George Twisleton | |
---|---|
Member of Parliament for Anglesey | |
In office September 1654 –April 1659 | |
Governor of Denbigh Castle | |
In office October 1646 –May 1660 | |
Personal details | |
Born | 1618 Drax,West Riding of Yorkshire |
Died | 12 May 1667 Lleuar Fawr,Carnarvonshire |
Resting place | St Beuno's Church,Clynnog Fawr |
Nationality | English |
Spouse | Mary Glynne c. 1650 to his death |
Children | George (1652–1714);Margaret;Jane;Philip (died 1701);William (died 1719);Mary (died 1720?);Alice (died 1720?);Elin (died 1727) |
Military service | |
Rank | Colonel |
Battles/wars | |
George Twisleton, 1618 to 12 May 1667, was a member of the landed gentry from Yorkshire and colonel in the Parliamentarian army during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Under the Commonwealth of England, he sat as MP for Anglesey from 1654 to 1659.
Although nominated to the High Court of Justice for the Trial of Charles I in January 1649, he did not participate and thus escaped prosecution after the 1660 Stuart Restoration. Thereafter he lived quietly at home in Lleuar Fawr, Carnarvonshire, where he died in 1667.
George Twisleton was born in 1618, third son of John Twisleton, who owned lands near Drax and Barlow, North Yorkshire, and Margaret Constable (died 1626). His two elder brothers, John (1614–1682), and Philip (c. 1616–1673), also supported Parliament during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. [1]
Sometime before 1652, he married Mary Glynne (died 1676), a Welsh heiress; they had numerous children, including George (1652–1714), Margaret, Jane, Philip (died 1701), William (died 1719), Mary (died 1720?), Alice (died 1720?), and Elin (died 1727). [2]
When the First English Civil War began in 1642, his brother Philip joined the army of the Eastern Association in Lincolnshire. [1] Twisleton's own movements are uncertain, although it seems likely he served with the Northern Association horse under Sir Thomas Fairfax. In April 1645, he is listed as Lieutenant Colonel of a cavalry regiment in the forces led by Sir William Brereton, Parliamentarian commander in the North Midlands. [3]
How Twisleton ended up here is unclear. Fairfax combined with Brereton on a number of occasions, including the Battle of Nantwich in January 1644, and Twisleton's unit may have remained in the area to support the Siege of Chester. The latter was a key supply point, linking Royalist recruiting areas in Wales and Ireland with their armies elsewhere in England. [4] By summer 1645, Brereton's blockade meant only the crossing over the River Dee still connected Chester and North Wales. [5]
Based in Oswestry, Twisleton was deputy to Colonel John Carter, charged with driving the Royalists out of Montgomeryshire. [3] The Battle of Naseby in June 1645 turned the war decisively in favour of Parliament, while the surrender of Montgomery Castle shortly afterwards cemented their control of the county. [6]
This allowed Parliamentarian forces from Oswestry under Thomas Mytton to push north into Denbighshire and Carnarvonshire. At Denbigh Green in November 1645, they repulsed a last ditch Royalist attempt to relieve Chester. [7] Twisleton led an attack on Whitchurch, Shropshire in December, and was then sent to blockade Hawarden Castle, just before Chester capitulated in February 1646. [3] Denbigh Castle itself held out until October 1646, when the garrison was ordered to surrender by Charles I. [8] Twisleton became the new Governor, a position he retained until the Stuart Restoration in 1660. [3]
However, victory resulted in bitter disputes over the post-war political settlement between the New Model Army and the majority of MPs in Parliament. [9] In this internal struggle, Twisleton's own position is unclear, although Philip Twisleton sided with the army, and in August 1647 replaced Edward Rossiter as colonel of the regiment guarding Charles I at Holdenby House. Rossiter was viewed by the Army Council as unreliable due to his links with Parliamentary moderates, and dismissed. [10]
When the Second English Civil War began in April 1648, John Owen, former Royalist Governor of Conwy, raised a small force in Carnarvonshire. On 3 June, he laid siege to Caernarfon Castle; Twisleton marched to its relief, and two days later Owen intercepted him near Y Dalar Hir on the shore of the Menai Straits. In the ensuing battle, the Royalists initially had the upper hand but fled after Owen was captured. [11] Combined with an earlier victory at St Fagans in May, this ended serious Royalist resistance in Wales, although Anglesey was not finally subdued until October. [12]
In January 1649, Twisleton was among the 135 commissioners appointed to the High Court of Justice for the Trial of Charles I, but he did not attend the proceedings. [13] He focused instead on establishing his position in Denbigh, marrying Mary Glynne, an heiress whose father was Lord Chief Justice from 1655 to 1660, while her brother William was Member of Parliament for Caernarfon in 1659. [14] Returned as MP for Anglesey in 1654, Twisleton was re-elected in both 1656 and 1659, serving on several Parliamentary committees. [13]
In the political infighting that took place in the last few months of the Commonwealth, Philip Twisleton supported George Monck, who considered his brother George reliable enough to confirm him as colonel of an infantry regiment in February 1660. [3] Following the Stuart Restoration in May, the regiment was disbanded, while the Royalist Bulkeley family resumed their control of local politics. Twisleton resigned all his offices, and retired to live on his wife's estate at Lleuar Fawr. He died there on 12 May 1667, and was buried in St Beuno's Church, Clynnog Fawr. [2]
Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet, 13 September 1604 – 7 April 1661, was an English religious Independent, author, and landowner from Cheshire. He was Member of Parliament for Cheshire at various times between 1628 and 1653, and during the First English Civil War, commander of Parliamentarian forces in the North Midlands.
