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Monday, 31 May 2021

(458) Batten of Aldon and Upcerne and Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) of Thornfalcon

Batten of Aldon and Upcerne 
This family was established as yeoman farmers at Michaelchurch and later North Petherton (Somerset) for several generations in the 16th and 17th centuries. They do not feature in the heralds' visitation of Somerset in 1623, and it is not clear when they were first granted arms, but the good marriages of James Batten (1654-1708) and his son Robert Batten (c.1690-1773), and a growing portfolio of freehold, leasehold and copyhold property across south Somerset and west Dorset placed them unambiguously among the gentry by the early 18th century. The family were nonconformists (Presbyterians and later Unitarians) in the 18th and early 19th centuries, and held Liberal views over an even longer period. Robert Batten (d. 1773) was a friend and associate of Sir Richard Steele, the Irish Whig journalist and playwright, and is said to have contributed a number of articles to Steele's journal, The Spectator, under the initials 'R.B.'. His only recorded son, Nathaniel Butler Batten (c.1713-85) was articled in 1730 to John Prigge of Ilminster (Som.), solicitor, and having served his term of five years and qualified as a solicitor, he married Prigge's daughter and set up in practice a few miles away at Yeovil (Som.) before 1740. Although no longer in the family's control, the firm of Batten & Co., solicitors, still exists and still has an office in Yeovil.

Nathaniel Butler Batten had four sons and a daughter by his two wives. All four sons (John Prigge Batten (1738-1809); Nathaniel Batten (1743-1819), Robert Batten (c.1745-1824) and Edmund Batten (c.1748-1836)) were articled to their father, but the career of the eldest is obscure and he may not have practised as a solicitor. He seems to have divided his time between London and Burton Pynsent (Som.), which he perhaps leased from William Pitt. The three younger sons were lawyers, and practised either in either Yeovil or London or both. Edmund Batten branched out into banking in 1819 in partnership with two other Somerset solicitors, and from 1819 with his nephew, John Batten (c.1774-1854), the son of John Prigge Batten. Since none of the three younger brothers had any sons to inherit their property, John Batten was the eventual beneficiary of all four brothers, bringing him the manor of Thornfalcon (Som.), which he inherited partly in 1819 and partly in 1836, and extensive if scattered lands across south Somerset. In 1829 he bought an estate on the south-western edge of Yeovil and built Aldon House, although he later handed this over to his eldest son, John Batten (1815-1900); his second son, Edmund Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1817-97) inherited the Thornfalcon estate.

Fairlee House, Newport (Isle of Wight)
John Batten (1815-1900) took another step up the social ladder through his marriage to Grace Eleanor White (d. 1883), who was heiress of the Upcerne House estate in Dorset and also Fairlee House, Newport on the Isle of Wight. Like his father, John was a solicitor and banker in Yeovil, and although he sold his controlling interest in the family bank in 1849, the family remained closely associated with its successor, Stuckey's bank, until 1920. His passion in life was, however, his antiquarian studies, focused on the local history of Somerset and Dorset.  When Grace came into possession of Upcerne and Fairlee in 1865, they seem at first to have been let, but the family evidently later spent some time at Upcerne, marked by John being High Sheriff of Dorset in 1881-82. John and Grace had three sons and two daughters who survived to maturity, and when he died in 1900 John divided his property between them. The eldest son, Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916) received Upcerne Manor, which it is interesting to see was regarded as the principal estate; the second son, Henry Butler Batten (1845-1912) took over the family legal practice and inherited Aldon House; while the third son, Lt-Col. Herbert Cary George Batten (1849-1926) inherited Fairlee House and other property in Somerset and Dorset. Herbert trained as a barrister rather than a solicitor, but in about 1888 he became manager the Bristol branch of Stuckey's Bank, and in due course a director of the bank and of several other companies as well. He moved to Abbots Leigh, on the southern outskirts of Bristol, but also acquired Keyford at Barwick near Yeovil as a secondary seat, and the manor of Ryme Intrinseca in Dorset. Fairlee House was let out and sold after his death in 1926, but his other property seems to have descended to his younger son, Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary Batten (1884-1963), who was a partner in the family legal practice in Yeovil.

Col. John Mount Batten was the first eldest son of the family to step away from a legal career in more than a century. He became a career soldier, first in the regular army and then in the militia, ending his career as Col. of the 2nd Royal Lancashire Militia, which saw service in South Africa in the Boer War. After his retirement he was High Sheriff of Dorset in 1903, and soon afterwards he was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Dorset, 1906-16. He had two sons and four daughters, but his eldest son, John Henry Strode Batten (1875-1914), who followed him into the army, was killed in action in the First World War. The Upcerne estate therefore passed in 1916 to the Colonel's younger son, Nathaniel Prygge Batten (1881-1941), who was prevented by a disability from pursuing a military career. He was married but had no issue, so on his death the Upcerne estate passed to his sister Winifred (1882-1965), who sold it in 1947.

Henry Butler Batten (1845-1912) inherited Aldon House and the family legal practice in 1900, and was also Town Clerk of Yeovil in succession to his father. He was unmarried and at his death bequeathed Aldon House and the practice to his nephew, Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary Batten (1884-1963), who later also inherited from his father property at Barwick (Som.) and Ryme Intrinseca (Dorset). These properties passed in turn to his son, William Henry Batten (1926-2013), who sold Aldon House in 1966 and lived latterly at Ryme Intrinseca, where his son, David Henry Cary Batten (b. 1952), still farms.

When John Batten (c.1774-1854) inherited the second moiety of the Thornfalcon estate in 1836, he gave the property to his younger son, Edmund Batten (1817-97), who enlarged the estate by additional land purchases. In 1843 he married Jemima Chisholm, the daughter of William Chisholm of Erchless Castle (Inverness-shire), who, on the death of her brother in 1858, inherited the Aigas Forest estate in the highlands of Scotland. As a condition of the inheritance, she and her husband and their children took the name Chisholm-Batten. Both the Thornfalcon and Scottish properties descended to their eldest son, Col. James Forbes Chisholm Chisholm-Batten (1847-1915), and then to the latter's son, James Utermark Chisholm-Batten (1884-1915), who was killed in the First World War just six months later. James was unmarried, so the estates descended to his younger brother, Edmund Rodolphe Chisholm-Batten (1887-1982), who also inherited Erchless Castle on the death of a distant cousin in 1935. He sold all his Scottish estates in 1937 and lived at Thornfalcon until 1979, when he was over ninety. The estate was then sold and the Court House was divided into two dwellings.

Court House, Thornfalcon, Somerset

The core of the house is a late medieval hall house, parts of the smoke-blackened roof of which remain in situ, but it was extensively remodelled in the 16th century and again in about 1870. The house is of two storeys, and is built of blue lias rubble stone with Ham stone dressings, and areas of roughcast. The entrance front has a central gabled two-storey porch with slightly projecting gabled cross-wings to either side, but the house was extended c.1870 in both directions beyond the cross-wings, so that there are now five gables in total, as well as a small gabled dormer to the right of the porch. The windows are now apparently all Victorian or later mullioned or mullioned and transomed ones, filled with plate glass which contributes markedly to the rather bleak appearance. Oriel windows on the first floor under the gables of both end bays give a specious appearance of symmetry to the façade. The rear elevation is much less regular than the entrance front and makes no effort at symmetry or even balance, with areas of blank wall, the size and position of windows dictated by the functional requirements of the rooms within, and one of the cross-wings having a steeper-pitch roof than the others. 

Court House, Thornfalcon: entrance front
The house as originally built had a three room and through-passage plan, with the hall (to the left of the porch) being open to the roof and heated from an open hearth; the parlour beyond the hall had a large fireplace in the side wall, where there is still a notable early 15th century fireplace with panels of flowing ogee tracery with shields and rosettes. The solar above the parlour was also heated. The service end of the house (to the right of the porch) seems also to have originally been open to the roof, but in the late 16th century the hall and service end were both divided by the construction of floors to create chambers above. The moulded framed plaster ceilings in the hall and parlour date from the same period: that in the hall has turned wooden pendants in the panels. The major enlargement of the house came in about 1870, when the additional gabled wings with oriel windows were built at either end of the house. The dining room (formerly the library) has a Jacobean-style chimneypiece with a pilastered overmantel, panelling, and a ceiling with moulded panels and pendants. There are two main staircases, of the early and later 19th century, and much late 19th century panelling and other woodwork throughout the house. An 18th century chimneypiece survives in the chamber over the hall. The house was divided into two dwellings after 1979, and a single-storey wing was added to the left of the main building in about 2000.

Descent: sold to Nathaniel Butler Batten (c.1713-85); to son, Nathaniel Batten (1743-1819); who left one moiety to his brother Robert Batten (c.1745-1824) and the other to his nephew John Batten (c.1774-1854); Robert's moiety passed to his brother Edmund Batten (c.1748-1836) who bequeathed it to his nephew, John Batten (c.1774-1854), possessor of the other moiety; given c.1840 to son, Edmund Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1817-97); to son, James Forbes Chisholm Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1847-1915); to son, James Utermark Chisholm-Batten (1884-1915); to brother, Edmund Rodolphe Chisholm-Batten (1887-1982), who sold 1979.

Aldon House, Yeovil, Somerset

A beautifully-situated house, built on the site of an earlier farmhouse for John Batten (1775-1854) in 1829-30. The house is built of Ham stone and is mainly of two storeys, although there are smaller-scale three-storey additions on the north-west; the entrance front is classical - or rather Italianate - and the garden front neo-JacobeanThe architect is unknown, but the entrance side is rather in the manner of Henry Goodridge's villas in Bath, and has two open-pedimented wings framing a five bay entrance front. The original central semi-circular arched doorway has been blocked, and entrance is now through a single storey porch in the angle between the centre and the right-hand wing. 

