Saturday, 7 June 2025

(604) Bethell of Rise and Watton Abbey

Bethell of Rise
This family are first found as minor gentry in Herefordshire in the 16th century. The name is spelled in a bewildering variety of forms (including Battle, Bedell, Bettell and Bythell), which makes tracing them with certainty very difficult; the form 'Bethell' was the most commonly used and has been adopted as standard in this account. Thomas Bethell (b. c.1530) of Mansell Lacy (Herefs), with whom the genealogy below begins, had five sons, of whom the two eldest inherited his property in Herefordshire and the three younger moved to Yorkshire, where they may already have had connections. The eldest of the three, Sir Henry Bethell (d. 1612), kt.,  acquired property at Ellerton and Otteringham in the East Riding and Alne in the North Riding. Roger Bethell (c.1560-1626) lived at Bainton in the East Riding but around 1600 he bought an under-lease of a Crown estate at Rise, making the family's first connection with the place that was to become their principal seat. The youngest son, Andrew Bethell (b. c.1562), seems to have inherited Rudding Grange, Naburn (Yorks NR) from an uncle. Roger Bethell's son and heir, Hugh Bethell (1589-1659), inherited his father's property at Rise and added to it lands in the neighbouring parish of Skirlaugh (Yorks ER). His three sons who survived to maturity (Sir Hugh Bethell (1615-79), kt., Christopher Bethell (1618-45) and John Bethell (1620-c.1652)) were all officers in the Parliamentarian forces during the Civil War. Sir Hugh commanded a regiment from 1644 onwards, was Governor of Scarborough Castle, 1649-51, and became an MP during the Commonwealth and after the Restoration; Christopher was killed at the siege of Bristol in 1645. Sir Hugh purchased the manor of Rise in 1646 and bought out a long Crown lease of the property a few years later. After he inherited his father's property at Rise in 1659 he owned almost the entire parish, and he also acquired the manor of Tansterne in Aldborough (Yorks WR) in right of his wife. Sir Hugh and his wife had several children, but he outlived his son and grandson, and died in 1679 without a direct male heir. His brother, John Bethell, who was given his father's lands at Skirlaugh, had died young, and it was therefore John's eldest surviving son, Hugh Bethell (c.1647-1717) who inherited both the Rise and Skirlaugh estates.

Hugh Bethell (d. 1717), who was MP for Hedon for five years at the end of the 17th century, married twice. By his first wife his only surviving child was a daughter, Mary Bethell (1684-1731), who married the poet, William Somerville (1675-1742), but had no issue. Hugh's second marriage, to Susan Dickenson (1653-1730), brought him the Watton Abbey estate, and also a son and heir. This was Hugh Bethell (1691-1752), who married a daughter of Sir John Cope of Bramshill (Hants) and Hanwell (Oxon), and had two sons, who inherited the Rise estate in succession and both remodelled the house there. The elder, Hugh Bethell (1721-72) was MP for Beverley for five years, but died unmarried. The younger, William Bethell (1729-99), was married but had no issue, and so on his death the estate passed to a fifth cousin once removed, who descended from Andrew Bethell (b. c.1562). This was Richard Bethell (1772-1864), the eldest son of the vicar of St Peter, Wallingford (Berks), whom William had evidently named as his heir, for he became a deputy lieutenant for the East Riding and an officer in the East Yorkshire militia during his benefactor's lifetime. Richard belonged to the generation which, alarmed by the French Revolution, saw the need contribute more to society to justify their existence. In Richard's case, this took the form of being a long-serving chairman of the East Riding Quarter Sessions and the Skirlaugh Board of Guardians, as well as serving as an MP between 1830 and 1841. At home, he rebuilt the house at Rise in a plain but fashionable neo-classical style, and was an active improver of his estates. He lived an exceptionally long life for the period, and was still active as a magistrate and poor law guardian until shortly before his death at the age of 92. The one thing he did not manage, however, was to raise a family, so at his death his estates passed to his nephew, William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79), whose father had been a schoolmaster at Eton and later vicar of Worplesdon (Surrey). By marked contrast, William married into the prominent Denison family and produced no less than six sons and six daughters, many of whom had interesting and successful careers. One of his younger sons was Christopher Bethell (1856-84), the rebel in the family ranks, who after disappointing his father in several ways was sent to southern Africa, where he married a native woman and was eventually killed by the Boers. A legal dispute followed about the rights of his wife and child to a share in a family inheritance, during which the courts held that as the marriage tradition within which he had been married permitted polygamy (even though his had been a monogamous relationship), it was not a marriage recognised by English law. His widow and child therefore lost their claim, and the interpretation of law established by the case became a legal precedent underpinning marriage law for more than a century afterwards.

When W.F. Bethell died in 1879, his heir was his eldest son, William Bethell (1847-1926), who married a daughter of the 8th Baron Middleton in the following year. They occupied Grimston House, North Grimston near her parents' seat at Birdsall House in preference to either Rise Hall or Watton Abbey. William was succeeded in 1926 by his son, Capt. William Adran Vincent Bethell (1890-1941), who was always known as Adrian. He announced in 1931 that he would shut up most of Rise Hall and retain only one suite of rooms for his family, at least until agricultural conditions improved his income from the estate. After he died in 1941 the estate passed to his son, Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96), who took the more radical step of selling a long lease on Rise Hall to a convent school and buying the former Rise rectory, which became a new and more modest centre for the estate, being renamed Rise Park. R.A. Bethell handed over the estate to his elder son, Hugh Adrian Bethell (b. 1952) in the 1980s, and after the convent school closed and Rise Hall had stood empty for some years, Mr Bethell sold the freehold of the mansion to the TV property developer, Sarah Beeny, and her husband. They decided to turn the house in a wedding venue, and it was subsequently sold to the present owners. The Bethell family continue to live at Rise Park, and still own the Rise and Watton Abbey estates.

Rise Hall, Yorkshire (ER)

A manor house was first mentioned in the early 14th century, but this apparently stood west of the later house in a field still marked by extensive earthworks and known as Blackhall Close. By the early 16th century the medieval house had been replaced, and other buildings then stood on its site. The new house seems to have stood on the present site, and in 1672 it had 13 hearths and was occupied by Sir Hugh Bethell (1615-79), kt.
Rise Hall c.1718, depicted in Samuel Buck's Yorkshire Sketchbook
By
 1716, when an estate plan was made, the manor house had an E-plan north front, approached by a central path, and formal gardens to the south and west. The earliest visual record of the house is a tiny sketch of about the same date in Samuel Buck's Yorkshire sketchbook. This shows an L-shaped vernacular Tudor or Jacobean house with three gables to the front and what seems to have been a walled forecourt. 

By 1762 most of the house had been rebuilt as a long U plan, open to the east, and in 1773 William Bethell gave the house a new front, apparently almost 180 ft. long, and then or soon after he remodelled the interior. Some fabric of the Tudor house was incorporated into the east end of its successor, as 16th or 17th century walling is evident inside on the first floor. 

