HUMAD2

Hull University Manuscripts and Archives Database


TITLE: PAPERS OF THE WICKHAM-BOYNTON FAMILY (INCORPORATING GRIFFITH) OF BURTON
AGNES 
 
 
Reference code: DDWB, DDWB(2), DWB 
Dates of creation: 1172-1944 
Extent: circa 1600 items 
Finding aids: listed to item level 
Related material in repository: DDX/16/200, 207, 217, 222, 228, 239, 248-9,
342, 346, 368-9; DDCV/26/36; DDCV/31; DDCV/40; DDCV/204/30; DDDU/11/96-97;
DDEV/68/248; DDHO/4/19-20; DDJL/4/18; DDMC/4/1; DDMM/28/13; DDPR/7/157; DDSQ;
DDSQ(2)/1/1; DDSQ(2)/18/1; DDSQ(3)/17/5 
Access: Open 
 
 
CONTENT AND SCOPE 
 
The papers of the Wickham-Boynton family of Burton Agnes arrived in the
Brynmor Jones Library in three deposits, two from the family themselves in
1974 via their solicitors, Crust Todd and Mills of Beverley (DDWB and
DDWB[2]), and one as a purchase (DWB) from Sotheby's 28 July 1947. The
material comprises legal and estate papers rather than personal papers. In
DDWB/12 and DDWB/15 there are medieval deeds for Little Kelk and Rudston
originally belonging to Bridlington Priory and some are printed in an edition
of W T Lancaster The chartulary of Bridlington Priory (1912). Some of the
earliest material in the collections are to be found here, though DDWB
generally is very rich in medieval charters. 
 
 The collections also include enclosure awards for Burton Agnes (1718, 1759),
Haisthorpe (1723) and Barmston (1758). There are manorial records for Burton
Agnes (1791-1875) as well as a court roll for the manor of Haisthorpe for
1414. DWB contains four quietuses of Sir Henry Griffith (1603-1607) as well as
later shrievalty records of Sir Griffith Boynton (1750-1771). A few papers
specifically relating to the early nineteenth-century financial management of
Sir Francis Bonyton are at DDWB(2)/13. 
 
 The collections are arranged as follows: DDWB has estate records for Bainton
(1349); Barmston (1317-1819), including the 1528 admiralty ratification of the
rights and privileges of Margaret Boynton and an abstract of the title of
Francis Boynton through to 1734; Bempton (late 12th century); Boynton (late
12th century to 1613); Burton Agnes (c.1172-1766), including gifts and deeds
of the Merlay, Sommerville and Griffith families and 'the cutting of the
intale' of the Boynton family in 1700; Burton Agnes and Thornholme
(1315-1597); Caythorpe in the parish of Rudston (mid-12th century-mid-13th
century); Gransmoor in the parish of Burton Agnes (1483, 1591); Grindale
(1331); Haisthorpe (1414-1803); Hull (1592-1636); Little Kelk (c.1185-1592);
Nafferton (1 item 1231-49); Ottringham (1614-1730); Rudston (late 12th
century-1730); Sutton upon Derwent (1309); Swaythorpe (1545); Thornholme
(early 13th century-1722); Wansford (1398); various townships (early 13th
century-1833), including an early 13th century exchange between Bridlington
Priory and Walter Boynton, records relating to the Sommerville and Greystoke
families, letters patent of 1498 to Walter Griffith to give him custody of the
infant John Thornholme and his possessions, a document dated 24 October 1656
and entitled 'A particular of Agnes Burton, Haistrop, Thurnam, Harpham and
Kelk Parva, the remaingeinge lands of Sir Henry Griffith deceased and
discendinge upon Sir Francis Boynton' and 1811 mortgages of Francis Boynton
provided by John Lockwood solicitor; Nottinghamshire (1481); Yorkshire, North
and West Riding (late 12th century-1792), including a 500 year lease from
Griffith Boynton to Constance Boynton as her marriage portion of £4000 in
1702. 
 
