The HARTLEY Surname History
Where is 'HARTLEY Country' ?
Many
researchers see the area around the Lancashire and Yorkshire borders, especially
north and east of Burnley, and up through the Pennines to Cumbria, separated
by the Yorkshire Dales as 'Hartley Country'. The southern area includes the
towns of Colne, Todmorden, Bacup and Haworth as well as Burnley itself. The
northern area includes the village of Hartley in Cumbria.
Lands around Wycoller and Trawden were owned and occupied for centuries by Hartley
families [see below].
In 1891 there were 19 049 Hartley families in England and Wales [ancestry.com] of whom 8034 [42%] lived in Lancashire and 6994 [37%] lived in Yorkshire.
This view over the Colne Valley overlooks Pendle Hill with the Forest of Trawden behind the viewer.
[NB: HARTLEY villages are also found in the south of England see: HARTLEY Place Names ]
HARTLEY Castle, near Kirkby Stephen, Cumbria [Cumbria Record Office, Kendal Musgrave family, baronets, of Hartley Castle, Westmoreland: Edenhall estate and manorial records, including papers and rough sketches for rebuilding of Edenhall (including Robert Smirke account), 1796-1830 (WD/ CAT/MUS). ]
There are remains of a Norman Castle named Pendragon Castle just south of Kirkby Stephens dating from 1180, maybe earlier or later, occupied by Sir Andrew de Harcla. Also a fortified Manor Hall named Hartley Castle [also known as Harcla Castle and Hardcla Castle] at Hartley village, given to Sir Andrew de Harcla by King Edward 11 in 1315. Sir Andrew also had possession of Hartley Manor, Mallerstang Forest and Smardale.
PENDRAGON CASTLE. The Norman Castle of Pendragon is reputed to have been
founded by Uther Pendragon, the father of King Arthur. According to legend,
Uther Pendragon and a hundred of his men were killed here when the Saxon invaders
poisoned the well. There are also claims that the Romans built at least a temporary
fort here, along the road between their forts at Brough and Bainbridge. But
apart from legend and supposition there is no real evidence that there was any
building here before the Normans built their castle in the 12th Century, about
the year 1180. The Castle was built next to the River Eden in the Vale of Mallerstang,
probably by Hugh de Morville [Lord of Westmoreland], Hugh de Kevelioc [Earl
of Chester] or by his son, Ranulph de Meschines. However some say it was built
as late as 1314.
The jurors at the Inquisition p. mortem of Robert de Clifford found that there
is a castle of stone in Mallerstang called Pendragon, held by Andrew de Harcla
by payment of a yearly rent of 6d. Roger, his son, being then 15 years
old, the custody of the Castle was committed by Edward 11 to Guy de Beauchamp,
Earl of Warwick. Roger coming of age, was drawn into that conspiracy which Thomas,
Earl of Lancaster, formed against the King, and, being taken a prisoner was
beheaded at York. The Inquisition p. mortem taken at his death in 1327 found
that he died possessed of this Castle of Pendragon, together with the Forest
of Mallerstang, also that the buildings in the Castle could not be extended,
for that the cost of maintaining the same exceeded the profits thereof. The
fortunes of the Castle, however, were resuscitated when the twice widowed Idonea
came into residence, indeed it seems to have risen to the zenith of its glory
during her time. The Lady Anne in her Memoirs of the Clifford family tells us
that "Pendragon Castle was Idonea's chief and beloved habitation." Here, in
the year 1333, she entertained Balliol, King of Scots, and here also she died,
aged 73. Notwithstanding Balliol's friendly visit a Scottish raiding party destroyed
the castle by fire in 1341. It was repaired by another Roger de Clifford who
married Maud Beauchamp and who died seised of the Castle in 1390–1, leaving
it to his son Thomas.
Then again we find it laid in ruins in 1541, but whether by the Scots or accident
by fire, we have no means of ascertaining. For 119 years it continued a desolate
ruin until it was re-edified by the Lady Anne in 1660. Her diary tells how she
formed the design of restoring the Castle as early as 1615, for a library for
a Mr. Christopher Wobridge. To give an easier access to the Castle she built
the neighbouring bridge over the Eden and, in 1662, "a wall of lime and stone
around the Castle 90 roods in compass, with two gates and within it a stable,
coach-house, brew-house, bake-house, wash-house and a little room over the gate
which is arched." In 1685 the castle was demolished by Thomas, Earl of Thanet,
and it has ever since continued to be exposed to the ravages of time and tempest.
[site of] Hartley Manor Hall [named Hartley Castle], near Kirkby Stephen, Cumbria.
After the exercution of Roger de Clifford in 1315 for adhering to the faction of the Earl of Lancaster, Hartley Manor Hall [Hartley Castle] was confiscated and granted by Edward 11 to Sir Andrew de Harcla (anglicized to Andrew de Harclay or Hartley*see below).and during his ownership was subjected to frequent destruction by the Scots. After the execution of Sir Andrew the Manor Hall and estate passed to Ralph Nevil, who fortified it in 1323 and subsequently sold them to Sir Thomas de Musgrave. Sir Thomas built his stone tower and received a licence to crenellate it on 4 October, 1353. Sir Richard de Musgrave (died 1615), enlarged it by the addition of Elizabethan wings and transformed the fortress into a mansion. Sir Philip Musgrave repaired and furnished the ancient chapel as also such rooms as had been left unfinished at the time of the Civil War. When about the year 1677 the Musgrave family removed to Eden Hall, Hartley Castle was deserted and allowed to fall into ruin. It was totally demolished between 1704 and 1735 by Sir Christopher Musgrave who died in 1735.
