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Tuesday, 27 August 2024

(582) Berkeley of Spetchley Park

Berkeley of Spetchley
This branch of the Berkeley family is descended from Thomas Berkeley (d. 1484), fourth son of James de Berkeley (c.1394-1463), 1st Baron Berkeley. Thomas himself settled at Dursley (Glos) and had at least four sons, of whom one of the younger, Richard Berkeley, was the ancestor of this family. He in turn had five sons, of whom the fourth, William Berkeley (d. 1552), settled at Hereford, where he was a merchant and served as Mayor, 1543-44 and MP for the City, 1547. His eldest son, William Berkeley (d. 1583), who is often confused with his father, had at least eight sons, of who only two produced issue. The younger was Rowland Berkeley (1548-1611), with whom the genealogy below begins. He moved from Hereford to Worcester, where he became a cloth merchant and clothier and came to occupy an important place in the administration of the city, serving as bailiff, 1585-88, first Master of the Clothiers' Company, 1590, and MP on four occasions between 1593 and 1604. He lived in a house in the Cornmarket, and he and his wife produced sixteen children between 1575 and 1594, all but one of whom survived to adulthood. From about 1600 he began investing his wealth in the purchase of manors and lands across Worcestershire, and at his death these were divided between his two eldest sons. 
William Berkeley (1583-1658) received the manors of Cowleigh in Mathon (Worcs) and Acton Beauchamp (Worcs), and went on to purchase Cotheridge Court. An account of him and his descendants is given in my post on the Berkeleys of Cotheridge. Rowland's second son, Sir Robert Berkeley (1584-1656) received the manor of Spetchley (Worcs), and enlarged his estate by the purchase of White Ladies Aston (Worcs) in 1612. He had been educated for a legal career and became first a serjeant-at-law and later a justice of King's Bench; he was knighted in 1627. For much of the 1630s he was occupied as an assize judge, but he was one of the justices who endorsed the legality of Ship Money in 1637 and the following year he was the judge in a test case brought by John Hampden which ruled that it was a prerogative levy and not a tax, and therefore did not require parliamentary sanction. In the run up to the Civil War, this was an inflammatory verdict in Parliamentary eyes, and he was arrested (in his own court!), imprisoned and stripped of all his public appointments by Parliament. In 1643 he was fined the colossal sum of £20,000, but prompt payment of half the fine was enough to secure his release and the waiver of the remaining penalty. 

Sir Robert's tribulations were not over, however, for during the siege of Worcester in 1646 his house at Spetchley was seized and used as the headquarters of the parliamentary army. Five years later, Scottish soldiers heading for the Battle of Worcester managed to burn it down, and Sir Robert was obliged to convert the surviving stable block into a temporary residence. His eldest son, Thomas Berkeley (1630-93), fought on the Royalist side in the 1651 Battle of Worcester. He escaped after the Parliamentarian victory and fled into exile on the Continent. He had already displeased his father by marrying a Roman Catholic, and while in Brussels he converted to Catholicism himself. This caused his father to disinherit him, but it seems likely that this was a pragmatic response to the potential impact of the penal laws rather than just a penalty for disobedience. An arrangement seems to have been agreed whereby Thomas would be excluded from the succession in favour of his eldest son, Robert Berkeley (1650-94), who would be raised in the Protestant faith, while Thomas' other son was brought up as a Catholic. At the same time, Sir Robert settled the estate on himself and after his death on trustees drawn from his Protestant friends, with the young Robert as tenant for life, so that in the event of his dying young, ownership would not pass directly into Catholic hands, and thus the worst consequences of the penal laws could be avoided. Many Catholic families took similar steps at this time. Thomas was given permission to live at Spetchley until his son came of age, but soon made a home at Ravenshill in Tibberton (Worcs), which became a centre for the Catholic faith.

Robert Berkeley (1650-94) was sent to Christ Church, Oxford and educated by the celebrated Dr John Fell, who was Dean there and also Bishop of Oxford (the Berkeleys and the Fells were connected by marriage). He selected as his wife a serious young woman, Elizabeth Blake (1661-1709), a friend of leading philosophers and divines, whose prayer book, A method of devotion, went through several editions in her lifetime. Unfortunately, Robert and Elizabeth had no children, and when he died at the beginning of 1694, just a few weeks after his father, the situation for which his grandfather had provided came to pass. Robert's successor as life tenant at Spetchley was his younger brother, Thomas Berkeley (1652-1719), and his descendants at Spetchley have remained Catholic ever since. Through his own marriage to Elizabeth Holyoake and the marriages he arranged for his children, Thomas allied himself with several of the leading Catholic families of the Midlands, including the Howards (later Stafford-Howards). Some mystery attaches to his eldest son, Robert Berkeley (b. 1682), however. Robert, who was 'half a year old' at the time of the heralds' visitation in 1683, was mentioned in his uncle's will written in 1692 but is not heard of again. His father's will in 1719 makes no reference to him, but still refers to his other sons as 'my second son' and 'my third son', as though Robert was still alive. No burial record for him has been traced, and it is uncertain whether he predeceased his father or was still alive in 1719 but had been disinherited.

The house at Spetchley at this time was still the partially moated converted stable block which Sir Robert Berkeley had made into a 'temporary residence' in the early 1650s. Illustrations of the house in the 18th century show that it was added to in a piecemeal fashion but not comprehensively rebuilt, and the impact of the penal laws on the status and wealth of the family are probably largely responsible for this. In 1719 the estate passed to Thomas' second son, John Berkeley (1683-1741), who was succeeded by his only surviving son, Thomas Berkeley (c.1720-42), who died only a few months later. The estate then reverted to John's younger brother, Thomas Berkeley (1685-1766), who may have been non-resident, as he is said to have died in France. His son, Robert Berkeley (c.1713-1804) is one of the more interesting figures in the story of the estate, as he was an active campaigner for Catholic emancipation. He also chose as his chaplain a series of men with literary aspirations, which he supported and encouraged. It was during his lifetime (and partly due to his own efforts) that the limitations on the Catholic gentry began to be relieved, and he was able to build a new wing at Spetchley containing a Catholic chapel. He married three times but had no children of his own, although after 1780 he adopted the orphaned son and daughters of his brother, John Berkeley (1720-78), and brought them up at Spetchley. The son, Robert Berkeley (1764-1845), became his heir, and also inherited Clytha Park (Mon.), which he sold on inheriting Spetchley. This, no doubt, was how he acquired the funds to rebuild Spetchley on a grand scale between 1811 and 1818, to the designs of the Catholic architect, John Tasker. For reasons which are unclear, however, he did not live in his new house for very long, before handing it over to his only surviving child, and retiring to Bath (Som.).

Robert Berkeley (1794-1874), who took over the reins at Spetchley, was an active and benevolent landlord, devoted to the improvement of his estates but not much interested in public life. He and his wife Henrietta, the daughter and co-heiress of an 'Indian nabob', had six sons and five daughters, only one of whom died in childhood, and several of them made marriages into notable Catholic families, such as the Feildings, Earls of Denbigh, and the Welds. His heir was his eldest son, Robert Berkeley (1823-97), who was educated at Oscott College in Birmingham and in Rome, and became a JP and Deputy Lieutenant for Worcestershire. He married Lady Catherine Browne, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Kenmare, and had six sons and six daughters. One of the sons became a Catholic priest and one of the daughters became a Sister of Charity undertaking humanitarian work in China, while most of the other sons pursued careers in the army or colonial administration. The heir to Spetchley was Robert Valentine Berkeley (1853-1940), who was not only a JP and DL, but served as Chairman of Quarter Sessions and as High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1909-10. He did not marry until he was nearly forty, but he and his wife Rose created the fine gardens at Spetchley Park with the help of his sister-in-law, and he also carried out improvements to the house in 1907-10. 

When R.V. Berkeley died in 1940, during the Second World War, his only son and heir, Robert George Wilmot Berkeley (1898-1969), was serving as an officer in the Worcestershire Yeomanry, and Spetchley Park was reserved for possible use by the Government in the event of invasion. Since it was happily never needed for this role, it was later used as a rest home for American air force personnel. In 1942, R.G.W. Berkeley also inherited Berkeley Castle (Glos), the seat of the senior branch of the family, on the death of the 8th and last Earl of Berkeley. Both R.G.W. Berkeley and his son, Robert John Grantley Berkeley (1931-2017), used both houses, but Berkeley Castle, which was open to the public on a regular basis from the 1950s onwards, and was the centre of a more extensive estate, perhaps inevitably claimed more of their attention. On the death of John Berkeley in 2017, the estates were divided between his two sons, with the elder, Charles, taking over Berkeley Castle, and the younger, Henry, receiving Spetchley Park, which he has since restored and rejuvenated. The gardens at Spetchley are open to the public on a regular basis, but not the house or chapel, although the redecorated interiors were extensively illustrated in Country Life magazine in 2023.

Spetchley Park, Worcestershire

Little seems to be known about the Tudor or earlier house which Rowland Berkeley acquired in 1606 except that it stood on a moated or at least partially moated site, since according to Nash it was burnt down by Scottish Presbyterian soldiers shortly before the Battle of Worcester in 1651. Sir Robert Berkeley (1584-1656), an elderly Royalist, evidently did not feel able to rebuild the house, and instead hurriedly fitted up the former stable block as a temporary residence, where he 'lived with content and even dignity upon the wreck of his fortune'. His successors, being Roman Catholics and financially pressured by the penal laws, did no more than tinker with this building for more than a century. 

Spetchley Park: the house in 1784, with the gabled former stable block on the left and two 18th century additions on the right.
Image: Worcestershire Archives & Archaeology Service x899:192 BA2432, no. 42b
Eighteenth century views of the house show it as consisting of a low gabled range - presumably the original stable block - with a taller projecting wing at one end and a balancing but detached building at the other end. To this the 18th century added two sash windowed blocks at different dates, one of which may have been the new wing added by Robert Berkeley (c.1712-1804) which contained a grand dining room and a Catholic chapel, although if so the wing must have been built before the 1791 Catholic Relief Act, as both wings are shown on a drawing dated 1784. A plan of 1805 shows that a second, parallel range existed behind the sash windowed blocks, which was separated from them by a very narrow courtyard; this was perhaps a service range.

In 1804, Robert Berkeley was succeeded by his nephew, another Robert, who engaged George Byfield (c.1756-1813) to make further changes to the house. Byfield, who was noted chiefly as a designer of prisons, also designed several modest country houses in the Worcestershire area, and was presumably recommended to Berkeley by one of his other clients. He exhibited 'A design for the improvements now making at Spetchley Park' at the Royal Academy in 1807, but something happened to alter Robert Berkeley's intentions, and by 1811 work was beginning on a completely new Greek Revival house, designed by John Tasker (c.1738-1816), a Roman Catholic architect who worked almost exclusively for Catholic clients. By 1811, Tasker was approaching the end of his career (and indeed, work was not completed until about 1818, two years after his death), but it is clear that he was at the height of his powers when he designed Spetchley, as it is arguably his most impressive and successful building.

Spetchley Park: drawing, attributed to John Tasker, showing the proposed mansion, c.1811. Image: Historic England.
The new house is a fine, well-proportioned, two-storey building of honey-coloured Bath stone, facing west and south across the park. The entrance front, on the west, has a giant portico of four unfluted Ionic columns and a deep pedimented with a cartouche of the Berkeley arms. To either side of the portico this front has just a single bay, although to its left there is a recessed service wing. 

Spetchley Park: the house from the south-west, c.1912. Image: Victoria County History.

Spetchley Park: south front.
The eleven bay south front is almost equally severe, with a two-storey semicircular bow articulated by giant unfluted Ionic pilasters occupying the central three bays, which is separated by three plain bays on either side from the wider end bays. The end bays are given sufficient weight to balance the bowed centre by projecting slightly and being framed by simplified Tuscan pilasters, and by pedimented tripartite windows on the ground floor with a broad rectangular moulded panel above instead of a window.

Spetchley Park; the inner hall, looking towards the staircase, 1984.
Image: Nicholas Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
Spetchley Park: simplified ground plan
with original room names.
Image: Nicholas Kingsley. Some rights reserved.