 Various deeds in DDWB include a copy of Walter Griffith's pedigree; a 1435
defeasance related to the marriage settlement of Walter Griffith and Joan
Nevill; the grant of Edward VI in 1550 of the wardship and marriage of Gabriel
St Quintin; a 1662 indulgence of the archbishop of York allowing Francis
Boynton, his wife and four others to eat meat during fasting, the marriage
licence of Griffith Boynton and Anne White dated 1742 and a series of pardons
granted to Robert Place (1415), Francis Boynton (1604), Henry Boynton (1604),
Matthew Boynton (1626), Henry Griffith (1626) and Francis Boynton (1661). 
 
 DDWB contains the marriage settlements of Gervase Clifton and Agnes Griffith
(1482); Matthew Boynton and Frances Griffith (1613); Henry Griffith and Mary
Willoughby (1620); Henry Griffith and Margaret Wortley (1636); William Boynton
and Elizabeth Barnard (1661); Francis Cobb and Barbara Hebblethwaite (1690);
Francis Boynton and Frances Hebblethwaite (1703); Griffith Boynton and Rebecca
White (1728); Griffith Boynton and Anne White (1742); James Kemplin and Isabel
Ganton (1748); William St Quintin and Charlotte Fane (1758). 
 
 DDWB contains the wills of John de Thornholme (1383); Thomas Smith (1467);
Martin Boynton (1518); Thomas Boynton (1520); Margaret Boynton (1533); Matthew
Boynton (1540); Cecily Boynton (1550); Thomas Boynton (c.1581); John
Thornholme (1597); Katherine Calverley (1603); Francis Boynton (1640); Martha
Barnard (1667); William Boynton (1689); William Cobb (1696); Elizabeth
(Boynton) Royston (1706); Griffith Boynton (1708); Richard Simpson (1727);
Griffith Boynton (1757); Griffith Boynton (1771); Griffith Boynton (1794). 
 
 DDWB(2) contains estate and legal papers of the Boynton family (especially
Francis Boynton) in the nineteenth century in the following sections: Barmston
(1767-1932), including leases and tenancy agreements, largely of the 1810s and
1820s and an original bundle relating to enclosure; Burton Agnes (1716-1920),
including leases and tenancy agreements, inventories of the personal effects
and furniture of Lady Boynton deceased 1889, papers to do with drainage, 19
letters of a dispute between Henry Boynton and Robert Hall 1848-9 and a 1920s
insurance policy for Burton Agnes Hall; Haisthorpe (1817); Rudston (1774-1894)
including leases, an 1814 plan of the estate and enclosure material; various
townships (1706-1944) including an abstract of the title of Francis Boynton,
details of his income 1806-10, mortgages arranged with the solicitor John
Lockwood and papers related to his financial arrangements with Henry John
Shepherd, leases, agreements, a copy of the will of Griffith Boynton (1771)
and John Harrison (1774) and a copy of the marriage settlement of Griffith
Boynton and Charlotte Topham (1765); a lease for Wood Hall in the parish of
Ellerby (1853); accounts (1788-1899) especially household and estate accounts
of the first three decades of the nineteenth century and Francis Boynton's
accounts with his creditor, John Lockwood; correspondence (1794-1877)
including 40 letters of John Lockwood to Henry John Shepherd about the
finances of Francis Boynton, as well as two family letters dated 1869 and
1877; rentals (1808-1854) largely for the estates of Francis Boynton in 1808;
settlements (1784-1886) including the marriage settlements of George Parkhurst
and Mary Boynton (1784), Francis Boynton and Sally Bucktrout (1815), Henry
Boynton and Louisa Strickland (1833), Henry Boynton and Harriet Lightfoot
(1843) William Mussenden and Katherine Maude Boynton (1866); papers of Francis
Boynton (1795-1833) amounting to more on his financial arrangements with John
Lockwood; various documents (1788-1875) including bonds of John Lockwood;
wills (1771-1898) of Griffith Boynton (1771), Griffith Boynton (1794), Mary
Parkhurst (probate 1815), Henry Boynton (1854), Henry Boynton (1861), Harriet
Boynton (1869), Henry Sommerville Boynton (1898) and a miscellaneous section
(1784-1869) including a memorial for Henry Boynton (1869) and certificates of
baptism, marriage and burial for the Boyntons, Griffiths, St Quintons and
others dated 1707-1815. 
 
