorton, had the privilege of being only one of six pallbearers to be named to carry Leicester’s casket in his great state funeral.

A “Robert Birkett” was in the Low Countries with Leicester, and he was later identified in footnotes as Sir Robert Burdett (1558-1603) of Bramcote. Investigation revealed that he was married to Mary Wilson, daughter of Dr. Thomas Wilson formerly of Strubby Manor. Wilson’s patron had been Leicester’s father. Burdett’s daughter married Sir John Bowes of Elford Manor, another location that ties to Roger Dale of Tixover. Although this Robert Burdett resided at Arrow Manor in Warwickshire, the Burdett family had once been at Legsby Manor (Edward Dale 1571) for several centuries. Our guess is that Sir Robert Burdett may be the namesake for Birkhead Dale, son of Roger Dale of Tixover.



[i] “Household accounts and disbursement books of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester” edited by Simon Adams. Cambridge University Press for the Royal Historical Society, University College, London, 1995, and located in the Virginia Historical Society.

Saint Briavels & Clearwell Manor

Saint Briavels Hundred in Monmounthshire

It has taken me twelve years to understand with some degree of confidence the English roots of the 3rd governor of Virginia, Governor Thomas Dale, who died in 1619. The reader should remember that estates in this period tended to follow family lines by inheritance and/or marriage. Dale’s widow held property on the lower tip of the Eastern Shore called “Dale’s Gift,” and at her death that property was partially inherited by Richard Hamby, whose sister (possibly niece) was married to Francis Throckmorton, Lady Dale’s nephew. Richard Hamby led us back to Thomas Dale of Alford (died 1571), whose property adjoined the Willoughby property, a portion of which was farmer by Captain John Smith’s father, George Smith.

As we studied the land holdings of Lady Dale’s family, we found that they were centered in Saint Briavels Hundred in the Wye River Valley, where we found land held by both the Littletons and Whittingtons, both families related to Lady Dale. Of course, descendants of both of these families became quite well established on the lower Eastern Shore.

The 1619 will of Governor Thomas Dale left few clues other than the four overseers named. The four were Sir William Throckmorton, the Earl of Southampton, Sir Thomas Smythe and William Cooke. In this one location of Saint Briavels Hundred, we were able to link all four of the overseers via families with property interests here.

In Saint Briavels Hundred, are located Clearwell Manor, Saint Briavels Castle and Estate, Lydney Manor, and Bream Parish, where another earl of Worcester, John Tiptoft[i] once lived at the manor of Le Bayly. The famous old knight, Sir Thomas de la Dale, was a personal retainer of John of Gaunt, and his son intermarried with the Tiptofts at Tickencote Hall in Rutland. Sir John Tiptoft was the guardian of the grandson of the famous old knight, Sir Thomas de la Dale, and Tiptoft’s widow named as her heir, her niece, the wife of an earlier Thomas Baynum. The grandson of the old knight Sir Thomas Dale was married to the first cousin of Sir John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester.

Our first clues were cryptic notes archived in the Dale portfolio in the London Genealogical Society regarding a 1609 deposition given by a John Dale, in which he named his father as Edward Dale. The deposition had to do with Clearwell Manor as a result of the death of a later Sir Thomas Baynum, whose son-in-law was Sir William Throckmorton, brother-in-law of Governor Thomas Dale. William Throckmorton was the first of four overseers named in Dale’s will.

In the same sitting in London, we also found another note that a Mary Somerset married an Edward Dale. The Somersets resided at Raglan Castle, a famous castle also above Saint Briavels connected to the Wye River.

Saint Briavels Castle

The Crown leased a portion of Saint Briavels Castle to Jacquette of Luxembourg, the widow of the grandson of John of Gaunt, the man that Thomas de la Dale served as a personal retainer. Fifty years later, the Crown then leased Saint Briavels to Thomas Baynum, and renewed the lease to his son Christopher Baynum in 1498, and the Baynums remained there until 1528 when an insider with King Henry VIII was awarded a lease for Saint Briavels. This Henry VIII insider was Sir William Kingston (died 1540) who held many critical positions ranging from Esquire of the Body to key military assignments including Captain of the Tower at the time of the execution of Anne Boleyn. Kingston’s son was the notorious Sir Anthony Kingston who we will read of later in the Dudley Conspiracy. William’s daughter, Bridget Kingston married Sir George Baynum of Clearwell Manor, and we are about to read about his descendants at Clearwell Manor.