Rise Hall: the west-facing entrance front

Rise Hall: south front in 1948. Image: Historic England.
Between 1815 and 1820 Richard Bethell extensively remodelled the house in an austere neo-classical style, almost certainly to the designs of Watson & Pritchett of York. The new house, which has been known successively as Rise Hall, Rise Park, and now Rise Hall once again, is of two storeys and faced with fine ashlar. It takes the form of a large rectangle, but the plan is irregular, no doubt to accommodate pre-existing fabric. The principal facade, of nine bays, faces west, and has a tetrastyle portico of four giant unfluted Ionic columns supporting a pediment. The plain but grand eleven-bay south range has a nine-bayed centre, with the middle three bays broken forward under a pediment, and wide, shallowly-projecting ends, one being the south end of the west range. The north range is plainer still, of seven bays between deep, end projections of one wide bay. On the east side the house incorporates a 18th century brick service block which was greatly extended in 1815-20.

Rise Hall: the principal staircase.
The interior is almost as plain as the exterior, with few of the rooms having more decoration than an elegant cornice. The centre of the house is occupied by a spine of mostly top-lit circulation spaces. The portico leads into an entrance hall with an Ionic screen of two columns. Behind that is the very generous top-lit staircase hall, lit by a rectangular roof light, with a cantilevered open-well staircase that has a delicate wrought iron balustrade, continued as a balcony on the first floor. Beyond the staircase hall is an elegant galleried inner hall, with a large decorative domed roof-light and the same pattern of balustrading as the staircase. Finally, at the end of the sequence is a top-lit service stair. 

Rise Hall: the library.
The principal, south-facing rooms open off that spine: the library fills the south end of the west range, followed by three, linked rooms in the centre of the south front, and a sitting room in the eastern projection. The dining room (once used as a chapel by the convent) has a fine stuccoed ceiling with Adam-style decoration and a handsome multi-coloured marble chimneypiece with Ionic columns and a frieze with a classical scene. This looks like genuine work of the 1770s that survived the rebuilding of 1815-20, but it may be convincing work of around 1900. In the north range, smaller rooms linked by their own corridor were probably used as upper servants' and business rooms: the lay-out may reflect a previous arrangement, as rooms in the north-east wing fit awkwardly behind the early 19th-century stone skin. The 18th-century brick, service block was remodelled to integrate it with the new house and extended east to form an additional court. 

Rise Hall: the dining room. Is the ceiling a survival of the 18th century interiors, or a skillful Edwardian addition?
The Bethells shut up most of the house for financial reasons in 1931, and moved out altogether in about 1946, when they bought the former rectory of 1809, now known as Rise Park, as a smaller and more manageable centre for the estate. The mansion was then let to a community of Augustinian Canonesses, who ran a Roman Catholic boarding and day school for girls there until 1989 and converted the former dining room into a chapel. They retained the building after the school closed and in 1995 were using the house as an occasional educational centre. By 1998 the house was standing empty, and after the lease was eventually given up, the property was sold in 2001 to the television personality and property developer, Sarah Beeny, and her husband. After using it as a weekend retreat for some years they decided it was too large and converted it into a wedding venue. They sold the house in 2019, and a further programme of repairs and alterations was carried out by the present owners, who operate it as a wedding and events venue.

Rise Hall: extract from 1st edn 25" plan of 1889, showing the 18th-19th century hall, the rectory (now Rise Park)
and the site of the medieval house at Black Hall to the west.
Sir Peter de Fauconberg had a park at Rise in the earlier 13th century and his son Walter was granted free warren there in 1292, but the medieval park was probably extinguished by the making of enclosures, as it was not mentioned in a 1624 estate survey, and in 1716, deer were kept in the demesne woods rather than a park. It was probably in the 1770s, that a new, larger park was made that required the diversion of one of the village streets. In 1716 the woods had included a lake, and another was added and both Old and New Ponds given small islands as part of the landscaping. The 'improvements' may have been designed by 'Capability' Brown, who made a general plan for Rise Park in 1775, though this does not survive. 

Rise Park: lodges of 1818. Image: J. Thomas. Some rights reserved
Watson & Pritchett made designs for gate lodges in 1818, and they were no doubt responsible for the present delightful neo-classical lodges with curving screen walls, ornamental iron gatepiers, and elegant wrought iron gates and railings, although these differ from the surviving designs. 
The New Pond was drained, or silted up, between 1852 and 1889, and the herd of fallow deer was killed at the start of the Second World War, when the park was ploughed; it has since been returned to grass. An ice-house near the lakes remained in 1995.




Descent: Crown lessees sub-let to Roger Bethell (c.1560-1626) and the latter's son, Hugh Bethell (1589-1659); to son, Sir Hugh Bethell (1615-79), kt., who purchased the freehold of the manor in 1646; to nephew, Hugh Bethell (c.1647-1717); to son, Hugh Bethell (1691-1752); to son, Hugh Bethell (1727-72); to brother, William Bethell (1729-99); to distant kinsman, Richard Bethell (1772-1864); to nephew, William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79); to son, William Bethell (1847-1926); to son, (William) Adrian Vincent Bethell (1890-1941); to son, Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96); to son, Hugh Adrian Bethell (b. 1952), who sold 2001 to Sarah Beeny and Graham Swift; sold 2019 to Dan and Helen Gill. The house was leased as an Augustinian convent school, 1946-89, and later as an education centre.

Watton Abbey, Yorkshire (ER)

The Venerable Bede mentions a nunnery at Watton as existing in the 8th century, but nothing more is known of it, and the monastic house which existed in the later medieval period was founded in about 1150 by Eustace Fitzjohn for the new Gilbertine order, created at Sempringham (Lincs) about ten years earlier. Gilbertine houses were nunneries served by resident canons, and so consisted of two separate monastic establishments for the nuns and canons, with a shared church in which the two communities were segregated by a wall down the middle. 

Watton Priory: site plan as recovered by excavation, 1893-98.
Watton Priory was the largest house of the order, and its plan was recovered by excavation in 1893-98, which showed that the complex was about 600 feet long, from west to east. The priory survived until it was dissolved in 1539, when the nuns and canons were pensioned off, and the prior - who was a protégé of Thomas Cromwell and also bishop of Llandaff - was given a lease of the priory site. In 1545 he became Archbishop of York and may then have made some use of the site, which could explain why the prior's lodging was preserved when the remaining buildings were largely demolished, although the ease with which such lodgings could be adapted as private houses meant that they were always the part of a monastery most likely to be preserved.

Watton Abbey: view of the house c.1718 from Samuel Buck's Yorkshire Sketchbook.
Watton Abbey: wash drawing of c.1780 by Christopher Machell, showing the demolished kitchen wing on the right.
Image: Victoria & Albert Museum E.383-1951
The three-storey west-facing prior's lodging at Watton consisted of three elements: a recessed ashlar range of the later 14th century on the left, with angle-buttresses; an imposing brick range of the mid to late 15th century with three octagonal corner turrets and a splendid two-storey bay window; and a large three-storey kitchen wing, probably of the same date, which was pulled down between 1780 and 1850. An earlier view by Samuel Buck, of c.1718, suggest that there were detached outbuildings west of the kitchen wing.