The interior planning of the house is elegantly contrived. The portico leads into an entrance hall which opens through a screen of scagliola Ionic columns into a wide inner hall, at the end of which a further screen of matching columns separates it from a large rectangular staircase hall. The sequence of three spaces was designed to be capable of being used flexibly, with folding walls that could be cranked out to make solid divisions behind the screens, which have recently been restored to working order. 
The cantilevered stone staircase has a fine iron balustrade supporting the handrail, and rises to a corridor running east-west through the first floor, from which open the principal bedrooms, although the central room, behind the bow, was evidently used as a ladies' sitting room in the early 19th century. The main reception rooms are along the south front, and were originally intended to be (from east to west), the drawing room, library (behind the bow) and dining room; all have simple Grecian chimneypieces and restrained plasterwork. At the west end of the house, the hall was flanked by a morning room - later a billiard room and now a sitting room - and a study. The entire east end of the house was occupied by a tall new Roman Catholic chapel, with additional bedrooms above it and a public entrance on its north side.

The house was remarkably little altered in the 19th century, but after a century some modernisation and redecoration was overdue. Robert Valentine Berkeley (1853-1940), who inherited in 1897, undertook a programme of improvements involving new plumbing and lighting, and the addition of a nursery floor above the Regency service wing. The work was done under the supervision of Edward Prioleau Warren (1856-1937), and further minor changes were made in 1911, including the insertion of a Venetian window in the staircase hall, this time under the aegis of Frank E. Howard of Oxford, a young architect who is thought to have been recommended by Warren.

Spetchley Park: the Regency root house.
Sir Robert Berkeley had licence to create a deer park at Spetchley in 1625, and an area of some 160 acres was enclosed for this purpose. Little more is known about the setting of the house, however, until the early 19th century, when the grounds immediately around the new mansion were landscaped in a Reptonian manner, and a small lake was created south of the house, with a conservatory and a simple root house nearby. The root house, restored in the 1980s, is a rare survival.. Alongside the alterations to the house in the early 20th century, R.V. Berkeley and his wife Rose (d. 1922), who was a passionate horticulturalist, undertook the creation of a more formal garden, with the help of Rose's sister, Ellen Willmott. In the 1920s, the gardens were one of the first to be opened to the public under the National Gardens Scheme, and they have been carefully maintained by subsequent generations.

In 1942, Capt. R.G.W. Berkeley inherited Berkeley Castle (Glos) from his thirteenth cousin, the last Earl of Berkeley, and during the Second World War the house at Spetchley was used for a time as a rest home for US Air Force personnel. In 1969 the Berkeley and Spetchley estates were inherited by Mr John Berkeley (1931-2017), who divided his time between the two, living at Berkeley in the winter and at Spetchley in the summer. Although maintained, the house was not improved, and suffered from the subdivision of the top floor into flats for members of the family. It was therefore rather 'tired' when inherited by Mr Berkeley's younger son, Henry. In 2019 he held a major 'decluttering' sale at Sothebys, disposing of some 750 lots of the historic contents that did not have particular significance for the family, and applying the proceeds to a reordering and redecorating of the house under the direction of George Saumarez Smith of Adam Architecture and Emma Deterding of Kelling Designs. Although the scale of the dispersal sale raised some concerns, the outcome of the refurbishment has been an extremely attractive and liveable family home. The original dining room has become a family kitchen and living room; the library - which retains some of its bookcases and their contents - is now the principal drawing room; while the original drawing room has been repurposed as a formal dining room. The small room at the west end of the house originally intended as a morning room has become an informal sitting room, and has been hung with a most attractive Chinese wallpaper, copied from original panels discovered during the preparations for the sale which had never been hung but which were evidently intended for this room, as they fitted its proportions exactly. The use of bold colours - a bright yellow in the staircase hall; a deep green in the drawing room; and a rich red in the dining room - gives a contemporary feel to the interiors, but otherwise the furniture and paintings are traditional and indeed many are drawn from the historic contents of the house, so the main rooms do not have to absorb discordant modernist accents.

Descent: Philip Sheldon sold 1606 to Rowland Berkeley (1548-1611); to second son, Sir Robert Berkeley (1584-1656), kt.; to son, Thomas Berkeley (1630-93); to son, Robert Berkeley (1650-94); to brother, Thomas Berkeley (1652-1719); to son, John Berkeley (1683-1741); to son, Thomas Berkeley (c.1720-42); to uncle, Thomas Berkeley (1685-1766); to son, Robert Berkeley (c.1713-1804); to nephew, Robert Berkeley (1764-1845); to son, Robert Berkeley (1794-1874); to son, Robert Berkeley (1823-97); to son, Robert Valentine Berkeley (1853-1940); to son, Robert George Wilmot Berkeley (1898-1969); to son, Robert John Grantley Berkeley (1931-2017); to younger son, Henry John Mowbray Berkeley (b. 1969).

Berkeley family of Spetchley Park


Berkeley, Rowland (1548-1611). Eighth, but eldest surviving, son of William Berkeley of Hereford and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of William Burghill of Cowarne (Herefs), born 1548. Educated at Oxford. Merchant and clothier in Worcester. A member of 'the 48' (the governing elite of Worcester) from 1578 (Chamberlain, 1583-84; Bailiff, 1585-88); first Master of the Worcester Clothiers' Company, 1590. MP for Worcester, 1593, 1597, 1601, 1604. He married, 15 April 1574 at St Martin, Worcester, Catherine (d. 1629), daughter of Thomas Hayward of Gloucester, and had issue:
(1) Dorothy Berkeley (1575-1648), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 25 January 1575/6; married 1st, 20 January 1594/5 at St Martin, Worcester, Thomas Wylde (c.1568-1610) of The Commandery, Worcester, and had issue three sons and two daughters; married 2nd, c.1611, Rev. Dr. Richard Thornton DD (d. 1615), canon of Christ Church, Oxford and of Worcester Cathedral; died 27 September and was buried at St Peter, Worcester, 28 September 1648; 
(2) Catherine Berkeley (b. 1576), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 20 December 1576; married, 4 November 1595 at St Martin, Worcester, William Worfield (d. 1623) of Bransford (Worcs), yeoman, and had issue one son and three daughters; living in 1623 but death not traced;
(3) Elizabeth Berkeley (b. 1578), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 19 May 1578; married, 17 January 1601/2 at St Martin, Worcester, Robert Crosby (b. 1578), of Worcester; living in 1610 but death not traced;
(4) Eleanor Berkeley (b. 1579), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 28 July 1579; apparently disinherited by her father as the wording of his will suggests that one or more daughters was excluded from its provisions and she is the only one not named; married, 4 May 1598 at St Martin, Worcester, John Frogmer (d. 1636) of Claines (Worcs);
(5) Jane Berkeley (1581-1621), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 25 April 1581; married, 10 December 1599 at St Swithin, Worcester, George Stinton (d. 1627?) of Worcester; buried at St Swithin, Worcester, 13 June 1621;
(6) Joan alias Johanne Berkeley (b. 1582), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 14 April 1582; married 1st, before 1610, Rev. Henry Bright (1562-1627) of Brockbury (Herefs) and had issue one son and six daughters; married 2nd, c.1630, Edward Annesley (d. 1638) of Brookend (Oxon); living in 1638;
(7) William Berkeley (1583-1658) [for whom see my account of the Berkeleys of Cotheridge];
(8) Sir Robert Berkeley (1584-1656) (q.v.);
(9) Mary Berkeley (b. 1585), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 4 July 1585; married, 28 February 1602/3, Edmund Wynne (1583-1645) of Thornton Curtis (Lincs); living in 1610;
(10) Anne Berkeley (1586-1638), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 6 August 1586; married 1st, before 1610, Thomas Moore (d. 1633), alderman of Worcester (who founded Moore's Blue Coat School charity in 1626), and 2nd, Dr William Smith DD (1582-1658), canon of Worcester Cathedral and rector of Tredington (Worcs) and formerly Warden of Wadham College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, 1630-32; buried at Spetchley, 30 October 1638;
(11) Joyce Berkeley (b. 1588), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 25 March 1588; married [forename unknown] Newton of London; living in 1610.
(12) Edward Berkeley (1589-1669), of Worcester, baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 7 December 1589; educated at Middle Temple (admitted 1612); merchant and member of the Levant Company; married, 17 November 1616 at All Hallows, London Wall, London, Elizabeth (1599-1679), daughter of Christopher Eland of London, and had issue one son and one daughter; buried at Spetchley, 21 January 1668/9;
(13) John Berkeley (1590-1672?), of East Barnet and later Radwell (both Herts), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 21 December 1590; married, c.1620, Elizabeth, daughter of John Turner, and had issue one son and two daughters; said to have been buried at Goldington (Beds), 4 December 1672; 
(14) Henry Berkeley (b. & d. 1592), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 4 March 1591/2; died in infancy;
(15) Henry Berkeley (1593-1682), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 6 June 1593; educated at Balliol College, Oxford (matriculated 1613; BCL 1618); lived at Welton (Northants); JP for Northamptonshire?; married 1st, 31 July 1617 at Badby (Northants), Jacomis Haywood (d. 1624) and had issue three sons and one daughter; married 2nd, 18 November 1624 at Badby, Amy (d. 1673), daughter of Thomas Glover, and had issue five sons and five or six daughters; buried at Daventry (Northants), 8 January 1681/2;
(16) Thomas Berkeley (1594-1661), baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 26 May 1594; agent for his brother Robert at Spetchley and lived latterly at Colwall (Herefs); married 1st, 3 September 1613 at Cradley (Herefs), Margaret Noxe, and had issue two sons; married 2nd, 16 June 1621 at St Martin, Worcester, Mary Browning (d. 1630) and had issue two sons and three daughters; married 3rd, 15 June 1631 at St Swithun, Worcester, Catherine, daughter of Thomas Walshe of Stockton (Worcs) and widow of Edward Mitton, and had issue six sons and one daughter; buried at Colwall, 11 July 1661.
He lived in a house in the Cornmarket, Worcester, but from about 1600 bought estates in various parts of Worcestershire, including the Cowleigh and Acton Beauchamp estates which passed to his elder son and in 1606 the Spetchley estate which he bequeathed to his second son.
He died 1 June, and was buried at Spetchley, 2 June 1611, where he and his wife are commemorated by a magnificent alabaster tomb erected in 1614 and attributed to Samuel Baldwin of Stroud; his will was proved in the PCC, 26 June 1611. His widow was buried at Spetchley, 2 January 1629/30.

Berkeley, Sir Robert (1584-1656). Second son of Rowland Berkeley (1548-1611) and his wife Catherine, daughter of Thomas Hayward of Gloucester, baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 27 July 1584. Educated at Queen's College, Oxford (matriculated 1597) and Middle Temple (admitted 1601; called 1608; bencher 1625-27). Barrister-at-law. Sheriff of Worcester, 1613-14; JP for Worcestershire, 1613-43; Recorder of Worcester, 1619-24; a commissioner of sewers for the Worcestershire/ Gloucestershire border, 1627-42; MP for Worcester, 1621, 1624. Serjeant-at-law, 1627 and King's Serjeant, 1627-32; a Justice of King's Bench, 1632-43 and an Assize judge, 1633-35 (Norfolk circuit), 1635-38 (Northern circuit) and 1639-40 (Midlands circuit); he was also extensively employed as a commissioner for specific purposes, 1621-42. He was a signatory of the judges’ public endorsement of the legality of Ship Money in February 1637, and the following year ruled, on a test case brought by John Hampden, that it was a prerogative levy, not a tax. Parliament saw this judgement as an attack on the Common Law, and on 12 February 1641 he was arrested in his own court and placed in the custody of one of the sheriffs of London pending his impeachment. In an extraordinary turn of events, when the other justices all rallied to the king at the outbreak of the Civil War, he was brought out of prison to preside over the Court of King's Bench for a term. Judgment was finally pronounced against him on 12 September 1643, when he was fined £20,000, barred from public office and imprisoned during pleasure. Prompt payment of half his fine secured the waiver of the rest and release from gaol, a process which may have been assisted by the fact that his wife was cousin to John Pym. He disinherited his eldest son, who had become a Roman Catholic, and passed his estates to his eldest grandson, who was raised as a Protestant. He was knighted, 14 April 1627. He married, Elizabeth (c.1590-1659), daughter and co-heir of Thomas Conyers (d. 1614) of Sockburne (Yorks) and East Barnet (Herts), and had issue:
(1) Thomas Berkeley (1630-93) (q.v.);
(2) twin, Catherine Berkeley (1631-81), eldest daughter, baptised at East Barnet, 18 August 1631; married, 1652 (settlement 16 October), Robert Cressett (1631-1702) of Upton Cressett (Shrops.), and had issue two sons and one daughter; died 30 January 1680/1, and was buried at Cound (Shrops.), where she was commemorated by a monument;
(3) twin, Isabella Berkeley (1631-64), baptised at East Barnet, 18 August 1631; married, 20 July 1652 at Groombridge (Kent), Philip Packer (1618-86) of Groombridge Place (who m2, 20 December 1666, Sarah Isgar), and had issue three sons and four daughters; buried at St Margaret, Westminster (Middx), 19 March 1664;
(4) Anne Berkeley (fl. 1655); unmarried in 1655, when she was mentioned in her father's will; death not traced.
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his father in 1611 and enlarged it by the purchase of the manor of White Ladies Aston (Worcs) in 1612. He created a deer park south of the house in 1625 and built a funerary chapel onto Spetchley parish church in 1614. The house on the estate was occupied by Parliamentarian troops as their headquarters during the siege of Worcester in 1646, and burned down by Scottish troops in 1651. He then converted the surviving stable block into a temporary dwelling.
He died 5 August, and was buried at Spetchley 21 August 1656, where he is commemorated by a fine black and white marble monument; his will was proved in the PCC, 25 September 1656. His widow was buried at Spetchley, 12 April 1659.