East view showing the ruins of Hartley Manor Hall [Hartley Castle] 1739 [thanks
to Tom Hartley for the copy of this Buck engraving]
Original occupants of Hartley Castle were ...
Husband: Michael de HARCLA Born:
ABT 1250 at: Of Hartley Castle,Kirkby
Stephen,Westmoreland,England
Wife: Joan [nee FITZJOHN] Born: ABT 1254 at: Of,Westmoreland,England
Children:
*Baron Andrew de HARCLA Born: ABT 1276 at: Of Hartley Castle,Westmoreland
Died: 1323 at: Carlisle ,Cumberland
John de HARCLA Born: ABT 1278 at: Of Hartley Castle,Westmoreland Died:
1323 at: Whitehall,Cumberland
Sarah de HARCLA Born: ABT 1280 at: Of Hartley Castle,Westmoreland Married:
ABT 1300 at: Of Great Musgrave, Westmoreland Died: AFT 1327: Spouses: Thomas
de MUSGRAVE Robert de LEYBURN [* de Harcla also referred to as de Hercle]
* another son not listed is * Henry Harclay [c. 1270 – 1317] Chancellor of the University of Oxford [1313-1316], a former Priest educated at the University of Paris [c.1300] where he was influeneced by Scotus. He was later a Secular Master [c.1310] and Scholastic Philosopher, a radical 'Thinker' who questioned Aristotle regarding Infinity and Eternity. His twenty-nine Quaestiones Ordinariae cover a range of topics in metaphysics, theology, physical science, philosophical anthropology and ethics, which were among the most important of those debated in the early 14thC. The articles provide a window to this era, as Harclay discusses many of the main questions of his day: whether and why we choose what is evil, how God can know the future and we can still be free, what a virtue is, whether the human soul survives death, whether all things are made up of atoms. He was the son of Sir Michael Harclay and Joan Fitzjohn, and the younger brother of Andrew Harclay
*Baron Andrew de HARCLA was a commander
of the English forces at the battle of Bannockburn in 1314, and he defeated
Thomas, Earl of Lancaster at the Battle of Boroughbridge [Battle of Old Byland]
[River Ure, NW of York] in 1322 for which he was made Lord Harcla, and
later Earl of Carlisle. "The 4th Earl of Hereford led the fight on Boroughbridge,
but he and his men were caught in the arrow fire. Then one of de HARCLAY's pikemen,
concealed beneath the bridge, thrust upwards between the planks and skewered
the Earl of Hereford through the anus, twisting the head of the iron pike into
his intestines. His dying screams turned the advance into a panic."' Sir Andrew
used the infantry tactics which were later to prove so effective against the
French at Crécy, and the rebels were defeated. Andrew
de HARCLA was at the height of his fame when he outmanœuvred and broke the power
of the rebel Earl Thomas of Lancaster at Boroughbridge, and took prisoner Roger
de Clifford III. Roger joined the rebels perhaps out of jealousy of Andrew,
or because he was not recognised as Sheriff of Westmorland, for since his father's
death at Bannockburn, deputy sheriffs—Hugh de Lowther, Walter de Strickland,
Patric de Curwen, Henry de Threlkeld, Henry de Warcop—had been chosen, or perhaps
because castles which were his by inheritance were garrisoned by others. But
on account of Clifford's rebellion the castles of Appleby and Brougham, as well
as Pendragon, were from this time definitely held by Andrew de HARCLA.
Sadly, it is believed as the result of some political skulduggery, Sir Andrew
was accused of colluding with Robert the Bruce for a truce against the King's
wishes and was hung drawn and quartered at Carlisle Castle, his head ending
up on the Tower of London. His brother John was also executed, leaving his son
John a ward of the king and his sister, Sarah who married Thomas de Musgrave
from nearby Great Musgrave and stayed on at Hartley Manor Hall [Hartley Castle].
[also see Hartley Household below].
Another account states Sir Andrew de Hercla or Harcla was created Earl of Carlisle by King Edward II. in the fifteenth year of his reign. This title he enjoyed but a short time, for in the following year he was arrested in his castle of Carlisle, for treasonable correspondence with the Scots, degraded from his knighthood, by ungirding his sword, and hacking off his spurs, hanged, drawn, and quartered, his head being placed on London-Bridge, and his four quarters thus disposed, one on the keep of Carlisle Castle, one on the keep of the castle at Newcastle, a third on York-Bridge, and the fourth at Shrewsbury.
Bones from the quarter hung at Carlisle Castle were later returned to Andrew's sister, Sarah, in 1328, and buried at Kirkby Stephen's Church in a Musgrave family tomb.At the church is a monumental figure of a man in armour, supposed to have been erected to the memory of Sir Andrew de Harcla.
