Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts

Monday, 11 May 2026

(635) Birch of Failsworth Lodge and Broughton Lodge

It seems likely, as stated by Foster, that this mostly Presbyterian nonconformist family were kin to the Birches of Birch Hall (Lancs), since both lived in the large parish of Manchester, but I have not been able to demonstrate the connection. The genealogy below begins with Josiah Birch (1723-86), a successful yarn manufacturer, who was the eldest son of Thomas Birch (1698-1764) and the grandson of another Thomas Birch (c.1670-1713). Josiah and his children were closely associated with the Cross St. Presbyterian Church in Manchester, and until 1770, Josiah and his wife Elizabeth Scholes lived in the High Street of that city, presumably in the house which he later bequeathed to his unmarried daughters. He then built Failsworth Lodge, a few miles outside the 18th century city (but well within the modern conurbation), which if a villa rather than a true country house, still had ornamental gardens and extensive accommodation. Josiah had a large family of six sons and six daughters, but two of the daughters died young and three more remained unmarried. All six of the sons seem to have pursued mercantile careers, many of them within the cloth industry which formed such an important part of Manchester's regional economy. Josiah's eldest surviving son was John Birch (1756-1828), who moved to the Cartmel district of south Lakeland and established the Backbarrow Cotton Twist Co., from the profits of which he built Broughton Lodge in the 1780s. John, who was unmarried, seems to have shared this house with his brothers and their families, who perhaps all used it as a holiday home. However, in 1808 John and his partners became bankrupt, and the house was sold to help pay his debts.

On the death of Josiah Birch in 1786, Failsworth Lodge and his family business seem to have passed to his fourth son, Samuel Ogden Birch (1765-1804), who also acquired a home at Backbarrow, near his elder brother's business. In 1793 he bought out his father's partners and continued in business as a sole trader, but at some point around 1800 he moved to Sicily with his family, probably for health reasons. In 1804 he died of a fever, which also killed one of his daughters, and the rest of the family returned to England.
Stoney Dale, Field Broughton. Image: C.J.Wright/Historic England
Failsworth Lodge was put on the market soon after his death, but if it was sold it seems to have been bought by Samuel's younger brother, Scholes Birch (1769-1850), who made it his main home until it was finally sold out of the family in 1819. Scholes was brought up as a Presbyterian and his own children were mostly baptised at Cross St., but two of his sons became Anglican clergymen, and one of them was the first Archdeacon of Blackburn, 1877-85. Scholes, who like his brothers was in the cotton industry, spent part of his time at Broughton Lodge until it was sold in 1808, and soon afterwards built a comfortable but modest three-bay house nearby, which he called Stoney Dale. This seems to have become his main home after the sale of Failsworth Lodge in 1819, although shortly before his death he moved south, sharing a house at Leamington (Warks) with his daughter and after her death, living at Brighouse (Yorks WR) with his son. Stoney Dale passed to his eldest son, George Birch (1793-1869), but had apparently been sold by 1859. Charles Birch (1795-1842), the fourth son of Samuel Ogden Birch, settled at Litherland House, a two-storey, five-bay house near Liverpool, in which city he was a merchant and banker. After his death at a comparatively young age his widow moved first to Cheltenham (Glos), then to Heston (Middx), and finally to a house on Putney Hill (Surrey), which she called Broughton Lodge, and where she died in 1883. Her only son, Lt-Col. Charles Birch (1838-99), who qualified as a barrister but did not practice, and was a militia officer, settled at Lympstone Grange (Devon), which like so many of the houses the family were associated with, was a large house in the country, but not a 'country house'; it passed to his widow but had been sold before her death in 1920.

Failsworth Lodge, Lancashire

The remarkable survival of a plain but polite red brick house of five bays and three storeys, with lower two-bay wings set back on either side. The lintel of a doorway at the rear has the initials JEB (for Josiah and Elizabeth Birch), and the date 1770. The central doorway on the entrance front has a broken pediment. The interior has been much altered, but is said to retain the original dog-leg staircase and some doors and overmantels on the upper floors. 