Berkeley, Thomas (1630-93). Only recorded son of Sir Robert Berkeley (1584-1656), kt., and his wife Elizabeth, daughter and co-heir of Thomas Conyers of East Barnet (Herts), baptised at East Barnet (Herts), 24 June 1630. He fought at the Battle of Worcester, and after the Royalists were defeated he escaped overseas and lived in exile in the Low Countries. His wife was a Catholic and while in Brussels, he converted to Catholicism. He was on this account disinherited by his father, though he was allowed to live at Spetchley until his young son Robert came of age and took up the inheritance. In 1656 he was the subject of a commission of lunacy to inquire into his state of mind and property, but this may have been a ruse to allow his property to be vested in trustees with a view to avoiding the penalties for recusancy. After his son came of age, Thomas moved to Ravenshill in Tibberton (Worcs) which he turned into a haven for Catholic priests and where he maintained a chapel. He married, about 1649, Anne (d. 1692)*, daughter of William Darell (d. 1638) of Scotney (Kent), and had issue:
(1) Robert Berkeley (1650-94) (q.v.);
(2) Thomas Berkeley (1652-1719) (q.v.);
(3) Elizabeth Berkeley (d. 1693); married, 11 April 1672 at Spetchley, Thomas Burton (1637-95) of Longner (Shrops), judge, and had issue three sons and seven daughters; died 1693;
(4) Anne Berkeley; died young.
He lived latterly at Ravenshill (Worcs)
He died 22 December, and was buried at Spetchley, 26 December 1693, where and his wife are commemorated by a standing architectural monument attributed to James Hardy, erected in 1693. His wife died 18 September 1692.
* Anne was brought up in the Catholic faith by her mother, and it was perhaps due to her influence that her younger son adopted Catholicism.

Berkeley, Robert (1650-94). Elder son of Thomas Berkeley (1630-93) and his wife Anne, daughter of William Darell of Scotney (Kent), born 15 July 1650. Although his father was a Roman Catholic, he seems to have been raised as a Protestant and was educated at Christ Church, Oxford (matriculated 1667), where he was a pupil of the Rt Rev. Dr John Fell (1625-86), Bishop of Oxford. During the reign of King James II he and his wife lived in exile in the Netherlands, and he returned as part of the court of King William III after the Glorious Revolution. He was a friend and correspondent of John Evelyn, and shared with him an interest in trees, and he is said to have been responsible for planting the first cedars in Worcestershire. By his will, he founded the Berkeley Hospital in Worcester. He married, 11 March 1678/9 at Westminster Abbey (Middx), Elizabeth (1661-1709), a philanthropist and religious thinker* who was author of a prayer book (A method of devotion, which went through several editions in her lifetime and was republished after her death with a memoir of her life), daughter of Sir Richard Blake, kt. of St John's. Clerkenwell (Middx), but had no issue.
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his grandfather in 1656, and came of age in 1671.
He died 14 January, and was buried at Spetchley, 19 January 1693/4, where he is commemorated by a large marble monument attributed to Grinling Gibbons; his will was proved in the PCC, 2 April 1694. His widow married 2nd, 1700, as his third wife, Rt. Rev. Gilbert Burnet (1643-1715), Bishop of Salisbury, and died 3 February, being buried at Spetchley with her first husband, 12 February 1708/9.
* She was a friend of John Locke, Bishop Stillingfleet and Catharine Trotter Cockburn.

Berkeley, Thomas (1652-1719). Second son of Thomas Berkeley (1630-93) and his wife Anne, daughter of William Darell of Scotney (Kent), born in 1652. A Roman Catholic in religion, like his parents. He married, 1681/2 (licence 18 February) Elizabeth (c.1663-92), daughter and sole heiress of John or William Holyoake of Morton Bagot (Warks), and had issue, possibly among others:
(1) Robert Berkeley (b. 1682); eldest son, 'half a year old' at the 1683 Visitation; mentioned in his uncle Robert's will in 1693 but not in his father's will;
(2) John Berkeley (1683-1741) (q.v.);
(3) Thomas Berkeley (1685-1766) (q.v.);
(4) Anne/Mary Berkeley (b. c.1686); married, 1705 (licence 17 February 1704/5), Henry Stafford (later Stafford-Howard) (c.1688-1743), son of the Hon. Francis Stafford-Howard (d. 1708) and grandson of Sir William Howard (1614-80), 1st Viscount Stafford, but had no surviving issue; death not traced;
(5) Elizabeth Berkeley (b. c.1689), born about 1689; married, 1709 (licence 3 October) at Belgrave (Leics), John Beaumont Byerley (1686-1742) of Belgrave Hall, son of Charles Byerley, and had issue at least two sons and two daughters; living in 1742 when she was granted administration of her husband's estate but death not traced.
He lived at Ravenshill, Tibberton (Worcs) until he inherited the Spetchley estate from his elder brother in 1694.
He was buried at Spetchley, 7 August 1719, where he is commemorated on a monument; his will was proved in the PCC, 23 December 1719. His wife was buried at Spetchley, 27 February 1691/2.

Berkeley, John (1683-1741). Second son of Thomas Berkeley (1652-1719) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter and sole heiress of William Holyoake of Morton Bagot (Warks), born 1683. A Roman Catholic in religion. He married Judith Hagon (d. 1752) of Norwich (Norfk), and had issue:
(1) Elizabeth Berkeley (fl. 1719); living in 1719 but probably died young;
(2) John Berkeley (d. 1719); died young and was buried at Spetchley, 24 May 1719;
(3) Thomas Berkeley (c.1720-42) (q.v.).
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his father in 1719.
He died 2 September and was buried at Bath Abbey (Som.), 4 September 1741, where he is commemorated by a floor slab. His widow was buried at St Giles in the Fields, Holborn (Middx), 1 February 1752; her will was proved in the PCC, 25 January 1752.

Berkeley, Thomas (c.1720-42). Son of John Berkeley (1683-1741) and his wife Judith Hagon of Norwich, born after 1719. A Roman Catholic in religion. He married, about 1740, Mary (1718-67), daughter of Edward Ferrers (1678-1729) of Baddesley Clinton (Warks), but had no issue.
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his father in 1741.
He died in 1742; his will was proved in the PCC, 26 March 1743. His widow married 2nd, 22 August 1745 at Brandsby (Yorks), Francis Cholmeley of Brandsby, and had issue at least one son and four daughters; she was buried at Brandsby, 22 April 1767.

Berkeley, Thomas (1685-1766). Third son of Thomas Berkeley (1652-1719) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter and sole heiress of John or William Holyoake of Morton Bagot (Warks), born 1685. A Roman Catholic in religion. He married, c.1712, Mary, daughter and heiress of Robert Davis of Clytha (Mon.), and had issue:
(1) Robert Berkeley (c.1713-1804) (q.v.);
(2) John Berkeley (1720-78) (q.v.).
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his nephew in 1742.
He is said to have died in France; his will, drafted 7 January 1765, was proved in the PCC, 22 May 1766. His wife apparently predeceased him but her date of death is unknown.

Berkeley, Robert (c.1713-1804). Elder son of Thomas Berkeley (1685-1766) and his wife Mary, daughter and heiress of Robert Davis of Clytha (Mon.), born about 1713. A Roman Catholic in religion, he supported a Catholic priest as his chaplain, and campaigned for Catholic emancipation. He published several pamphlets and is thought to have been the author of a petition to King George III by the Catholic nobility and gentry presented in 1778, which led to the passage of the Catholic Relief Act 1778. He also supported the literary efforts of his chaplains, including Thomas Phillips' Life of Cardinal Pole (1764). He married 1st, 1744 (settlement 18 May), Anne (d. 1746), daughter of John Wybarn (c.1687-1739) of Hawkwell (Kent), and sister and co-heiress of John Wybarn alias Wyborne of Flixton (Suffk), 2nd, c.1747-51, Catherine (d. 1777), daughter of Thomas Fitzherbert (d. 1765) of Norbury (Derbys) and Swinnerton (Staffs), and 3rd, 11 May 1778 at St Julian, Shrewsbury (Shrops.), Elizabeth (d. 1811), daughter of Peter Parry of Twysog (Denbighs.), but had no issue, though after the deaths of his brother John and his sister-in-law, he became the guardian of their children.
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his father in 1756, and extended the house with a new RC chapel and entertaining room. His first wife brought him an interest in manors in Essex, which he sold in 1788.
He died 20 December and was buried at Spetchley, 27 December 1804, where he is commemorated by a monument; his will was proved in the PCC, 18 April 1805. His first wife was buried at Spetchley, 21 April 1746. His second wife was buried at Spetchley, 24 December 1777. His widow lived latterly at Hartpury Court (Glos) and was buried at Spetchley, 11 June 1811; her will was proved in the PCC, 5 December 1811.

Berkeley, John (1720-78). Second son of Thomas Berkeley (1685-1766) and his wife Mary, daughter and heiress of Robert Davis of Clytha (Mon.), born in 1720. He married 1st, 2 May 1763 at St Paul, Covent Garden, Westminster (Middx), Catherine (d. 1766), daughter of Charles Bodenham (d. 1762) of Rotherwas (Herefs), and 2nd, 2 October 1773 at Spetchley, Jane (d. 1780), daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Compton (d. 1758), 3rd bt., of Hartpury Court (Glos), and had issue:
(1.1) Robert Berkeley (1764-1845) (q.v.);
(2.1) Catherine Berkeley (c.1774-1823), born about 1774; married, 15 April 1801 at Spetchley, Robert Canning (1773-1843) of Foxcote, Ilmington (Warks) (who m2, 18 July 1826, Maria (1804-68), daughter of Joseph Bonnor Cheston of Gloucester, and had issue two daughters), but had no issue; buried at Hartpury (Glos), 3 March 1823;
(2.2) Jane Berkeley (1777-1853), baptised at St George RC church, Worcester, 2 May 1777; she and her husband inherited Hindlip Hall from the Compton family and rebuilt it; she married, 14 May 1799, Thomas Anthony Southwell (1777-1860), 3rd Viscount Southwell, and had issue two sons and five daughters died 26 October, and was buried at Hindlip, 3 November 1853.
He lived at Hindlip Hall (Worcs) and also had a house in Foregate St., Worcester. He inherited Clytha Park (Mon.) from his father.
He died between May and July 1778; his will was proved in the PCC, 8 July 1778, and made provision for four children (William Seward, John King, Frances Jones and Mary Jones) who may have been his illegitimate offspring, although the wording of the will leaves their claim on him unexplained. His first wife died in 1766. His second wife died 20 April 1780.

Berkeley, Robert (1764-1845). Only son of John Berkeley and his first wife Catherine, daughter of Charles Bodenham of Rotherwas (Herefs), born 1764. A Roman Catholic in religion. One of the stewards of the Worcester Music Meeting, 1803. He married, 4 May 1792 at Lanfoist (Mon.), Appolonia (1772-1806), third daughter of Richard Lee of Lanfoist Place (Mon.), and had issue:
(1) Robert Berkeley (1794-1874) (q.v.);
(2) Mary Berkeley (d. 1808); died young and was buried at Spetchley, 31 March 1808;
(3) A daughter (d. 1824); died in Paris (France), 21 March 1824.
He inherited Clytha Park (Mon.) from his father but sold it to his father-in-law on inheriting the Spetchley estate from his uncle in 1804, and built a new mansion house to the designs of John Tasker in 1811-18. Soon after it was completed, he handed it over to his son and eventually moved to Bath (Som.).
He died in Bath (Som.), 14 June, and was buried at Spetchley, 21 June 1845, where he is commemorated by a memorial brass tablet by Hardman & Co; his will was proved in the PCC, 4 July 1845. His wife died 'after a tedious illness' at Clifton, Bristol, 3 September, and was buried at Spetchley, 9 September 1806.