Sir William Kingston married the widow Anne Berkeley of Stoke Gifford. The Standard Bearer for King Henry VIII in 1539, the same year that Kingston died, was Sir John Berkeley of Stoke Gifford, who was the great grandfather of Lady Dale, wife of Governor Dale. The Manor of Stoke Gifford overlooked Bristol from a commanding position, and Bristol, the home of a very wealthy family of Dales, was just across the river from where the Wye River emptied into the Severn. Governor Dale’s wife was Lady Elizabeth Throckmorton of the Throckmortons of Tortworth, and her mother was Elizabeth Berkeley of Stoke Gifford. In our research, there were several other manors across England that continued to appear, and the following connects many of them. Her first husband was Sir John Gyse. Their son by the same name married into the Grey family of Wilton, located at the head of the Wye River. Young Gyse’s sister-in-law was another Mary Somerset; aunt of the Mary Somerset we believe married Edward Dale.

Clowerwall [Clearwell] Manor

Clearwell Manor is located not too distant from the Throckmorton family home at Tortworth. Clearwell was located three miles south of Monmouth, and sixteen west of Gloucester, in the parish of Saint Briavels. Clowerwall was the original name; it was changed to Wellington, and then later became known as Clearwell. Clearwell parish church is where the Baynums, and several generations of Throckmortons are buried. The adjoining hamlet of Newland once belonged to a William Baynum who lost it to the crown in the sixth year of King Edward III, but the Baynums would later acquire and hold Clearwell. Baynum’s father-in-law, Admiral William Wynter also resided in this same immediate area at Lydney Manor. Clearwell passed by marriage to Sir William Throckmorton, the first overseer of the will of Governor Thomas Dale, and Dale’s brother-in-law. The family debt left by Lady Dale’s father was overwhelming, and Baynum Throckmorton, Lady Dale’s nephew, eventually sold Clearwell. It was sold to the husband of a cousin, but that man, Sir Horace Vere, was a famous soldier from the Low Countries and had fought alongside Governor Thomas Dale. In Fact, Vere’s brother, Sir Richard Vere, was commander of the Low Countries and responsible for reinstating Thomas Dale as a commander.

George Baynum of Clearwell

Sir William Kingston’s son-in-law was George Baynum of Clearwell, the son of Christopher Baynum (1478-1557) and Joan Morgan. Baynum remarried “Cicely” Gage, daughter of Sir John Gage, another famous soldier of Henry VIII, who kept Gage’s portrait in one of his palaces. Her sister Alyce Gage married Sir Anthony Brown. Sir John Gage married the daughter of Sir Richard Guildford who returned to England with Henry, Earl of Richmond, to claim the throne. Richard Guildford, William Brandon, and Anthony Brown had been among Henry Tudor’s (Henry VII) most trusted supporters living in exile with him. It was son Anthony Brown, husband of Alyce Gage, and Anthony’s step-brother William Fitzwilliam, 1st Earl Southampton, who were executors of the will of Sir William Kingston. Anthony’s granddaughter married Sir Henry Wriothsley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, the second overseer of Governor Dale’s will.

The sisters had a brother named Edward Gage, and his son Anthony Gage married an Elizabeth Dale, presumably related to the Edward Dale who gave testimony for Thomas Baynum. Through the Gage family, George Baynum was related to the Earl of Southampton and William Somerset, 3rd Earl of Worcester, of nearby Raglan Castle.