It appears Sir Andrew's brother, Michael de Harcla, was also condemned and had his estate at Harmby confiscated in 1323 and given to Henry le Scrope, later passing to the Nevill family. Later Roger, his son, being then 15 years old, the custody of Pendragon Castle was committed by Edward 11 to Guy de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. Roger coming of age, was drawn into that conspiracy which Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, formed against the King, and, being taken a prisoner was beheaded at York. The Inquisition p. mortem taken at his death in 1327 found that he died possessed of this Castle of Pendragon, together with the Forest of Mallerstang. .
* Richard le FRANCIS took the surname VERNON and lived at Haddon Hall. He married the unnamed daughter of Michael de Harcla. He had a son named William.
* John de Harcla's daughter Isabel married Richard de RADCLIFFE c.1344, son of William RADCLIFFE and Margaret de HINDLEY
* Crosby Ravensworth Hall. The site of Thomas de HASTINGS' house in 1286. "On Whit Sunday of that year Richard le Fraunceys of Mauld's Meaburn sent William de HARCLA, John le Fraunceys, Robert de Appleby and others to Crosby Ravensworth. There they found Nicholas de Hastings, leaning on his bow, outside the gate of his brother's house, and immediately they attacked him. John le Fraunceys struck him with a staff and pushed him in the breast and by pressing upon him with his horse thrust him into a ditch. Seeing this William de HARCLA leapt at him with his sword drawn intending to run it into him but the sword fell from his hand and so he failed. Whereupon John le Fraunceys bade Robert de Appleby shoot him with an arrow and Robert did as he was asked and shot him in the breast and Nicholas very quickly died." After which the murderers returned in a body towards the manor house of Mauld's Meaburn. "At once the villagers of Crosby followed them with hue and cry and with intent to arrest and seize the felon, Robert, who shot the arrow. But John le Fraunceys and William de HARCLA and the others drove them back and by use of weapons rescued Robert de Appleby and took him away into the manor house of Richard le Fraunceys, who sent them forth, at Mauld's Meaburn, shut the gates after them and allowed no one to go in. Thereon came Alice, wife of Nicholas de Hastings, the slain man, she climbed on to a wall and raised hue and cry and sought to obtain entrance for the people with her that they might arrest them, but those inside the manor house prevented anyone from gaining ingress."
"Our particular HARTLEY branch stemmed from the area in Westmoreland, [now Cumbria] England, near to Kirkby Stephen. The village of HARTLEY had a keep or small Castle in the 13th century. Designed to defend the area from the Scottish border raiders, it is now lost within farm buildings on the moor side. The raiders drove the HARTLEYs south, through the "Trough of Bowland" and they then settled in the Pendle area of Lancashire. There are hundreds of HARTLEYs in the area, mainly Johns who begat Johns, making the detailed searching a genealogists nightmare. Links developed between Colne, Trawden, Winewall, and Wycoller in Lancashire and Laneshaw Bridge, Stanbury, Haworth, and Oxenhope in Yorkshire. My own traced ancestors stem from Haworth and Oxenhope, but there are intriguing links to Wycoller". [ thanks to David Hartley E-mail: [David, please submit your new email address]
Hartley Household
the Household itself has a long history: in 1310, the Earl of Carlisle, Sir
Andreas de HARCLA - a name later anglicized to Andrew of HARTLEY - was made
Commander of Edward II¹s forces against Robert The Bruce and later fought bravely
at the Battle of Bannockburn. http://www.hartleyhousehold.co.uk/main.htm
Wycoller Hall, Whalley, Pendle District.
Now in ruins, Wycoller Hall was the ancestral home
of the HARTLEYs who were one of the greatest farming families in this part of
Lancashire. Wycoller lies within Trawden township, together with Winewall and
Beardshaw Booth.
In 1422 Geoffrey and Robert HARTLEY occupied cow pastures at Over and Nether Wycoller. In 1459 John, James, Henry and William HARTLEY occupied nearby Beardshaw Booth whilst Ellis, Henry and James HARTLEY occupied Over and Nether Wycoller. John HARTLEY occupied nearby Winewall [where Sir William Pickles HARTLEY's ancestors [Hartley's Jam] once lived, see Hall of Fame S-Z
In 1474 Peter HARTLEY occupied Winewall.
In 1507 Geoffrey and John HARTLEY occupied Beardshaw Booth whilst Hugh HARTLEY
occupied Winewall. Wycoller was occupied by Piers HARTLEY the Elder.
In 1527, ten HARTLEYs occupied Beardshaw Booth whilst Roger, Thomas and John
HARTLEY the Elder occupied Winewall. Peter and three other HARTLEYs occupied
Wycoller. In 1528 Nicholas HARTLEY, a Priest, occupied Witley House at Beardshaw
Booth.
The Hall itself is said to have been built by Piers HARTLEY in 1550. It
was passed through the marriage of his daughter Elizabeth in 1611 to Nicholas
Cunliffe in 1646.
The Cunliffe family of Hollins, Accrington was a founding North of England Saxon
family; 12thC Adam de Cunliffe was Baron of Manchester. The Cunliffes kept 'open
house' throughout Christmas, with roast beef and goose, pudding and plenty of
beer, set around a fireplace surrounded by stone benches.
Six generations inhabited Wycoller Hall. John Cunliffe married Grace HARTLEY
in 1628 and lived at Wycoller.The last of the true line was a man called Henry
Owen [who assumed the name Cunliffe]. After his death in 1818 he left substantial
debts so it became the property of the chief mortgager, a Rev. John Oldham who
sold the doors, windows, roofing timbers and stone to support the building of
a cotton mill in Trawden. Wycoller Hall is said to be haunted by a spectre horseman,
and a lady dressed only in black silk.