Berkeley, Robert (1794-1874). Only son of Robert Berkeley (1764-1845) and his wife Appolonia, third daughter of Richard Lee of Lanfoist (Mon.), born 21 May 1794. JP and DL for Worcestershire; High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1838-39. In 1832, at the first election after the Great Reform Act, he was active in the Whig interest in the electoral contest in the West Worcestershire constituency, and is said to have been offered a baronetcy afterwards (which he declined). He did not play a prominent part in the public life of the county thereafter, but was 'ardently attached to a country life' and after he moved to Spetchley, he was said to have 'never since left [it] except for very brief seasons', devoting himself to the management of his estate and to simple country pursuits such as shooting. He was an engaged and liberal landlord, who supported and encouraged his tenants in the improvement of their farms and undertook improvements of his own, including the building of a village school at Spetchley. He married, 24 January 1822 at St Marylebone (Middx), Henrietta Sophia (1795-1857), eldest daughter and co-heiress of the notorious Indian 'nabob', Paul Benfield MP (1741-1810) of London and Woodhall Park (Herts), and had issue:
(1) Robert Berkeley (1823-97) (q.v.);
(2) Mary Frances Berkeley (1825-41), born at Spetchley, 6 January 1825; died unmarried at Brussels (Belgium), 14 May 1841;
(3) Harriet Eliza Berkeley (1826-78), born 29 January 1826; died unmarried at The Hermitage, Stanbrook (Worcs), 16 November 1878; her will was proved 15 January 1879 (effects under £7,000);
(4) John Edward Berkeley (1827-47), born 6 March 1827; educated at Stonyhurst College; died at the school, 2 January, and was buried at Spetchley, 8 January 1847;
(5) Agnes Mary Caroline Berkeley (1828-60), born 17 August 1828; a Dominican nun; died 16 July 1860;
(6) Maj. Henry William Berkeley (1831-1916), born 24 February 1831; educated at Stonyhurst; an officer in the 3rd Dragoon Guards (Cornet, 1853; Lt., 1855; Capt., 1858; Maj., 1868; retired 1874); married, 18 April 1872 at St Gregory's RC church, Cheltenham (Glos), Matilda Catherine (1848-1916), daughter of George Ford Copeland of Bayshill, Cheltenham, and had issue four sons and one daughter; died 30 January 1916 and was buried at St Austin's RC church, Kenilworth (Warks); administration of goods (with will annexed) granted 13 April 1916 (estate £25,502);
(7) Emily Jane Berkeley (1832-1919), born 5 June 1832; married, 31 October 1855 at Spetchley, Simon Thomas Scrope (1822-96) of Danby Hall (Yorks), and had issue five sons and five daughters; died 20 January 1919; will proved 3 April 1919 (estate £1,643);
(8) Mary Berkeley (1833-1901), born 16 August 1833; married, 29 September 1857 at Spetchley, as his second wife, Rudolph Basil William Feilding (1823-92), 8th Earl of Denbigh, and had issue four sons and five daughters; died in Rome (Italy), 3 June 1901; will proved 24 August 1901 (estate £6,524);
(9) Frederick Charles Berkeley (1835-66), born at Spetchley, 11 February 1835; died of a heart attack in the grounds of Spetchley Park, 8 June, and was buried at Spetchley, 14 June 1866; administration of goods granted 16 July 1866 (effects under £9,000); he is commemorated by a memorial cross on the spot where he died;
(10) Charles Berkeley (1836-37), born about September 1836; died in infancy and was buried at Spetchley, 6 July 1837; 
(11) Francis Rowland Berkeley (1840-1925), born May 1840; blind from 1916; married, 26 June 1879, probably at the Brompton Oratory (Middx), Frances (1848-1925), daughter of John Weld of Leagram Park, Chipping (Lancs), and had issue two sons; died 27 September 1925; will proved 17 April 1926 (estate £7,374).
He lived at Blackmore Park before, and in the early years of, his marriage, until his father handed over Spetchley to him; he inherited the estate from his father in 1845.
He died 26 September 1874, and was buried at Spetchley, where he was commemorated by a Hardman & Co. memorial brass, like his father; his will was proved 21 November 1874 (effects under £60,000). His wife died 15 December and was buried at Spetchley, 21 December 1857.

Robert Berkeley (1823-97) 
Berkeley, Robert (1823-97).
Eldest son of Robert Berkeley (1794-1874) and his wife Henrietta Sophia, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Paul Benfield MP of London, born at Blackmore Park (Worcs), 8 October and baptised at Hanley Castle (Worcs), 12 October 1823. Educated at Oscott College and in Rome. JP and DL for Worcestershire. A Roman Catholic in religion. He married, 24 March 1851, Lady (Mary) Catherine (1829-1924), daughter of Thomas Browne (1789-1871), 3rd Earl of Kenmare, and had issue:
(1) Augusta Mary Catherine Gabrielle Joseph Berkeley (1852-77), born 18 March 1852; married, 9 May 1876 at Spetchley*, as his first wife, Charles William Francis Noel (1850-1926), Viscount Campden (later 3rd Earl of Gainsborough), and had issue one daughter; died following childbirth, 5 November 1877, and was buried at Spetchley;
(2) Robert Valentine Berkeley (1853-1940) (q.v.);
(3) Mary Ida Berkeley (1854-83), born 8 September 1854; married, 9 May 1876 at Spetchley*, as his first wife, William Joseph Fitzherbert Brockholes CBE (1851-1924) of Claughton Hall (Lancs) and had issue two daughters; died 14 January 1883;
(4) Maurice Henry Berkeley (1856-1921), born 2 April 1856; an officer in the Worcestershire militia and yeomanry (2nd Lt., 1874; Lt., 1876; resigned 1880; Capt., 1884; hon. Maj.; retired 1905), who served in the Boer War; lived at Foxcote Manor, Ilmington (Warks); JP (from 1898) and DL (from 1900) for Worcestershire; died unmarried, 1 March 1921; will proved 5 May 1921 (estate £1,044);
(5) Maud Ellen Emily Henrietta Berkeley (1858-1944), born 14 March 1858; lived in Worcester with her sister Constance; died unmarried, 6 March 1944 and was buried at Spetchley; administration (with will annexed) granted to her sister Constance, 3 August 1944 (estate £10,425);
(6) Thomas Mowbray Martin Berkeley (1859-1916), born 11 November 1859; educated at Beaumont College, Windsor and RMA Sandhurst; an officer in the army (2nd Lt. 1879; Lt., 1881; Capt., 1887; Maj., 1896; Br. Lt-Col., 1900; retired 1903) who served in Egypt and the Boer War (wounded twice; mentioned in despatches); later Brigade Major in Territorials, 1905-11 and one of HM Hon. Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, 1909; married, 12 June 1912 in the RC chapel at Foxcote, Helena Johanna Elizabeth (1861-1939), daughter of John Michael Koecher of Manchester, merchant, and widow of Capt. George Henry Jackson of the Indian army; he returned to the colours in the First World War and was killed in action in France, 20 May 1916; will proved 23 August 1916 (estate £1,840);
(7) Agnes Mary Philomena Berkeley (1861-1944), born Jul-Sept 1861; a Sister of Charity of St Vincent de Paul (as Sister Xavier) from 1882, who lived and worked in China from 1890 and developed a charitable mission called the House of Mercy on Zhoushan island from 1911, which remained in operation even after the Japanese invasion in the Second World War; she died 9 March 1944 and was buried at Zhoushan (China);
(8) Constance Mary Josephine Berkeley (1863-1946), born 15 February 1863; lived in Worcester with her sister Maud; died unmarried 8 February 1946 and was buried at Spetchley; will proved 4 July 1946 (estate £16,678);
(9) Hubert John Aloysius Berkeley (1864-1942), born 25 June 1864; after training on HMS Conway, he joined the Royal Navy (midshipman), but left the service and in 1886 joined the Malay States Civil Service, becoming District Officer in Upper Perak, 1904-14, 1918-26, a remote district which he 'administered in the fashion of a Malay chief and with little regard for higher authority'; according to his successor, he wove a legend about himself through the dissemination of anecdotes of his own eccentricity and defiance of the state government; he served in the First World War with the Worcestershire Regt. (Capt., 1915) and was appointed Companion of the Imperial Service Order, 1921; JP for Worcestershire, 1927 (Chairman of Droitwich Petty Sessions, 1940-42); a member of Worcestershire County Council; died unmarried at Clinkgate Farm, Droitwich (Worcs), 27 April 1942 and was buried at Sacred Heart & St Mary RC church, Droitwich; will proved 14 August 1942 (estate £22,609);
(10) Fr. Oswald Joseph Berkeley OSB (1866-1924), born 8 December 1866; educated at Downside and in Rome; joined the Benedictine community at Belmont (Herefs) and was ordained a Roman Catholic priest, 1895; priest of Whitehaven (Cumbld.) RC church, 1898-1924, except for First World War service as an army chaplain with the rank of Major, 1914-18, during which he was mentioned in despatches and awarded the MC, 1918; died 29 April 1924 and was buried at Whitehaven; 
(11) Etheldreda Mary Margaret Henrietta Berkeley (1868-1924), born 27 May 1868; educated at St Dominic's Convent, Stone (Staffs); married, 27 July 1893, Maj. Joseph Chichester (1858-1924), of Calverleigh Court (Devon), but had no issue; died 3 December 1924 and was buried at Calverleigh; will proved 4 June 1925 (estate £50,485);
(12) Wolstan Edward Francis Berkeley (1870-1943), born 2 November 1870; a director of the Cheltenham Brewery Co.; lived at Portishead (Som.) from 1926; married, 2 July 1913 at Courtfield (Mon.), Alice, daughter of Col. Francis Baynham Vaughan of Courtfield; died 24 October 1943; will proved 24 May 1944 (estate £9,866).
He rented Overbury Court (Worcs) and later Wootton Hall, Wootton Wawen (Warks) until he moved to Spetchley, which he inherited from his father in 1874. He later moved to a smaller house, St Cloud at Powick (Worcs), which he rented from Earl Beauchamp, and handed over Spetchley to his eldest son. His widow remained at St Cloud until it was destroyed by fire in 1902 and then moved to Foxcote Manor, Ilmington (Warks).
He died 9 September, and was buried at Spetchley, 13 December 1897; his will was proved 29 December 1897 (effects £241). His widow died 26 August 1924; her will was proved 28 October 1924 (estate £371).
* A double wedding, with her sister.

Berkeley, Robert Valentine (1853-1940). Eldest son of Robert Berkeley (1823-97) and his wife Lady Mary Catherine, daughter of Thomas Browne, 3rd Earl of Kenmare, born at Overbury Court (Worcs), 29 April 1853. Educated at Beaumont College, Windsor and Oscott. JP (from 1877; Chairman of Quarter Sessions) and DL (from 1891) for Worcestershire; High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1909-10; a member of Worcestershire County Council, (Councillor, 1889-1914; Alderman, 1914-31). An officer in the Worcestershire militia (2nd Lt., 1876; Lt., 1878; Capt., 1881; Maj., 1893; retired 1893). Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. He married, 20 August 1891 at Holy Cross & All Saints RC Church, Warley (Essex), Rose (1861-1922), younger daughter of Frederick Willmott of Warley Place, and had issue:
(1) Eleanor Mary Frederica Augusta Berkeley (1892-1930), born at St Andrews (Fife), 26 August 1892; married, 5 February 1930, John Brennan (1895?-1961) of Barraghcore, Goverbridge (Co. Kilkenny), but had no issue; died intestate, 30 May 1930; administration of goods granted 19 August 1930 (estate £8,876);
(2) Rosamund Mary Berkeley (1893-94), born 20 September 1893; died in infancy, 24 March 1894;
(3) Robert George Wilmot Berkeley (1898-1969) (q.v.);
(4) Margaret Elizabeth Berkeley (1902-98), born 10 January and baptised at Torquay (Devon), 16 January 1902; a nun of the Order of Our Lady of Sion in Paris (France) from 1926; died 7 March 1998.
He occupied Spetchley from about 1880 and inherited it from his father in 1897. He carried out improvement works in the house in 1907-10. His wife and her sister laid out a garden.
He died 14 August 1940 and was buried at Spetchley, where he is commemorated by a table tomb in the churchyard; will proved 27 January 1941 (estate £3,285). His wife died 21 August 1922.

