John Wildman

Last updated

Lilburne, The Picture of the Council of State, 1649, pp. 8, 19).
  • London's Liberties; or a Learned Argument between Mr. Maynard and Major Wildman, 1651.
  • In the Twelve Collections of Papers relating to the Present Juncture of Affairs in England (1688–9, 4to), there are several pamphlets probably written by Wildman, viz.: [54]

    Three tracts are attributed to Wildman, jointly with others, in A Collection of State Tracts, published on occasion of the late Revolution and during the Reign of William III (1705, 3 vols. fol.), viz.: [55]

    Family

    Published accounts have recorded that Wildman's first wife was Frances, daughter of Sir Francis Englefield, 2nd Baronet, and his second wife was Lucy, daughter of Lord Lovelace. [56] However, these connections have recently been contested. The History of Parliament - The House of Commons 1640-1660 records that Wildman's first wife was Dorothy, daughter of Michael Whitefoot of Hapton in Norfolk, a family noticed in Wildman's own will. Wildman's second wife was Lucy Richmond, daughter of Anthony Richmond of Idstone, Ashbury, Berkshire, from a family connected to Wildman's friend and ally, the Berkshire MP Henry Marten.

    Wildman had a son, John, who married Eleanor, daughter of Edward Chute of Bethersden, Kent, in 1676, [57] and died childless in 1710, though he made John Shute, later Viscount Barrington, his chief heir, particularly of Beckett Hall, [54] which the elder Wildman had bought in 1657 from the regicide Henry Marten (see above). [58] [59] [60] [Controversy 1]

    Notes

    Footnotes
    1. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) (ODNB) states that Wildman's first wife was Frances, daughter of Sir Francis Englefield, while the second was Lucy "daughter of Lord Lovelace".

      The ODNB account fails to identify its sources for the identity of either wife, so checking the secondary or primary sources used by the author of the ODNB article is difficult. The details of the first marriage as described by the ODNB match those of Ashley's work, and the ODNB may have used Ashley as a source, but Ashley does not cite another source (Ashley 17). The identity of Wildman's first wife therefore remains unclear pending the discovery of more reliable sources. However, it is noteworthy that, in 1689, Wildman sat as MP for Wootton Bassett in Wiltshire where the Englefields lived (Nash Ford 2010).

      The ODNB's identification Lucy "daughter of Lord Lovelace" appears also to be based on Ashley, but his referenced source (Ashley 18, 304), the '13th Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts', does not mention this marriage. Richmond, however, cites several items of direct primary source evidence that Lucy was the daughter of Anthony Richmond of Idstone at Ashbury in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire) (see Richmond, v. 3, p. 134-5), and Nash Ford states this is confirmed by the arms of Wildman impaling Richmond on the ledger stone above their grave in Shrivenham Church.(Nash Ford 2010; Ball & Ball, 2002) It seems that "Lord Lovelace" (presumably Richard Lovelace, 1st Baron Lovelace (1564–1634)) may not have a daughter named Lucy. There is certainly none recorded in the Hurley parish register with the rest of his children (Nash Ford 2010c). He did, however, have a daughter, Elizabeth, who married Henry Marten (Nash Ford 2010a) and Ford suggests the two have been confused (Nash Ford 2010).