 DWB is a rather varied collection of papers sold by the Wickham-Boynton
family in 1947. It contains the following: very miscellaneous papers for
Yorkshire, East Riding (1560-1858) including a 1560 deed of covenant for John
Thornholme, a rough court roll from 1590 for Barmston, some eighteenth-century
leases, a grant of tithes to Griffith Boynton in 1722 and a mortgage for £950
between Francis Boynton and his creditors, John Lockwood and Henry John
Shepherd; medieval and early modern papers for Yorkshire, North Riding,
especially Lebberston (1363-1739) including papers of the de Burton, Place and
Lamplugh families, the marriage settlements of William Lamplugh and Hester
Shipton (1666), William Lamplugh and Elizabeth Jackson (1729) and Richard
Kirshaw and Constance Boynton (1702), as well as a 1736 quitclaim for their
son, William Kirshaw Boynton; Yorkshire, West Riding. The papers are
especially for Bingley, Bradford, Morton, Cottingley Bridge and Mexborough
(1521-1858) and include miscellaneous items to do with land sales, mortgages
and settlements, especially for the Rhodes, Hird, Lister, Lamplugh and Maud
families, a bundle of papers in Richard Ransome -v- William Calverley
(c.1803), the marriage settlements of Jeremiah Bargh and Grace Ward (early
eighteenth century), John Rhodes and Anne Dinsdall (1718) and Jeremiah Dixon
and Mary Wickham, whose father, the Reverend Henry Wickham was involved with
her father in a Leeds banking venture, the papers of which are also in the
collection; a settlement, York (1793); Derbyshire (1603); a mortgage, county
Durham (1747); Lancashire (1664-1798) including more papers for Henry Wickham
and a lease from the bishop of Chester to Dorothy Benson of Wrenthorpe (1677);
a mortgage for Lincolnshire (1620); the 1621 description of the king's third
claimed during the minority of Henry Griffith; appointments and commissions of
various members of the Boynton family in the local judiciary and militia
(1669-1852); miscellaneous papers (c.1558-1845) including an Elizabethan jury
list, an acquittance of £1100 paid by Matthew Boynton towards the Ulster
plantation for his baronetcy in 1618, a letter of John Barnard to his wife
dated 24 October 1634 and William Boynton's certificate of 1673 for taking the
oaths of allegiance and supremacy and making a declaration against the
doctrine of transubstantiation; papers relating largely to the shrievalty of
Griffith Boynton from 1750 and the wills of Isaac Hawmond (1650), John Rawson
(1662), Jonathan Thompson (1689), Cuthbert Braderig (1698), Margaret Boynton
(1720), John Rhodes (1751), Mary Clarkson (1761), William Greenwood (1762),
William Lamplugh (1770), Francis Boynton (1779), John Williamson (1804),
Andrew Hodgson (1803), Christiana Radford (1821). 
 
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 
 
The home of the Wickham-Boynton family, Burton Agnes Hall near Bridlington in
the East Riding of Yorkshire, has descended through two families, the
Griffiths and the Boyntons, without sale, for several hundred years. After the
Norman conquest the estate passed from the king to Robert de Brus. The
medieval hall, built circa 1170, may have been built by his successor, Roger
de Stuteville and when the male line of the de Stuteville family failed the
hall and manor passed into the de Merlay family through the marriage of Alice
de Stuteville to Roger de Merlay. In 1274 it passed again through an heiress,
this time to Robert de Sommerville, and it stayed in that family just two
generations until failure of the male line again saw its transfer, this time
to the Griffith family through the marriage of Joan de Sommerville to Rees ap
Griffith in 1355. The papers in DDWB, DDWB(2) and DWB relate to the Griffith
family and the Boyntons who succeeded to Burton Agnes also through marriage in
1654 (Wood, Burton Agnes old manor house, pp.1-2; Allison, Victoria county
history of Yorkshire East Riding, pp.106-8). 
 