Berkeley, Robert George Wilmot (1898-1969). Only son of Robert Valentine Berkeley (1853-1940) and his wife Rose, younger daughter of Frederick Willmott of Warley Place (Essex), born 23 April 1898. Educated at Downside, the Oratory School, and Magdalen College, Oxford. An officer in the Yeomanry (2nd Lt., 1917; Lt., 1919; Capt., 1945), who served in the First World War, 1917-19, and the Second World War, 1939-45. An underwriting member of Lloyds and a company director. Deputy Master of the Berkeley Hounds, 1923-28, Joint Master, 1928-69. DL for Worcestershire from 1952; High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1933-34; a member of Worcestershire County Council, 1928-46; a member of the council of the Three Counties Agricultural Society from 1926. He married, 23 November 1927 at the Brompton Oratory, the Hon. Myrtle Emmeline Theresa (1907-82), daughter of Charles Joseph Thaddeus Dormer (1864-1922), 14th Baron Dormer, and had issue:
(1) Rosalind Magdalen Ellen Berkeley (1928-2015), born 14 September 1928; a nun of the Order of Our Lady of Sion, Eden Grove, Holloway, London N7; died 30 November 2015;
(2) Juliet Elizabeth Mary Berkeley (1930-2019), born 6 June 1930; lived at Spetchley Park; died unmarried, 30 August 2019;
(3) Robert John Grantley Berkeley (1931-2017) (q.v.).
He inherited the Spetchley estate from his father in 1940 and the Berkeley Castle estate (Glos) from his 13th cousin, the 8th Earl of Berkeley, in 1942.
He died 28 August 1969; his will was proved 29 May 1970 (estate £759,593). His widow died 31 May 1982; her will was proved 6 August 1982 (estate £10,233).

R.J.G. Berkeley (1931-2017) 
Berkeley, Robert John Grantley (1931-2017).
Only son of Robert George Wlmot Berkeley (1898-1969) and his wife, the Hon. Myrtle Emmeline Theresa, daughter of 
Charles Joseph Thaddeus Dormer, 14th Baron Dormer, born 24 July 1931. Educated at the Oratory School and Magdalen College, Oxford (BA). An officer in the army (2nd Lt., 1950; Lt., 1952), and later in the Warwickshire & Worcestershire Yeomanry (Lt., 1954; Capt., 1956; Maj., 1963); DL for Gloucestershire, Worcestershire and Herefordshire; JP for Gloucestershire, 1960-97; High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1967-68 and Gloucestershire, 1982-83. Joint Master of Berkeley Hounds, 1960-84. He married, 25 January 1967, Georgina Bridget (b. 1939), eldest daughter of Maj. Andrew Stirling-Home-Drummond-Moray of Easter Ross (Perths.), and had issue:
(1) (Robert) Charles Berkeley (b. 1968) (q.v.);
(2) Henry John Mowbray Berkeley (b. 1969) (q.v.).
He inherited Berkeley Castle and Spetchley Park from his father in 1969.
He died 2 November 2017. His widow is now living.

Berkeley, (Robert) Charles (b. 1968). Elder son of Robert John Grantley Berkeley (1931-2017) and his wife Georgina Bridget, eldest daughter of Maj. Andrew Stirling Home Drummond Moray, born 10 October and baptised at Berkeley, 31 October 1968. Educated at Ampleforth and Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester. Worked for some of the major London auction houses (Christies and Sothebys). High Sheriff of Gloucestershire, 2019-20. He married, 2009, Katherine Mary (k/a Daisy) (b. 1972), three-day-event rider and Olympic equestrienne, daughter of Dave Dick, jockey, and had issue:
(1) Mary Beatrice Rose Berkeley (b. 2011), born 12 January 2011.
He inherited Berkeley Castle from his father in 2017.
Now living. His wife is now living.

Berkeley, Henry John Mowbray (b. 1969). Younger son of Robert John Grantley Berkeley (1931-2017) and his wife Georgina Bridget, eldest daughter of Maj. Andrew Stirling Home Drummond Moray, born September 1969. Educated at Ampleforth and RMA Sandhurst. An officer in the army from 1992. Joint Master of Berkeley Foxhounds, 2000. He married, 15 July 2000, Katherine Mary Anne (k/a Kate) (b. 1975), nutritionist, daughter of Rupert John Oliver Arkell (1927-86), and had issue:
(1) Violet Mary Myrtle Berkeley (b. 2008), born 4 June 2008;
(2) Wilfred John Cranfield Berkeley (b. 2010), born 7 March 2010.
He inherited Spetchley Park from his father in 2017.
Now living. His wife is now living.

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1969, pp. 45-46; H.A. Tipping, 'Spetchley Park', Country Life, 8-15 July 1916; A. Brooks & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Worcestershire, 2nd edn., 2007, pp. 598-99; R.J.G. Berkeley, 'The Compton family of Hartpury Court', Transactions of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, vol. 131 (2013), pp. 13-24; J. Goodall, 'Spetchley Park', Country Life, 13-20 September 2023.

Location of archives

Berkeley of Spetchley: The family archives remain in the possession of the family and are cared for by the archivist at Berkeley Castle, to whom enquiries should be addressed.

Coat of arms

Berkeley of Spetchley: Gules, a chevron argent between ten crosses pattée six in chief and four in base of the second.

Can you help?

  • Can anyone provide photographs or portraits of the people whose names appear in bold above, for whom no image is currently shown?
  • If anyone can offer further information or corrections to any part of this article 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 27 August 2024.



Friday, 16 August 2024

(581) Berkeley of Cotheridge Court

Berkeley of Cotheridge
This family are a cadet branch of the Berkeleys of Spetchley (who will be the subject of a future post), who were in a turn a cadet branch of the Berkeleys of Berkeley Castle. This branch begins with William Berkeley (1583-1658),
son of Rowland Berkeley of Worcester and Spetchley, a wealthy clothier. William purchased the Cotheridge estate near Worcester in 1615, and settled it on his only son, Sir Rowland Berkeley (1613-96), kt., on the latter's marriage in 1635. He served as High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1617-18, a clear mark of his newly-minted landed status, but his marriage was to Margaret Chettle, the daughter of another Worcester citizen, who served as mayor and MP for the city.

Sir Rowland Berkeley was educated at Oxford and the Middle Temple, and was knighted in 1641. By 1643 he was a justice of the peace and was evidently managing the estate at Cotheridge. He was an active Royalist in the Civil War (being a Commissioner of Array and also High Sheriff in 1644-45), but after the siege of Worcester in 1646 he compounded for his delinquency and took an oath not to take up arms against Parliament again. This oath he seems to have taken seriously, for he took considerable risks to avoid involvement in the Battle of Worcester in 1651. His resolution does not seem to have cost him royal favour, however, for his name was on the list of men to be included in Charles II's proposed Order of the Royal Oak in 1660, and he was restored to the magistracy and lieutenancy in the same year. He had married, in 1635, Dorothy Cave (1619-77), the teenage daughter of Sir Thomas Cave of Stanford Hall (Northants), and probably had a large family, but our knowledge of his children is probably incomplete as the Cotheridge parish registers do not survive before 1653. We do know, however, that he had only one son who survived to adulthood, Thomas Berkeley (c.1639-69), who died while travelling in south-east Europe, long before his father's death. Sir Rowland therefore adopted as his heir Rowland, the second son of his eldest daughter, Elizabeth Green (c.1645-c.1688), on condition that he took the name Berkeley in lieu of Green.

Rowland Green (later Berkeley) (1680-1731) came of age in 1701 and was High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1711-12. He and his wife, Mary Bohun, had a large family, although several of his children died young. His heir was Rowland Berkeley (1705-59), who married Lucy Lechmere from Severn End (Worcs) a few months after his father's death and produced an even larger family (nine sons and five daughters) than his father, although once again, several of them died young. Rowland seems to have played little part in public affairs, and he thus lacked other sources of income to supplement the resources of the estate, making it difficult for him to provide for his younger sons and daughters, several of whom remained unmarried. His eldest son and heir, Rowland Berkeley (1732-1805) inherited the Cotheridge estate and made major changes to the house there in about 1770, which were perhaps financed by his marriage in 1768 to the daughter of a London merchant. They had no children, however, so at his death the estate passed to his younger brother, the Rev. Henry Rowland Berkeley (1740-1832), who had none either, having married only in middle age to a woman already past childbearing age. Henry was the last survivor of his father's large family, and on his death Cotheridge passed to his nephew, the Rev. Richard Tomkyns (1768-1840), once more on the condition that the heir took the name Berkeley, which he had royal licence to do in 1832.

The Rev. Richard Tomkyns (later Berkeley) also made a very late marriage, and at his death left only a daughter, Louisa Anne (1823-90), who could not inherit Cotheridge as the estate was entailed on the male line. It passed instead to Richard's second cousin, the Rev. John Rowland Berkeley (1781-1850), who descended from a younger son of Rowland Berkeley (1680-1731). This branch of the family had been clergymen through several generations, and John was vicar of Much Cowarne (Herefs). He never married, so at his death Cotheridge passed to his younger brother William Berkeley (1784-1869), who spent most of his life in Essex and London. His eldest son was the Rev. William Comyns Berkeley (1810-85), who was appointed as rector of Cotheridge in 1850 and after his father's death became a classic Victorian squarson, combining the roles of squire and parson until his death in 1885. Comyns Berkeley, as he seems to have been known, married a daughter of the famous early 19th century antiquary, John Bowyer Nichols (1779-1863), and the couple had four sons, of whom the eldest, and the heir to Cotheridge, was Rowland Comyns Berkeley (1845-1925). It was in this generation that the combined effect of the Agricultural Depression and progressive taxation first made it impossible for small estates like Cotheridge to continue to support a gentry family in a leisured existence, and his sons all went into careers in engineering or colonial planting. Their careers were, of course, interrupted by the First World War, and the eldest son, Rowland Broughton Berkeley (1883-1957) served at different times in the army, the navy, and the air force. He inherited Cotheridge in 1925, but sold most of the land in 1932 and eventually parted with the house in 1949, after which it was converted into flats. He had no children, and his siblings left no surviving issue either, so he was the last of the Berkeleys of Cotheridge.

Cotheridge Court, Worcestershire

The house is essentially a late 16th century timber-framed house of two storeys and attics, which was much altered in 1770. The plan consists of a central block containing the entrance hall and principal staircases, with the kitchen and offices at the rear, a shallow L-shaped wing on the north, and a longer wing on the south, both wings projecting symmetrically on the east front.  As a result of the changes of 1770, the original building is now only apparent from the west, where the Tudor close studding and carved bargeboards are visible. However, in the early 20th century the Berkeley family retained a drawing showing the house in its original form, with the east front crowned by four gables - one on each wing and two over the recessed centre - while a small porch with a gabled room over it stood in the centre of the range. 

Cotheridge Court: the rear of the house from the north-west in 1932, prior to the removal of  lime render. Image: R.J. Collins/Historic England 

Cotheridge Court: recent aerial view of the house from the south-west, showing the semi-timbered range
More survives inside of the Tudor house, including the principal staircase, north of the hall, which rises in three flights to the first floor round a square (but probably reduced) well, and has massive newels crowned by moulded finials, and heavily moulded handrails, supported by square raking balusters joined at their heads by small semicircular arches.
Cotheridge Court: the Tudor staircase, c.1920
Image: Victoria County History/University of London
In the early 20th century, t
he dining room, at the east end of the north wing, had Elizabethan panelling, while the room to the west of it, known as the 'brown parlour', had a plaster ceiling of the same date with a rose in the centre, and contemporary panelling, although an earlier painted panel behind this indicated that this part of the house may contain some fragments of the previous house on the site. To the north of the dining room is a small panelled room, traditionally called 'the sot's hole,' which is rather quaintly said to have been where drunk and disorderly prisoners brought before the Berkeleys in their capacity as magistrates, were locked up until they had sobered up! It seems more likely that this was a small parlour, and the room above has good late 16th century plasterwork.

Cotheridge Court: the house from the south-east soon
after re-fronting c.1770.


In 1770, a new red brick entrance front was created as a thin skin over the timber-framed house; the recessed five-bay centre was given sash windows and a new classical doorcase in place of the Tudor porch; the south wing was rebuilt in brick and both wings were given Venetian windows on the ground floor; and the gabled attics were concealed by a solid brick wall with blind glazed windows and a plain parapet. The entrance doorway has a moulded architrave and consoles supporting a pediment containing a shield with the Berkeley arms. Inside, the hall, apparently always a single-storey space, was divided to enable the creation of a new staircase at its southern end, and a new drawing room was created at the eastern end of the south wing, which has a plaster ceiling, doorcases, and wooden chimneypiece in the Adam style.