As well as owning Wycoller, the Cunliffes also took over the Winewall estate
in the 17thC.
In 1589 Roger HARTLEY of Wycoller left four
looms in his Will to his sons Christopher and Thomas HARTLEY.
In 1609, ten HARTLEYs occupied Beardshaw Booth whilst Roger, Thomas and John
HARTLEY the Elder occupied Winewall. Peter HARTLEY occupied Wycoller.
In 1662 Geoffrey, Robert, James, John and Roger HARTLEY occupied land at Trawden.
James HARTLEY occupied Winewall. Other land occupiers were James Hartley of
Lane, James Hartley of Wanless, James Hartley of Alderhurst, James Hartley of
Beyghur, James Hartley of Ludgemoss, John Hartley of Gelford (Gillvert) Clough
and Peter Hartley of Beardshaw Head. In 1662 and 1666 Bernard HARTLEY occupied
Wycoller.
In 1693 Elizabeth HARTLEY died, leaving Blackscarr Croft Mill at Trawden to
her heir, William HARTLEY of Chatburn. Her father was William HARTLEY, her grandfather,
George HARTLEY
'The
Friends of Wycoller' was set up in 1948 with the primary aim to preserve the
Hall. Restoration work on the Hall began in 1950 and the fireplace has been
rebuilt with their help.
Now a ruin, Wycoller Hall stands in a picturesque and sheltered situation in
the Wycoller Valley, close to the stream, facing south-west, and is a stone-built
16th-century house of somewhat unusual plan, though the state of dilapidation
it is now in makes an exact understanding of the original disposition of its
parts difficult. It follows, however, to some extent the usual type of a central
hall and end wings, but the kitchen and offices seem to have been on the north-east
side of the hall instead of at the end, and the arrangement of the hall itself
varies in other particulars from the ordinary type. The south-east wing is three
stories in height, but the roof having gone from the whole of the building,
and the walls being broken and imperfect, it is impossible to say whether other
parts have ever been of more than two stories. That there was a room over the
hall is shown by the window remaining in the front elevation and by other evidence
in the hall itself, and the building would probably be of two stories throughout,
with attics in the end wings. The south-east wing, however, seems to have been
almost wholly rebuilt at a much later period, the windows having the appearance
of 18th-century work, and was probably then raised to its present height. Alterations
at the back appear also to have been made at the same time. The north-west wing
has no projection in front of the main wall of the central block, but beyond
it set back 9 in. is a presumably later wing 44 ft. in length and originally
25 ft. wide, but at some still later date an addition 10 ft. wide has been built
in the back. The house, which as it now stands is overgrown with grass and weeds,
was abandoned as a residence after the death of the last of the Cunliffes in
1819, but the later north-west block, the walls of which still stand their full
height of two stories, had its roof intact till about the year 1880. The great
hall and south-east wing are now the property of Mrs. Susannah Benson, and the
rest of the building belongs to the Corporation of Colne. The northeast wing,
which includes the old kitchen, has been repaired and is now used as a cottage.
The great hall is 23 ft. long by 23 ft. 6 in. wide, with a large open fireplace at the north-west end, and a bay in the east corner 9 ft. 6 in. wide and 10 ft. 9 in. deep. The south-east end is now open to the wing, but the wall was apparently formerly carried across, making the hall of the dimensions just stated. The fireplace is 12 ft. 6 in. wide and 7 ft. 6 in. deep, the back curved on plan, with a stone seat carried all round. The stone arch, which has the appearance of having been rebuilt, is struck from three centres, and is 7 ft. 9 in. high to the crown and 5 ft. to the springing under a square hood mould with blank shields in the spandrels. A passage-way 5 ft. wide runs behind the fireplace with a door from the hall at the south end, and a stone staircase at the north leading to the floor above. The outer door at the end of the passage-way is now built up and a later door made in the lobby between it and the hall formed by the deep recess of the fireplace. (fn. 29) The hall is lit by a long low mullioned window of twelve lights on the south-west side and by the bay window opposite, the latter apparently having been rebuilt in the 18th century. On the north-east side between the bay and the fireplace are two four-centred arched doorways, now built up, leading to the kitchen and offices, the spandrels of which are ornamented with shields, blank in one case, but in the other bearing the date 1596, the '96,' however, in the second shield appearing to have been newly cut. On the north-east side of the fireplace, under the stairs, is a small recess in the wall with a curiously shaped opening narrowing at the bottom. Immediately above the windows and fireplace, at the height of 9 ft., a moulded string course runs round the hall, marking presumably the ceiling height, but a large projecting stone corbel at the angle of the bay makes it difficult definitely to reconstitute the hall in its original condition. Of the south-east wing only the walls, or some parts of them, remain, and many alterations seem to have been made. In the south corner is a large fireplace opening 12 ft. wide, partly built up and made into a closet, and there are two outer doors on the southeast wall. The kitchen is 19 ft. square and now forms the living room of a farm-house.
An unusually large number of superstitious and other stories are associated with the house. Wycoller Hall is thought to be “Ferndean Manor” in Charlotte Brontes novel “Jane Eyre”. The Brontes spent much of their life in Haworth, close to Wycoller.