Watton Abbey: the house in 2013. Image: Les Waby/Historic England
The house was adapted into a private house in the mid to late 16th century, but does not seem to have undergone any significant external alterations until the demolition of the kitchen wing at some time after 1780. Inside, the original medieval spaces have been altered and subdivided, and the main staircase is now an open-well stair of c.1700, with onion-on-ball balusters and ball finials on the newel posts. After the construction of the present house at Rise Hall in 1815-20, Watton Abbey was normally let, and it was a school for some ten years between 1830 and 1840. A new porch was built where the kitchen wing formerly abutted the main house in about 1890, and further internal alterations were made in the 19th and 20th centuries, so that there is now little early work to be seen inside.

Descent: Crown leased 1540 to Most Rev. Robert Holgate (c.1482-1555), last prior of Watton and later Archbishop of York; reverted to Crown and granted to John Dudley (c.1505-53), Duke of Northumberland; on his attainder it reverted to the Crown and was granted by 1576 to John Farnham...by 1605 to Sir Thomas Earlkyn, kt.... sold before 1637 to Sir Thomas Finch (1578-1639), 3rd bt. and 2nd Earl of Winchilsea; to son, Heneage Finch (c.1627-89), 3rd Earl of Winchilsea; sold 1672 to William Dickenson (d. 1702); to daughter, Sarah (d. 1730), wife of Hugh Bethell (c.1647-1717); to son, Hugh Bethell (1691-1752); to son, Hugh Bethell (1727-72); to brother, William Bethell (1729-99); to widow, Charlotte Bethell (d. 1814); to kinsman, Richard Bethell (1772-1864); to nephew, William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79); to son, William Bethell (1847-1926); to son, William Adrian Vincent Bethell (1890-1941); to son, Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96); to son, Hugh Adrian Bethell (b. 1952). 
The house was generally let after 1820. Tenants included Digby Legard (fl. 1829), the Rev. John Earle (fl. 1830-40), rector of Watton, who ran it as a school; Rev. Henry Jennings, rector of Watton (fl. 1840-c.1860); Richard Beckitt (d. 1898) and John Arthur Coulson (fl. c.1900-14).

Bethell family of Rise Hall and Watton Abbey


Bethell, Thomas (b. c.1530). Son of Thomas or Richard Bethell of Mansell Lacy (Herefs). He married Elizabeth, daughter of George Rogers, and had issue (possibly among others):
(1) John Bethell; died without issue;
(2) Nicholas Bethell, of Maidenhead, Orleton? (Herefs); married and had issue four sons;
(3) Sir Hugh Bethell (d. 1612), kt., of Ellerton and Otteringham (Yorks); proprietor of the peculiar court of Alne; high sheriff of Yorkshire, 1608-09; married 1st, Joan, daughter of [forename unknown] Stevens of Devon, but had no issue; married 2nd, Anne, daughter of Sir William Mallory, kt., of Studley Royal (Yorks WR), and had issue one daughter (Grisilla, who married Sir John Wray (1586-1655), 2nd bt., and had issue four sons and eight daughters); married 3rd, Jane (who m2, Sir George Butler, kt., but had no issue), daughter of Most Rev. Thomas Young, Archbishop of York; buried at Ellerton; will proved 7 February 1611/2;
(4) Roger Bethell (c.1560-1626) (q.v.);
(5) Andrew Bethell (b. c.1562) [for whom see below].
He lived at Mansell Lacy (Herefs).
His date of death is unknown. His wife's date of death is unknown.

Bethell, Roger (c.1560-1626). Fourth son of Thomas Bethell (b. c.1530) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of George Rogers, born about 1560. He married Susanna (d. 1630), daughter of [forename unknown] Thornton and widow of Thomas Lindley, and had issue:
(1) Hugh Bethell (1589-1659) (q.v.);
(2) Robert Bethell (b. 1591; fl. 1665), baptised at Bainton, 1 February 1590/1; lived at Everthorpe in North Cave (Yorks ER); married Elizabeth, daughter of James Constable (d. 1622) of Cliffe, and had issue three sons; living in 1665;
(3) Margaret Bethell (b. 1592), baptised at Bainton, 12 June 1592;
(4) William Bethell (b. 1594), baptised at Bainton, 12 June 1594;
(5) Elizabeth Bethell (b. 1595), baptised at Bainton, 7 August 1595; married, 29 December 1617 at Rise, Anthony Morehouse;
(6) Thomas Bethell (b. & d. 1596), baptised at Bainton, 14 November 1596; died in infancy and was buried at Bainton, 19 November 1596;
(7) Joan Bethell (b. 1597), baptised at Bainton, 20 December 1597;
(8) Christian Bethell (d. 1638), possibly of this generation; buried at Rise, 29 April 1638.
He evidently lived at Bainton, at least until he acquired a sub-lease under a Crown lessee of an estate at Rise in the late 16th century.
He was buried at Rise, 22 March 1625/6; his will was proved in October 1627. His wife was buried at Rise, 30 April 1630.

Bethell, Hugh (1589-1659). Eldest son of Roger Bethell (c.1560-1626) and his wife Susanna, daughter of [forename unknown] Thornton and widow of Thomas Lindley, baptised at Bainton, 10 July 1589. He married, 15 October 1611 at Cherry Burton, Ellen (d. 1648), daughter of Thomas Johnson of Bishopburton, and had issue:
(1) Helen/Ellen Bethell (b. 1613), baptised at Cherry Burton, 29 July 1613; married, 1633 (licence), Christopher Bacon (1598-1679?) of North Ferriby and Selby (Yorks NR) (who m2, Beatrix [surname unknown] (d. 1724));
(2) Sir Hugh Bethell (1615-79), kt. (q.v.);
(3) Christopher Bethell (1618-45), baptised at Rise, March 1618; an officer in the Parliamentarian army (Capt., 1644; Maj., 1645); died unmarried when he was killed at the siege of Bristol, September 1645;
(4) John Bethell (1620-c.1652) (q.v.);
(5) Thomas Bethell (1622-23), baptised at Rise, 12 May 1622; died in infancy and was buried at Rise, 25 May 1623;
(6) Robert Bethell (b. 1624), baptised at Rise, 23 March 1623/4; died unmarried and without issue.
He inherited his father's estate at Rise in 1626.
He was buried at Rise, 15 March 1658/9. His wife was buried at Rise, 26 September 1648, where she is commemorated by a monument.