Netherley Manor

Because the Clearwell Manor inheritance was so important, we noted that another daughter of Thomas Baynum, Joann Baynum Vaughan, inherited Netherley Manor[ii], which is the adjoining parish. Netherley was held by Robert Greyndour and passed to Robert's daughter Elizabeth, who married firstly Reynold West, Lord la Warre, and secondly John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester, before she died in 1452. John Tiptoft held the estate until his death in 1470 when it reverted to Elizabeth's heir Alice, the wife of Thomas Baynum. The heirs of the old knight, Sir Thomas de la Dale, had been assigned John Tiptofts as his guardian, and this information placed the Baynums as distant kinsmen of the De la Warres, and Sir Thomas de la Warre, who was the first governor of Virginia. Governor Thomas Dale was the third governor of Virginia, and his friend Thomas Gates was second.

Admiral William Wynter of Lydney Manor

Lydney was the name of this entire region before it became known as Saint Briavels, and a major manor there was Lydney Manor. Thomas Baynum’s wife was the daughter of the famous Admiral William Wynter, Lord of Lydney Manor, and was most famous for his role in the defeat of the Spanish Armada. Admiral William Wynter was involved as a business partner with Sir Francis Drake for many years in English exploration and privateering.

The admiral’s father, John Wynter, was Surveyor of the Navy under Henry VIII. Father’s 1545 will named as friends; Sir Anthony Denny (brother-in-law of Sir John Gates), Sir Anthony Brown, the same man who was an executor of the will of Sir William Kingston and who so frequently connected us with the Baynums and Throckmortons, and Sir Thomas Henage who was a brother-in-law to Nicholas Wilson, son of Dr. Thomas Wilson. Gates we will discuss later, and Wynter’s sister, Agnes, married Thomas Wilson of Lincolnshire who was born at Strubby Manor, which we later found in the possession of Thomas Dale of Alford, father of the Edward Dale we believe married Mary Somerset. Thomas Dale of Alford was married into the same Hamby family that inherited Governor Dale’s lands in Virginia upon Lady Dale’s death.

Wynter’s sons sailed with Francis Drake, and the admiral was a primary investor in Drake’s voyages. William Wynter got into several political scrapes, both the Lady Jane Grey affair and Wyatt’s Rebellion, and was jailed in the tower after both, but released. His fellow conspirators, Anthony Kingston of Saint Briavel’s Castle, and John Throckmorton of Tortworth were not so lucky, and were executed along with Sir Edward Rodgers, whose daughter was Lady Dale’s stepmother. William Wynter sailed in the 1558 fleet and had taken the post of his father, defending England against a French advance into Scotland. The impending threat of the fleet was apparently the reason for his release rather than innocence.

Admiral Wynter also bought the two manors near Lydney, “Warwick Manor” and “Shrewsbury Manor,” from William Herbert on May 12, 1561. He also owned the manors of Wyck, Pirton, Newent and Kingsweston, which he bought from Sir William Berkeley. William Wynter was designated to become the constable of Saint Briavel’s Castle after William Herbert, but died before Herbert relinquished that post, but William’s son, Edward Wynter, became constable of Saint Briavels.

Sir Edward Wynter

Son Edward Wynter fought under Christopher Carleill in the same 1585 Drake voyages that his other son, Nicholas Wynter, was killed during Drake's attack on Cartagena de las Indias. Thomas Gates, 2nd Governor of Virginia had been Carleill’s lieutenant on that same voyage, and fought alongside Edward Wynter in the raid on the Spanish Fort Augustine. Son William Wynter married Eleanor Huntley, and her brother married Elizabeth, the daughter of William Throckmorton of Tortworth, Lady Dale’ uncle.

Son Edward Wynter (1560-1619) most interested us because of his age. He was an apprentice to his father during voyages to support the Irish military effort in 1580, and then sailed with Drake in the 1585 voyage. Edward returned that year with booty worth a staggering £600,000, and afterwards fought as a volunteer with Maurice of Nassau and Henry IV of France against the Spanish. In 1595, he married Anne Somerset, one of four daughters of Edward, 4th earl of Worcester, of nearby Raglan Castle.