Seven bridges cross Wycoller Beck. Three of the most important are shown above. Pack-Horse Bridge, a twin arched bridge which may have originated almost 800 years ago, but has been reconstructed over the centuries. Sally Owen, mother of Wycoller's last squire has led to the bridge's alternative name - Sally's Bridge. Clapper Bridge is close to the ruins of Wycoller Hall and probably dates from the late 18th or early 19th century. Grooves in the bridge from the weavers' clogs were allegedly chiselled flat by a farmer whose daughter was fatally injured on the bridge. Clam Bridge is possibly more than 1000 years old and is listed as an Ancient Monument. It is a single slab laid across Wycoller Beck and once had a handrail. In 1989 and again in 1990 the bridge was swept away and cracked in two. It was repaired and replaced in 1991.
The HARTLEY Family Coat of Arms
A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain ... by Bernard Burke
There are eight HARTLEY families mentioned in Burke's. They likely have the same origins, in Lancashire and Cumberland.
1] HARTLEY of Manchester, Lancashire [Visit Lancaster 1664] Ar on a cross gu pierced of the fleld four cinquefoils or in the 2nd and 3rd quarters a martlet s i Crest A martlet sa holding in the beak a cross crosslet fltchee
2]
HARTLEY
of Bucklebury House, Berkshire and Little Sodbury, Gloucestershire. See:
Doctor David HARTLEY in The Hartley Hall of Fame A-F, click on Winchcombe
Henry HARTLEY
Arms: "ARG. [Silver] on a cross gu.[Red Cross],
pierced of the field four cinquefoils [four gold five-leafed flowers] or, in
the second and third quarters a Marlet [Blackbird] sa."
Crest: "a Martlet [Blackbird] sable, holding in the beak a cross-crosslet,
fitchee, or [a Gold Cross] "
Motto: Vive ut Vivas "Live [life] to the fullest"
3]
HARTLEY
of Gillfoot, Whitehaven, Cumberland. John HARTLEY b.c.1740 m.29 Aug 1762
Elizabeth MILHAM. Their son Thomas HARTLEY b.c.1770 m.13 Aug 1796 Anne HARTLEY
d.16 Jan 1831. Their son Thomas HARTLEY b.29 Sep 1802, m.10 Apr 1839 Georgianna-Elizabeth
RIMINGTON d.1855. Their son Thomas HARTLEY b.21 Mar 1847
Arms: "ARG. [Silver] on a cross gu.[Red Cross], pierced of the field four cinquefoils
[four gold five-leafed flowers] or, in the second and third quarters a Marlet
[Blackbird] sa."
Crest: "a Martlet [Blackbird] sable, holding in the beak a cross-crosslet,
fitchee, or [a Gold Cross] "
Motto: Spectemur agendo "Let us be judged by our actions"
4]
Same Arms c HARTLEY Wheaton Aston Hall, Staffordshire. Erm
on a cross engr gu four quatrefoils or in the 1st and 4th quarters a martlet
sa Crest Upon a mount vert a martlet sa in the beak a cross pattte fltchee or
Motto: Sub hoc signo vinces
Descendants of George B. Thorneycroft [ Shrubbery Ironworks, Horsely Fields,
Wolverhampton] Generation No. 1 1. GEORGE B.1 THORNEYCROFT died 1851. Child
of GEORGE B. THORNEYCROFT is: 2. i. EMMA2 THORNEYCROFT, d. 1909, Tong, Salop
Generation No. 2 2. EMMA2 THORNEYCROFT (GEORGE B.1) died 1909 in Tong, Salop.
She married JOHN HARTLEY [b.1813 Dumbarton Scotland to John HARTLEY [Glassworks
Dumbarton] and Margaret STEVENSON [nee KAYLL]. ]. He lived [and died 1884] in
Tong Castle, Salop. More About JOHN HARTLEY:
John HARTLEY, along with one of his brothers James N. HARTLEY, established Hartley's
Glassworks and Wearglass Works in Sunderland in 1836/7; Chance and Sons Glassworks,
Smethwick; partner with his brother-in-law Major Thorneycroft, J. P. in Messrs
J. B. Thorneycroft & Co.'s large Ironworks and Collieries; Director of the L.
& N.W. Railway; Deputy Lieutenant for Staffordshire. Elected Mayor of Wolverhampton
1858. Burial: 1884, St Bartholemew's, Tong Children of EMMA THORNEYCROFT and
JOHN HARTLEY are: 3. i. GEORGE THOMPSON3 HARTLEY, b. 1844; d. July 20, 1917,
Wheaton Aston, Staffs. ii. REV CANON HARTLEY. iii. MISS HARTLEY.