Bethell, Sir Hugh (1615-79). Eldest son of Hugh Bethell (1589-1659) and his wife Ellen, daughter of Thomas Johnson of Bishopburton, baptised at Rise, 2 October 1615. An officer in the army during the First Bishops War, 1639. In 1639 he brought a case in the Court of Chivalry against Sir William Allenson, kt., accusing him of calling Bethell a 'base lying knave' and provoking a duel; the outcome of the case is not known. In the Civil War he took the parliamentary side and was an officer in the northern army (Capt., 1643; Col., 1644-49), who fought at the battle of Marston Moor (wounded; lost an eye). Governor of Scarborough Castle (Yorks), 1649-51; High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1652. He took part in the Yorkshire rising for a free Parliament led by Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Baron Fairfax, in January 1660, and General Monck commissioned him to take over the regiment of horse formerly commanded by John Lambert. MP for the East Riding of Yorkshire, 1654, 1656, and for Hedon (Yorks), 1660-79; JP for the East Riding of Yorkshire, 1649-76 and for Beverley, 1657; DL for the East Riding c.1670-76. He was knighted by Cromwell, 29 November 1658, and since he continued to use the title after the Restoration, may have been dubbed again by Charles II in or after 1660. He married, 14 January 1640/1 at Aldburgh (Yorks ER), Mary (d. 1687), daughter of Thomas Mitchelbourne of Carlton, and co-heiress of her brother, and had issue (possibly among others):
(1) Hugh Bethell (b. 1643), baptised at Bubwith (Yorks), 10 July 1643; presumably died young;
(2) Hugh Bethell (c.1652-77); born about 1652; educated at Brandesburton (Yorks) and St John's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1669); married, 20 September 1671 at Snaith (Yorks), Margaret (1651-84), daughter of Sir John Dawnay, kt., later 1st Viscount Downe, of Cowick Hall (Yorks ER), and had issue at least one son and one daughter (who both died young); died in the lifetime of his father, 7 September, and was buried at Rise, 9 September 1677, where he is commemorated by a monument;
(3) Anne Bethell; married [forename unknown] Hunter, and had issue one son.
He purchased the manor of Rise in 1646 and a long leasehold interest in it c.1650. He inherited the manor of Tansterne in Aldborough (Yorks WR) in right of his wife in 1655 and his father's estate at Rise in 1659.
He died 3 October, and was buried at Rise, 6 October 1679, where he is commemorated by a monument. His widow married 2nd, 30 May 1680 at Rise, Christopher Hildyard, and was buried in Beverley Minster (Yorks ER), 3 June 1687.

Bethell, John (1620-c.1652). Third son of Hugh Bethell (1589-1659) and his wife Ellen, daughter of Thomas Johnson of Bishopburton, baptised at Rise, 28 May 1620. An officer in the Parliamentarian army during the Civil War (probably serving in Hull as a Lieutenant, autumn 1642; Maj. in his brother's regiment, 1644). He married 1st, Mary, daughter of Richard Hildyard (1570-1627) of Ottringham, and 2nd, Anna [surname unknown], and had issue:
(1.1) John Bethell (fl. 1651), eldest son;
(1.2) Hugh Bethell (c.1647-1717) (q.v.);
(1.2) Johnson Bethell (b. & d. 1648), baptised at Bishop Burton, 1 May 1648; died in infancy and was buried at Bishop Burton (Yorks ER), 21 May 1648;
(2.1) Richard Bethell (c.1651-85), of Beverley (Yorks ER), born after September 1651; married and had issue at least one son; buried at Beverley Minster, 15 April 1685.
He was given an estate in North Skirlaugh (Yorks ER) by his father.
He died in late 1651 or early 1652; his will was proved in the PCC, 29 May 1652 and 3 November 1655. His first wife died before 1650. His widow's date of death is unknown.

Bethell, Hugh (c.1647-1717). Second, but eldest surviving son of John Bethell (1620-c.1652) and his first wife, Mary, daughter of Richard Hildyard of Ottringham, born about 1647. Mayor of Hedon, 1683-84; MP for Hedon, 1695-1700; DL for the East Riding, 1699. He married 1st, 22 September 1681 at Thornton Curtis (Lincs), Mary (1657-84), daughter of Edward Skinner of Thornton Curtis, and 2nd, 19 December 1690 at Watton (Yorks ER), Sarah (1653-1730), daughter and co-heiress of William Dickenson of Watton Abbey, and had issue:
(1.1) Arabella Bethell (b. & d. 1682), baptised at Rise, 13 May 1682; died in infancy and was buried at Rise, 22 May 1682;
(1.2) Anne Bethell (1683-92), baptised at Rise, 17 June 1683; died young and was buried at Rise, 21 December 1692*;
(1.3) Mary Bethell (1684-1731), baptised at Rise, 30 May 1684; married, 1 February 1708/9 at Cherry Burton (Yorks ER), William Somerville (1675-1742) of Edstone (Warks), poet, but had no issue; died 5 September 1731 and was buried at Wootton Wawen (Warks), where she is commemorated by a monument;
(2.1) Hugh Bethell (1691-1752) (q.v.);
(2.2) Sarah Bethell (1692-1766?), baptised at St Helen, York, 3 November 1692; said to have died unmarried in London and was perhaps the spinster of this name buried at St Paul, Covent Garden, Westminster (Middx), 28 October 1766;
(2.3) Isabella Bethell (1694-95), baptised at Rise, 27 April 1694; died in infancy and was buried at Rise, 10 January 1694/5;
(2.4) Elizabeth Bethell (1695-1727), baptised at Rise, 19 March 1694/5; died unmarried and was buried at Watton, 13 February 1726/7;
(2.2) William Bethell (1696-97), baptised at Rise, 7 June 1696; died in infancy and was buried at Watton, 26 May 1697.
He inherited the Rise Hall estate from his uncle in 1679, and the Watton Abbey estate in right of his second wife.
He died 2 February 1716/7 and was buried at Rise, where he is commemorated by a monument; his will was proved at York, 16 August 1717. His first wife died in childbirth and was buried at Rise, 17 May 1684. His widow was buried at Watton, 9 December 1730; her will was proved at York, 13 February 1730/1.
* Not entered in the parish register for Rise but is recorded in the register of Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, York.

Bethell, Hugh (1691-1752). Elder and only surviving son of Hugh Bethell (c.1647-1717) and his second wife, Sarah, daughter and co-heiress of William Dickenson of Watton Abbey (Yorks ER), baptised at St Helen, York, 2 November 1691. High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1733-34. He married, 21 January 1726/7 at Eversley (Hants), Anne (1699-1729), only daughter of Sir John Cope (1673-1749), 6th bt., of Bramshill (Hants) and Hanwell (Oxon), and had issue:
(1) Hugh Bethell (1727-72), born 17 November and baptised at St Giles-in-the-Fields (Middx), 22 November 1727; educated at Beverley and Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (matriculated 1746); inherited the Rise Hall estate from his father in 1752; High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1762-63; MP for Beverley, 1768-72; died unmarried at Bell Inn, Edmonton (Middx), 8 May, and was buried at Rise, 23 May 1772, where is commemorated by a monument; will proved at York, February 1773;
(2) William Bethell (1729-99), baptised 16 February 1728/9; educated at Beverley and Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (matriculated 1747); inherited the Rise Hall estate from his brother in 1772; High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1780-81; married, 15 October 1754 at St Mary, Beverley (Yorks ER), Charlotte (1735-1814), daughter of Ralph Pennyman, a Cornet in General Wade's Horse, but had no issue; buried at Rise, 25 July 1799, where he is commemorated by a monument; will proved at York, September 1799.
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates from his father in 1717. After his death they passed to his two sons in turn, and then to a William's fifth cousin, once removed (see below).
He died 25 March and was buried at Rise, 5 April 1752, where he is commemorated by a monument; his will was proved in the PCY, May 1752. His wife died 28 February, and was buried at Rise, 5 March 1728/9, where she is commemorated by a monument.