    Citations
    1. Firth, C. H. (1900). Dictionary of National Biography.
    2. Norfolk Record Office; Reference: PD 184/1
    3. Venn & Venn, Alumni cantabrigienses; a biographical list of all known students, graduates and holders of office at the University of Cambridge, from the earliest times to 1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1927), Pt I, Vol. 4, p.408
    4. 1 2 3 Chisholm 1911, p. 640.
    5. B. Taft, "Journey to Putney: The Quiet Leveller," in G. Schochet, ed., Religion, Resistance, and Civil War: Papers Presented at the Folger Institute Seminar ‘Political Thought in Early Modern England, 1600–1660’ (Washington, DC, 1990), p. 69; Como, David R. (2020), "Making ‘the Heads of the Proposals’: The King, the Army, the Levellers, and the Roads to Putney," English Historical Review 135 (577): 1391-2. https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceaa312
    6. Como (2020), pp. 1391-2, 1396-1408
    7. The manifesto is reproduced and transcribed in Como (2020), pp. 1408-1411, 1427-1428
    8. Firth 1900 , p. 232 cites Clarke Papers, i. 347, 356
    9. Firth 1900 , p. 232 cites: Clarke Papers, vol. i. pp. xlviii, 240, 259, 317, 386.
    10. Vernon & Baker 2010
    11. Firth 1900 , p. 232 cites: A Declaration of the Proceedings of Lieutenant-colonel John Lilburne and his Associates, 1648, 4to; Commons' Journals, v. 437, 469.
    12. Firth 1900, pp. 232, 233.
    13. 1 2 3 Firth 1900, p. 233.
    14. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Clarke MSS.
    15. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Cal. of Committee for Compounding, pp. 1653, 1769, 3100, 2201; cf. Life of Colonel Hutchinson, ed. 1885, ii. 174.
    16. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Lysons, Berkshire, p. 366.
    17. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Old Parl. Hist. xx. 305.
    18. Ashley 1947, p. 90.
    19. Waylen 1854, p. 277.
    20. Crowley et al. 1999 , pp. 140–149 endnote 93.
    21. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Thurloe, iii. 147; Whitelocke, Memorials, iv. 183.
    22. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1655–56, p. 387.
    23. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Clarendon, Rebellion, xv. 104; Clarendon State Papers, iii. 311, 315, 331, 336.
    24. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Clarendon State Papers. iii. 408, 419; Hist. MSS. Comm. 10th Rep. vi. 197.
    25. Rachel Hammersley, James Harrington: An Intellectual Biography (Oxford, 2019), p. 241
    26. Hammersley (2019), 249-259
    27. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Whitelocke, Memorials, iv. 385.
    28. Firth 1900 , p. 233Commons' Journals, vii. 798; A Letter concerning the securing of Windsor Castle to the Parliament, 1659, 4to.
    29. Firth 1900 , p. 233 cites Commons' Journals, viii. 66.
    30. Firth 1900 , p. 233Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1660–1 p. 409, 1661–2 pp. 556, 560.
    31. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Egerton MS. 2543, f. 65; Kennet, Register, pp. 567–602.
    32. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1665–6, pp. 200, 288.
    33. 1 2 Firth 1900, p. 234.
    34. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1667, p. 502.
    35. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Pepys, Diary, 8 December and 12 December 1667.
    36. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1670, p. 322.
    37. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Hist. MSS. Comm. 12th Rep. vi. 218.
    38. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Informations as to the Rye House Plot, p. 50 ed. 1696; Ferguson, Life of Robert Ferguson pp. 145, 434.
    39. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Ferguson, Life of Robert Ferguson pp. 78, 419, 434.
    40. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Luttrell, Diary, i. 263, 292, 301; The Proceedings upon the bailing the Lord Brandon Gerrard ... Major Wildman, &c., folio, 1683.
    41. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Burnet, Own Time, ed. Airy, ii. 363; Sprat, Rye House Plot, ed. 1696, ii. 107.
    42. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites Hist. MSS. Comm. 12th Rep. vi. 394.
    43. Firth 1900 , p. 234 cites The Secret History of the Rye House Plot, by Ford, Lord Grey, 1754, pp. 93, 114; cf. Macaulay, History of England, ii. 121, People's edit.
    44. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Burnet, Reign of James II, ed. Routh, p. 351.
    45. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Grey, Debates, ix. 28, 70, 79, 193, 326.
    46. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Boyer, Life of William III, App. ii. 19; Hist. MSS. Comm. 12th Rep, vi. 261.
    47. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1689, p. 59.
    48. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Dalrymple, Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, ed. 1790, iii. 77, 94, 131, 184.
    49. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Luttrell, Diary, ii. 187, 192.
    50. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Le Neve, Knights, p. 439; Luttrell, i. 615, ii. 603.
    51. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Luttrell, iii. 112.
    52. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Daniel and Samuel Lysons, Magna Britannia, "Berkshire", p. 367.
    53. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Macaulay Hist. of England, people's edit. i. 256; Disraeli, Sybil, chap. iii.
    54. 1 2 3 4 Firth 1900, p. 235.
    55. Firth 1900, pp. 235, 236.
    56. Greaves 2011.
    57. Firth 1900 , p. 235 cites Chester, London Marriage Licenses, p. 1467; Le Neve, Knights, p. 43.
    58. Nash Ford 2010.
    59. Nash Ford 2010a.
    60. Nash Ford 2010b.

    References

    Web

    Attribution:

    Further reading

    Sir John Wildman
    MP
    Wenceslas Hollar - Major Wildman cropped.jpg
    1653 engraving of John Wildman by Wenceslas Hollar. The caption reads nil admirari ("astonished at nothing")
    Postmaster General
    In office
    1689–1691