Cotheridge Court: watercolour view from north-east by E. Doe, 1847. Image: William Drummond/Historic England

Cotheridge Court: east front c.1920. Image: Victoria County History/University of London
Further changes were made to the house in the mid 19th century, probably in the early 1870s. At this time, a balustrade with vases was added to the parapet of the entrance front, and the stepped tripartite windows on the first floor of the wings were inserted in place of earlier semi-circular tripartite ones. 

Cotheridge Court: renovation and partial demolition works in progress in 1950. Image: H.E. Sergeant/Historic England
After selling much of the estate in 1932, the Berkeleys finally sold the house in 1949 to an Irish entrepreneur, who felled the timber in the park, and divided the house into two dwellings and three smaller flats. During the renovation works the timber-framing on the west front, which had been plastered over, was exposed, a gabled range of outbuildings, perhaps including a brewhouse, which stood behind the south range, was largely demolished, and many old oak beams from the interior were removed and sold. The house was formerly approached along a noted avenue of lime trees, which were felled in 1961 when they were deemed to be unsafe.

Descent: Thomas Vaux (1510-56), 2nd Baron Vaux of Harrowden, sold 1534 to Sir Robert Acton (d. 1558), kt., to younger son Charles Acton; to son, Sir John Acton (d. 1621), kt.; sold 1615 to William Berkeley (1583-1658); handed on in his lifetime to Sir Rowland Berkeley (1613-96), kt.; to grandson, Rowland Green (later Berkeley (1680-1731); to son, Rowland Berkeley (1705-59); to son, Rowland Berkeley (1732-1805); to brother, Rev. Dr. Henry Rowland Berkeley (1740-1832); to nephew, Rev. Richard Rowland Tomkyns (later Berkeley) (1768-1840); to second cousin, Rev. John Rowland Berkeley (1781-1850); to brother, William Berkeley (1784-1869); to son, Rev. William Comys Berkeley (1810-85); to son, Rowland Comyns Berkeley (1845-1925); to son, Rowland Broughton Berkeley (1883-1957), who sold 1949 to Charles Lewsey, who converted the house into two dwellings and three flats.

Berkeley family of Cotheridge Court


Berkeley, William (1583-1658). Eldest son of Rowland Berkeley (1548-1611) of Worcester and Spetchley and his wife Catherine, daughter of Thomas Heywood, baptised at St Martin, Worcester, 30 July 1583. High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1617-18. He married, about 1607, Margaret (1586-1649), daughter of Thomas Chettle (c.1552-c.1640) of Worcester, MP for Worcester in 1614, and had issue:
(1) Katherine Berkeley (c.1608-55), elder daughter, born about 1608; married, 12 July 1632 at St Saviour, Southwark (Surrey), John Verney (d. 1680) of Compton Murdock alias Compton Verney (Warks), probably the younger son of Sir Richard Verney (1563-1630), kt.; buried at Chesterton (Warks), 28 June 1655;
(2) Jane Berkeley (c.1611-65), born about 1611; married, before 1635, as his second wife, William Jeffreys (c.1595-1658) of Ham or Homme Castle, Clifton-upon-Teme (Worcs), and had issue five sons and four daughters; died 8 March and was buried at Clifton-upon-Teme, 10 March 1664/5;
(3) Sir Rowland Berkeley (1613-96), kt. (q.v.).
He inherited the manors of Cowleigh (in Mathon (Worcs)) and Acton Beauchamp from his father in 1611 and purchased the manor of Cotheridge from Sir John Acton (d. 1621) in 1615. He sold Cowleigh in 1624 and the remainder of the estate was settled on his son on the latter's marriage in 1635.
He died 4 December 1658; his will was proved in the PCC, 1 January 1658/9. His wife died 29 September 1649.

Berkeley, Sir Rowland (1613-96), kt. Only son of William Berkeley (1583-1658) and his wife Margaret, daughter of Thomas Chettle of Worcestershire, born in 1613. Educated at the Middle Temple (admitted 1627) and Christ Church, Oxford (matriculated 1632). Knighted, 30 June 1641. JP for Worcestershire, 1643-46, 1660-80, for Worcester City, 1660-80, and for Worcester and Worcestershire, 1689-96. High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1644-45. DL for Worcestershire, 1660-88. During the Civil War he was an active Royalist, but at the surrender of Worcester on 23 July 1646 he obtained a written pass to return home in return for taking an oath not to bear arms against Parliament again, and he compounded for delinquency the following month and paid a fine of £2,030 (about four times the annual value of the estate). He evidently regarded himself as still bound by his oath in 1651 for he left an account of his conduct during the Battle of Worcester in that year, when he was 'brought to Worcester, much against his will, from Cotheridge, where he had this time remained at home 'resolved not to meddle.' He wrote to his father-in-law, Sir Thomas Cave, that he was fetched to the King from Cotheridge by a major with a party of horse. Having learnt that a commission had been issued to him and other gentlemen of the county to assist Major-General Massey, then governor of Worcester, and 'not liking the employment,' he, while waiting for audience with the king, got to his horse and fled home with what speed he could, the battle being already hot on both sides of the town. He got in about nine that night, after an exciting ride through the army, being captured once by the Scots, and escaping from them again. The next morning by sunrise a party of the Parliamentary horse rode to Cotheridge and told Sir Rowland he must come with them to their general. They carried him off and took his dun colt with them, but by the time they reached St. John's he found they had no order for what they did, and again escaped home. He was one of the gentlemen chosen by King Charles in 1660 to be invested with the order of the Royal Oak, but the order was never set up. MP for the City of Worcester, 1661. He married, 26 November 1635, Dorothy (1619-77), daughter of Sir Thomas Cave, kt., of Stanford Hall (Northants), and had issue, probably among others:
(1) Thomas Berkeley (c.1639-69), born about 1639; who 'out of a generous curiosity to see foreign countries, went with... Sir Daniel Harvey, ambassador extraordinary... to Sultan Mahomet Kan, emperor of the Turks, and travelling with [him] from Constantinople towards Thessalonika, where the ambassador was to receive his audience from the emporor, fell sick by the way' and died unmarried aged 30 at Megara (Greece), 25 October 1669, where he was buried among the Greek Christians; commemorated by a monument at Cotheridge;
(2) Elizabeth Berkeley (c.1645-c.1688) (q.v.);
(3) Anne Berkeley (c.1648-77), born before 1653; died unmarried and was buried at Cotheridge, 23 October 1677;
(4) Penelope Berkeley (c.1650-96), born about 1650; married, 23 September 1686 at Cotheridge, as his second wife, Sir Thomas Street (1625-96), kt., a justice of common pleas and MP for Worcester, 1659-79, son of George Street (1594-1643), mayor of Worcester, but had no issue; buried at Cotheridge, 25 April 1696;
(5) Mary Berkeley (c.1653-1707); married, 6 October 1675 at Cotheridge, Richard Nash junior (c.1653-96) of Droitwich, and had issue at least one son* and two daughters; buried at Droitwich, 11 June 1707, where she is commemorated on the monument to her husband and father-in-law;
(6) Dorothy Berkeley (b. 1654), baptised at Cotheridge, 15 May 1654; probably died young but death not traced;
(7) Margaret Berkeley (1657-1707), baptised at Cotheridge, 9 March 1657; married, 1675 (licence 25 April), William Bromley (1656-1707) of Holt Castle (Worcs), MP for Worcester, 1685-1700 and for Worcestershire, 1701-02, 1705-07, eldest surviving son of Henry Bromley (1632-70), and had issue three daughters; died on 23 August 1707 at Horseheath Hall (Cambs), evidently of an infectious disease which also killed her husband and one of her daughters, and was buried with them at Holt, 25 August 1707;
(8) Rebecca Berkeley (1659-89?), baptised at Cotheridge, 25 October 1659; married, 24 November 1686 at Cotheridge, as his second wife, Henry Townshend (c.1653-1707) of Elmley Lovett (who m3, 24 November 1690 at Ombersley (Worcs), Penelope (c.1657-99), daughter of Samuel  Sandys of Ombersley), but had no issue; possibly the woman of this name buried at St Margaret, Westminster (Middx), 3 March 1688/9.
He had taken over the management of the Cotheridge estate by 1646. 
He was buried at Cotheridge, 7 April 1696; his will was proved 11 April 1696. His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 4 May 1677.
* The Worcestershire historian, Dr. Treadway Russell Nash, was the grandson of Richard and Mary Nash.

Berkeley, Elizabeth (c.1645-c.1688). Eldest recorded daughter of Sir Rowland Berkeley (1613-96), kt., and his wife Dorothy, daughter of Sir Thomas Cave, kt., of Stanford Hall (Northants), probably born about 1645. She married, 1668 (licence), Henry Green (1640-94) of Wyken (Warks), a trustee of Rugby School from 1687, and had issue:
(1) Henry Green (1669-1744), baptised at Wyken, 9 March 1669; inherited the Wyken estate from his father in 1694; married, 26 October 1697 at St Paul, Covent Garden, Westminster (Middx) Margaret (1664-1724), eldest daughter of Sir William Craven (1638-95) of Benham Valence (Berks) and Coombe Abbey (Warks), and had issue at least one son and one daughter (who died young); died without surviving issue and was buried at Wyken, 23 June 1744;
(2) Dorothy Green (b. 1671), baptised at Wyken, 5 October 1671; living in 1691 and probably the woman of this name who married, 29 December 1697 at St Michael, Coventry, Thomas Burgh*, and had issue at least one son and two daughters; death not traced;
(3) Penelope Green (b. 1672), baptised at Wyken, 10 October 1672; married, 10 August 1696 at Cotheridge, Benjamin Jeffries (1649-c.1708) of Clifton-upon-Teme (Worcs), but had no issue; 
(4) Elizabeth Green (b. 1673), baptised at Wyken, 6 November 1673; married, 1703 (licence 11 September), Henry Green (b. c.1663) of Ashley (Northants), son of Henry Green of Rolleston (Leics), and had issue at least one son;
(5) Mary Green (1674-1744), baptised at Wyken, 13 October 1674; died unmarried at Wyken; will proved 12 October 1744;
(6) Anne Green (1675-1710), baptised at Wyken, 4 December 1675; died unmarried and was buried at Wyken, 6 November 1710;
(7) Maria Rebecca Green (1677-1729), baptised at Wyken, 24 May 1677; married, 6 December 1704 at Clifton-upon-Teme (Worcs), Hon. John Craven (1673-1726) of Whitley (Warks), and had issue four sons** and two daughters; buried in Binley (Warks), 16 August 1729;
(8) Margaret Green (b. 1678), baptised at Wyken, 9 September 1678; living in 1691;
(9) Jane Green (b. 1679; fl. 1740), baptised at Wyken, 2 October 1679; living unmarried in 1740 but death not traced;
(10) Rowland Green (later Berkeley) (1680-1731) (q.v.);
(11) Bridget Green (1683-99), baptised at Wyken, 3 April 1683; died unmarried and was buried at Wyken, 15 September 1699.
She died between 1683 and 1691. Her husband was buried at Wyken, 3 May 1694, but his will was not proved in the PCC until 21 May 1697.
* Entered in the parish register as Birgg. Many other variations of the name seem to be recorded, including Burr and Baugh.
** Their son William succeeded to the barony of Craven as 5th Baron in 1764.