Major General Rowland Laugharne was a member of the Welsh gentry, and a prominent soldier during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, in which he fought on both sides.
Sir William Vaughan was a cavalry officer in the armies of Charles I of England. Initially serving in Ireland during the Confederate Wars, the outbreak of the First English Civil War led to him being sent to England in 1644, at the head of an Anglo-Irish cavalry regiment, to reinforce the Royalist army.
James Berry, died 9 May 1691, was a Clerk from the West Midlands who served with the Parliamentarian army in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Characterised by a contemporary and friend as "one of Cromwell's favourites", during the 1655 to 1657 Rule of the Major-Generals, he was administrator for Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Shropshire and Wales.
Robert Venables, was an English soldier from Cheshire, who fought for Parliament in the 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms, and captured Jamaica in 1655.
Major General Thomas Mytton, also spelt Mitton,, was a lawyer from Oswestry who served in the Parliamentarian army during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms and as MP for Shropshire in the First Protectorate Parliament.
Sir Kenrick Eyton was a Welsh lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1660. He fought in the Royalist army in the English Civil War.
This is a timeline for the English Civil War in Shropshire.
Sir John Owen of Clenennau (1600–1666), was a Welsh landowner from Anglesey, who served with the Royalist army in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, during which he held various commands in North Wales.
Colonel Sir Gilbert Gerard was a Royalist officer during the English Civil War.
The Battle of Denbigh Green took place during the closing stages of the First English Civil War. Fought just outside the Royalist garrison of Denbigh, it has been described as probably the only action in the North Wales theatre of the war "meriting the description of battle".
The Battle of Y Dalar Hir took place on 5 June 1648 in Caernarfonshire, North Wales, during the Second English Civil War. While little more than a skirmish, it had a significant effect on the local progress of the conflict.
Colonel Robert Ellice of Gwasnewydd was a Welsh professional soldier who served in the Royalist army in the English Civil War.
The siege of Hereford took place in 1645 during the English Civil War when the city of Hereford and its English Royalist garrison was besieged by a Scottish Covenanter army under the command of the Earl of Leven. The Covenanters were allied to the English Parliamentarian cause and moved to take the Royalist stronghold in the wake of their victory at the Battle of Naseby. After a month-long siege the approach of Royalist reinforcements and news of Montrose's victories against the Coventanters in Scotland forced Leven to abandon the siege and retreat. However, in December of the same year the city was taken in a surprise attack by Colonel John Birch and remained in Parliamentarian hands for the remainder of the conflict.
The Flintshire Militia, later the Royal Flint Rifles was an auxiliary regiment reorganised in the Welsh county of Flintshire during the 18th Century from earlier precursor units. Primarily intended for home defence, it served in all of Britain's major wars, and supplied many recruits to the Regular Army. After a shortlived merger with another Welsh militia regiment it became a battalion of the King's Royal Rifle Corps but was disbanded in 1889.
The Carnarvonshire Militia, later the Royal Carnarvon Rifles, was an auxiliary regiment reorganised in the county of Caernarfonshire in North Wales during the 18th Century from earlier precursor units. Primarily intended for home defence, it served in Britain and Ireland through all Britain's major wars until it was disbanded in 1908.