---

Bethell, Andrew (b. c.1562). Fifth son of Thomas Bethell and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of George Rogers, born about 1562. He married and had issue:
(1) John Bethell;
(2) Richard Bethell (b. c.1585) (q.v.).
He probably lived at Rudding Grange, Naburn (Yorks NR) which he is believed to have inherited from his uncle, William Bethell.
His date of death is unknown.

Bethell, Richard (b. c.1585). Second son of Andrew Bethell (b. c.1562) and his wife, born about 1585. He married and had issue including:
(1) Richard Bethell (1628-63??) (q.v.).
He inherited the Herefordshire property of his uncle, John Bethell.
His date of death is unknown. His wife's date of death is unknown.

Bethell, Richard (1628-63). Only recorded son of Richard Bethell (b. c.1585) and his wife, said to have been born in 1628. He married, 11 February 1658/9 at Burghill, Joan Brossene (d. 1707), and had issue:
(1) John Bethell (b. 1659) (q.v.).
He lived at Burghill (Herefs).
He was buried at Burghill (Herefs), 6 September 1663. His widow married 2nd, 7 November 1670 at Burghill, George Baynham, and was buried at Burghill, 27 October 1707.

Bethell, John (b. 1659). Only son of Richard Bethell (1628-63) and his wife Joan Brossene, baptised at Burghill, 4 November 1659. He married, 7 May 1683 at Burghill, Katherine Jay (d. 1695) of Derndale (Herefs), and had issue:
(1) Margaret Bethell (b. 1685), baptised at Burghill, 6 October 1685;
(2) Richard Bethell (1687-1762) (q.v.);
(3) Anne Bethell (b. 1690), baptised at Burghill, 22 April 1690.
He lived at Burghill (Herefs).
His date of death is unknown. His wife is said to have died 20 February 1694/5.

Bethell, Richard (1687-1762). Only recorded son of John Bethell (b. 1659) and his wife Catherine Jay of Derndale (Herefs), born 1687. He married, perhaps 11 June 1715 at Stretton Sugwas (Herefs), Frances (d. 1763?), daughter of [forename unknown] Broad or Bond of Hereford, and had issue:
(1) Rev. Richard Bethell (c.1734-1806) (q.v.).
He lived in All Saints parish, Hereford.
He may be the man of this name buried at Burghill (Herefs), 12 April 1762; his will was proved at Hereford, 2 June 1762. His widow is probably the woman of this name buried at All Saints, Hereford, 14 March 1763.

Bethell, Rev. Richard (c.1734-1806). Only recorded son of Richard Bethell (1687-1762) and his wife Frances Broad or Bond of Hereford, born about 1734. Educated at Wadham College, Oxford (matriculated 1751; BA 1755; MA 1759). Ordained deacon, 1756 and priest, 1759. Curate of Holme Lacy (Herefs), 1756; vicar of St Lythans (Glam), c.1760-88; curate of St Peter, Wallingford, by 1775; vicar of Stanstead Abbots (Essex), 1781-96; rector of St Peter, Wallingford (Berks), 1788-1806. He married, 8 August 1771 at Isleworth (Middx), Anne (d. 1805), daughter of James Clitherow (1694-1752) of Boston House (Middx), and had issue:
(1) Richard Bethell (1772-1864) (q.v.);
(2) Rt. Rev. Christopher Bethell (1773-1859), born at Isleworth (Middx), 21 April 1773; educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1792; BA 1796; MA 1799; DD 1817); Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, 1794-1808; rector of Kirby Wiske (Yorks NR), 1808-30; rector of Shobrooke (Devon); Dean of Chichester Cathedral, 1814-24; Bishop of Gloucester, 1824-30, Exeter, 1830 (Apr-Oct) and Bangor, 1830-59; treasurer and prebendary of Exeter Cathedral, 1830-31; a High Church clergyman who was the author of several theological works and volumes of sermons, but whose value as a bishop was limited by his appointment to a largely Welsh-speaking diocese when he himself could not speak the language; died unmarried, 19 April, and was buried at Llandegai (Caernarvons.), 27 April 1859;
(3) James Bethell (1775-1851), baptised at St Peter, Wallingford, 15 October 1775; apprenticed to Charles Knight of London, stationer, 1791; lived latterly at Brighton (Sussex); died unmarried and was buried at Rise, 13 November 1851;
(4) Anne Bethell (b. 1777), baptised at St Peter, Wallingford, 2 July 1777; said to have died unmarried but death not traced;
(5) Rev. George Bethell (1779-1857) (q.v.);
(6) Philippa Bethell (1781-1848), baptised at St Peter, Wallingford, 5 August 1781; lived with her brother Christopher; died unmarried, 17 November, and was buried at Bangor (Caernarvons.), 29 November 1848; her will was proved in the PCC, 7 February 1849;
(7) Frances Bethell (1785-1824), baptised at St Peter, Wallingford, 19 June 1785; died unmarried and was buried at Burnham (Bucks), 7 July 1824.
He was evidently living at Wallingford (Berks) by 1775.
He died 12 January and was buried at St Peter, Wallingford, 21 January 1806; his will was proved in the PCC, 15 February 1806. His wife was buried at Wallingford, 2 December 1805.

Richard Bethell (1772-1864) 
Bethell, Richard (1772-1864).
Eldest son of Rev. Richard Bethell (c.1734-1806) and his wife Anne, daughter of James Clitherow of Boston House (Middx), born at Isleworth (Middx), 10 May, and baptised there, 24 June 1772. Educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1791; BA 1795). Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, 1794-99. An officer in the East Yorkshire militia (Capt.; retired 1799) and the Beverley Local Militia (Col., 1810); 
DL (from 1795; Vice-Lieutenant, 1857-59) and JP (from 1801) for East Riding of Yorkshire, Chairman of East Riding Quarter Sessions, 1819-50, and High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1822-23; Chairman of the Skirlaugh Board of Guardians, 1834-60. He was a Tory in politics, but a moderate, who supported Catholic emancipation and was prepared to support modest measures for parliamentary reform. He initially stood for parliament in Yorkshire in 1825 but withdrew before the poll. However, his 'acute legal knowledge, business-like habits and courteous demeanour... secured for him universal respect and admiration', and he was subsequently elected MP for Yorkshire, 1830-31 and for the East Riding, 1832-41. He was also active in managing his estates, promoting enclosure and drainage schemes from his earliest days as a landowner. He married, 26 April 1800, at St Peter-le-Poer, London, Mary (1780-1839), second daughter of William Welbank (1741-91) of London and Ravensworth Cowton (Yorks), merchant, but had no issue.
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates (together some 13,000 acres) from his distant kinsman, William Bethell, in 1799, but only gained full possession on the death of the latter's widow in 1814.
He died aged 92 on 25 December 1864 and was buried at Rise, 2 January 1865; his will was proved 17 February 1865 (effects under £30,000). His wife died 4 October, and was buried at Rise, 15 October 1839, where she is commemorated by a monument.