Generation No. 3 3. GEORGE THOMPSON HARTLEY (EMMA2 THORNEYCROFT, GEORGE
B.1) was born 1844, lived at Kilsll Hall then lived [and died July 20, 1917]
in Wheaton Aston Hall, Staffs. He married LOUISA STONE 1871, daughter of JOHN
SPENCER STONE. She died 1892 in Wheaton Aston, Staffs. More About GEORGE THOMPSON
HARTLEY:
George opened the
"Hartley Arms" in Wheaton Aston. Burial: 1917, Lapley, Staffs. Children
of GEORGE HARTLEY and LOUISA STONE are: 4. i. ERNALD GEORGE JUSTINIAN HARTLEY,
b. Abt. 1873. ii. MABLE HARTLEY. iii. MISS H. HARTLEY, m. GORDON-WATSON. Generation
No. 4 4. ERNALD GEORGE JUSTINIAN HARTLEY (GEORGE THOMPSON3, EMMA2 THORNEYCROFT,
GEORGE B.1) was born Abt. 1873. He married MARY FRANCES WEDGWOOD. Notes for
ERNALD GEORGE JUSTINIAN HARTLEY: Last known address Frilford House, Abingdon,
Berks. Child of ERNALD HARTLEY and MARY WEDGWOOD is: i. GEOFFRY ERNALD WEDGWOOD
HARTLEY.
5] HARTLEY: granted to John HARTLEY Esq of Catteral Hall, Giggleswick Yorkshire. Gu a cross erm on a chief ar three hearts of the field Crest A heart as in the arms enslgned with a crown vallery or betw two wings barry of six az and
6] HARTLEY of Settle, Giggleswick, Yorkshire. Same Arms a canton erm for diff Oral A heart as in the arms ensigned with a crown vallery or betw two wings barry of six az and or the heart charged with an erm spot gold for diff
7]
HARTLEY of Mlddleton Lodge near Richmond, Yorkshire. Middleton Tyas,
Kneeton and Moulton belonged to ULF before the Conquest in 1066. They then passed
to Count ALAN of Richmond in 1086, with Middleton and Kneeton jointly owned
by UGHTRED. Down the ages, ownership passed from the SHUTTLEWORTH family to
the HARTLEY family; Marmaduke HARTLEY; Leonard William HARTLEY; George HARTLEY
[1780-1841]; Leonard HARTLEY; Leonard Lawley HARTLEY in 1857; then to Leonard
Laurie HARTLEY in 1879. Leonard died at St. Leonards-on-Sea, December 27th,
1883, aged 67. The manor then passed to Colin Douglas EYRE, who was succeeded
by his brother Ralph EYRE. Or a cheveron between three annulets
[rings] gules over all a fesse arure Crest: A stag couchant reguard ar
8]
HARTLEY of Beech Park, Clonsilla, Co.Dublin,
Ireland. [HARTLEY family originally from Lancashire]. Samuel HARTLEY. His
son Rev.William HARTLEY b.1679 of Ballylaghan Co.Carlow, Ireland. His son Rev.Humphry
HARTLEY b.1711 m.Honor. Their son Bartholomew b.20 Dec 1758 m.10 Dec 1785 Ann
AGAR. Their son Bartholomew b.13 Dec 1780 m.2 Jun 1823 Eliza WILSON. Their son
Richard Wilson HARTLEY b.24 Mar 1824 m.Hester HEPENSTALL.
Arms: "ARG. [Silver] on a cross gulen [Red Cross],
pierced of the field four cinquefoils [four gold five-leafed flowers] or, in
the first and fourth quarters a Marlet [Blackbird] sable. in the second quarter
a Rose, [a Red Rose [of Lancashire] barbed and seeded, proper"
Crest: "Out of a Mural Crown, or a Stags Head, proper, holding in the mouth,
a Rose, gules, [a Red Rose [of Lancashire] barbed and seeded, proper"
Motto: Spectemur agendo "Let us be judged
by our actions"
also, there are the following contributions:
[above the
shield and helmet is the crest which is described as: " A black martlet holding
in the beak a gold cross." - thanks to John L. Dodd]
Alternative descriptions can be found as follows:
the motto reads "Sub hoc signo vinces", translated reads
"Under this sign you shall conquer" [thanks to Stephen Hartley E-mail: sbhartley@ozemail.com.au ]
Blazon of Arms Gules, a canton ermine on a chief argent;
three hearts of the field.
Crest A heart as in the arms ensigned, with a crown vallery or; between two
wings barry of six azure and or; the heart charged with an ermine spot or.
[I have in my possession a hand painted representation of The HARTLEY Coat which
belonged to my father. It has been in the family's possession for at least fifty-five
years to which I can personally attest. It closely approximates the home page's
illustration." [thanks to Benjamin W. Hartley E-mail: bhartley@top.monad.net ]
Picture Gallery of 1800's
Victorian England
typical 19thC dress of HARTLEY Family members from Yorkshire and Lancashire
Ailse
O'Fussers [ Mary Alice Hartley ]
The last of the lime gal drivers that plied her calling in the
Rochdale district was a strange character named Mary Alice Hartley, who was
more familiarly known as "Ailse O'Fussers". She kept a small farm, Holough,
on the edge of the moorland above Shawforth. In her palmy days she had as many
as twenty gals, and they carried bags of coal from Land coalpit, near Shawforth,
and sometimes lime from Clitheroe or Burnley. They travelled the packhorse roads
from Clitheroe to Bacup on the moors skirting Shawforth and Whitworth, along
the foot of Brown Wardle, down Cronkeyshaw to Rochdale.