Aldon House, Yeovil: the entrance front. 

Aldon House, Yeovil: garden front, c.1905.


The garden front has three Dutch gables and mullioned windows in 17th century style, and to its side there once stood a large mid 19th century glazed conservatory. After the Batten family sold the house in 1966 it became a language school until 2006, when it was divided into nine apartments.

Aldon House: cottage orné in Ninesprings valley in the mid 20th century.
The Battens made a romantic walk of the steep valley below the house, with cascades and ponds, to which the public were admitted by ticket in the early 20th century. After the estate was sold, the park was acquired by the local council in the 1970s and is now Ninesprings Park. A cottage ornée lodge built about 1840 stands at the end of the drive, and has deeply overhanging bargeboarded gables, heavily latticed casement windows under dripmoulds and a two oriel windows. A similar cottage once stood in the park, which was used for serving teas to visitors before the Second World War. Unfortunately it became neglected during the war and fell into disrepair. It was demolished in 1973 and only the foundations remain today.

Descent: built for John Batten (c.1774-1854); to son, John Batten (1815-1900); to son, Henry Butler Batten (1845-1912); to nephew, Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary Batten (1884-1963); to son, William Henry Batten (1924-2013), who sold 1966.

Upcerne House, Dorset

The Upcerne estate belonged in the 16th century to the Stourton family, but after the attainder and execution of the 8th Baron Stourton for murder it passed into the hands of the Crown. It was granted in 1572 to John Marsh and Francis Grencham, who sold it almost at once to John Meller of Winterbourne Came (Dorset). According to an early 18th century source, the present house was built by Meller's son, Sir Robert Meller (1564-1624). 

Upcerne Manor: entrance front in 1939. Crown copyright, licenced under the Open Government Licence

Upcerne Manor: phased plan of the house published in 1952. Crown copyright, licenced under the Open Government Licence.

A detailed description of the building in its original form was published in second edition of Hutchins' Dorset in 1813 and accords well with photographs of the house taken before alterations in about 1970. The north-west facing entrance front had a hall at the centre and two projecting gabled cross-wings to either side of a single-storey central porch. The windows were stone mullioned casements with four-centred arched lights and label moulds, of the type 
which continued to be fashionable in Dorset until much later than elsewhere. Hutchins mentions carved stonework and 'capitals of Gothic pillars' built into the walls, and suggested that much of the stone for the new house was reused from Cerne Abbey. This seems very likely, but none of the carved work can still be seen today. The left-hand cross-wing contained the kitchens and other offices, while the right-hand wing at the southern end of the house contained the family accommodation. There were two rooms on the ground floor with panelling and decorative plasterwork, while the finest room in the house was a great chamber which ran the full length of the wing on the first floor and had a coved ceiling with decorative plasterwork in the spandrels at either end depicting the Judgement of Solomon and the story of Abraham and Isaac. Almost certainly the room had a fine chimneypiece too, and there may have been simpler decorative plasterwork on the body of the ceiling, inviting a comparison with the great chamber of Herringston (Dorset), which was created at about the same time. Access to the chamber would have been by the 'Great Stair' which is mentioned by Hutchins, but the position of which is uncertain, since it was removed when the wing was drastically remodelled in about 1840.

Upcerne Manor: garden front as remodelled c.1875-80, photographed c.1892.
In the mid 18th century a short, brick-built service range was added to the north end of the house. The estate then descended rather tortuously to John White, who must have been responsible for the regrettable stripping out of the historic interiors in the 1840s. In 1865 it passed into the more sympathetic hands of John Batten, who remodelled the garden front between 1875 and 1880. Hutchins says that this front originally had a single octagonal bay window running through both floors of the family wing at the southern end of the house, and a recessed centre between this bay and the other cross-wing. Batten completely refaced the elevation, filling in between the gable ends of the two original wings with a plain ashlar facade supporting battlements, and providing both wings with two-storey polygonal bay windows under half-conical roofs. The fenestration echoes the original windows on the entrance front. Later 19th and early 20th century changes were minor: the house was re-roofed in 1892, and a secondary stair turret was added at the north-east end of the main range in 1909.

Upcerne Manor: the entrance front in 2011. Image: Gareth Dawkins. Some rights reserved.
In 1947 the estate was sold by the Battens to Reginald and Vera Broadhead, who created a Capability Brown-style park around it by damming the Cerne river to create a chain of four lakes, two of which have islands, and planting clumps of trees, which now have a convincingly mature feel. Rather later, perhaps c.1970, they altered the house. The first floor above the hall was removed to create a double-height space, and the original stone mullioned casements on the entrance front were replaced by full-height mullioned and transomed windows that copied the detailing of their predecessors. The entrance porch was also altered, with the doorway moved from the front face to the left-hand side wall - perhaps to reduce draughts.

Descent: Crown sold 1572 to John Marsh and Francis Grencham; sold to John Meller (d. 1595); to son, Sir Robert Meller (1564-1624)... Edward Meller (d. 1699); sold 1685 to Nicholas Cary (c.1651-97) of Hackney (Middx), goldsmith; to son, Nicholas Cary... Thomas Strode Cary (d. 1784); to aunt, Grace, wife of John White (d. 1800) of Fairlee (IoW); to son, John White (d. 1830); to son, John White (1816-45); to brother, William White (d. 1865); to sister, Grace Eleanor (1817-83), wife of John Batten (1815-1900); to son, Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916), who at first let it to Cdr. the Hon. Gerald Fitzmaurice Digby (1858-1942), but was resident by 1909; to son, Nathaniel Prygge Batten (1881-1941); to sister, Winifred Eleanor Sarah (1882-1965), who sold 1947 to Reginald and Vera Broadhead; sold 1979.... Archduke Michael von Habsburg-Lothringen (b. 1942).

Batten family of Alden and Upcerne


Batten, James (1654-1708). Eldest son of John Batten (d. 1685) of Tuckerton in North Petherton (Som.) and his wife, baptised at Pitminster (Som.), 21 November 1654. He married, 14 September 1688 at Pitminster, Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of Robert Drake of Pitminster, a descendant of the ancient family of Drake of Ashe (Devon), and had issue:
(1) John Batten; who inherited the Tuckerton estate from his father;
(2) Robert Batten (c.1690-1773) (q.v.);
(3) James Batten.
He lived at Tuckerton in North Petherton (Som.).
He died in 1708; his will was proved at Taunton in the same year. His wife's date of death is unknown.

Batten, Robert (c.1690-1773). Second son of James Batten (d. 1708) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of Robert Drake of Pitminster (Som.), born c.1690. He was a friend of Sir Richard Steele and an occasional contributor to The Spectator under the initials 'R.B.'. He married, 29 October 1712 at Lyme Regis (Dorset), Sarah (1681-1774), daughter and co-heiress of Nathaniel Butler of Lyme Regis, goldsmith and mayor of that town in 1690 and 1705, and had issue:
(1) Nathaniel Butler Batten (c.1713-85) (q.v.);
(2) Elizabeth Batten (c.1714-1802), born about 1714; married, 1751, Peter Clark (d. 1772) of Exeter (Devon), merchant, and had issue two daughters; died 18 July, and was buried at the Mint Presbyterian Church, Exeter, 23 July 1802; will proved in the PCC, 25 August 1802.
He lived at Charmouth (Dorset) and later at Ilminster (Som.), and had lands at Taunton, North Petherton, Pitminster and Lyng which were mostly inherited from his grandfather.
He was buried at Lyme Regis, 14 June 1773; his will was proved in the PCC, 12 July 1773. His widow was buried at Lyme Regis, 13 June 1774.

Batten, Nathaniel Butler (c.1713-85). Only son of Robert Batten (c.1690-1773) of Charmouth (Dorset) and his wife Sarah, daughter and co-heiress of Nathaniel Butler of Lyme Regis (Dorset), goldsmith, born about 1713. Articled clerk to John Prigge of Yeovil, attorney, 1730. Solicitor in Yeovil, in independent practice by 1740. A nonconformist, probably a Presbyterian, in religion. He married 1st, 13 December 1737 at Ilminster (Som.), Joanna (1710-38?), daughter and heiress of John Prigge, and 2nd, 1740, Ann (d. 1802), daughter of Edward Adams of Ilminster, mercer, and had issue:
(1.1) John Prigge Batten (1738-1809) (q.v.);
(2.1) Nathaniel Batten (1743-1819), articled clerk to his father, 1762; admitted to Inner Temple, 1777; solicitor in Yeovil; lived at Kingston House, Yeovil and inherited the manor of Thornfalcon from his father; buried at Yeovil, 6 December 1819; will proved in the PCC, 25 May 1820;
(2.2) Robert Batten (c.1745-1824), articled clerk to his father, 1758; solicitor in Hare Court, Inner Temple; a Unitarian in religion; inherited a moiety of the manor of Thornfalcon from his elder brother; said to have married Hannah, daughter of John Copeland of Peckham and Lingfield Lodge (Surrey), and had issue one daughter; buried at the Unitarian chapel, Yeovil, from which his remains were exhumed when the site was redeveloped in 1982-83; will proved in the PCC, 10 June 1825;
(2.3) Edmund Batten (c.1748-1836), articled clerk to his father, 1772; solicitor in Yeovil; clerk to Yeovil Turnpike Trust; a Town Commissioner, 1830-36; banker (in partnership with Samuel Sparkes and Lazarus Baker, solicitors of Crewkerne and Chard, 1819-29 and then with his nephew, John Batten until his death in 1836); a Unitarian in religion; married, 24 April 1810 at Templecombe (Som.), Ann (1766-1845), daughter of Robert Chaffey of Stoke-sub-Hamdon (Som.) and widow of John Brine (d. 1804), but had no issue; probably built Hollands House, Yeovil, as his residence, and inherited a moiety of the manor of Thornfalcon from his brother Robert; lived latterly at Kingston House, Yeovil; died 4 January, and was buried at Yeovil, 14 January 1836; will proved in the PCC, 6 July 1836;
(2.4) Susannah Batten (d. 1841); married, 11 July 1809 at Yeovil, as his second wife, Rev. Samuel Fawcett (1751-1835), the radical Unitarian minister of Yeovil, 1801-16, but had no issue; died Jan-Mar 1841; her will was proved in the PCC, 18 January 1843.
He lived at Yeovil (Som.), where he probably built Church House in about 1770. He inherited an estate at Pitminster (Som.) from his father but sold it and purchased the manor of Thornfalcon.
He was buried at Yeovil, 1 October 1785. His first wife is said to have died, probably in childbirth, in 1738. His widow was buried at Yeovil, 9 September 1802.