Bethell, Rev. George (1779-1857). Fourth son of Rev. Richard Bethell (c.1734-1806) and his wife Anne, daughter of James Clitherow of Boston House (Middx), baptised at St Peter, Wallingford (Berks), 1 August 1779. Educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1798; BA 1802; MA 1805); Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, 1801-07; ordained deacon, 1803, and priest, 1805; Assistant Master at Eton College, 1802-17; Fellow of Eton College, 1818-57 (Vice-Provost, 1851-57); domestic chaplain to Richard Colley Wellesley (1760-1842), 1st Marquess Wellesley, 1813; vicar of Burnham (Bucks), 1822-33; rector of Worplesdon (Surrey), 1833-57. He married, 23 December 1807 at Fulmer (Bucks), Anne (1780-1852), daughter of Thomas Lightfoot of Crowle (Lincs), apothecary, and had issue:
(1) Anne Sarah Bethell (1808-87), baptised at Eton (Bucks), 23 December 1808; married, 11 April 1844 at Eton, Rev. William Warren (1803-77), rector of Wroot (Lincs), 1832-77, but had no issue; died 15 March and was buried at Hurstpierpoint (Sussex), 19 March 1887; will proved 30 July 1887 (estate £15,203);
(2) William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79) (q.v.);
(3) Mary Bethell (1811-60), baptised at Eton, 11 April 1811; married, 4 October 1859 at Wroot, as his second wife, Maj-Gen. Sir Charles Warren KCB (1798-1866), but had no issue; died on Malta, 22 December 1860; administration of goods granted 30 January 1867 (effects under £100);
(4) Catherine Bethell (1812-95), baptised at Eton, 31 July 1812; married, 11 August 1841 at Worplesdon, Rev. George Henry Woods (1802-79) of Shopwyke House, Oving (Sussex), but had no issue; died 12 October and was buried at Hurstpierpoint, 17 October 1895; will proved 2 January 1896 (effects £14,979);
(5) Georgiana Bethell (1813-1901), baptised at Eton, 23 December 1813; married, 4 November 1857 at Holy Trinity, Guildford (Surrey), as his second wife, Rev. Thomas Norris Williams (1809-81), of Treffos, Menai Bridge, rector of Aber (Caernarvons.), son of John Williams, banker, but had no issue; died in Brighton (Sussex), 6 May 1901; will proved 21 June 1901 (estate £19,833);
(6) Fanny Margaretha Bethell (1814-1914), born 15 December 1814 and baptised at Eton, 4 August 1815; married, 8 May 1838 at Worplesdon, Samuel Haydon (1814-69) of Bramley and Guildford (Surrey), banker and mayor of Guildford, 1850, and had issue two sons and one daughter; died aged 99 on 5 May 1914; administration of goods granted 7 July 1914 (estate £12,281);
(7) twin, Richard Bethell (b. & d. 1816), baptised at Eton, 1 August 1816; died in infancy and was buried at Eton, 24 December 1816;
(8) twin, George James Bethell (1816-17), baptised at Eton, 1 August 1816; died in infancy and was buried at Eton, 7 May 1817;
(9) George Bethell (1818-19), baptised at Eton, 12 March 1818; died in infancy and was buried at Eton, 14 April 1819;
(10) Susan Philippa Bethell (1819-83), baptised at Eton, 13 August 1819; died unmarried and was buried at Hurstpierpoint, 12 December 1883; will proved 27 February 1884 (estate £13.006); 
(11) Richard Bethell (1821-85), baptised at Eton, 24 November 1821; educated at Eton, Exeter College, Oxford (matriculated 1839; BA 1843) and the Middle Temple (admitted 1844; called 1847); barrister-at-law, but did not practise; emigrated to New Zealand about 1875; married, 25 November 1873 at Christ Church, Down St., Mayfair, Westminster (Middx), Isabel Anne (1843-1927), daughter of Rev. Dr. John Lillie, a Scottish Presbyterian minister, and had issue one son and one daughter; died 30 April 1885 at Rangiora, Canterbury (New Zealand); administration of goods granted 9 August 1890 (effects in England & Wales, £299).
He lived at Eton and Worplesdon.
He died 16 March and was buried at Worplesdon, 21 March 1857; his will was proved in the PCC, 7 May 1857. His wife died 9 January and was buried at Worplesdon, 16 January 1852.