Green (later Berkeley), Rowland (1680-1731). Second son of Henry Green (1640-94) of Wyken (Warks) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Rowland Berkeley (1613-96), kt., of Cotheridge (Worcs), baptised at Wyken, 19 January 1680/1. He was adopted by his maternal grandfather and brought up as heir to the Cotheridge estate. He took the name Berkeley on succeeding to the estate in 1696, but was sometimes referred to as 'Mr Berkeley Green'. High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1711-12. He married, 1700 (licence 10 August), Mary (d. 1731), daughter and co-heir of George Bohun of Newhouse and Coundon (Warks), and had issue:
(1) George Berkeley (b. 1701), baptised at St Michael, Coventry, 22 April 1701; predeceased his father and probably died young;
(2) Mary Berkeley (b. 1701), baptised at St Michael, Coventry, 26 December 1701; died in infancy;
(3) Mary Berkeley (b. 1702), baptised at St Michael, Coventry, 30 November 1702;
(4) Dorothy Berkeley (1704-77), baptised at St Michael, Coventry, 3 March 1704; married, 16 June 1725 at Cotheridge, William Calcott (d. 1738) of Berwick (Shrops.), and had issue three sons and three daughters; buried at Atcham (Shrops.), 11 June 1777;
(5) Rowland Berkeley (1705-59) (q.v.);
(6) Elizabeth Berkeley (1707-49), baptised at St Michael, Coventry, 28 May 1707; died unmarried and was buried at Cotheridge, 3 December 1749;
(7) Susanna Berkeley (1709-20), born 2 March and baptised at Cotheridge, 9 March 1708/9; died young and was buried at Cotheridge, 12 June 1720;
(8) Margaret Berkeley (1710-80), born 15 November and baptised at Cotheridge, 17 November 1710; married, 21 August 1740 at Atcham (Shrops.), Scarlett Lloyd of Harlescott, Shrewsbury (Shrops.) and was buried at St Mary, Shrewsbury, 30 April 1780;
(9) Penelope Berkeley (b. 1712), born 30 May and baptised at Cotheridge, 8 June 1712; married, 21 July 1731 at Doddenham (Worcs), John Green; possibly married 2nd, 9 March 1742/3, George Watts; death not traced;
(10) Rev. Lucy Berkeley (1713-93) (q.v.);
(11) Jane Berkeley (1715-91), born 25 September and baptised at Cotheridge, 2 October 1715; married, 27 April 1749, William Craven (1705-69), 5th Baron Craven of Coombe Abbey (Warks), MP for Warwickshire, 1746-64, but had no issue; died October 1791; will proved in the PCC, 23 November 1791;
(12) Catherine Berkeley (1717-69), born 14 September and baptised at Cotheridge, 17 September 1717; married, 22 December 1747, as his second wife, Thomas Leigh (1713-49), 4th Baron Leigh, of Stoneleigh Abbey (Warks), and had issue one daughter; buried at Stoneleigh, 12 April 1769; will proved at Lichfield, 1769.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his grandfather in 1696.
He was buried at Cotheridge, 17 July 1731. His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 27 April 1731.

Berkeley, Rowland (1705-59). Second, but eldest surviving son of Rowland Green (later Berkeley) (1680-1731) and his wife Mary, daughter and co-heir of George Bohun of Newhouse and Coundon (Warks), baptised at St Michael, Coventry (Warks), 9 October 1705. He married, 2 December 1731 at Hill Croome (Worcs), Lucy (d. 1769), daughter of Anthony Lechmere of Severn End (Worcs), and had issue:
(1) Rowland Berkeley (1732-1805) (q.v.);
(2) Anne Berkeley (1734-72?) (q.v.);
(3) Edmund Berkeley (1735-37), born 21 June and baptised at Cotheridge, 3 July 1735; died in infancy and was buried at Cotheridge, 2 April 1737;
(4) Lucy Berkeley (1736-1812), born 27 August and baptised at Cotheridge, 24 September 1736; died unmarried and was buried at Cotheridge, 9 March 1812;
(5) Thomas Berkeley (1737-38), born 7 December and baptised at Cotheridge, 9 December 1737; died in infancy and was buried at Cotheridge, 6 March 1738;
(6) William Rowland Berkeley (b. & d. 1739), baptised at Cotheridge, 9 February 1738/9; died in infancy and was buried at Cotheridge, 26 February 1738/9;
(7) Rev. Henry Rowland Berkeley (1740-1832) (q.v.);
(8) Rev. Thomas Rowland Berkeley (1741-1825), born and baptised at Cotheridge, 23 December 1741; educated at New College, Oxford (MA 1769; BD and DD, 1786); Fellow of New College; ordained deacon, 1765, and priest, 1766; rector of Rugby (Warks), 1767-1825 and Wootton (Oxon), 1786-1825; domestic chaplain to his aunt, Lady Craven, 1769; died unmarried, 1 February, and was buried at Wootton, 9 February 1825; administration of his goods granted to his brother Henry, 1826;
(9) Dorothy Berkeley (b. & d. 1744), baptised at Cotheridge, 30 March 1744; died in infancy and was buried at Cotheridge, 8 May 1744;
(10) Mary Berkeley (1745-1833?); baptised at Cotheridge, 9 August 1745; married, 12 August 1773 at Hallow (Worcs), Joseph Severne (d. 1805) of Mundersfield House, Bromyard (Herefs), and had issue; probably the woman of this name whose will was proved in the PCC, 5 August 1833;
(11) Margaret Berkeley (1746-87), born and baptised at Cotheridge, 6 January 1746/7; married, 10 November 1778 at Cotheridge, William Yeomans of Worcester; buried at All Saints, Worcester, 24 January 1787;
(12) Anthony Rowland Berkeley (b. & d. 1748), born 10 March and baptised at Cotheridge, 13 March 1747/8; buried at Cotheridge, 9 April 1748;
(13) William Rowland Berkeley (1750-75), baptised at Cotheridge, 18 November 1750; died unmarried and was buried at Cotheridge, 19 May 1775;
(14) Robert Rowland Berkeley (1754-1808), baptised at Cotheridge, 5 February 1754; attorney in Worcester (bankrupt, 1799); died unmarried and was buried at Cotheridge, 15 January 1808.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate fom his father in 1731.
He was buried at Cotheridge, 26 April 1759; his will was proved at Worcester, 12 July 1759. His widow was buried at Cotheridge, 13 June 1769; her will was proved in the PCC, 4 July 1769.

Berkeley, Rowland (1732-1805). Eldest son of Rowland Berkeley (1705-59) and his wife Lucy, daughter of Anthony Lechmere of Severn End (Worcs), born 12 November and baptised at Cotheridge, 14 November 1732. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1750). Bailiff of Droitwich, 1756. High Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1764-65; MP for Droitwich for a few weeks in 1774. He married, 28 June 1768, Sarah (1733-95), probably the daughter of William Carbonell of Hampstead, but had no issue.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his father in 1759.
He was buried at Cotheridge, 13 April 1805; his will was proved in the PCC, 25 June 1805. His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 17 April 1795.

Berkeley, Rev. Henry Rowland (1740-1832). Fifth son of Rowland Berkeley (1705-59) and his wife Lucy, daughter of Anthony Lechmere of Severn End (Worcs), born 21 April and baptised at Cotheridge, 22 April 1740. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated, 1759; BCL 1766; DCL, 1782); Fellow of New College, Oxford. Ordained deacon, 1763 and priest, 1765. Rector of Onibury (Shrops.), 1765-1832, Shelsley Beauchamp (Worcs), 1783-1832 and Acton Beauchamp (Worcs), to 1820; perpetual curate of Cotheridge, 1808-32. He married, 22 November 1794 at Woodstock (Oxon), Mary (1751-1816), daughter of David Jones of New Woodstock (Oxon), but had no issue.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his brother in 1805, and at his death it passed to his nephew, Rev. Richard Tomkyns (later Berkeley).
He died aged 92 on 17 September, and was buried at Cotheridge, 25 September 1832; his will was proved in the PCC, 18 March 1833. His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 26 February 1816.

Berkeley, Anne (1734-72?). Eldest daughter of Rowland Berkeley (1705-59) and his wife Lucy, daughter of Anthony Lechmere of Severn End (Worcs), born 10 March and baptised at Cotheridge, 4 April 1734. She married, 18 July 1765 at Cotheridge, Rev. Richard Tomkyns (1721-89) of Henwick House (Worcs), vicar of Whitsbury (Wilts), 1748-77, youngest son of Packington Tomkyns of Bromyard (Herefs), and had issue:
(1) Rev. Richard Tomkyns (later Berkeley) (1768-1840) (q.v.).
She was living in 1769, and may be the woman of this name buried at Martin (Hants), 23 August 1772. Her husband died 'after an illness of about ten years', 29 July, and was buried at Cotheridge, 5 August 1789.

Tomkyns (later Berkeley), Rev. Richard (1768-1840). Only recorded son of Rev. Richard Tomkyns (1721-89) of Henwick House (Worcs) and his wife Anne, eldest daughter of Rowland Berkeley (d. 1759), baptised at Claines (Worcs), 2 May 1768. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1787; BA 1791; MA 1797). Fellow of New College, Oxford. Rector of Great Horwood (Bucks), 1816-40. He took the name Berkeley in lieu of Tomkyns by royal licence on succeeding his maternal uncle in the Cotheridge estate in 1832. He married, 1822, Louisa (1788-1872), daughter of Rev. James Preedy of Winslow (Bucks), and had issue:
(1) Louisa Anne Tomkyns (1823-90), baptised at Great Horwood, 31 March 1823; married, 13 September 1849 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Edward Russell Ingram (1819-56), tenant of Waresley House, Hartlebury (Worcs), and had issue two sons and two daughters; died at Tenby (Pembs), 14 January 1890; will proved 15 April 1890 (effects £3,382);
(2) Rowland Berkeley Tomkyns (b. & d. 1826), born 25 August and baptised at Great Horwood, 26 August 1826; died in infancy and was buried at Great Horwood, 8 September 1826.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his uncle, Rev. Henry Rowland Berkeley, in 1832. At his death it passed to his kinsman, the Rev. John Rowland Berkeley (1781-1850).
He died 2 January and was buried at Cotheridge, 10 January 1840; his will was proved in the PCC, 24 February 1840. His widow died 13 April 1872; her will was proved 19 August 1872 (effects under £450).

Berkeley, Rev. Lucy (1713-93). Third son of Rowland Green (later Berkeley) (1680-1731) and his wife Mary, daughter and co-heir of George Bohun of Newhouse and Coundon (Warks), born 21 November and baptised at Cotheridge, 8 December 1713. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1733; BA 1737; MA 1741). Ordained deacon, 1739 and priest, 1740. Rector of Great Witley, 1741-93, Acton Beauchamp (Worcs) and Allington (Wilts), 1774-93; also domestic chaplain to Baroness Leigh, 1765 and Baroness Craven, 1769. He married, 18 November 1741 at Lincoln's Inn Chapel, Jane (1710-69), daughter of Robert Coxe of London, and had issue:
(1) Rowland Berkeley (1742-1814) (q.v.);
(2) Jane Berkeley (1749-1826), baptised at Great Witley, 9 October 1749; married, 18 December 1783 at Worcester, Rev. William Calcott (1757-c.1820) of Caynham Court (Shrops.); buried at Atcham (Shrops.), 29 August 1826.
He was buried at Cotheridge, 18 July 1793; his will was proved in the PCC, 27 July 1793. His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 3 March 1769.

Berkeley, Rev. Rowland (1742-1814). Only recorded son of Rev. Lucy Berkeley (1713-93), rector of Great Witley and Acton Beauchamp (Worcs), and his wife Jane, daughter of Robert Coxe of London, baptised at Great Witley (Worcs), 15 August 1742. Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1759; BCL, 1765; LLD, 1775). Fellow of New College, Oxford. Ordained deacon, 1765, and priest, c.1767. Curate of Clifton-on-Teme (Worcs), 1766-70; and Stockton-on-Teme (Worcs), 1777-79; rector of Allington (Wilts), 1767-74; vicar of Writtle and rector of Rochford (Essex), 1775-1814. He married Elizabeth (1752-1827), daughter of John Wathen of Clapham (Surrey), and had issue:
(1) Rev. John Rowland Berkeley (1781-1850) (q.v.);
(2) Lucy Berkeley (1783-1851), baptised at Writtle, 11 February 1783; married, 5 December 1811 at Writtle, Dr Clement Hue MD FRCP (1779-1861), physician to the Foundling Hospital, St. Bartholomew's Hospital and Christ's Hospital, son of Jean Hue of Jersey, and had issue two sons; died 8 March 1851 and was buried at the Foundling Hospital, London;
(3) William Berkeley (1784-1869) (q.v.);
(4) Henry Comyns Berkeley (1785-1846), baptised at Writtle, 13 August 1785; articled to Hanson & Birch of Chancery Lane, 1802; solicitor in private practice in partnership with his brother Charles (partnership dissolved, 1836), after which he appears to have gone to live abroad in Bruges (Belgium); married, 29 May 1810 at Rochford (Essex), Charlotte Matilda (1789-1848), daughter of Thomas Swaine of Rochford, and had issue several children; died intestate, 6 May 1846 and was buried at Dusseldorf (Germany), where he is commemorated by a monument;
(5) George Berkeley (b. 1786), baptised at Writtle, 15 December 1786; living in 1814 but death not traced;
(6) Thomas Berkeley (1788-1819), baptised at Writtle, 19 February 1788; lived in London; buried at Writtle, 22 January 1819;
(7) Mary Anne Berkeley (1789-1871), baptised at Writtle, 5 December 1789; married, 18 November 1830 at St George, Bloomsbury (Middx), Capt. Thomas Kersteman (1789-1853) of Canewdon (Essex), son of Jeremiah Kersteman of Prittlewell (Essex), but had no issue; died 6 January 1871; will proved 27 January 1871 (effects under £3,000);
(8) Emily Berkeley (1791-1837), baptised at Writtle, 19 June 1791; married, 25 September 1821 at St George, Bloomsbury, James Bishop, and had issue; probably the woman of this name buried at St Marylebone (Middx), 22 May 1837;
(9) Charles Berkeley (1794-1869), baptised at Writtle, 20 May 1794; solicitor in practice with his elder brother, Henry, until 1836; married, 13 October 1829, Susan (1806-88), daughter of Thomas Clarke, and had issue three sons and two daughters; died 8 February and was buried at St James, Swains Lane, St. Pancras, 15 February 1869; will proved 4 March 1869 (effects under £12,000).
He lived at Writtle (Essex).
He was buried at Writtle, 1 July 1814; his will was proved in the PCC, 20 July 1814. His widow was buried at Writtle, 6 March 1827.