  The Griffiths were a Welsh family who had settled in Staffordshire in the
thirteenth century. Walter Griffith, who died in 1481, was responsible for
restoring the Norman manor house and adding the fifteenth-century roof. The
Griffith family chapel in the church at Burton Agnes was built circa 1500 and
the family played an important part in the affairs of the north during the
sixteenth century. The second Sir Walter Griffith became high sherriff of
Yorkshire in 1501 and was governor of Scarborough castle until his death in
1531. His son, George, was knighted a year later and was in turn succeeded by
his son, another Walter Griffith, in 1559. The latter's son, Sir Henry
Griffith, was knighted by James I in 1603 and was responsible for building the
Elizabethan/Jacobean new Burton Agnes hall around the same time when appointed
high sheriff of Yorkshire. The new hall stands next to the original Norman
manor house. The latter became service quarters and a laundry and has had
several alterations since those made in the fifteenth century (Wood, Burton
Agnes old manor house, p.2; Pevsner & Neave, York and the East Riding, pp.
365, 367). 
 
 Henry Griffith was succeeded in 1620 by his son, also Henry Griffith, who was
knighted by Charles I in 1627 and was a royalist during the civil wars of the
1640s before surrendering to parliament and taking the national covenant. When
he died in 1654 the estate passed to the son of his sister, Frances, who was
married to Matthew Boynton (Wood, Burton Agnes old manor house, p.2; Musgrave,
Burton Agnes Hall, p.8). 
 
 The Boyntons claim their descent from an eleventh-century lord of the manor
of Bovington or Boynton. They became lords of the manor of Acklam in
Cleveland, but this manor, along with other family land, was forfeited to the
king after Sir Henry Boynton was beheaded in 1405 for supporting the rebellion
of Henry Percy, earl of Northumberland. Sir Henry's eldest son, Thomas, died
without issue and his second son, William, petitioned for return of land at
Boynton. In this he was successful and his grandson, Henry, greatly expanded
the family estates again by marrying Margaret, daughter of Martin de la See,
lord of the manor of Barmston who died in 1494 (there is a picture of his tomb
at DDMM/8/1) (Hawkesbury, Some East Riding families, p.6; Collier, The Boynton
family, pp.1-10; Foster, Pedigrees). 
 
 Henry Boynton died only a year after Martin de la See and his wife took a
religious vow not to remarry and was admitted of Corpus Christi York in 1513.
She was a votary and patroness to the priory of Nun Cotham. She appointed
Cuthbert Tunstall, bishop of Durham, one of the executors of her will, written
in 1533 (DDWB/25/6). Margaret Boynton died in 1536, by which time her two
eldest sons had predeceased her and she was succeeded to Barmston by her
grandson, Matthew Boynton (c.1504-1541), who was married to Anne Bulmer of
Wilton. He was appointed chief steward of the king's possessions in the
counties of York and Lincolnshire and one of their daughters, Cicely, became
maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth. The Boyntons became financially very
healthy in the sixteenth century. They held compact estates around Bridlington
and lived in a moated manor house at Barmston, the remains of which can still
be seen. Matthew's eldest son Thomas (b. circa 1523) was MP for Boroughbridge
and high sheriff of Yorkshire and when he died in 1582 he left a personal
estate of £2454 (Collier, The Boynton family, pp.13-15; English, The great
landowners of East Yorkshire, p.16; Morris, A series of picturesque views, i,
p.90; Ward, East Yorkshire landed estates, p.26; Foster, Pedigrees). 
 
 Thomas Boynton was succeeded by his son, Francis, who also served as high
sheriff of Yorkshire and sat on the council of the North. By the time of his
death in 1617 the family had accumulated the manors of Barmston, Roxby,
Acklam, Rudston, as well as lands in Boynton and the rectories of Barmston and
Bridlington with their tithes. He married Dorothy, who was the heiress of
Christopher Place and they had four children two of whom died in infancy. His
only son to survive to adulthood was Matthew, born circa 1591. He paid £1100
for his baronetcy in 1618 and married Frances Griffith, who became sole
heiress of her brother, Sir Henry Griffith of Burton Agnes (Collier, The
Boynton family, pp.18-19; English, The great landowners of East Yorkshire,
p.16; Foster, Pedigrees). 
 