William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79)
Image: National Portrait Gallery 
Bethell, William Froggatt (1809-79).
Eldest son of Rev. George Bethell (1779-1857) and his wife Ann, daughter of Thomas Lightfoot of Crowle (Lincs), apothecary, born 2 December 1809 and baptised at Eton (Bucks), 17 March 1810. Educated at Brasenose College, Oxford (matriculated 1827; BA 1831). JP and DL for East Riding of Yorkshire; High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1875-76. He married, 25 March 1841 at St George, Doncaster (Yorks WR), Elizabeth Beckett (1820-70), daughter of Sir Edmund Denison (later Beckett-Denison) (1787-1874), 4th bt., of Grimthorpe (Yorks ER), and had issue:
(1) Maria Bethell (1842-1937), baptised at Rise, 20 February 1842; lived at Newton Kyme Hall and later at Boston Hall, Boston Spa (Yorks WR); died unmarried aged 95 on 1 April, and was buried at Newton Kyme (Yorks WR), 4 April 1937; will proved 31 May 1937 (estate £73,094);
(2) Lucy Bethell (1844-1917), baptised at Doncaster, 4 July 1844; lived with her elder sister at Newton Kyme; died unmarried, 21 January, and was buried at Rise, 24 January 1917; will proved 13 April 1917 (estate £51,471);
(3) Charlotte Bethell (1846-1927), baptised at Rise, 22 January 1846; married, 23 November 1882 at St Peter, Eaton Sq., Westminster (Middx), Lt-Col. Lambert Henry Bouwens (1843-1902), son of Rev. Theodore Bouwens (1799-1869), and had issue one son and one daughter; died 19 January 1927 and was buried at Littleton (Surrey); will proved 22 March 1927 (estate £18,998);
(4) William Bethell (1847-1926) (q.v.);
(5) George Richard Bethell (1849-1919), of Sigglesthorne Hall (Yorks ER), which he purchased in 1893, born 23 March and baptised at Rise, 27 June 1849; educated at HMS Britannia and Royal Naval College, Greenwich; joined Royal Navy in 1862 (Midshipman, 1864; Lt., 1872; Cdr., 1884; retired from active list, 1889; Capt., 1899) and served in First World War with East Yorkshire Volunteer Regiment (Maj., 1916); JP and DL (from 1919) for the East Riding of Yorkshire; MP for Holderness, 1885-1900; died unmarried, 3 December 1919; will proved 28 February 1920 (estate £64,609);
(6) Elizabeth Bethell (1851-1915), baptised at Rise, 24 June 1851; married, 11 August 1874 at Rise, Capt. Edwyn Walker (1837-1919), fourth son of Sir James Walker, 1st bt. of Sand Hutton (Yorks), and had issue four sons and one daughter; died in London, 25 October 1915; will proved 27 May 1915 (estate £51,043);
(7) Anna Bethell (1852-66), baptised at Rise, 27 March 1852; died young and was buried at Brompton Cemetery (Middx), 17 July 1866;
(8) Col. Edward Hugh Bethell (1854-1940), born 27 January and baptised at Rise, 5 March 1854; educated at Rugby and Royal Military Academy, Woolwich; an officer in the Royal Engineers (Lt., 1873; Capt., 1885; Maj., 1892; Lt-Col., 1899; Col., 1902; retired 1906 but re-employed 1915-17), awarded DSO, 1900 and appointed CMG, 1917; married 1st, 15 December 1881 at Aurangabad (India), Gertrude (1861-88), daughter of Col. Eustace Hill, and had issue two sons; married 2nd, 6 February 1890 at Lichfield Cathedral (Staffs), Annie (1856-1946), daughter of Rev. John Gylby Lonsdale (1818-1907), canon of Lichfield, and had issue one son and one daughter; died 27 January 1940; will proved 25 April 1940 (estate £47,202);
(9) Christopher Bethell (1856-84), baptised at Rise, 3 April 1856; educated at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1873) and Lincoln's Inn (admitted 1876); a freemason from 1875; emigrated to southern Africa, 1878, where he was on the staff of Sir Charles Warren and also operated as a hunter and farmer; his enthusiasm for British intervention in Bechauanaland was frequently embarrassing to the authorities; he married, in Bechuanaland, Tepo Baobile, and had issue one daughter (born posthumously); wounded and subsequently executed by Boer forces in Stelland raid in South Africa, 30 July 1884; administration of goods granted 16 June 1885 (estate £602); 
(10) Edmund Beckett Bethell (1857-58), born Oct-Dec 1857 and baptised at Rise, 1 January 1858; died in infancy and was buried at Rise, 26 March 1858;
(11) Catherine Bethell (1859-1933), baptised at Rise, 8 March 1859; married, 10 January 1883 at Bramham (Yorks WR), Hon. Sir Charles Algernon Parsons OM, KCB, FRS (1854-1931), mechanical engineer and inventor of the steam turbine generator, sixth son of 3rd Earl of Rosse, and had issue one son and one daughter; died 16 October 1933 and was buried at Kirkwhelpington (Northbld); will proved 3 January 1934 (estate £108,160);
(12) Alfred James Bethell (1862-1920), born 2 October and baptised at Rise, 16 November 1862; educated at Eton and Royal Military College, Sandhurst; army officer (Lt., 1882); served on staff of Sir Charles Warren in Bechuanaland Border Police; returned to England and became a banker with Beckett & Co. of Leeds; lived at The Lodge, Doncaster (Yorks WR); JP for West Riding of Yorkshire; married 1st, 30 August 1887 at Norton Malton (Yorks N&ER), Maud Amelia (1861-1917), daughter of Robert Hartley Bower (d. 1886) of Welham (Yorks NR), banker, and had issue three daughters; married 2nd, Oct-Dec 1917, Hon. Elinor Frances (1869-1943), daughter of Henry Edmund Butler (1844-1912), 14th Viscount Mountgarret, and widow of Andrew Sherlock Lawson FSA (1855-1914) of Aldborough Manor, Boroughbridge (Yorks WR); died 23 October and was buried at Tong (Yorks WR), 28 October 1920; will proved 4 January 1921 (estate £50,905).
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates from his uncle in 1864.
He died 7 March 1879 and was buried at Rise; his will was proved 19 May 1879 (effects under £100,000). His wife died 26 July and was buried at St Peter, Bournemouth (Hants), 30 July 1870.

Bethell, William (1847-1926). Eldest son of William Froggatt Bethell (1809-79) and his wife Elizabeth Beckett, daughter of Sir Edmund Denison (later Beckett), 4th bt., of Grimthorpe, born 11 August 1847. An officer in the Hornsea Artillery Volunteers (Capt.); JP for East and West Ridings of Yorkshire and DL for the East Riding; County Alderman of the East Riding County Council and Chairman of its Education Committee. In 1871-72 he travelled to and around Australia, and the journal of his tour is available online. He married, 1 January 1880 at Birdsall (Yorks ER), Hon. Maria Myrtle (1859-1900), fifth daughter of Digby Willoughby (1817-77), 8th Baron Middleton, and had issue:
(1) Phyllis Mary Hermione Bethell (1889-1962), born 26 April 1889; Acting Master of Quorn Hunt, 1948-51; married, 7 February 1923 at Holy Trinity, Brompton (Middx), Maj. William Philip Cantrell-Hubbersty OBE (1877-1947) of Ragdale Hall (Leics); died 8 September 1962; will proved 5 November 1962 (estate £189,542);
(2) William Adrian Vincent Bethell (1890-1941) (q.v.).
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates from his father in 1879, but lived at Grimston House, North Grimston, which he rented.
He died 13 August 1926 and was buried at Rise; his will was proved 7 December 1926 and 7 April 1927 (estate £244,771). His wife died 13 November 1900; administration of her goods was granted to her husband, 28 February 1901 (estate £3,767).