Sir Thomas Smythe, Treasurer of the Virginia Company

Admiral William Wynter’s wife who died in 1573 was the daughter of Thomas Langton, whose family supposedly had ties to families involved in the 1536 Pilgrimage of Grace. Their family lived at Langton for several centuries adjacent to Aswarby Manor[iii] where the Carres of our research lived, and where we located a “Mary Somerset.” Most importantly, the Langton family connected Admiral Wynter to the third overseer of Governor Dale’s will, Sir Thomas Smythe, Treasurer of the Virginia Company a well as the supervisor of Governor Thomas Dale.

Admiral William Wynter, like his kinsman Customer Thomas Smythe, was deeply involved in the first phases of English exploration. His name appeared in most of the English sea battles, and he was a privateer working the Gold Coast of Africa in the late 1550s, perhaps with eight or nine slavers, while Smythe’s father, “Customer,” and Andrew Judde, incorporated the first stock company, the Moscovy Company, to find a northern passage to the East Indies.

Another early explorer working the African Coast, Thomas Wyndham, died at sea about 1553, but his crew returned with a fabulous treasure, which excited the merchants in England. Wyndham descended from John Wyndham of Norfolk who married the daughter of the Duke of Norfolk, son Thomas Wyndham was Vice Admiral of England under Henry VIII, and it was his niece who married, secondly, Sir Francis Drake. His descendant was Thomas Wyndham, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, who later built Clearwell Castle near Clearwell Manor in 1725.

One source reported that Admiral William Wynter died in 1589 after the battle against the Spanish Armada as a result of a wound received from recoiling cannon. Ironically, it was Wynter who altered the type and tactics of the cannon used that allowed the English ships to sit safely back and fire upon the armada. Son William Wynter, who was married to Lady Dale’s cousin, was serving aboard a ship from the port of Bristol, as was a John Dale who might have been the same John Dale giving testimony in 1609 regarding Baynum’s Clearwell. We also were never able to determine if Felicia Wynter, wife of the Mayor of nearby Bristol, was his aunt, but we were interested because Felicia Wynter married Henry (William) Dale (died 1512) of Bristol whom most previous researchers had reported linked to Governor Thomas Dale.

Governor Thomas Dale and Wynter

In the state papers of King James, sometime between August and October of 1610, court records indicate that a Thomas Dale received a grant to the benefit of the recusancy of John Winter (Wynter) and widow (Elizabeth Sheldon) Russell of Worcester. Her husband, Sir John Russell of Strensham (died 1594), had been raised in the household of Sir Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford, and was at odds with his neighbors in Worcester, and then separated from his wife Elizabeth Sheldon who was very active as a recusant in the Catholic religion. Sir John Russell fought in the Low Countries under Leicester, in the command of his kinsman and best friend, Sir William Russell of Thornhaugh. We wondered if John Wynter was the ten-year-old son of Captain Edward Wynter of the Drake voyages. Although we did not fully understand the nature of the recusancy grant to Thomas Dale, it did seem to reconfirm his closeness with the Wynter family and Baynum family of Clearwell as well as reconfirmed the ties to William Russell of Thornhaugh. Sir John Russell also acquired Clifford Manor, once part of Tewkesbury, and we located Roger Dale and his wife Mary Dale of Devon and Toddington at Wincombe Abbey near Tewkesbury in 1594. This suggested that Roger Dale of Tewkesbury in 1594 might be the same Roger Dale of Collyweston who acquired Tixover so near Thornhaugh the following year.

The Governor Thomas Dale grant revealed some other interesting facts. In 1701, another Edward Wynter sold Thomas Skipwith, most likely the son of Sir Henry Skipwith, a tract of land at Twickenham. Major Edward Dale of Virginia married into the Skipwith family.

Saint Briavels Parish

Just as I started my story about Governor Dale with Saint Briavels Parish, I will conclude to make a point. There was a hamlet called Mork, on Mork Road between Clearwell Manor and Saint Briavels. The Dale family owned most of Mork as well as the nearby chapel dedicated to St. Margaret which the Dales bought in 1664. Governor Dale and his wife had no children, but in 1688, a Thomas Dale, owner of Mork Farm acquired a fulling mill and a dyehouse built adjoining Mork mill. Apparently, one line of the Dale family continued in Saint Briavels, and our guess would be that they were the same Dales mentioned in the 1609 deposition regarding nearby Clearwell Manor.