 Matthew Boynton sat for Hedon in the parliament of 1628, but he came under
scrutiny in the 1630s for his religious tendencies and eventually fled to
Holland. He had returned by 1640 when he sat in parliament for Scarborough
though his allegiance before the outbreak of hostilities in 1642 was
ambiguous. Some sources say he was a royalist, but it is clear he also had
orders from parliament to observe the activities of John Hotham and his son
whose own loyalties wavered the other way, from parliamentarianism to
royalism. He and his younger son, Matthew, were responsible for the capture of
the Hothams, who were both executed for their change of allegiance. They then
received the surrender of Scarborough castle from Hugh Cholmley who had also
switched allegiance from parliamentarianism to royalism, but he was allowed to
flee abroad. Matthew Boynton was then made governor of Scarborough castle
until his death in 1647 when the younger Matthew Boynton succeeded him before,
very ironically, changing sides and becoming a royalist (Allison, Victoria
county history of Yorkshire East Riding, p.71 citing R A Marchant, Puritans
and the church courts in the diocese of York, 1560-1642, pp.122, 241-2;
Collier, The Boynton family, pp.20-1; Ross, Celebrities of the Yorkshire
wolds, pp.31-3). 
 
 Matthew Boynton's wife predeceased him by 13 years after bearing him 12
children. Their eldest son Frances (b.1618), thus became heir to Barmston and
Burton Agnes and he succeeded to the latter on the death of his uncle in 1654,
seven years after the death of his father. He made a profitable marriage to
Constance, daughter of Viscount Saye and Sele (chamberlain to the household of
Charles II) and the couple lived quietly at Barmston until their deaths in the
1690s. Francis Boynton's eldest son, William (b.1643), who was the first
member of the family to move from Barmston to Burton Agnes, was MP for Hedon
1680-5, but predeceased his father in 1689. His son, Griffith Boynton
(b.1664), thus succeeded his grandfather to the baronetcy and estate (he was
responsible for the major alterations at Burton Agnes), but his two marriages
failed to produce children and on his death in 1731 the inheritance shifted to
his cousin, Francis (b.1677) whose father was Henry Boynton, the younger
surviving son of Francis and Constance and rector for 47 years at Barmston
(Foster, Pedigrees; Collier, The Boynton family, pp.24-9; Allison, Victoria
county history of Yorkshire East Riding, p.109). 
 
 Through the eighteenth century the Boyntons continued to be involved in both
local and national politics. However they also amassed increasing debts, so
they demolished the house at Barmston and in 1771 sought statutory permission
to sell property and this was a process that continued well into the
nineteenth century, by which time the estates were considerably reduced.
Francis Boynton, 4th baronet, was educated at St John's college, Cambridge and
studied law. He became recorder of Beverley and was MP for Hedon 1734-9, but
his attendance was very poor. His wife, Frances Hebblethwaite, had six
children, though the first born son died in infancy. When Francis Boynton died
in 1739 he was thus succeeded to the baronetcy and the lands by his second
son, Griffith Boynton (b.1712). Griffith Boynton was also a lawyer and was
admitted to Gray's Inn in 1730. He married Anne White, but she died giving
birth to their only child, a son born in 1743. He did not remarry and himself
died in 1761 to be suceeded by Griffith Boynton, 6th baronet (Foster,
Pedigrees; Collier, The Boynton family, pp.29-33; Allison, Victoria county
history of Yorkshire East Riding, p.109; English, The great landowners of East
Yorkshire, p.28; Sedgwick, The house of commons, p.481). 
 