Adrian Bethell (1890-1941) 
Bethell, (William) Adrian Vincent (1890-1941).
Only son of William Bethell (1847-1926) and his wife Hon. Maria Myrtle, fifth daughter of Digby Willoughby (1817-77), 8th Baron Middleton, born 11 September and baptised at Birdsall (Yorks ER), 26 October 1890. Educated at Eton. An officer in the army (2nd Lt., 1911; Lt., 1913; Capt., 1915; retired 1923), who served throughout the First World War (wounded). He returned to service as a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Home Guard, 1939. Joint MFH of East Holderness Hunt, 1927-41. JP and DL for East Riding of Yorkshire (Chairman of North Holderness Petty Sessions); County Alderman of East Riding County Council; Governor of Beverley Grammar School and Beverley High School; President of the Hull and East Yorkshire Institute for the Deaf and Dumb. He married 1st, 18 August 1915 at St Margaret, Westminster (Middx) (div. 1917) Hon. Clarissa Madeleine Georgiana Felicité (1896-1960), only daughter of Edward Priaulx Tennant (1859-1920), 1st Baron Glenconner, and 2nd, 29 January 1921 at the Chapel Royal of the Savoy, London, Cicely Violet (1898-1974), second daughter of Sir John Richard Geers Cotterell (1866-1937), 4th bt., of Garnons (Herefs), and had issue:
(1.1) Diana Hermione Bethell (1916-67), born 5 June and baptised at St Margaret, Westminster, 30 June 1916; married 1st, 24 April 1939 at St Paul's Cathedral, London (div. 1956), Richard Purcell Blow (1915-63), elder son of Detmar Jellings Blow of Hilles House, Painswick (Glos), architect, and had issue two sons; married 2nd, 10 March 1961 (div. 1963), Marco Blow (fl. 1969); died 25 July 1967 and was buried at Wilsford (Wilts), where she is commemorated by a monument by Roderick Gradidge in the new churchyard; will proved 29 February 1968 (estate £73,735);
(2.1) Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96) (q.v.);
(2.2) Christopher Adrian Bethell (1925-92), born 4 January 1925; educated privately; married, 30 January 1960 at St Nicholas Hurst (Berks), Jocelyn Waiata (1928-2021), daughter of Dr John Vassie Buchanan MB ChB of Creed Lodge, Grampound (Cornw.), but had no issue; died 11 October 1992 and was buried at Rise; will proved 12 January 1993 (estate £539,493);
(2.3) Hugh William John Bethell (1928-50), born 8 July 1928; obtained a private pilot's licence, 1948; joined the RAF (Cadet Pilot Officer); died in a flying accident near Peebles (Scotland) in his own plane, 1 October 1950; buried at Rise; administration of goods granted to his mother, 25 January 1951 (estate £9,696).
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates from his father in 1926.
He died 16 July 1941; will proved 20 January, 16 February and 10 Ovtober 1942 (estate £199,906). His first wife married 2nd, 27 March 1918 (div. 1928), Maj. Lionel Hallam Tennyson (1889-1951), 3rd Baron Tennyson of Aldworth and had further issue three sons; she married 3rd, 24 July 1928 (sep. 1936 & div. 1939), an American, James Montgomery Beck jr. (1892-1972), son of James Montgomery Beck (1861-1936), Solicitor General of the United States, and had further issue a twin son and daughter; she died 3 September 1960. His widow married 2nd, 28 November 1946, Roden Powlett Graves Orde (1910-85) (who m2, Jan-Mar 1976, Antonia A. Radcliffe (b. 1947)) of Bridstow (Herefs), eldest son of Roden Horace Powlett Orde (1867-1941), and died 30 November 1974.

Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96) 
Bethell, Richard Anthony (1922-96).
Eldest son of (William) Adrian Vincent Bethell (1890-1941) and his second wife, Cicely Violet, second daughter of Sir John Cotterell, 4th bt., born 22 March 1922. Educated at Eton. An officer in the Life Guards (2nd Lt., 1941; retired as Lt., 1947), who served in Second World War. JP for East Riding of Yorkshire (from 1950); Lord-Lieutenant of Humberside, 1983-96 (Vice Lord Lieutenant, 1980-83). He married, 27 September 1945 at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Westminster (Middx), Lady Jane Pleydell-Bouverie (1923-2006), a junior commander in the Auxiliary Territorial Service, eldest daughter of 7th Earl of Radnor KG KCVO, and had issue:
(1) Camilla Bethell (1946-2006), born 27 June 1946; married, 17 December 1966, Peter Charles Freeman Gregory-Hood (b. 1943) of Loxley Hall (Warks), only son of Col. Alexander Marshall Horace Gregory-Hood OBE MC of Loxley Hall, and had issue three daughters; died 10 August 2006; will proved 14 March 2007;
(2) Sarah Bethell (b. 1948), born 13 August 1948; married, 31 May 1969 at Rise, David Charles Ratcliffe-Brotherton (b. 1941) of Whitwell-on-the-Hill (Yorks NR), son of Charles Frederick Ratcliffe-Brotherton, and had issue one son and one daughter;
(3) Hugh Adrian Bethell (b. 1952) (q.v.);
(4) William Anthony Bethell (b. 1957), of Arnold Manor, Long Riston (Yorks ER), born 18 May 1957; farmer; a director of York and Pontefract racecourses; married, Jan-Mar 1983, Elizabeth Anne, daughter of Lt-Col. Charles Samuel Madden (1915-93), and had issue one son and one daughter.
He inherited the Rise Hall and Watton Abbey estates from his father in 1941. Rise Hall was let to a convent school from 1946, and he purchased the former rectory as a new seat, which he renamed Rise Park.
He died 20 July 1996; his will was proved 22 August 1996. His wife died 21 July 2006; her will was proved 24 January 2007.

Bethell, Hugh Adrian (b. 1952). Elder son of Richard Anthony Bethell (1922-96) and his wife, Lady Jane Pleydell-Bouverie, eldest daughter of 7th Earl of Radnor KG KCVO, born 23 April 1952. Educated at Eton. High Sheriff of the East Riding of Yorkshire, 2003-04. A director of Beverley racecourse and a trustee of the Wasing Park (Berks) estate. He married, 2 July 1983, Sarah Elizabeth (b. 1955), daughter of Maj. Thomas Edward St. Aubyn CVO (1923-2012), and had issue:
(1) Oliver Anthony Bethell (b. 1985), born 5 May 1985; married, 2018, Quita Frances, daughter of Anthony Collard of Lincoln;
(2) Edward Alexander Bethell (b. 1987), born 9 March 1987;
(3) Nicholas Andrew Bethell (b. 1990), born 8 May 1990; married c.2021, Alice Victoria Rose (b. 1991), daughter of Andrew Robin Mills of Farthinghoe (Northants), and has issue two sons.
His father handed over the family estates to him. He sold Rise Hall in 2001, but retained Rise Park and most of the estate.
Now living. His wife is now living.

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1914, pp. 147-48; Burke's Landed Gentry, 1969, pp. 46-47; G. Poulson, The history and antiquities of the seigniory of Holderness, vol 1, 1840, pp. 408-09; A. Oswald, 'Watton Abbey', Country Life, 2 November 1935, pp. 458-63; Sir N. Pevsner & D. Neave, The buildings of England: Yorkshire - York and the East Riding, 2nd edn., 1995, pp. 658-59, 733-37; VCH Yorkshire East Riding, vol. 7, 2002, pp. 330-40;

Location of archives

Bethell family of Rise Hall and Watton Abbey: deeds and estate papers, 1191-1926 [East Riding of Yorkshire Archives, DDRI]

Coat of arms

Argent, on a chevron, between three boars' heads couped sable, an estoile or.

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? I would also welcome a recent photograph of the former vicarage, now Rise Park, to add to the introduction.
  • I have found it particularly difficult to trace the genealogical information for the earlier generations of this family, due partly to the variable spelling of the Bethell name and partly to the loss of parish registers for some of the parishes with which the family was associated (although those for Rise itself survive). If anyone can add to or correct the information I provide, therefore, I should be particularly grateful.
  • 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 7 June 2025.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment if you have any additional information or corrections to offer, or if you are able to help with additional images of the people or buildings in this post.