Her appearance was most grotesque and arrested the attention of every person
whom she and her gals passed on their journey. In build she was short and stout,
and she wore over her petticoats a male topcoat. A "Jim Crow" hat was fastened
and secured on her head with a handkerchief over the top of her hat, and tied
under her chin. She carried a long stick in the style of a shepherd, and presented
more the appearance of a man than a woman. Yet she had a lover, named Thomas
Walton, a young farmer who resided with his parents at Hursted Nook Farm near
Pottery. They were indiscreet and when their offspring died she insisted on
carrying the coffin herself to the graveside in Whitworth churchyard. In her
declining days Ailse lived at Potovens, a cottage on the edge of the moor above
Shawforth and carried coal on a donkey's back for her customers. It was a great
favourite of hers, was named "Jerry", shared her dwelling and was fastened to
her bedpost at nights.
Ailse died about 1879 and was buried in Whitworth Churchyard. The ladies of
the village decorated her coffin with a wreath of flowers, and in this ground
on the side of the hill, a short distance from the packhorse road she traversed,
she lies in uncomplaining sleep.
[ from Robertson's "Rochdale and the Vale of Whitworth,1897 image
© Rochdale Local Studies Library
]
The Lancashire Weavers Riots ...
of April 1826 were one of the most dramatic events in the history
of the English cotton industry. For four days, the area bordered by Chorley,
Clitheroe, Bacup and Bury was convulsed as desperate crowds attacked local weaving
sheds and smashed over 1100 of the hated power looms. Six people were killed,
ten people transported for life and thirty sentenced to prison terms for their
part in the disturbances.
For a list of The Rioters and their sentences: including a "John HARTLEY"
Go to: The Lancashire Weavers Riots
HARTLEY Mine Disaster
at Hester Pit, Northumberland.
January 1862
"Oh, my men, my canny men, they would have done ought
for me and there they are all lying dead and cold" New Hartley is near Blyth
9 miles NNE of Newcastle in the south-east of Northumberland.
Consisting of Mill Pit, Nightingale Pit, Whin Pit, opened:1754 Owners:1850's
- Carr & Co. May 1929 - Hartley Main Collieries Ltd. 1947 - National Coal Board
[N.C.B.]
Located half-a-mile from the Village Hall, and close to the railway station
of New Hartley, is the old shaft of the Hartley New Pit, made memorable by the
terrible catastrophe which occurred there on Thursday, January 16th, 1862.
At the pit-head was the engine-house, containing the engine for pumping the
water out of the pit supported on a massive beam over the mouth of the pit shaft.
Suddenly, and without a moment’s warning, this ponderous mass of iron snapped
in half thundered down the shaft, crushing the strong wooden wall which divided
the pit into two shafts and filling the shaft with debri as far down as the
yard seam. A cage containing eight men was ascending the shaft at the time the
beam broke. It was at once smashed, and torn as it had been manufactured of
the weakest tin instead of the strongest wrought iron.
Six of the occupants were instantly killed, and two miraculously escaped. This
shaft was the only entry to the mine and being blocked by the mass of iron and
woodwork, the supply of fresh air was cut off from the men imprisoned in the
workings, without a hope of escape. By the Friday afternoon it is probable that
all of the entombed miners had succumbed to the deadly effects of the noxious
gases. In the meantime efforts were made by devoted friends and relatives to
force a passage into the workings.
Day after day, and night after night, they toiled heroically, frequently overcome
by the deadly gases. The whole country was roused by the terrible tidings, and
manifested the utmost interest in the fate of the imprisoned men. On the Sunday
after the accident an immense crowd gathered on the scene, and by the afternoon
a huge crowd was milling round the pit head arriving by trap, railroad, and
on foot. Steadily Mr. Coulson and his brave assistants and volunteers proceeded
with the clearing of the shaft, and on Wednesday morning three of the sinkers,
headed by Emerson, Mr. Coulson’s chief assistant, were able to advance into
the furnace drift, but were unable to proceed far on account of the gas.
In the afternoon one of the shift-men, William Adams, managed to penetrate into
the yard seam through the furnace drift. He was fearfully excited when he came
back to the surface and tore his hair like a maniac while relating his dreadful
news in spasmodic jerks. The bodies of the men and boys were found lying in
rows, all quiet and placid, as if sleeping off a heavy day’s work. Boys were
lying with their hands on the shoulders of their fathers, and one poor fellow
had his arms clasped round the neck of his brother. The sleep like approach
to their death has been pathetically described by Mr. Joseph Skipsey the poet
of the Coal-fields, in his ballad on "The Hartley Calamity" [see below]
On the body of Armour, the back-over man, was found a small memorandum book,
containing the brief but significant last entry: "Friday afternoon, at half-past
two, Edward Armstrong, Thomas Gledstone, John Hardy, Thomas Bell, and others
took extremely ill. We had a prayer meeting at a quarter to two, when Tibbs,
Henry Sharp, J. Campbell, Henry Gibson, and William Paltrier. Tibbs exhorted
us again, and Sharp also." On a shot-box belonging to a hewer named James Bewick
the following pathetic words were scratched, evidently with the point of a nail:
" Friday afternoon. My dear Sarah,—I leave you " No doubt the writer died immediately
afterwards.
The bodies were interned in Earsdon churchyard on Sunday, the 26th January,
in ground set apart for the purpose, in the presence of a vast concourse of
spectators. The sad procession was necessarily a long one, and many of the bodies
were in the ground before the last had left the desolated village, which was
four miles away. The terrible calamity called on the sympathy of all classes
of society for the widows and children of the Hartley men, and a noble fund
for their relief was speedily subscribed.