Batten, John Prigge (1738-1809). Only son of Nathaniel Butler Batten (c.1713-85) and his first wife, Joanna, daughter and heiress of John Prigge, born 3 November 1738 and baptised at Ilminster Presbyterian church. Articled clerk to his father, 1754. A Unitarian in religion. He married, 25 September 1760 at Yeovil, Ann, daughter of William Wallis, and had issue:
(1) Joanna Batten (c.1762-1828); mentioned as a beneficiary in the wills of her uncles Nathaniel and Robert Batten; married, 13 September 1790 at Whitechapel (Middx), Rev. John Burrow of Taunton, and had issue; buried at Yeovil, 29 November 1828;
(2) Ann Batten (fl. 1829)mentioned as a beneficiary in the wills of her uncles Nathaniel and Robert Batten and her aunt Susannah; probably died unmarried;
(3) Elizabeth Batten (fl. 1829)mentioned as a beneficiary in the wills of her uncles Nathaniel and Robert Batten and her aunt Susannahprobably died unmarried;
(4) Harriet Batten (c.1771-1831), born about 1771mentioned as a beneficiary in the wills of her uncles Nathaniel and Robert Batten and her aunt Susannah; married, 20 April 1795 in Whitechapel (Middx), as his second wife, William Pulham; died 9 June and was buried at Ilminster Presbyterian Chapel (Som.), 16 June 1831;
(5) John Batten (c.1774-1854) (q.v.);
(6) Sarah Batten (c.1774-1824), born about 1774; mentioned as a beneficiary in the will of her uncle Nathaniel Batten; lived at East Coker (Som.); died unmarried and was buried at Yeovil, 20 September 1824.
He lived at Burton Pynsent (Som.).
He died in London and was buried at Bunhill Fields burial ground, 7 February 1809. His wife's date of death is unknown.

John Batten (c.1774-1854) 
Batten, John (c.1774-1854).
Only son of John Prigge Batten (1738-1809) and his wife Ann, daughter of William Wallis, born about 1774. Educated at Inner Temple (admitted 1800). Solicitor in Yeovil in partnership with his son from c.1838; partner in Yeovil Old Bank (Batten, Sparks & Co.) from 1829. JP and DL for Somerset. He married, 8 March 1813 at Christchurch, Newgate St., London, Sarah (c.1780-1821), daughter and eventual co-heiress of John Copeland of Amen Corner, London, wholesale tea dealer, and also of Iver (Bucks) and Lingfield Lodge (Surrey), and had issue:
(1) Mary Anne Batten (c.1814-27), born about 1814; died aged 13 on 2 April and was buried at Yeovil, 10 April 1827;
(2) John Batten (1815-1900) (q.v.);
(3) Emily Batten (c.1816-53); married, 31 July 1849 at Yeovil (Som.), Thomas Bates (1810-82), barrister-at-law, of Lincoln's Inn, Aydon White House and Heddon-on-the-Wall (Northbld), and sometime Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, and had issue one son; died 23 December, and was buried at Yeovil, 31 December 1853; administration of goods granted 22 July 1863 (effects under £20);
(4) Edmund Batten (1817-97) [for whom see Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) of Thornfalcon below];
(5) Herbert Butler Batten (1820-99) of Hollands, Yeovil (Som.), born 25 July 1820; JP and DL for Somerset and JP for Dorset; an officer in the 1st Somerset Militia (Capt.); married, 27 November 1858 at Stoke Trister (Som.), Elizabeth (1827-99), daughter of Rev. William Phelips of Cucklington (Som.) and sister of William Phelips of Montacute (Som.), and had issue (including Herbert Phelips Batten (1859-1918) of Lufton Manor, Yeovil, Somerset); died 9 January 1899 and was buried at Lufton (Som.); will proved 21 March 1899 (estate £91,536).
He built Aldon, Yeovil (Som.) in 1829-30 but appears to have handed it over to his eldest son around the time of the latter's marriage in 1841, and lived latterly at Hollands House, Yeovil. He inherited one moiety of the manor of Thornfalcon from his uncle Nathaniel Batten in 1819 and the other from his uncle Edmund Batten in 1836, together with extensive lands in Thornfalcon, Yeovil, North Petherton, South Petherton, Somerton, Odcombe, Baltonsborough, West Coker, Hardington Mandeville, North Perrott, Queen Camel, West Camel, Ashington and Montacute, all in Somerset.
He died 27 June and was buried at Yeovil, 4 July 1854; his will was proved in the PCC, 4 August 1854. His wife died 27 November and was buried at Yeovil, 4 December 1821.

John Batten (1815-1900) 
Batten, John (1815-1900).
Eldest son of John Batten (c.1774-1854) of Aldon and his wife Sarah, daughter and eventual co-heiress of John Copeland of Iver (Bucks) and Lingfield Lodge (Surrey?), born 17 February 1815. Articled clerk to his father, 1832, and qualified as a solicitor, c.1838. He was subequently in practice as a solicitor at Yeovil in partnership with his father and later with his son as Batten & Son; Town Clerk of Yeovil; clerk to the Yeovil Petty Sessions and the Commissioners of Taxes. Partner in Yeovil Old Bank from 1836 to 1849, when the concern was sold to Stuckey's Bank of Langport (Som.). DL for Somerset and JP for Somerset and Dorset; High Sheriff of Dorset, 1881-82. A Liberal in politics, but did not play an active part in political affairs. He was an ardent antiquarian, a founder member of the Somerset and Dorset Notes & Queries Society, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. He married, 25 May 1841 at Brympton (Som.), Grace Eleanor (1817-83), daughter of John White of Upcerne (Dorset) and Fairlee (IoW), and had issue:
(1) Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916) (q.v.);
(2) Eleanor Harriet Batten (1844-1917), born 1844; married 1st, 29 July 1880 at Yeovil, as his second wife, Rev. Dr. Charles William Williams DD (1819-89), rector of Christchurch, Brondesbury (Middx) and headmaster of North London Collegiate School, son of Rev. Samuel Williams, and 2nd, 17 July 1890 (probably bigamously) at Windermere (Westmld), 'Charles Walter Baker Farquharson', a fraudster and serial bigamist who made a living by marrying women with private incomes and defrauding them; he abandoned her after receiving £1,500 and some jewellery, but was eventually tried and convicted for his crimes under the name Albert Charles Baker in 1896, and was sentenced to seven years in prison; she then reverted to the surname Williams; she died 16 February 1917 and administration of her goods was granted 2 August 1917 (estate £2,249);
(3) Henry Butler Batten (1845-1912) (q.v.);
(4) Emily Jane or Cicely Batten (b. 1847), birth registered as Emily Jane, Apr-June 1847, but probably the child baptised at Yeovil as Cicely Batten, 17 September 1847; apparently died in infancy;
(5) Col. Herbert Cary George Batten (1849-1926) (q.v.);
(6) Arthur John Batten (b. 1850), baptised at Yeovil, 13 May 1850; died in infancy and was buried at Yeovil, 18 May 1850;
(7) Cecily Alice Batten (c.1851-1932), baptised at Preston Plucknett (Som.), 3 February 1852; educated at Missenden House School, Newchurch (IoW); married 1st, 12 June 1879 at Yeovil, Alexander Crawford (1831-87) of Leeds (Yorks WR), architect, son of Samuel Crawford, a Presbyterian minister, and had issue three daughters; married 2nd, 22 August 1895 at Abbots Leigh (Som.), Col. Walter John Tarte (1833-1918) of Wyke Regis (Dorset); died 20 January and was buried at Wyke Regis, 23 January 1932; her will was proved 8 July 1932 and 18 August 1933 (estate £17,229).
He lived at Kingston House, Yeovil until he took over Aldon from his father in about 1841. His wife inherited Upcerne and Fairlee from her brother in 1865.
He died at Weymouth, 8 November, and was buried at Barwick (Som.), 12 November 1900; his will was proved 14 March 1901 (estate £40,102). His wife died 4 July and was buried at Barwick, 9 July 1883*.
* Entered in the register as 9 June in error.

Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916) 
painted by his father-in-law, James Sant 
Batten, Col. John Mount (1843-1916).
Eldest son of John Batten (1815-1900) and his wife Grace Eleanor, daughter of John White of Upcerne (Dorset) and Fairlee (IoW), born 7 April 1843. Educated at Winchester. JP for Somerset and Dorset; High Sheriff of Dorset, 1903; Lord Lieutenant of Dorset, 1906-16. An officer in the army (Ensign, 1861; Lt., 1865; Capt., 1871; retired 1878; Major, 1887) and in 2nd Royal Lancashire Militia (Capt., 1878; Hon. Major, 1882; Hon. Lt-Col., 1889; Hon. Col. by 1889), who served in the Boer War; he was appointed CB, 1903. He was a Liberal member of Dorset County Council, 1889-92, an Alderman of the County Council, 1901-16, and a Governor of Sherborne School, 1905-16. He married 1st, 16 July 1873 at St James, Piccadilly, Westminster (Middx), Margaret Annie (d. 1893), eldest daughter of Rev. John Brooks, rector of Walton-le-Dale (Lancs), and 2nd, 8 August 1895 at St Mary, West Kensington (Middx), Mary Edith (1852-1949), eldest daughter of James Sant RA, artist, and widow of Howard Frederick Nalder, and had issue:
(1.1) Grace Amy Margaret Batten (1874-1968), baptised at Upcerne, 3 November 1874; married, 6 January 1898 at St Mary Abbots, Kensington (Middx), Lt-Col. Edward George Troyte Bullock CMG TD DL JP (1862-1942) of Zeals House (Wilts), and had issue one son and three daughters; died aged 94 on 28 September 1968; will proved 21 January 1969 (estate £9,708);
(1.2) John Henry Strode Batten (1875-1914), born 23 December 1875; educated at Rossall School and Trinity Hall, Cambridge (matriculated 1894; BA, 1898); JP for Dorset (from 1896); an officer in the King's Liverpool Regt. (2nd Lt., 1899; Lt., 1900; Capt., 1909), who served in the Boer War, where he was in the garrison at Ladysmith throughout the siege, and in the First World War; married, 21 July 1908 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Alberta Theresa (1880-1960) (who m2, 29 January 1916, at Christ Church, Mayfair, Westminster (Middx), Arthur Henry Addenbrooke Simcox (d. 1942) of the Indian Civil Service, son of Rev. Henry Kingdom Simcox, and had issue), daughter of Dr. Patrick Kavanagh MD, but had no issue; killed in action in the lifetime of his father, 26 October 1914; will proved 3 March 1915 (estate £896);
(1.3) Nathaniel Prygge Batten (1881-1941) (q.v.);
(1.4) Winifred Eleanor Sarah Batten (1882-1965) (q.v.);
(1.5) Frances Maud Batten (1886-1951), born 16 October 1886 and baptised at Upcerne, 30 June 1887; married, 6 July 1908 at St Mary Abbots, Kensington, Capt. Francis John Langdon (1873-1948), son of John William Langdon of Clifton, merchant, and had issue one daughter; died 12 October 1951; will proved 17 December 1951 (estate £4,318);
(1.6) Catherine Constance Mount Batten (1889-1934), born 10 August and baptised at Upcerne, 13 October 1889; died unmarried, 24 December 1934; administration of goods granted 25 May 1934 (estate £1,878).
He lived at Coker Court, East Coker (Som.) until he inherited the Upcerne (Dorset) estate from his father in 1900. He also had a London home at Mornington Lodge, West Kensington.
He died 5 March and was buried at Upcerne, 9 March 1916; his will was proved 23 June 1916 (estate £14,751). His first wife died 26 September and was buried at Upcerne, 30 September 1893; her will was proved 1 November 1893 (estate £386). His widow died aged 97 on 4 November 1949; her will was proved 29 December 1949 (estate £262,850).

Batten, Nathaniel Prygge (1881-1941). Second, but eldest surviving, son of Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916) and his first wife, Margaret Annie, eldest daughter of Rev. John Brooks, rector of Walton-le-Dale (Lancs), born 1881. Educated at Sherborne School and Exeter College, Oxford (BA 1905; MA). Solicitor. He suffered from a physical disability which prevented his acceptance for military service, but he volunteered for service in Belgium as a civilian ambulance driver in the First World War. His disability also prevented him from riding but he was a good cricketer and enjoyed shooting, and as a young man he played table tennis competitively. He married, 9 April 1913 at Christ Church, Mayfair, Westminster (Middx), Lily Saunders Graham (1881-1955), daughter of Dr John Eadie MD, but had no issue.
He inherited the Upcerne estate from his father in 1916 but lived at the former parsonage rather than the manor house. At his death the estate passed to his sister Winifred.
He died 25 September and was buried at Upcerne, 27 September 1941; his will was proved 13 May 1942 and 14 May 1943 (estate £5,429). His widow died in Dublin, 30 June 1955; her will was proved 31 October 1955 (estate £899).

Batten, Winifred Eleanor Sarah (1882-1965). Second daughter of Col. John Mount Batten (1843-1916) and his first wife, Margaret Annie, eldest daughter of Rev. John Brooks, rector of Walton-le-Dale (Lancs), born 3 July 1882 and baptised at Up Cerne, 15 April 1883. She served in the First World War with the Voluntary Aid Detachment (Commandant) and Women's Royal Air Force, 1916-18. She was unmarried and without issue.
She inherited the Upcerne estate from her brother in 1941 but sold it in 1947.
She died at Shaftesbury (Dorset), 13 September 1965; her will was proved 10 March 1966 (estate £17,433).

Henry Butler Batten (1845-1912) 
Batten, Henry Butler (1845-1912).
Second son 
of John Batten (1815-1900) and his wife Grace Eleanor, daughter of John White of Upcerne (Dorset) and Fairlee (IoW), born 13 October 1845. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1864; BA 1869). Solicitor in Yeovil by 1875, presumably after being articled to his father; Town Clerk of Yeovil; clerk to the Yeovil and County Justices. He was unmarried and without issue.
He inherited Aldon, Yeovil from his father in 1900.
He died 1 February 1912 and was buried at Yeovil; his will was proved 16 May 1912 (estate £89,885).





Col. Herbert Cary George Batten (1849-1926) 
Batten, Col. Herbert Cary George (1849-1926).
Third son 
of John Batten (1815-1900) and his wife Grace Eleanor, daughter of John White of Upcerne (Dorset) and Fairlee (IoW), born 3 March 1849 and baptised at Preston Plucknett (Som.), 3 February 1852. Educated at Cheltenham College, Trinity Hall, Cambridge (matriculated 1866; BA 1870) and the Inner Temple (admitted 1869; called 1874). Barrister-at-law on the western circuit and later banker (Director of Stuckey's Bank in Bristol, 1888-1918, and later of the London County and Westminster Bank, and Parr's Bank)He was also Chairman of the Bristol & South Wales Wagon Company and the Bristol Dogs' Home, and a board member of many other hospitals and charitable bodies. JP (from 1890) and DL for Somerset; Sheriff of Bristol, 1904-05, 1907-08. A Liberal in politics he stood unsuccessfully for parliament in East Sussex in 1884 and in West Dorset in 1885 and 1886. He was an officer in the Cambridgeshire Rifle Volunteers (Lt., 1867) and later the 3rd (Militia) Battn, Dorset Regiment (Capt. by 1885; Maj., 1897; Lt-Col commanding, 1901; retired 1909) and later Hon. Col of the battalion. During the First World War he was commander of the Bristol portion of the Gloucestershire Volunteers, and was appointed OBE. He was a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, a member of the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society, and a talented cultivator of orchids, and while living at Abbots Leigh he built up a noted herd of Guernsey Cattle and established a model dairy, which was managed by his wife. He was a keen sportsman, hunting in Dorset for nearly seventy years, and also enjoyed shooting. He married 1st, 6 August 1878 at Holy Trinity, Brompton (Middx), Frances Eleanor (c.1859-93), daughter of John Beardmore of Uplands Park, Fareham (Hants), and 2nd, 5 October 1898 at St Peter, Cranley Gardens, Kensington (Middx), Isabel Frances (1866-1946), daughter of Gen. Sir Robert Bright GCB, and had issue:
(1.1) Frances Eva Cary Batten (1881-1950), born 26 February and baptised at Up Cerne, 2 October 1881; an accomplished violin and viola player and a member of the Dorset Choral Association; married, 6 February 1907 at Abbots Leigh (Som.), Lt-Col. Richard Bright* (1872-1938) of Prince's Place, Ryme Intrinseca, youngest son of Gen. Sir Robert Bright GCB, and had issue one son and one daughter; died 8 February 1950; will proved 3 July 1950 (estate £20,157);
(1.2) Lt-Col. John Beardmore Batten (1883-1955), born 30 March and baptised at Up Cerne, 5 June 1883; educated at Winchester; an officer in the Royal Fusiliers (2nd Lt., 1901; Capt., 1910; retired as Lt-Col., 1912) who served in the First World War as an officer (Maj.) in Special Reserve Battalion, Royal Fusiliers (wounded; mentioned in despatches) and in civil defence in the Second World War; awarded DSO, 1917; borough councillor for Pennington, Lymington (Hants), 1946-49; married 1st, 10 October 1910 (div. 1926), Mary Evelyn (d. 1962), daughter of John Locke of Kilbeggan (Co. Westmeath) and had issue one son; married 2nd, 17 August 1927, Eleanor Leslie (d. 1959), younger daughter of Canon William Gardner Melville, vicar of Stratford-on-Avon (Warks), and had issue one daughter; died 23 April 1955; will proved 18 July 1955 (estate £1,910);
(1.3) Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary Batten (1884-1963) (q.v.).
His principal residence was at Chetnole House (Dorset) until 1888 when he moved to Leigh Lodge, Abbots Leigh (Som.). He retired to Wyndham House, Sutton Bingham (Som.). He maintained Keyford, Barwick (Som.) as a secondary seat and enlarged it in the 1920s. A serious fire damaged the house in 1926 but it had largely been restored before his death. He also owned Fairlee House in the Isle of Wight (which was let, and sold after his death) and virtually the whole parish of Ryme Intrinseca (Dorset).
He died 26 November 1926, and was buried at Barwick; his will was proved 25 March 1927 (estate £50,046). His first wife died in 1893. His widow died in May 1946.
* His elder sister was his wife's stepmother.