Berkeley, Rev. John Rowland (1781-1850). Eldest son of Rev. Rowland Berkeley (1742-1814) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of John Wathen of Clapham (Surrey), baptised at Writtle (Essex), 22 December 1781. An officer in the Writtle Volunteers (Capt., 1803; Capt.-Commandant, 1804). Educated at New College, Oxford (matriculated 1800; BA 1805; MA 1808). Fellow of New College, Oxford. Ordained deacon, 1806 and priest, 1807. Rector of Acton Beauchamp, 1807-20; vicar of Much Cowarne (Herefs), 1813-50 and perpetual curate of Cotheridge, 1841-50. He was unmarried and without issue.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his kinsman, Rev. Richard Tomkyns (later Berkeley) in 1840.
He died 1 April 1850; his will was proved in the PCC, 22 April 1850.

Berkeley, William (1784-1869). Second son of Rev. Rowland Berkeley (1742-1814) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of John Wathen of Clapham (Surrey), baptised at Writtle, 18 June 1784. He married, 12 April 1809 at St Pancras (Middx), Lucy Frederica (1784-1878), third daughter and co-heir of John Richard Comyns of Hylands (Essex), and had issue:
(1) Rev. William Comyns Berkeley (1810-85) (q.v.);
(2) Comyns Rowland Berkeley (1811-1904), born 4 March 1811; solicitor; married, 18 December 1845 at St John, Notting Hill (Middx), Mary Ann (1826-1905), daughter of Rev. Frederick James Lateward, rector of Perivale (Middx), and had issue six sons and one daughter; died aged 93 on 9 August 1904; will proved 22 September 1904 (estate £135);
(3) Charles Clement Berkeley (1812-92), born 16 July and baptised at High Ongar, 18 August 1812; educated at Jesus College, Cambridge (matriculated 1831; BA 1835) and Lincoln's Inn (admitted 1831; called 1836); barrister-at-law, equity draughtsman and conveyancer; he was unmarried but had issue by his housekeeper, Susannah E. Fowler*, at least two sons and one daughter; died 18 January 1892; will proved 12 February 1892 (effects £2,153);
(4) Frederica Comyns Berkeley (1813-16), baptised at High Ongar (Essex), 27 October 1813 and again 26 July 1815; died young and was buried at Writtle, 23 February 1816;
(5) George Brackenbury Berkeley (1815-89), baptised at High Ongar, 26 July 1815; clerk to an attorney at Clement's Inn, London and later farmer, grocer and wine merchant; married, 26 August 1839 at Hornsey (Middx), Jane Abigail (1816-99), only daughter of Samuel Chymish of Abridge (Essex), shopkeeper, and had issue seven sons and five daughters; died 18 October 1889; administration of goods granted to his widow, 3 February 1890 (effects £75);
(6) Emily Comyns Berkeley (1818-92), born 5 September and baptised at Stanford Rivers, 30 October 1818; died unmarried at Isleworth (Middx), 25 August 1892;
(7) John Berkeley (1819-37), baptised at Stanford Rivers, 28 October 1819; died unmarried and was buried at Writtle, 23 December 1837;
(8) Julia Berkeley (1820-50), baptised at Stanford Rivers (Essex), 6 October 1820; died unmarried and was buried at Writtle, 2 March 1850;
(9) Augustus Berkeley (1821-1901), baptised at Stanford Rivers, 17 November 1821; coal merchant and farmer; married, 5 October 1847 at Holy Trinity, Mile End, Stepney (Middx), Matilda Joan, daughter of Henry Owen, of White Hall, Abridge (Essex), and had issue two sons and three daughters; died 25 October and was buried at Stanford Rivers, 31 October 1901;
(10) Henry Leeds Berkeley (1824-27), born 25 January and baptised at Theydon Garnon, 17 July 1824; died young and was buried at Writtle, 5 December 1827;
(11) Thomas Algernon Berkeley (1825-43), born 5 April and baptised at Theydon Garnon (Essex), 17 August 1825; died young and was buried at Writtle, 13 January 1843.
He lived at Coopersale Hall (Essex) and later in London before inheriting the Cotheridge estate from his elder brother in 1850.
He died 13 November and was buried at Cotheridge, 20 November 1869; his will was proved 1 December 1869 (effects under £5,000). His widow died aged 94 on 12 December 1878; her will was proved 15 January 1879 (effects under £450).
* The 1891 census gives her name as Berkeley and states she was married to C.C. Berkeley, but I can find no evidence of a marriage.

Berkeley, Rev. William Comyns (1810-85). Eldest son of William Berkeley (1784-1869) and his wife Lucy Frederica, third daughter and co-heir of John Richard Comyns of Hylands (Essex), born 24 February and baptised at Writtle (Essex), 6 March 1810. Educated at Woodford Grammar School and Jesus College, Cambridge (matriculated 1831; BA 1835). Ordained deacon, 1837 and priest, 1839. Curate of Great Stainton (Co. Durham), 1837; rector of Cotheridge, 1850-73. He married, 26 June 1844 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Harriet Elizabeth (1819-75), daughter of John Bowyer Nichols FSA, the eminent antiquary, of Hanger Hill, Ealing (Middx), and had issue:
(1) Rowland Comyns Berkeley (1845-1925) (q.v.);
(2) Rev. William Nichols Berkeley (1846-1938), born 25 October and baptised at Harlington, 4 December 1846; educated at Brighton College and Jesus College, Cambridge (matriculated 1867; BA 1871); ordained deacon, 1870 and priest, 1871; curate of Holt (Worcs), 1870-73; vicar of Cotheridge, 1873-91; retired to Charlton Lawn, Charlton Kings (Glos); married, 30 April 1878 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, Janet Berkeley Calcott, daughter of Rev. John Gaskin, rector of St Cuthbert, Bedford, and had issue two daughters; died aged 91 on 4 June 1938; will proved 2 August 1938 (estate £8,497); 
(3) Edmund Robert Berkeley (1848-1906), born 28 August and baptised at Harlington (Middx), 24 September 1848; an officer in the army (Ensign, 1867; Lt., 1870; Capt., 1877; retired 1878) and the East Yorkshire militia (Capt., 1878; Maj., 1885; hon. Lt-Col., 1887; retired 1888); a freemason from 1878; in retirement lived at Netherley (Kincardines.) and later at Chittenden, Edenbridge (Kent); died unmarried, 16 April 1906; will proved 13 August 1906 (estate £1,387);
(4) Herbert Bowyer Berkeley (1851-90), born 26 March and baptised at Cotheridge, 17 August 1851; chemical manufacturer; lived at Glengowan, Shortlands (Kent); died unmarried, after a long illness, at Birmandreis, Algiers (Algeria), 26 May 1890; will proved 11 July 1890 (effects £12,221).
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his father in 1869.
He died 7 August and was buried at Cotheridge, 14 August 1885; his will was proved 22 October 1885 (effects £9,631). His wife was buried at Cotheridge, 23 September 1875.

Berkeley, Rowland Comyns (1845-1925). Eldest son of Rev. William Comyns (1810-85) and his wife Harriet Elizabeth, daughter of John Bowyer Nichols FSA of Hanger Hill, Ealing (Middx), born 8 June and baptised at Harlington (Middx), 17 July 1845. Educated at Marlborough College, Christ's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1865; BA 1869) and the Middle Temple (admitted 1869). He married, 1 January 1880 at Holt (Worcs), Mildred Caroline (1857-1944), an antiquarian* and opponent of blood sports, third daughter of Rev. Archibald Paris, rector of Ludgvan (Cornw.), and had issue:
(1) Evelyn Mary Berkeley (1880-1953), born at Broadwas (Worcs), 11 October and baptised at Cotheridge, 23 November 1880; emigrated to Canada, 1913, after her engagement to a clergyman was broken off, and married, 6 October 1914 at Mission City, British Columbia (Canada), Wyndham Russell Saker (d. 1930), son of William Saker of Assam (India), and had issue one son (who died on active service in 1944); returned to England in 1932; died 27 January 1953 and was buried at Cotheridge; will proved 19 March 1953 (estate £13,934);
(2) Mildred Sybil Berkeley (1882-1955), born 21 February 1882; died unmarried, 25 May 1955; will proved 7 July 1955 (estate £29,409);
(3) Rowland Broughton Berkeley (1883-1957) (q.v.);
(4) Harold Sale Berkeley (1886-1919), baptised at Cotheridge, 30 July 1886; died unmarried, 4 May 1914;
(5) Egbert Paris Berkeley (1888-1957), baptised at Cotheridge, 8 November 1888; planter in Surinam; died unmarried at Paramaribo (Surinam), 6 May 1957; administration granted to his younger brother, 25 June 1957 (estate £7,314);
(6) Wilfrid Nichols Berkeley (1889-1964), born 26 November 1889 and baptised at Cotheridge, 16 January 1890; apprenticed to Alday & Onions of Birmingham, motor engineers; served in First World War with Australian Imperial Force; farmer at Cotheridge and later at Great Malvern (Worcs); married, 7 September 1921, Helen Mary (1897-1984), only daughter of Arthur John Lucy of Cotheridge, engineer; died 9 April 1964; will proved 14 July 1964 (estate £16,450).
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his father in 1885.
He died 4 May 1925; his will was proved 25 September 1925 (estate £24,287). His widow died 19 May 1944; her will was proved 8 July 1944 (estate £986).
* She published several papers in the Transactions of the Worcestershire Archaeological Society.

Berkeley, Rowland Broughton (1883-1957). Eldest son of Rowland Comyns Berkeley (1845-1925) and his wife Mildred Caroline, third daughter of Rev. Archibald Paris, rector of Ludgvan (Cornw.), born 29 June and baptised at Cotheridge, 2 August 1883. Educated at Shrewsbury School and apprenticed at LNWR Locomotive Works, 1902-05. Automobile engineer. He served in the First World War with the Warwickshire Regt., 1914-15; the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve (Lt., 1915; Lt-Cdr., 1918); and the Royal Air Force (Maj., 1918; retired 1919) and in the Second World War as Billeting Officer for Martley Rural District. He married, 16 December 1911 at Wistaston (Ches.), Ada Constance (1888-1975), daughter of Henry Fairhead of Little Hayward (Staffs), but had no issue.
He inherited the Cotheridge estate from his father in 1925, but sold much of the land in 1932 and the house itself in 1949. He lived latterly at Shanklin (IoW).
He died at Shanklin, 31 August 1957; his will was proved 17 October 1957 (estate £29,298). His widow died 15 May 1975; her will was proved 29 August 1975 (estate £44,229).

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1952, pp. 164-65; T.R. Nash, Collections for the history of Worcestershire, 1781, pp. 257-59; VCH Worcestershire, vol. 4, pp. 255-60; A. Brooks & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Worcestershire, 2nd edn., 2007, pp. 241-42;

Location of archives

Berkeley family of Cotheridge Court: deeds, manorial records, estate and household papers, 1463-1927 [Worcestershire Archive & Archaeology Service, 705:93]

Coat of arms

Quarterly, 1st and 4th, Vert, three bucks trippant within a bordure or (for Green); 2nd and 3rd, Gules, a chevron argent between ten crosses pattée, of the second (for Berkeley).

Can you help?

  • Does anyone know who now owns the drawing of Cotheridge Court before the 18th century alterations?
  • Can anyone provide photographs or portraits of the people whose names appear in bold above, for whom no image is currently shown?
  • If anyone can offer further information or corrections to any part of this article 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 16 August 2024 and was updated 26 August 2024.