On that day, 204 men and boys were lost when the giant beam of the pumping engine
snapped and twenty tons of cast iron hurtled down the only shaft, blocking all
attempts at rescue for several vital days. Nearly all the fatalities were caused
by gas which quickly built up in the workings, and the entire community of New
Hartley was overwhelmed by the tragedy. Almost every home in the village lost
a breadwinner, and in some the coffins were said to have been stacked from floor
to ceiling. The funeral that followed on January 26th was remembered for generations
- for despite the fact that a few bodies were taken to Cramlington, Cowpen and
Seghill for burial, most were buried together in the churchyard at Earsdon,
four miles away, and it is said that the last coffin had not left New Hartley
when the first was reaching the churchyard, thronged by 60,000 people who had
come to stare or to mourn.
The fund money poured in from all over the country, and increased rapidly, reaching
£50,000 by February 13th and over £75,000 by early April. Apart from special
payments for various purposes, it was decided to give 8/6d. weekly to each widow,
12s. to a widow with one child, and 15s. to a widow with two children. Many
of the widows remarried but twenty years after the disaster there were still
over seventy recipients.
At Earsdon,
St Albans, a village in North Tyneside close to Whitley Bay, there is a Hartley
Memorial Monument to the Hartley Mine Disaster.
THE HARTLEY CALAMITY
[Joseph Skipsey (1832-1903)]
THE Hartley men are noble, and Ye'll
hear a tale of woe;
I'll tell the (loom of the Hartley men— The year of sixty-two.
'Twas on a Thursday morning, on The first month of the year,
When there befell the thing that well May rend the heart to hear.
Ere chanticleer with music rare Awakes
the old homestead,
The Hartley men are up and off To earn their daily bread.
On, on they toil; with heat they broil,
And streams of sweat still glue
The stour unto their skins, till they Are black as that they hew.
Now to and fro, the putters go The waggons
to and fro,
And echoes clang of wheel and hoof Within the mine below.
The din and strife of human life Awake
in "wall" and "borde,"
When, lo! a shock is felt which makes Each human heart-beat heard.
Each bosom thuds, as each his duds He
snatches and away,
And to the shaft in terror flees With all the speed he may.
Each, all, they flee—by two—by three
They seek the shaft, to seek
An answer in each other's face, To what they may not speak.
"Are we entombed?" they seem to ask,
"The shaft is closed, and no
Escape have we to God's bright day From out the night below.
" So stand in pain the Hartley men, And
o'er them swiftly comes
The memory of home and all That links us to our homes.
Despair at length renews their strength,
And they the shaft must clear;
And soon the sound of mall and pick Half drowns the voice of fear.
And hark! to the blow of the mall below
Do sounds above reply?
Hurra, hurra, for the Hartley men, For now their rescue's nigh.
Their rescue nigh? The sounds of joy
And hope have ceased, and ere
A breath is drawn a rumble's heard Re-drives them to despair.
Together, now behold them bow; Their
burden'd souls unload
In cries that never rise in vain Unto the living God.
Whilst yet they kneel, again they feel
Their strength renew'd—again
The swing and the ring of the mall attests The might of the Hartley men.
And hark! to the blow of the mall below
Do sounds above reply?
Hurra, hurra, for the Hartley men For now their rescue's nigh.
But lo! yon light, erewhile so bright
No longer lights the scene;
A cloud of mist yon light hath kiss'd, And shorn it of its sheen.
A cloud of mist yon light hath kiss'd,
See! how along it steals,
Till one by one the lights are smote, And deep the gloom prevails.
"O, father, till the shaft is rid Close,
close beside me keep;
My eye-lids are together glued, And I—and I—must sleep."
"Sleep, darling, sleep, and I will keep
Close by—heigh-ho!"— To keep
Himself awake the father strives; But he—he too—must sleep.
"O, brother, till the shaft is rid Close,
close beside me keep;
My eye-lids are together glued, And I—and I—must sleep."
"Sleep, brother, sleep, and I will keep
Close by—heigh-ho!"— To keep
Himself awake the brother strives; But he—he too—must sleep.
"O, mother dear! wert, wert then near
Whilst—sleep!"—The orphan slept;
And all night long by the black pit-heap The mother a dumb watch kept.
And fathers and mothers, and sisters
and brothers; The lover and the new-made bride;
A vigil kept for those who slept, From eve to morning tide.
But they slept—still sleep—in silence
dread, Two hundred old and young,
To awake when heaven and earth have sped, And the last dread trumpet rung!
A pause for thoughts ...
as a special tribute
to all the HARTLEY Family members who have died in conflicts, throughout time,
all over the world.
visit the British Commonwealth War
Graves Commission Register
*New National Memorial
Arboretum, Staffordshire, England
please
bookmark this new website address: www.hartleyfamily.org.uk
e-mail enquiries to: enquiries@hartleyfamily.org.uk
HARTLEY Crest and Coat of Arms
Shop at
for HARTLEY gifts; plaques, tiles, framed crests, t-shirts etc.
Special Exclusive Discounts for HARTLEY Reunions. Click on pic to left, then
enter HARTLEY in search, then click on 'Family Reunions' under the 'Products'
heading. Generous savings available through www.hartleyfamily.org.uk