Batten, Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary (1884-1963). Second son of Col. Herbert Cary George Batten (1849-1926) and his first wife, Frances Eleanor, daughter of John Beardmore of Uplands (Hants), born 5 December 1884 and baptised at Up Cerne, 3 May 1885. Educated at Winchester and Trinity Hall, Cambridge (BA). Solicitor; principal of Batten & Co., Yeovil; Town Clerk of Yeovil. JP for Dorset (from 1912) and DL for Somerset (from 1939). An officer in the 3rd Battn, Dorsetshire Regiment (Maj.) who served in First World War (mentioned in despatches, wounded; awarded DSO); Hon. Col. of 663 Super Heavy Regiment, Royal Artillery (Territorial Army), 1948. Freeman of the borough of Yeovil. Master of Cattistock Foxhounds, 1939-55, 1957-60 and Chairman of the hunt, 1960-63. President of Bath & West and Southern Counties Agricultural Society, 1959. He married 1st, 14 August 1912 at Chilfrome (Dorset), Dorothy Lilian Hyde (1892-1951), third daughter of Rev. Edgar Astley Milne MFH, of Chilfrome, and 2nd, 9 June 1952, Pamela Betty (1906-71), second daughter of John Fletcher-Mossop of Ford Castle (Northbld) and widow of F/Offr John Nigel Richards (1908-44), and had issue:
(1.1) Frances Eleanor Daphne Batten (1915-2002), born 12 July 1915; served in Second World War with First Aid Nursing Yeomanry and Auxiliary Territorial Service; married, 8 May 1947, Brig. Anthony Crook MC MRCSE LRCP (1913-2005) of Colly Farm, Dottery, Bridport (Dorset) and had issue two daughters; died 17 October 2002; will proved 12 May 2003;
(1.2) William Henry Batten (1926-2013) (q.v.).
He inherited Aldon House, Yeovil from his uncle Henry in 1912.
He died 30 November 1963 and was buried at Ryme Intrinseca (Dorset), 5 December 1963; his will was proved 21 February 1964 (estate £61,664). His first wife died 24 September 1951 and was buried at Ryme Intrinseca; administration of her goods was granted 30 November 1951 (estate £4,960). His widow died 22 February 1971; her will was proved 16 July 1971 (estate £165,146).

Batten, William Henry (1926-2013). Only son of Maj. Herbert Copeland Cary Batten (1884-1963), and his first wife, Dorothy Lilian Hyde, third daughter of Rev. Edgar Astley Milne of Chilfrome (Dorset), born 29 January 1926. Educated at Marlborough College. An officer in the Royal Marines (2nd Lt., 1944; Lt., 1946; retired, 1949) and in Territorial Army (Capt., 1953; Major, 1958; retired 1961). Admitted a solicitor, 1954. He married, 2 September 1950 at Symondsbury (Dorset), Susan Helen Frances (b. 1929), elder daughter of Sir William Philip Colfox, 1st bt. of Symondsbury Manor, and had issue:
(1) David Henry Cary Batten (b. 1952), born 3 March 1952; educated at Eton; married, Apr-Jun 1981, Sarah G. (b. 1953), daughter of Brig. John Gordon Bagnall MC OBE, but had no issue;
(2) Tessa Mary Batten (b. 1953), born 22 October 1953; married, Jul-Sept 1976, John Garvie Mackenzie-Green (1953-2005) of Beaminster (Dorset), insurance company executive and farmer, son of Jack Green, and had issue two sons and one daughter;
(3) Caroline Bridget Batten (b. 1955), born 13 July 1955; married, Oct-Dec 1978, Angus Handasyde Dick (b. 1954) of Ivybridge (Devon), and had issue two sons and one daughter;
(4) Michael John Batten (b. 1960) of Ryme Intrinseca (Dorset), born 29 January 1960; married, Jul-Sept 1984, Joanna Patricia Winslade (b. 1961), and had issue two sons and one daughter.
He inherited Aldon House, Yeovil from his father in 1963, but sold it in 1966. He lived latterly at Church Farm, Ryme Intrinseca (Dorset).
He died 25 May 2013. His widow is now living.

Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) family of Thornfalcon


Batten (later Chisholm-Batten), Edmund (1817-97). Second son of John Batten (c.1774-1854) of Aldon and his wife Sarah, daughter and eventual co-heiress of John Copeland of Iver (Bucks) and Lingfield Lodge (Surrey), born 3 November 1817. Educated at Sherborne School (head boy), Edinburgh University (admitted 1834; MA), Magdalen Hall, Oxford (matriculated 1845), and the Inner Temple (admitted 1838; called 1842); he was also admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1849. Barrister-at-law, who was in regular practice for many years, and wrote a number of legal treatises. JP for Somerset and Inverness-shire. He had literary and antiquarian interests, and was a founder member of the Somerset Archaeological & Natural History Society, in whose journal he published almost annually, and was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh from 1857. He was the editor of The charters of the priory of Beauly (1877), and The Register of Richard Fox, Bishop of Bath and Wells (1889). He took the additional surname of Chisholm by royal licence, 1859, and he and his wife matriculated the arms of Chisholm in Scotland in 1860. He married, 1 August 1843 at Windlesham (Surrey), Jemima (1817-83), only daughter of William Chisholm of Erchless Castle (Inverness-shire) and sister and heir of Duncan Macdonnell Chisholm of Chisholm, and had issue:
(1) Jemima Emily Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1844-82), baptised at St Mary, Bryanston Sq., London, 1 August 1844; died unmarried and was buried at Thornfalcon, 10 April 1882; administration of her goods granted to her father, 23 November 1882 (effects £230);
(2) James Forbes Chisholm Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1847-1915) (q.v.);
(3) Edith Ursula Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1849-1902), born 24 February and baptised at St Mary, Bryanston Sq., London, 5 June 1849; died unmarried and was buried at Thornfalcon, 5 December 1902; will proved 26 January 1903 (estate £4,267);
(4) Admiral Alexander William Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1851-1925), born 28 September 1851; an officer in the Royal Navy (Lt., 1875; Cdr., 1886; Capt. 1893; retired 1903; Rear-Adm., 1905; Vice-Adm., 1909; Admiral, 1913; returned to active duty as a Capt., 1915); ADC to King Edward VII, 1904-05; appointed MVO, 1903 and DSO, 1917; in 1915 he was nearly drowned while attempting to rescue a man from a dock basin in Portsmouth; married, c.1887, Britannia Ellen (1861-1932), daughter of Nathaniel Wood of Knightsbridge (Middx), greengrocer, and had issue one son and two daughters; after retirement he lived in Edinburgh; died 2 November 1925; will confirmed in Edinburgh, 10 March 1926 (estate £3,062);
(5) Sarah Annette Eliza Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1853-1920), baptised at Thornfalcon, 31 July 1853; died unmarried, 9 June 1920; will proved 4 September 1920 (estate £5,227);
(6) Amye Fanny Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1856-1932), born 18 May 1856; died unmarried, 24 February 1932; will proved 12 April 1932 (estate £4,465);
(7) An un-named son (1858-59), born 16 December 1858; died in infancy, 1 March 1859;
(8) Lilias Mary Chisholm-Batten (1860-63), born 10 May 1860; died young and was buried at Thornfalcon, 6 June 1863;
(9) Rose Jane Chisholm-Batten (1862-1931), born 18 May and baptised at Mortlake (Surrey), 28 June 1862; died unmarried, 23 November 1931; will proved 8 February 1932 (estate £7,148).
He was apparently given Court House, Thornfalcon by his father and bought further land in the parish from the Wyndham family in about 1840. His wife inherited the Aigas Forest estate (Inverness-shire) from her brother in 1858.
He died 13 February 1897 and was buried at Thornfalcon; administration of his goods was granted to his elder son, 17 May 1897 (effects £18,225). His wife died intestate, 30/31 August 1883 and was buried at Thornfalcon; administration of her goods was granted 4 March 1886 (estate £27).

Batten (later Chisholm-Batten), James Forbes Chisholm (1847-1915). Elder son of Edmund Batten (1817-97) and his wife Jemima, only daughter of William Chisholm and sister and heir of Duncan Macdonnell Chisholm of Chisholm, born 13 January and baptised at St Mary, Bryanston Sq., London, 14 April 1847. His surname became Chisholm-Batten in 1859. Educated at Winchester and Exeter College, Oxford (matriculated 1866; BA 1870). An officer in the army (Ensign, 1869; Lt., 1871; Capt., 1880; retired from active service and moved to pay dept, 1881; Maj., 1895; Lt-Col. 1900; retired 1905). JP for Somerset and Inverness-shire. He married, 9 August 1883 at Erith (Kent), Anne Douglas (d. 1917), eldest daughter of John de Havilland Utermarck, bailiff of Guernsey, and widow of Capt. William Bothwell Potter, and had issue:
(1) James Utermark Chisholm-Batten (1884-1915), born 29 May 1884; an officer in 3rd Battalion, Dorset Regiment (2nd Lt., 1909; Lt., 1912); he was unmarried and without issue when he was killed in action, 30 September 1915; administration of goods granted to his mother, 5 September 1916 (estate £731);
(2) Harry Copeland Chisholm-Batten (1885-86), born 21 October and baptised at Ambala, Bengal (India), 21 November 1885; died in infancy, Jan-Mar 1886;
(3) Edmund Rodolphe Chisholm-Batten (1887-1982) (q.v.);
(4) Maj. John de Havilland Chisholm-Batten (1889-1917), born 14 October 1889; educated at Winchester; an officer in the 58th Battalion, Royal Field Artillery (Maj.), who served in First World War; he was unmarried and without issue when he was killed in action, 7 August 1917; he was buried at Wulverghem-Lindenhoek Road Military Cemetery, Heuvelland (Belgium).
He inherited Court House, Thornfalcon and Aigas Forest from his father in 1897. After his death they passed in turn to his sons James (who was killed six months later) and Edmund.
He died 17 March 1915 and was buried at Thornfalcon; his will was proved February 1916 and 31 May 1917 (estate £19,633). His widow died 1 December 1917.