The Great House Estate was also on Mork Road, and it later was joined with Clearwell Manor. In 1609, Richard Whittington left this to his son Thomas Whittington[iv], who left it to his son William Whittington. This William Whittington, who died in 1625, left quite a bit of money to various local charities. It was his cousin, Captain William Whittington of Northampton County in Virginia with whom we were so familiar in our Virginia studies. Lady Dale claimed descent from the same family of Whittingtons, as her grandfather, Thomas Throckmorton of Tortworth married Margaret Whittington, daughter of Thomas Whittington of Pauntley Manor, another branch of the Whittingtons of Saint Briavels.

These marriages draw increasing attention to the marriage of Hugh Dale and Margaret Mortimer in 1566 at Saint Martins-in-the-Field as the missing link. The year 1567 is my estimated birth date for Governor Dale. Hugh Dale remarried again in 1568 suggesting that his first wife had died, perhaps in childbirth. There is a great deal of Internet discussion about the Mortimers, but as of this moment they are still in a quandary. The famous old knight, Sir Thomas de la Dale, had once been the guardian of Edmond Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, when Edmond was heir presumptive of England.



[i] John Tiptoft (circa 1425-1470) studied at Oxford and was made Earl of Worcester in 1449. He was Treasurer of the Exchequer from 1452-1455 and Lord deputy of Ireland from 1456-1457 when he went on a two-year pilgrimage to the Holy Land. On his return, he stayed in Italy for two years where he acquired a reputation as a scholar in Latin. Upon his return, Edward IV appointed him Constable of England in 1462 and once again Lord Deputy of Ireland in 1467. Upon his return, he was again appointed Constable of England but when Henry VI was restored, Tiptoft fled, was captured and executed. The title was bestowed to Charles Somerset in 1513.

[ii] Westbury-on-Severn, Manors and other estates, http://www.british-history.ac.uk

[iii] We located a Rev. William Dale in Haworthingham, in 1667, and that is the village adjacent to Aswarby. [http://www.r-alston.co.uk/school.htm]

[iv] Thomas Whittington and George Baynum, father of Thomas Baynum, were listed in the 1542 muster of Gloucester

William Whittington (born 1451) = Elizabeth Arundell, d/o Renfry Arundell of Cornwall

| John Whittington

| Thomas Whittington (born 1488)

| Margaret Whittongton = Thomas Throckmorton

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Lincolnshire Connection

Sir Peregrine Bertie, Lord Willoughby of Eresby, was from an ancient family, and overlord of the Willoughby Estates in Lincolnshire, which would have included Thomas Dale of Alford and Captain John Smith’s father, who were apparently on adjoining estates. Lord Willoughby is best known to Virginians because he sponsored the military training of the famous Captain John Smith whose father farmed almost twenty acres at Willoughby. Peregrine Bertie succeeded Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, as the senior military officer in the Low Countries, and the two Vere brothers, Francis and Horace, his kinsmen, succeeded Willoughby in that vital role. It was the younger brother, Sir Horace Vere of Tilbury, who married Lady Dale’s cousin and purchased Clearwell Manor in Saint Briavel’s Parish.

Dr Thomas Wilson

Dr. Thomas Wilson, who dedicated his famous book, The Art of Rhetoric, to John Dudley, Earl of Warwick about whom you will read connected to most the major players in the Dale’s history. Wilson jointly held the office of Secretary of State with Sir Francis Walsingham whose daughter married firstly Sir Phillip Sydney and secondly Robert Devereaux, 2nd Earl of Essex, with whom Governor Dale was associated. Walsingham’s stepson was Christopher Carleill, another Marian exile, who was second-in-command on the Drake voyages, and commander of a young Lt. Thomas Gates and Edward Wynter. It was the Sydneys who passed Manton Manor and Tixover Manor indirectly to Roger Dale of Collyweston.

