Old Wonersh Families
These notes are taken from existing papers and booklets, and are
therefore not original research.
Acknowledgement is given to the booklet “Four Families in Wonersh and Bramley” and “Our
Village” by Wonersh History Society. Also The History of
Reference is also made to Manning & Bray (available in the Reference Library at
both Cranleigh
and Bramley).
Very many letters and documents are
summarised and published online in the Surrey
History Centre Collections Catalogue . It has not been found possible to link these
references directly, however from the SEARCH page it is possible to bring up
the relevant collection of documents, with the search criteria
highlighted. These include
Norton
Family – Deeds of
Loseley papers, Collection Section LM
The Carrills
(Caryll) and Duncombes
See Manning & Bray Vol
II page 109
In Wonersh church in 1542 Clemence Bartlett daughter (or
possibly sister) of John Burley (d1551) married Richard
Carrill (d1576) younger son of John Caryll of Warnham near Horsham
(there is a Caryl Chapel at St Margaret’s Warnham), Attorney to the Duchy of Lancaster and member of
an old catholic family whose main seat was at Harting. He was admitted the same year to the Mercers Company in the City of
One of their daughters was Judith Carill. In due course
she married George Duncombe (d1646) of Weston near Albury, (they had
memorials in the old
church at Albury). They had numerous children and they figure as
the head of many a family tree. George
was a lawyer and conveyencer, who purchased many estates
in the surrounding villages, including Burningham in Dunsfold in 1604 and Weston sometime before 1611 (SHC collection
1322). He is also named as Steward at the Court of Bramley
from 1617 until his death in 1646 (SHC Ref 892/5/2 &3. He and his
descendants are named as the patrons of Wonersh church until 1765.
Simon Carill married Elizabeth
Aungier in 1607, but he died when their son,
another John, was just four, so she obtained wardship
and later remarried. Sometime between
1632 and 1637 John Carill
(d1656) married Hester Stynt(d1675)
of
When John died the estate was divided between his three daughters: Lettice Ramsden (East Bramley),
Margaret Ludlow (
SHC indicates that the Carrill
family operated during the Civil War from Great Tangley
on the Royalist side supported by the fact that King Charles II created John a
baronet after the Restoration. On the
other hand the puritan parliament of Cromwell had heavily fined Royalist gentry
possibly accounting for their decilining fortunes.
John and Hester had six children , only one boy who
died childless. The epitaphs recorded by
Manning of monuments now missing are:-
Simon, eldest son of John , who succeeded to the estate in 1612. The monument was a marble slab on the floor
of
the Tangley Chaple,
probably described as modest in relation to the monument to his father:-
Here lyeth the body of Simon
Caryll of Tangley, Esquire,
Sonne of John Caryll, Esquire,
and Lettice his wife, in
Whose memory his loving wife hath caused this stone to
be
Laid, though no
sumptuous monument of his deserts and her
love Anno D’ni 1619, aged 44
years, April 30th
John, eldest son of Simon, was only
5 when his father died, but the widow survived him for 31 years, and her long
period of
dominance in the maonor house may
explain why she alone of the ladies has an epitaph. The marble slab on the floor of
the chaple was inscribed:-
Here lyeth buried, this 25th
October 1650, the body of
Dame Elizabeth,
daughter of Francis, Lord Aungier, Baron
of Longford, wife of Simon Caryll of Tangley, Esq. He in memory of
so good a wife and mother, hath caused this stone to be
layed this 20th of September 1651.
The second John Caryll
survived his mother less than 6 years and died, like his father, at the early
age of 44. His
gravestone was at the east end of the south aisle, bearing
the inscription which Aubrey noted down.
It implies that his
honourable interment at the cost
of his widow was because his own estate was insufficient for the purpose!:-
If true Religion, Prudence, sober Zeal,
Constant Love to Church and Commonweal,
Could have restrained the fatal hand of health,
He now had lived who lieth
underneath.
But let this silence griefe,
and playnts strike dumb,
The Just is taken from the ill to come.