Chisholm-Batten, Edmund Rodolphe (1887-1982). Third son of James Forbes Chisholm Batten (later Chisholm-Batten) (1847-1915) and his wife Anne Douglas, eldest daughter of John de Havilland Utermark, bailiff of Guernsey, and widow of Capt. William Bothwell Potter, born 10 May 1887. Educated at HMS Britannia (Naval cadet, 1902; Midshipman, 1903; retired 1905) and Tamworth Agricultural College. He married, 29 September 1920 at All Saints, Woodham (Surrey), Winifred Mary (1893-1975), elder daughter of Ernest Harry Cain of Chobham (Surrey), and had issue:
(1) Evelyn Anne Chisholm-Batten (1921-2019), born 21 July 1921; married, 29 August 1942, John Henry Cromwell-Bush, farmer in Kenya, elder son of Rev. Paul Cromwell-Bush, vicar of Queen Camel (Som.), and had issue two sons and two daughters; died aged 98 on 3 February 2019; will proved 30 May 2019;
(2) Walter Rodolphe Chisholm-Batten (1923-2020), born 25 July 1923; educated at Marlborough and Edinburgh University (MD); an officer in the Royal Navy (Surgeon-Lt., 1954; ret. about 1962) and later physician in general practice (MRCS, LRCP); married 1st, 20 December 1946 at Thornfalcon (div. 1968), Jean Elizabeth (1927-89), younger daughter of Capt. George Henry Taberman of Harrow-on-the-Hill (Middx) and had issue two sons and two daughters; married 2nd, 2 November 1968, Shirley Elizabeth Innes, eldest daughter of Norman Dyson Innes Rycroft of The Grove, Thornton Hough (Ches.) and formerly wife of David P.S. Terry, and had further issue one son and one daughter; died aged 97 on 17 December 2020;
(3) Robert Edmund Chisholm-Batten (1928-2008), born 7 June 1928; educated at Marlborough; he was unmarried and had no issue, but in 1955 was prosecuted and fined in a Dublin court for the seduction of Mrs. Leonard Hailey; died 23 September 2008 and was buried at Thornfalcon; his will was proved 24 November 2008.
He inherited Court House, Thornfalcon, and Aigas Forest from his elder brother in 1915, and Erchless Castle (Inverness-shire) from his kinswoman in 1935. The Scottish estates were sold in 1937. Thornfalcon was sold in 1979.
He died aged 94 on 15 March 1982 and was buried at Thornfalcon; his will was proved 17 March 1983 (estate £81,641). His wife died 8 July 1975 and was buried at Thornfalcon; her will was proved 15 October 1975 (estate £5,660).

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1972, pp. 48-50; Somerset Vernacular Building Research Group report, March 2001; J. Orbach & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Somerset - South and West, 2014, pp. 636, 723; M.J. Hill, West Dorset Country Houses, 2014, pp. 281-84;

Location of archives

Batten of Aldon, Yeovil: manorial records, deeds, estate papers, correspondence, legal papers, maps, diaries, genealogical and antiquarian papers and records of legal practice in Yeovil, 14th-20th cents. [Somerset Heritage Centre A\EIK]

Coat of arms

Batten of Aldon and Upcerne: Azure, a chevron nebuly ermine between three anchors erect, each entwined with a cable or, a chief enarched of the last.
Chisholm-Batten of Thornfalcon: Quarterly, 1st and 4th, Azure, a chevron nebuly ermine between three anchors erect, each entwined with a cable or, a chief enarched of the last; 2nd and 3rd, Gules, a boar's head couped or, langued azure.

Can you help?

  • I am always interested to see additional images of the houses depicted in posts, especially early drawings, watercolours or photographs, if anyone has these. 
  • I should be most grateful if anyone can provide photographs or portraits of people whose names appear in bold above, and who are not already illustrated, or better images of the portraits I already have.
  • Any other additions or corrections to the text above will be gratefully received and incorporated. I am always particularly pleased to hear from descendants of the family who can supply information from their own research or personal knowledge for inclusion.

Revision and acknowledgements

This post was first published 31 May 2021 and was updated 12 September 2021. I am grateful to 'KJB' for a correction.


Sunday, 16 May 2021

(457) Batt of Purdysburn House and Rathmullan House

Batt of Purdysburn and Rathmullan 
This family traced its origins back to Samuel Batt (d. c.1702), who is said to have moved from Cornwall to New Ross (Co. Wexford) in about 1650, and to have established himself there as a merchant. He and his son, another Samuel Batt (d. c.1716), also acquired lands in County Wexford including a farm called Ozier Hill, which remained in the family until the 19th century. The younger Samuel's son Thomas (d. 1741) had two recorded sons, of whom the elder, Samuel (d. 1765), inherited Ozier Hill, while the younger, Robert Batt (c.1728-83), entered the army. Samuel's son and heir, Major Thomas Batt (c.1742-79), was an officer in the 18th Foot who went to America with his regiment. In 1773 he seems to have retired from the army and settled in Nova Scotia, but two years later he joined the Royal Fencible American Regiment and led a decisive action at the Battle of Fort Cumberland in 1776. Soon afterwards he had a very public disagreement with the Colonel of the regiment about the terms of an amnesty granted to a group of rebels, and he may have resigned soon afterwards. Family sources say he was killed in a military engagement in 1779, but I have been unable to confirm this. He died in or before 1779, however, for his property at Ozier Hill passed at that time to his uncle, Robert Batt.

Robert Batt (c.1728-83), with whom the genealogy below begins, was also an officer in the 18th Foot, but retired on his marriage in 1765 before his regiment went to America. He applied the proceeds from the sale of his commission to establishing himself as a merchant in Belfast, where he seems to have prospered and raised a family of five sons. The eldest son, Narcissus Batt (c.1766-1840) joined him in the business at an early age and continued it after his father's death in 1783, later taking his younger brother Robert (1773-1811) into partnership. In 1808 he moved into banking, becoming one of the four partners in David Gordon & Co.'s Belfast Bank, which quickly gained a solid reputation, based on the good reputations of its partners. In 1827 the firm (by then sometimes referred to as Batt's Bank) merged with the Belfast Commercial Bank to form the Belfast Banking Company. Narcissus was also active in the broader commercial affairs of Belfast. In 1783 he became the youngest member of the newly-founded Chamber of Commerce, and later he was one of the Harbour Improvement Commissioners, whose work turned the city into a major port and shipbuilding centre. 

The profits of banking and mercantile activity enabled Narcissus to buy firstly, in 1807, a long lease of Donegall House in Donegall Place, Belfast, the former town house of the Marquess of Donegall, and then in 1811 to purchase the Purdysburn estate south of the city, which he remodelled very extensively to the designs of Thomas Hopper in the 1820s. In his declining years he retired from business and lived at Purdysburn, where he died in 1840.

Stranmillis House, as built for Thomas Batt (c.1806-61).
His sons, Robert (1795-1864), who inherited Purdysburn, and Thomas (c.1806-61) were both involved in the banking business. Thomas retired in 1857 when his health began to fail and bought an estate at Stranmillis, where he built a new house to the designs of Sir Charles Lanyon, which was unfinished at the time of his death and which was sold soon afterwards. Robert was succeeded at Purdysburn by his only son, Robert Narcissus Batt (1844-91), who was apparently not involved in the family bank, and became well-known as a racehorse owner. In 1883 he owned just over 12,000 acres in Co. Down. He married and had two daughters, who are said to have declined the opportunity to inherit the house at Purdysburn. He therefore left it to Belfast General Hospital, and it was sold in 1895 to Belfast Corporation, which made the house part of an extensive mental hospital and also built a fever hospital in the grounds. The house survived until 1965 but was then demolished and replaced by undistinguished office blocks.

The youngest son of Robert Batt (1728-73) was Thomas Batt (c.1775-1857), who was apparently a timber merchant in Belfast until c.1829. In 1837 he bought the 6,000 acre Rathmullen estate in Co. Donegal, where there was a moderately-sized new house and splendid views over Lough Swilly. He was succeeded at Rathmullan House (the village is Rathmullen but the house is now called Rathmullan House) by his only son, Robert Batt (1816-97), who enlarged and modernised the house about 1870 to accommodate his large family. In 1883 he owned 4,337 acres in Co. Donegal, but under the impact of the agricultural depression and the cost of long-running litigation this shrank further before his death. His eldest son, Col. Thomas Edmond Batt (1854-1908), inherited what was left but also many debts, and in 1904 he sold off everything except the house and its gardens. Four of his surviving younger brothers emigrated to Australia and a fifth became a commercial clerk in London. When he died in 1908, Col. Batt left the house to his two surviving unmarried sisters and their brother Charles Lyons Batt (1860-1932). They occupied the house until the last of them died in 1938, and in 1944 it was sold to the Holiday Fellowship as a walkers' hostel.

