Sir Giles STRANGEWAYS, Knight

Born: ABT 1528, Melbury Sampford, Dorset, England

Died: 11 Apr 1562, Melbury Sampford, Dorset, England

Buried: Melbury Sampford Church, Dorset, England

Father: Henry STRANGEWAYS (Sir Knight)

Mother: Margaret MANNERS

Married: Joan WADHAM (b. 1533 - d. 1603) (dau. of John Wadham of Merifield and Joan Tregarthen) (sister of Sir Nicholas Wadham) (m.2 Sir John Young)

Children:

1. Anne STRANGEWAYS

2. Elizabeth STRANGEWAYS

3. John STRANGEWAYS of Melbury Sampford (Sir)

4. Nicholas STRANGEWAYS

5. George STRANGEWAYS

6. Edward STRANGEWAYS


The details in this biography come from the History of Parliament, a biographical dictionary of Members of the House of Commons.

Born ABT  1528, first son of Henry Strangeways by Margaret, dau. of George Manners, Lord Ros, and sis. of Thomas, 1st Earl of Rutland. Married 1546, Joan, dau. of John Wadham of Merifield, Som. and sister of Sir Nicholas Wadham; by whom he had at least 4s. 2da. Suc. his grand-father Sir Giles Strangeways 1546. Kntd. 1549. Warden, Neroche forest, Som. 1551; commr. church goods, Dorset 1553, j.p. from 1554.

Strangeways owned extensive estates in Dorset, including the site of the monastery of Abbotsbury. Through his wife his heirs acquired rights to considerable property in Somerset, which he himself did not live to enjoy. He also owned lands in Yorkshire, whence the family had moved to Dorset in the fifteenth century. A license to alienate was granted in Oct 1546, viz. 'Sir Giles Strangeways to Sir Hugh Paulet... John Sydenham of Brympton... to the use of the said Sir Giles for Life'... He was a protestant during Edward VI's reign, when he served as a commissioner for church goods. After Mary's accession he came up to London to render an account of his proceedings in the latter capacity. He was one of those who ‘stood for the true religion’ in the Oct 1553 Parliament, and in 1555 he opposed a government bill, but he must have given the Marian government general support in the county, as he continued to serve on the Dorset commission of the peace and his wardenship of Neroche forest was renewed by a patent of Nov 1555. In 1557 he commanded 50 men in the expedition of William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, to St. Quentin. Sir William Courtenay, who died on the campaign, appointed him an executor.

Strangeways lived and died extravagantly. In Jun 1555 he surrendered himself to the Fleet to avoid outlawry for debts that included over £100 to two London tailors. He sold 700 ewes, 600 wethers and 300 hogs, leaving three estates denuded of livestock.

When he died in his early thirties on 11 Apr 1562, he left his widow with at least six children under 21. His will, which he made before going on the St. Quentin campaign and to which he added two codicils, in 1558 and 1562, required his wife, if she married again, to give a bond of £2,000 to carry out her duties as executrix. The 13 overseers to whom she was bound received a total of £72 plus expenses. The executrix was compelled to sell all the household goods to pay debts amounting to over £3,000. Strangeways left 1,000 marks to his daughter Anne on her marriage and 600 marks to a younger son. Among numerous charitable bequests were some to poor prisoners at Ilchester and Dorchester, and to the lazar-house of Bridport. There is an effigy of him in plate armour at Melbury Sampford church.
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