And now, which long before he did desire,
Caryll sings Carols in the heavenly Quire,
Here lyeth the body of John Caryll of Tangley, Esq, son
of Simon Caryll of Tangley, Esq, and Dame Elizabeth
his
wife; which John died on 30th day of May 1655,
and
was honourably interred at the
charge of his loving wife
Hester, by whom he had four children, John deceased,
Lettice, Elizabeth and Margaret.
This
John died in infancy. There is no record
of any baptism at Wonersh:-
Reader, believe without suspense,
Here lyes entombed
innocence:
Which to the earth once showed
its face,
But finding there no resting
place,
It quickly left its loathed room,
And sought for refuge in the
Tomb.
Here lyeth the body of John Caryll, the son of John Caryll of
Tangley, Esquire, and Hester, his wife, who dyed an infant
On the 5th day of
February, 1639.
Francis
Duncombe married John Caryll’s
widow Hester. His marble stone exists in the south chapel, but
only words highlighted in red are readable
but was given by Manning & Bray as:--:
Sir Francis Duncombe, Baronett, dyed the 26th of October,
Anno D’ni
1670, and in the 42nd year of his age.
Freed from all griefes he
now lies asleepe;
Death, by his fall, made his
relations weepe.
Untimely ‘twas; and by his death
did prove,
not unto him, then that did him
love,
Cruel and tyrant like; and by’t
show
unto mankind what malice he doth owe.
More Death could not do; for at last he shall
be brought forth glorious at the Trumpet’s call.
The Cliftons,
Chapples & Nortons
(later Lord Grantley)
The family connection with Wonersh perhaps
starts with Richard Gwynne (Gwinn)
(d1701) who in 1677 purchased Elizabeth Fermor (Carrill’s) third of their estate, later to become known as Wonersh Deer Park. His tomb can be seen in the vestry (south
chapel). The manorial status of the
purchase was assumed rather than a right, and he behaved as Lord of the Manor,
exercising rights over Wonersh church, including
family burial in the Tangley Chapel. The estate came without a suitable manor
house so Gwynn chose a farmhouse at the side of the village green (opposite the
church) and set about rebuilding it as his residence, later known as Wonersh House. It is thought that His Lordships Pew in the
chancel originated at this time, being enlarged subsequently (the oak from this
pew was subsequently used to make the screen in the vestry). The charity
that he set up in his will continued to help provide schooling in the parish.
On his death in 1701 his estate passed to his niece Susanna Clifton
(d1725). After her death in 1725
her only son Richard Clifton, Filacer of London &
Middlesex, survived just one year. Their epitaphs are recorded by Manning &
Bray to be on the sides of the Gwynn tomb, however if so they are now obscured
by the organ platform. Her only daughter
Trehane Clifton (born 1691) inherited the
estate.
In 1710 Trehane married Mr
William Chapple
(d1744) barrister of the Middle Temple, 2nd
son of John Chapple of Upway
Dorset. There is a large painting held in the church today depicting the old
house and church that is considered to represent this wedding party. Their eldest son William evidently married
without the approval of his parents. The
Victoria County History says “in the Wonersh Register
his marriage is entered but is erased with such success that though his name
and parentage are legible that of the lady is entirely gone and details of the
probable misalliance are consequently lost.”
He never remarried and all four sons of the marriage died without issue, so in around 1756
Grace became the heiress. William Chapple became a Justice of the King’s Bench in 1737 and
was Knighted; he presided over the trial of Dick
Turpin at
Their daughter Grace Chapple married Fletcher Norton in
1731. He was a rising young barrister at
the time and his career was meteoric. He
came from an old family whose seat was at Grantley
near Rippon in
A floor tablet in the vestry is in
memory of Fletcher Norton’s 4th son Edward. It is undated,
however he was MP for Haslemere and
William became Baron, 2nd Lord Grantley
on the death of his father in 1789, marrying Anna Margareta Midgely of Beverley in 1791. Sadly two children died in infancy and she
died suddenly in 1795. In 1793 the
church was in such dilapidation that it had to be almost completely
rebuilt. The south chapel was torn down
and replaced by the 2nd Lord Grantley as a family
mausoleum, said to have been designed by his butler. As patron he presented two new vicars. In 1808 he then bought
There is a large tomb in the graveyard
for the children (and their immediate families) of the 1st Lord Grantley. It was
originally in the mausoleum and moved outside in 1901. The inscriptions on the top and all four
sides:-
·
The Honourable
Fletcher Norton, Senior Baron of His Majesty’s Court of Exchequer in
·
The Honourable
Caroline
Elizabeth, widow of the Honourable
Fletcher Norton, Born April 9th 1769 died March 17t 1846.
