Eardisley Park, Herefordshire
The house was built (probably on the site of an existing farmhouse as some of the surrounding outbuildings are older) in the early 18th century for William Barnesley (d. 1737) as a two-storey five-by-five bay brick house. Mr. Perry, the owner at the end of the 18th century, is thought to have been responsible for adding an attic storey to the house and coating it in cement render. During the 19th century it had at first gentry tenants and later became 'a farmhouse of the superior type'.
Eardisley Park: the three-storey house before the fire of 1999. |
Eardisley Park: the smoking ruins of the house after the fire in 1999. |
Descent: built for William Barnesley (1649?-1737); to son, William Barnesley (c.1703-60), who was however fradulently excluded from possession from 1738-49 by Mansel Powell and others; to widow, Elizabeth (1707-73); sold in 1778 to Dr Pettit; sold to [forename unknown] Perry...Thomas Perry (fl. 1811-37)... James Perry (fl. 1890); to W. Perry Herrick; sold c.1920 to Capt. Michael John Hunter (d. 1951); sold 1927... sold 1996 to Nigel Morris-Jones (b. 1959) and his wife, the Hon. Anne Morris-Jones. The house was let for much of the 19th century, latterly to farming tenants.
Barnesley family of Eardisley
Barnesley, William (1649?-1737)*. The records of the Inner Temple show that he was born at Stafford, and so he may have been the William Barnesley, son of Henry Barnesley and his wife Margery baptised at Bradley near Stafford, 11 July 1649. Educated at the Inner Temple (admitted 1668; called 1675; bencher, 1694; Treasurer, 1707-08); due to his long life, he was for many years the senior bencher of the inn. Barrister-at-law. JP and DL for Herefordshire; High Sheriff of Herefordshire, 1704-05. His son having married without his permission, he threatened to disinherit him, but he never executed a will; after his death, his solicitor and a distant cousin in London combined, with assistance from others, to fabricate a pretended will which was proved in London, and only later demonstrated to be a forgery. He married, 1696 (licence 1 June), Jane (d. 1734), daughter of Sir Nicholas L'Estrange, 4th bt., of Hunstanton (Norfk), and had issue:
(1) William Barnesley (c.1703-60) (q.v.).
He purchased the Eardisley estate in about 1685.
He died on 7 April, and was buried at Eardisley, 12 April 1737, where he and his wife are commemorated by a mural monument; the will forged by his solicitor and associates was proved 15 May 1742 but set aside following a Chancery decree in 1749. His wife died 20 November 1734.
* His monument gives his age at death as 93, but this seems to be an exaggeration; the baptism in 1649 is consistent with his admission to the Inner Temple in 1668. There is another entry in the Inner Temple admission registers for a William Barnesley of Stafford in 1670, but this seems likely to be a re-admission rather than a different person. The Inner Temple William seems also to be readily confused with another William Barnesley, clothworker of Old Jewry, London, who also died in 1736/7 and was buried in London; his wife was another Jane, daughter of Giles Sussex of London, merchant, and they had a daughter, Catherine (1692-1730), who married William Kingscote of Kingscote (Glos). The two men were probably related, as they are both involved in deeds relating to the Lurkenhope estate in Shropshire in 1704.
Barnesley, William (c.1703-60). Only son of William Barnesley (1649?-1737) and his wife Jane, daughter of Sir Nicholas L'Estrange, 4th bt., of Hunstanton (Norfk), born about 1703*. He evidently suffered from learning difficulties, and was easily influenced; he was eventually declared a lunatic at his wife's request in 1742. He married, 26 August 1723 in the precincts of the Fleet Prison, London, Elizabeth (1707-73), daughter of Walter Price of Kaevenblane**, but had no issue.
He should have inherited the Eardisley estate from his father in 1737, but was defrauded by his father's solicitor, Mansel Powell, and others, who forged a will disinheriting him. He recovered his property in 1749 after a lengthy Chancery suit, vigorously pursued by his wife on his behalf. This was succeeded by a further legal dispute with relatives. After his widow's death the estate was sold in 1778 to Dr. Pettit.
He died 23 January 1760, and was buried at Eardisley, where he and his wife are commemorated by a monument designed by Thomas Symonds. His widow died 8 April 1773, and was also buried at Eardisley.
* Based on his recorded age at death, which may be inaccurate.
** Thus on her monument in Eardisley church; the estate has not been identified.
Principal sources
The Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 20, 1750, pp. 364-68; M. Binney, 'Eardisley Park, Herefordshire', Country Life, 5 February 2004, pp. 48-52; A. Brooks & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Herefordshire, 2nd edn, 2012, p. 217.
Location of archives
None known.
Coat of arms
None recorded.
Can you help?
- Can anyone private fuller information about the descent of the property in the period when it was owned by the Perry family, or its ownership between 1927 and 1999?
- I should be most grateful if anyone can provide portraits of the people whose names appear in bold above.
- If anyone can offer further information or corrections I should be most grateful. I am always particularly pleased to hear from current owners or the descendants of families associated with a property who can supply information from their own research or personal knowledge for inclusion.
Revision and acknowledgements
This post was first published 3 November 2021.
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