Purdysburn House, Co. Down

The earliest reference to the house is in a document dated 1712, indicating that a residence had been built here by James Willson (1680-1741), a successful merchant who had been building up an estate in the area since at least 1708. His son, Hill Willson (1707-73), embarked upon a major remodelling of house and gardens in the late 1730s, as indicated by a date stone of 1740 in the summerhouse in the walled garden. In 1744, Walter Harris was able to refer to ‘a house and pretty improvements... at Purdysburn'. At the same time as the house was remodelled, new formal gardens were created, which apparently remained unchanged when the first Ordnance Survey map was surveyed in 1834. 

Purdysburn House: the demesne as shown on the Ordnance Survey 1st edn. map of 1834.
After Hill Willson's death, the house and gardens at Purdysburn passed not to his eldest son, who was disinherited, but to his second son, also Hill Willson, who showed little interest in the house and demesne. The contents were sold in 1785 and the property was then let to the Bishop of Down & Connor until 1799. The house then stood empty until it was bought in 1811 by Narcissus Batt (1761-1840), a successful Belfast merchant and banker. A further decade then elapsed before Batt commissioned Thomas Hopper (1776-1856) to remodel and enlarge the old house. He was working at Gosford Castle in County Armagh at the time, but was based in London, and it is doubtful how much personal attention he can have given the job, which lacks the confidence and sophistication of his other commissions, although it is among the very earliest examples of the neo-Tudor style in Ireland. Work was apparently complete by 1825, when Batt was able to move in. 

Purdysburn House: the west and north fronts in about 1900.
The building that resulted from Hopper's alterations was a rather awkward stucco-faced gable-ended double pile house comprising a six bay three-storey block with arrays of transomed and mullioned windows, label mouldings, string coursing, plain parapets and an array of tall decorative chimney stacks. Octagonal turrets with decorative parapets and slender onion-shaped pinnacles flanked the main entrance on the west front, and similar turrets surround a canted bay on the north front. The east front facing the gardens was broken by a two bay two-storey recessed centre with an unusual gothic parapet. Whist working on his new house, Narcissus Batt was also engaged upon both the gardens and demesne. New gates and lodges were added and a neo-Tudor cottages were built in the estate village. In the garden he built a summer house in the form of a sham medieval tower house, and he probably laid out the park planting shown on the 1834 Ordnance Survey map, including three miniature lakes. 

Purdysburn House: aerial view of the east front and formal garden c.1930. Image: National Museums of Northern Ireland.
The last member of the Batt family to occupy Purdysburn was Robert Narcissus Batt (1844-91), whose two daughters declined the offer of inheriting the property. He therefore bequeathed it to Belfast General Hospital ‘for whatever use they saw fit', and in 1894 it was sold to Belfast Corporation with 295 acres. The corporation established a mental hospital on one side of the demesne and an infectious diseases hospital on the other, and the original house became part of the mental hospital. It was the construction of the fever hospital (later known as Belvoir Park Hospital), in close proximity to the policies of Belvoir House, which induced the 3rd Lord Deramore to abandon Belvoir in 1904 and move to Yorkshire. The gardens at Purdysburn were maintained by, and for the benefit of, the patients of the mental hospital until 1965, when the house was demolished and replaced by dull government office blocks and a prison, although some elements of the gardens, including the Gothick tower, remain. Belvoir Park Hospital remained in use until 2006, but has now also closed.

Descent: built for James Willson (1680-1741); to son, Hill Willson (1707-73); to son, Hill Willson, who leased it to Rt. Rev. William Dickson, Bishop of Down and Connor, c.1785-99; unoccupied until sold 1811 to Narcissus Batt (1761-1840); to son, Robert Batt (1795-1864); to son, Robert Narcissus Batt (1844-91); bequeathed to Belfast General Hospital; sold 1894 to Belfast Corporation.

Rathmullan House, Co. Donegal

The house, originally simply called 'The Lodge' was built about 1820 on a fine site overlooking Lough Swilly for Lt-Col. George or Andrew Knox, the third son of the Rt. Rev. and Hon. William Knox, Bishop of Derry and Raphoe. After Thomas Batt junior inherited the house in 1857 he enlarged it considerably and added the three not-quite-evenly spaced canted bays with wide overhanging eaves on the main front. 

Rathmullan House: the entrance front as altered by Thomas Batt, c.1870. Image: Rathmullan House Hotel.
When the house became a hostel after the Second World War, the original bedrooms were knocked together to create suitably spartan dormitories, a change that was happily reversed when the house became an hotel in 1962. However, the constant drive to make the hotel larger and more financially viable has seen it greatly enlarged, although the main rooms of the original building retain a country house feel. A pavilion dining room designed by Liam McCormick was built in 1969, a swimming pool and a new bedroom wing were added in the 1990s, and a further bedroom wing and function room in 2004.

Descent: built for Lt-Col. George Knox (1799-1881); sold c.1837 to Thomas Batt (d. 1857); to son, Thomas Batt (1816-97); to son, Col. Thomas Edmond Batt (1854-1908); to brother, Charles Lyons Batt (b. 1860; fl. 1931) and sisters, Alice Elizabeth (fl. 1912) and Mabel Mackenzie Batt (d. 1914)...sold 1944 to Holiday Fellowship; sold 1961 to Bob and Robin Wheeler, who converted it to an hotel; to Mark and Mary Wheeler.

Batt family of Purdysburn


Batt, Robert (c.1728-83). Younger son of Thomas Batt (d. 1741) of Ozier Hill (Co. Wexford) and his wife Jane, daughter of Thomas Devereux, born about 1728. An officer in the 18th Foot (Lt., 1752; Capt., 1756; retired 1765), who sold his commission at the time of his marriage and set up in business as a merchant in Belfast. He married, 1765, Hannah (c.1737-1816), daughter of Samuel Hyde of Belfast, and had issue:
(1) Narcissus Batt (c.1766-1840) (q.v.);
(2) Rev. William Batt (c.1768-1855), born about 1768; educated at Trinity College, Dublin (matriculated 1785; BA 1789); possibly at one time minister at Mallusk, Newtownabbey (Co. Antrim), but retired and for many years lived in Donegall Place, Belfast; married Arminella Turnley (c.1771-1840), and had issue; died 14 June 1855; will proved in Dublin, 1855;
(3) Samuel Hyde Batt (c.1770-1837), born about 1770; cotton spinner and calico printer; married 1st, 7 September 1807 at Lisburn (Co. Antrim), Margaret Mortimer (c.1786-1822), and had issue two sons and one daughter; married 2nd, 25 June 1823 at Newtownbarry (Co. Wexford), Mary Croker (1786-1871) and had issue a further two sons and one daughter; died 27 January 1837; will proved in Dublin, 1838;
(4) Robert Batt (c.1773-1811), born about 1773; merchant in Belfast in partnership with his eldest brother; died unmarried, 8 May 1811 and was buried at Clifton St. Cemetery, Belfast; 
(5) Thomas Batt (c.1775-1857) [for whom see below, under Batt of Rathmullan].
He settled in Belfast in 1765 but inherited Ozier Hill from his nephew in about 1779. 
He died 26 October 1783 and was buried at Drumbo (Co. Down), where he is commemorated by a monument in the churchyard. His widow died 24 April 1816 and was buried at Clifton St. Cemetery, Belfast.

Batt, Narcissus (c.1766-1840). Eldest son of Robert Batt (c.1728-83) and his wife Hannah, daughter of Samuel Hyde of Belfast, born about 1766. A merchant in partnership with his father and later his brother Robert, and one of the founders of the Belfast Bank (now part of Danske Bank) in 1808. He was the youngest founder member of the Belfast Chamber of Commerce in 1783, and was later a member of the Belfast harbour improvement commission. High Sheriff of Co. Down, 1835. He married, 1793, Margaret (d. 1843), daughter of Thomas Greg, and had issue, possibly among others who died young:
(1) Robert Batt (1795-1864) (q.v.);
(2) Elizabeth Greg Batt (c.1801-54); died unmarried in Edinburgh, 27 March 1854; her will was proved in Dublin, 1855;
(3) Mary Batt (c.1805-90), born about 1805; married, 16 May 1838 at Ballylesson (Co. Down), Thomas Richard Greg (1805-84) of Ballymenoch House, Holywood (Co. Down), and had issue one son and one daughter; died at Tunbridge Wells (Kent), 8 January 1890; will proved 10 May 1890 (estate £7,920);
(4) Thomas Greg Batt (c.1806-61), born about 1806; educated at Trinity College, Dublin (matriculated 1822; BA 1827); a director of the Belfast Bank (retired about 1858); he bought the Stranmillis House estate in 1857 and commissioned a new house from Sir Charles Lanyon, but did not live to see it completed; he died without issue at Langan Schalbach (Germany), 3 July 1861; will proved 8 August 1861 (effects under £30,000).
He inherited Ozier Hill from his father in 1783. He bought Donegall House in Belfast in 1807 and the Purdysburn estate in 1811. He remodelled Purdysburn House to the designs of Thomas Hopper c.1820-25.
He died 27 January 1840; his will was proved in Dublin in 1840. His widow died 29 September 1843.