·
The Right Honourable
William, Lord Grantley, Baron Markenfield,
Lord High Steward of Allertonshire and Guildford,
Colonel of the First Royal Surrey Regiment of Militia, FSA &c &c &c
Orbit November 12th 1822 Aetatis suae 82.
·
The Right Honourable
Grace, Dowager Lady Grantley, died October 30th
1803 Aged 95 years.
·
The Honourable
James Norton, son of Lord Grantley, died March 1st
1794 aged 1month and 3 days.
·
The Right Honourable
Anna Margaretta, Lady Grantley,
died April 16th 1795 aged 21 years.
·
The Honourable
William Fletcher Conyers Norton, born November 16th 1792, died
October 16th 1793, only child of the Rt Honble Lord and Lady Grantley.
·
General the Honourable
Chapple Norton died March 27th 1818 aged
72 years.
·
The Right Honourable
Grace Norton, Countess
of Portsmouth died November 16th 1813 aged 61 years. Her burial
hatchment is on the north wall of the nave.
Fletcher Norton, the 3rd Lord Grantley
(d 1875), had fought at
His presumptive heir was his brother George, someone who was always short
of money. George created a stir when he
kidnapped his own children and held them at the family home. His wife Caroline
embarked on a bitter struggle to regain them, leading to the enactment of the
Custody of Infants Bill in 1839. His son Thomas Brinsley had
suffered a fall from a horse and was almost uncontrollable; he lived in Capri
and in 1854 married Maria Federigo, the daughter of a
solicitor in
John Brinsley became 5th
Lord Grantley in 1877. He eloped and eventually married his cousin’s
American wife. He decided to dispose of
all his Surrey property and return to the family seat in
In the nave of Wonersh church we have the funeral hatchments of :-
·
Grace (d1813), Countess
of Portsmouth, daughter of 1st Lord Grantley,
·
William, 2nd
Lord Grantley (d1822),
·
Anna, wife if 2nd
Lord Grantley (d1795)
·
Thomas Brinsley, 4th Lord Grantley
(d1877), whose remains were returned from
See also website www.genuki.org.uk
- Sir Fletcher Norton and Seats
of Surrey 1828 by G F Prosser, Wonersh - Google Book Search
The Sparkes
The Sparkes family were
large landowners in the Bramley and Wonersh areas during the 18th & 19th
C. The name appears in the registers and
monuments in both Wonersh and Bramley,
however evidence of the relationship between the parts of the family has not so
far been found.
The property was passed down through his son to Richard (d1815) and Sarah Sparkes
(d1837), (buried in the churchyard) In 1806 he
inherited
It was Richard who inherited
John and Catherine had 3 children: John (who became a Colonel and lived
in Woodyers), Robert (who became an Admiral and
inherited Woodhill), and Frank (who built
A window in Wonersh nave is in memory of John Sparkes, given in 1901 by his son Richard, but there is no
date or indication of which part of the family he came from. The brass reading lectern, in the form of an
eagle, is inscribed “To the Glory of God
in memory of John Sparkes Born 1815 died 1899”.
The chancel parclose (side screen), now
forming part of the notice board in the entrance porch was designed by Sir
Charles Nicholson and made in 1929 in remembrance of the Sparkes
family and has the inscription:- In memory of the
two sons and six daughters of Richard and Sarah Sparkes
of Green Place this screen is erected by the Nephews and Nieces the children of
John and his sister Sarah.
It is recorded that John Sparkes of Gosden (Bramley) bought Little Tangley (the Manor House of Chinthurst
with Loseley) in 1791, remaining in the family for
several generations.
Very many
letters and documents are summarised and published online in the Surrey
History Centre Collections Catalogue .