Wilson was first married to Admiral Wynter’s sister, and secondly married to Jane Empson. Empson’s daughter by an earlier marriage was married into the same Gates family from which Governor Thomas Gates was supposed to have originated. Thomas Wilson was born in 1525 at Strubby Manor in Lincolnshire. Strubby was one of the manors named by Thomas Dale of Alford in his will of 1571 and passed to his son Francis Dale while Legsby Manor passed to son Edward Dale. [More than a century later, 1681, there was also an Edward Dale still at Legsby, married to Anne Skepper of Mavis Enderby.]

John Wynter (died 1546) Lydney Manor Thomas Langton
| Agnes (Anne) Wynter = Dr. Thomas Wilson, Strubby Manor | Sir William Wynter = Mary Langton |
| Mary Wynter = Thomas Baynum
| Cicely Baynum = William Throckmorton, Clearwell Manor

We also examined Farlesthorpe Manor, another estate mentioned by Thomas Dale of Alford in his will of 1571. The 1588 will of John Spenluffe (Spendlove) of Farlesthorpe and Strubby was signed on April 4, 1588, and his brother was reported in 1562 to have been a servant of Sir Edward Dymoke, the same fellow that Thomas Wilson (Strubby) spent time with when he was finishing the previously mentioned book. We think it was his father, Sir Robert Dymoke, who negotiated the marriage contract between his stepdaughter and Thomas Mirfin, Lord Mayor of London, an ancestor of Sir Thomas Smythe, Treasurer of the Virginia Company. Spenluffe mentioned Lord Willoughby of Eresby (Peregrine Bertie) in his 1588 will, and was buried in Alford as was Thomas Dale seventeen years earlier. Had Spendluffe married the widow or daughter of Francis Dale to gain these manors?
From the website of the school at Alford: “When John Spendluffe died in 1588 he left lands at Farlesthorpe, Strubby, Cumberworth, Woodthorpe and Withern for the support of the School and these were the basis of the Foundation Trust from which the School still derives benefit.”
Dr. Thomas Wilson appeared to be linked in some undetermined fashion to Governor Thomas Dale – one niece married Thomas Baynum of Clearwell Manor (father-in-law of William Throckmorton, and another niece married William Cooke, the last overseer of the Governor Dale’s will.

John Wynter
Admiral William Wynter | | Agnes Wynter = Thomas Wilson of Strubby = (2) Jane Empson | | Elizabeth Empson = Thomas Lucy = (2) Dor. Arnold
| Mary Wynter = Thomas Baynum, Clearwell Manor | Joyce Lucy = William Cooke
| Cecily Baynum = William Throckmorton, Lady Dale’s brother


Dr. Wilson was a strong supporter of the Puritan cause: especially Henry of Navarre (Henry IV) of France who wrote personal letters of endorsement for both Wilson and Governor Thomas Dale. In 1560, with Elizabeth on the throne and the Earl of Leicester (brother of Wilson's late patron, John Dudley) in ascendancy at court, Wilson returned to London. He was soon appointed to remunerative and responsible positions in the government, and with a profile quite similar to the other Dale, Dr. Valentine Dale.

Dale's Property in Virginia & Thomas Dale of Alford

Governor Thomas Dale (died 1619), who fostered the Peace of Pocahontas, and his wife, Elizabeth Throckmorton Dale (died 1639), had no children, and at the time of her death, Richard Hamby was named as one of two recipients of the Dale property (about 5000 acres divided between the Eastern Shore and the upper James River at City Point.) The portion of the property on the Eastern Shore of Virginia was known as Dales Gift.

A short investigation soon revealed that the great grandfather of Richard Hamby was John Hamby (Maltby), who administered the will of his brother-in-law, Thomas Dale of Alford (Lincolnshire) in 1571. John Hamby (Maltby) and his sister Anne Hamby Dale (died 1578) were the children of George Hamby of Brocklesby.

Thomas Dale of Alford mentioned in 1571 two sons in his will, Edward Dale and Francis Dale, and left each of them various properties. Son Edward Dale received the manor at Legsby in Lincolnshire, and Francis Dale received Strubby Manor in Lincolnshire.