Batt, Robert (1795-1864). Elder son of Narcissus Ball (c.1766-1840) and his wife Margaret, daughter of Thomas Greg, born 23 June 1795. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (matriculated 1812; BA 1816). A partner in the Belfast Bank. JP and DL for Co. Down; High Sheriff of Co. Down, 1846. He married 1st, 30 November 1830 at Rothesay (Bute), Jean Bogle (1810-33), daughter of Rev. Daniel Wilkie of Greyfriars, Edinburgh, and 2nd, 18 March 1841 at Leamington Priors (Warks), Charlotte Sarah (1815-57), daughter of Samuel Wood of Upton (Ches.), and had issue:
(2.1) Margaret Violetta Batt (1842-44), born 16 July and baptised at Leamington Priors (Warks), 19 August 1842; died in infancy and was buried at Leamington Spa, 8 May 1844;
(2.2) Robert Narcissus Batt (1844-91) (q.v.);
(2.3) Emily Charlotte Batt (1846-1906), born 24 April 1846; married, 23 November 1876 at Drumbo (Co. Down), Capt. John Lewis Way RN (1840-1904), son of Rev. Charles John Way; died 10 August 1906, was cremated and her ashes were buried at Great Yeldham (Essex); administration of goods granted 27 October 1906 (estate £6,359);
(2.4) Mary Jane Batt (1848-1919), born at Purdysburn, 6 September 1848; died unmarried, 17 December 1919; administration of goods granted at Belfast, 22 March 1920 (estate £192);
(2.5) Margaret Sarah Batt (1849-1932), born at Purdysburn, 12 September 1849; married, 5 September 1878 at Knockbreda (Co. Down), Col. Thomas Thompson Simpson (1836-1916) of Birks Hall, Halifax (Yorks WR), son of John Simpson, but had no issue; died 30 August and was buried at North Ockendon (Essex), 2 September 1932; will proved 14 November 1932 (estate £9,225);
(2.6) Geraldine Elizabeth Batt (1851-1931), born at Purdysburn, 16 April 1851; died unmarried, 9 January and was buried at North Ockendon, 14 January 1931; will proved 23 February 1931 (estate £7,692).
He inherited Osier Hill and Purdysburn from his father in 1840.
He died 27 July 1864; his will was proved in Belfast, 16 August 1864 (effects under £35,000). His first wife died at Madeira (Portugal), 14 June 1833. His second wife died at Pau (France), 15 February 1857.

Batt, Robert Narcissus (1844-91). Only son of Robert Batt (1795-1864) and his wife Charlotte, daughter of Samuel Wood of Upton (Ches.), born 10 November 1844. JP and DL (from 1877) for Co. Down; High Sheriff of Co. Down, 1870. He was a racehorse owner, and keen follower of the Turf. He married, 6 March 1866 at Mansfield (Notts), Marion Emily (d. 1892), eldest daughter of Sir Edward Samuel Walker of Berry Hill, Mansfield, and had issue:
(1) Eveleen May Batt (1867-97), born 1867; married, 19 May 1892 at Manby (Lincs), Capt. Charles Arthur Staniland (1856-1931), fourth son of Meaburn Staniland MP, solicitor, and had issue one son and three daughters; died 30 October 1897;
(2) Nella Lilian Batt (1872-1921), born 8 December 1872; married, 18 December 1894 at St Mary Abbots, Kensington (Middx), Col. Frederick Knight Essell (1864-1951), of Bevere Knoll, Claines (Worcs), son of George Essell of Rochester, and had issue three sons and two daughters; died 14 November 1921; will proved 27 January 1922 (estate £5,222).
He inherited Purdysburn from his father in 1864.
He died from the effects of falling downstairs at Purdysburn, 20 November and was buried at Ballylesson, 24 November 1891; his will was proved in Belfast, 11 March 1892 (effects £21,152). His widow died 7 February 1892.

Batt of Rathmullan


Batt, Thomas (c.1775-1857). Youngest son of Robert Batt (c.1728-83) and his wife Hannah, daughter of Samuel Hyde of Belfast, born about 1775. Probably the man of this name who was a timber merchant in Belfast until about 1829, when he sold the business as a going concern. He married 1st, 20 December 1813 at Dromore (Co. Down), Elizabeth (1787-1820), daughter of Robert Waddell of Islandderry, Dromore, and 2nd, 2 July 1827 at Upper Cumber (Co. Londonderry), Sarah (1796-1878), second daughter of Samuel Lyle of The Oaks (Co. Londonderry), and had issue:
(1.1) Thomas Batt (1816-97) (q.v.);
(1.2) Elizabeth Hannah Batt (c.1818-78), born about 1818; amateur watercolourist; married, 6 June 1846 at St Anne, Belfast (Co. Down), Caesar George Otway (1809-67), Assistant Poor Law Commissioner, son of Rev. Caesar Otway; died 24 December 1878.
He purchased Rathmullen House (Co. Donegal) with 6,000 acres in 1837.
He died at Rathmullen, 12 October 1857; his will was proved in Dublin in 1857. His first wife died in 1820. His widow died 27 March 1878.

Batt, Thomas (1816-97). Only son of Thomas Batt (c.1775-1857) and his first wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Waddell of Islandderry (Co. Down), born 1816. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1834; BA 1838; MA 1841). JP and DL (from 1868) for Co. Donegal; High Sheriff of Co. Donegal, 1844-45. A member of the council of the Royal Agricultural Society of Ireland, 1847-52. He married, 6 July 1852 at Hollywood (Co. Down), Charlotte (1825-1905), daughter of Ven. Edmund Dalrymple Hesketh Knox, archdeacon of Killaloe, and had issue:
(1) Agnes Charlotte Batt (1853-1938), born in Derry City, 10 June 1853; married, 23 August 1877 at Rathmullen, Lt. Archibald Hamilton Duthie RN (c.1843-83), third son of Rev. Archibald Hamilton Duthie, but had no issue; died 23 November 1938; 
(2) Col. Thomas Edmond Batt (1854-1908) (q.v.);
(3) Alfred Acheson Batt (1856-1916), born 15 May 1856; naval cadet, 1869; emigrated to Croydon, Queensland (Australia); died 12 November 1916 and was buried at South Brisbane Cemetery;
(4) Edmond Hesketh Batt (1857-82?), born 6 December 1857 and baptised at Rathmullen, 17 July 1858; joined civil service, 1875; said to have died unmarried, 1882;
(5) Arthur Robert Batt (1859-91), born 27 April 1859; miner in Queensland (Australia); died there, unmarried, 13 April 1891;
(6) Charles Lyons Batt (1860-1932) (q.v.);
(7) Gerard Otway Batt (1862-1944), born 28 February 1862; commercial clerk in London; married Anne Elizabeth [surname unknown] (b. 1860); died 23 February 1944; administration of goods granted 28 June 1944 (estate £5,447);
(8) Robert Devereux Batt (1863-1924), born 6 November 1863; emigrated to Australia; died unmarried at Croydon, Queensland (Australia), 31 March 1924;
(9) Octavius Batt (1865-1937), born 16 April 1865; emigrated to Australia before 1904; married, 1910, Violet Myra (1890-1949), daughter of William Thomas Robson, but had no issue; died 1 June 1937 at Wodonga, Victoria (Australia);
(10) Alice Elizabeth Batt (1866-1938), born 4 December 1866; co-heir to Rathmullan House on her brother's death in 1908; died unmarried, 2 October 1938; will proved at Dublin, 8 March 1939 (estate £554);
(11) Frederick Shelley Batt (1869-76), born 8 September 1869; died young, 16 January 1876;
(12) Mabel Mackenzie Batt (1871-1914), born 24 November and baptised at Bathwick (Som.), 27 December 1871; co-heir to Ruthmullan House on her brother's death in 1908; died unmarried, 10 September 1914; administration of her goods was granted 6 November 1914 (effects £5,629).
He inherited Rathmullen House from his father in 1857.
He died 19 July 1897. His widow died 31 January 1905.

Batt, Col. Thomas Edmond (1854-1908). Eldest son of Thomas Batt (1816-97) and his wife Charlotte, daughter of Ven. Edmund Hesketh Dalrymple Knox, archdeacon of Killaloe, born 14 October 1854. JP for Donegal. An officer in the Donegal Artillery (Capt., 1876; Maj.  1889; Lt-Col., 1895-1901; Hon. Col., 1897). He was unmarried and without issue.
He inherited Rathmullen House from his father in 1897, but sold the estate apart from the house and its immediate demesne in 1904.
He died 27 December 1908; administration of his goods was granted to his brother, 25 January 1909 (effects £166).

Batt, Charles Lyons (1860-1932). Fifth son of Thomas Batt (1816-97) and his wife Charlotte, daughter of Ven. Edmund Hesketh Dalrymple Knox, archdeacon of Killaloe, born 24 October 1860. Clerk of Rathmullen Petty Sessions; Secretary of the Killygarvan parochial council for more than 20 years; Treasurer and Secretary of Rathmullen races. He was unmarried and without issue.
He inherited Rathmullen House jointly with his sisters Alice and Mabel on the death of his elder brother in 1908.
He died of a heart attack, 19 January 1932; a reredos in Killygarvan parish church, Rathmullen, was dedicated to his memory in 1936.

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry of Ireland, 1912, p. 33; T. Reeves-Smyth & P. Smith, 'An Early Eighteenth Century Garden Bosquet at Purdysburn, Co. Down', Northern Ireland Heritage Gardens Trust Occasional Paper, No 5, 2015; https://www.rathmullanhouse.com/history-of-the-house.html

Location of archives

No significant accumulation is known to survive.

Coat of arms

Argent, on a cross between four bats sable three escallops in pale or.

Can you help?

  • I am always interested to see additional images of the houses depicted in posts, especially early drawings, watercolours or photographs, if anyone has these. I would be particularly interest to see any view of Purdysburn before it was rebuilt by Hopper; or any view of Rathmullan before the alterations of c.1870.
  • I should be most grateful if anyone can provide photographs or portraits of people whose names appear in bold above.
  • Any additions or corrections to the text above will be gratefully received and incorporated. I am always particularly pleased to hear from descendants of the family who can supply information from their own research for inclusion.

Revision and acknowledgements

This post was first published 16 May 2021.