 Griffith Boynton, 6th baronet, was returned MP for Beverley, but there is no
record of him ever speaking in parliament and there is only one registered
vote recorded. He married first Charlotte Topham, and their respective arms
are quartered in the pediment above the Burton Agnes chimneypiece brought from
Barmston in the 1760s (the arms of Thomas Griffith [d.1582] and his three
wives are elaborately carved into the Elizabethan wood below). Charlotte
Boynton died at the age of 26 only two hours after giving birth to a stillborn
daughter in 1767 and Griffith Boynton married Mary Hebblethwaite less than a
year later. By her he had three sons who were destined to inherit the
baronetcy and estates in turn. He was succeeded on his death in 1778 by
Griffith Boynton (b.1769) who was educated at Trinity College Cambridge and
married Ann Parkhurst. The marriage was childless and he was succeeded by his
brother Francis Boynton (b.1777) who married Sarah Bucktrout. They also had no
children and when he died in 1832 he was succeeded by the youngest brother,
Henry Boynton, who had been born after his father's death, in 1778 (Namier &
Brooke, The house of commons, p.109; Foster, Pedigrees; Pevsner & Neave, York
and the East Riding, p.369; Collier, The Boynton family, pp.34-5). 
 
 Henry Boynton, 9th baronet, married Mary Gray and had 10 children. His eldest
son, Henry (b.1811), succeeded on his death in 1854 and made a career for
himself in the local militia. His first wife, Louisa Strickland, died without
leaving children in 1841 and he remarried in 1843. His second wife, Harriet
Lightfoot, had two children, Henry Sommerville Boynton (b.1844) and Katherine
Maude Boynton who married William Mussenden, general of the 8th Hussars. Henry
Sommerville Boynton, 11th baronet succeeded his father in 1869 and was the
31st and last descendant in direct line from Walter de Bovington or Boynton.
He was a traveller and naturalist whose large collection of stuffed birds was
later destroyed by a bomb in 1940. When he died in 1899 he left behind a
daughter, Cicely Mabel Boynton, who was born in 1877 and who married Thomas
Lamplugh Wickham (Musgrave, Burton Agnes Hall, p.9; Collier, The Boynton
family, pp.35-9). 
 
 In the late nineteenth century the estate of the Boynton family went through
further contraction; in 1879 the 11th baronet's 9300 acres had a gross annual
value of £10,000, but by 1910 the estate was only 5500 acres in size. Having
no son, Sir Henry Boynton's title was inherited by his cousin, Sir Griffith
Boynton and it has passed down through his heirs. His daughter, Cicely, owned
the estate until she died in 1947 to be succeeded by her younger son (the
elder having died on active service in 1942), Marcus Wickham Boynton, who in
1948 put the old Norman hall in the hands of the ministry of works and who
opened up the 'new' Elizabethan/Jacobean hall (and its fine collection of
Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings) to the public to solve the
family's financial difficulties. The estate is now in the hands of his nephew
(Musgrave, Burton Agnes Hall, p.10; Wood, Burton Agnes old manor house, Intro.
and p.2). 
 
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING 
 
* Allison, K J, Victoria county history of Yorkshire: East Riding (1971) 
* Collier, C V, An account of the Boynton family (1914) 
* English, Barbara, The great landowners of East Yorkshire 1530-1910 (1990) 
* Foster, J, Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire (1874-5) 
* Hall, Ivan, Samuel Buck's Yorkshire sketchbook (1979) 
* Morris, F O, A series of picturesque views of seats of the noblemen and
gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland (1880) 
* Musgrave, E I, Burton Agnes Hall near Bridlington, East Yorkshire: a
souvenir handbook (1950) 
* Namier, L & Brooke, J, The house of commons 1754-1790 2 vols. (1964) 
* Neave, D & Pevsner, N, The buildings of England: York and the East Riding
(1995) 
* Ross, F, Celebrities of the Yorkshire wolds (1878) 
* Sedgwick, R, The house of commons 1715-1754 2 vols. (1970) 
* Ward, J T, East Yorkshire landed estates in the nineteenth century (1967) 
* Wood, Margaret, Burton Agnes old manor house (1956) 
 
Related material in other repositories: Wilberforce House, Hull; Morrice MSS,
Dr Williams Library, London 
 
Humad2  
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