Failsworth Lodge

Failsworth Lodge: the setting of the house in 1849.
The house was already in multiple occupation by the early 19th century, and part of it was in use as a school by 1830. In 1849 it still retained ornamental grounds and an avenue flanking the approach drive, but a dyeworks had been built by the river west of the house, which cannot have improved the amenities of the location. In the 20th century the house became a club for workers at the Avro engineering company, but after this closed it fell into disuse. The surrounding land was developed as a housing estate in the early 21st century and the house, which is now known as Lancaster Lodge, was converted into flats after 2022.

Descent: built 1770 for Josiah Birch (1723-86); to son, Samuel Ogden Birch (1765-1804); sold? to brother, Scholes Birch (1769-1850); sold 1819 to John Heywood (b. 1803).. sold 1936 to Sir Roy Hardy Dobson (1891-1968), who established the Avro Engine Works Club (aka the Lancaster Club) in the house... sold to Bellview Homes. 

Broughton Lodge, Field Broughton, Lancashire

The house is said to have been built around 1780 for John Birch (1756-1828), the eldest surviving son of Josiah Birch of Failsworth Lodge, and there is a superficial resemblance to the slightly earlier Failsworth house: this is again a five bay, three-storey block with a hipped roof and lower wings. 

Broughton Lodge: entrance front in 2012. Image: Karl and Ali. Some rights reserved.
However, at Broughton Lodge, the scale is slightly smaller and the wings have a more sophisticated Palladian treatment, with links leading to pavilions with pediments and Venetian windows under super-arches. There is also a central porch with unfluted Ionic columns. Inside, there is said to be a fine drawing room, with Adam-style plasterwork, fireplaces and doorcases, and an original staircase with stick balusters. When the house was sold in 1808, the accommodation comprised dining and drawing rooms (both 24 x 17.5 ft), a breakfast room, music room (30 x 19 ft) and study, with a billiard room in the west wing and ten principal bedrooms. The house is now in multiple occupation.

Descent: built for John Birch (1756-1828); sold after his bankruptcy in 1808... John Wakefield (fl. 1831-51); sold 1851 to the sitting tenant, John Barker (1797-1869); to son, John Daye Barker, who sold 1901 to C.E.J. Knowles...

Birch family of Failsworth Lodge


Birch, Josiah (1723-86). Eldest son of Thomas Birch (1698-1764) and his wife Susannah (1702-40), daughter of Josiah Jesse of Manchester, born 18 January 1723. Yarn merchant, in partnership with John Rigby as John Birch & Sons. He rose high in Manchester society, serving as Constable, 1763-64, honorary treasurer of the Manchester Infirmary, 1776-83, Vice President of the Manchester Agricultural Society, 1783, and Treasurer of the Manchester Academy. A nonconformist in religion. He married, 27 October 1748 at Prestwich (Lancs), Elizabeth (1725-83), daughter of Thomas Scholes of Prestwich, and had issue:
(1) Thomas Birch (1749-74), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 28 August 1749; probably a partner in his father's business; died unmarried in the lifetime of his father, 14 September 1774;
(2) Susannah Birch (1751-1823), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 27 February 1750/1; lived latterly at Liverpool; died unmarried, 30 January 1823, and was buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester;
(3) Ann Birch (1752-56?), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 1 January 1753; perhaps the person of this name buried at Manchester Collegiate Church (now Cathedral), 1 December 1756;
(4) Elizabeth Birch (1754-1820), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 24 July 1754; married, 23 February 1773 at Manchester Collegiate Church (now Cathedral), John Kennion (c.1748-1827) of Liverpool and London, merchant, and had issue at least two sons and one daughter; lived latterly at Amersham (Bucks); buried at Bunhill Fields Burial Ground, London, 14 January 1820;
(5) John Birch (1756-1828) (q.v.);
(6) Sarah Birch (1758-1833), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 4  July 1758; lived with her elder sister at Liverpool; died unmarried, 20 May, and was buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 23 May 1833;
(7) Mary Birch (b. & d. 1760), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 24 April 1760; died in infancy, 22 May 1760;
(8) Charlotte Birch (1761-91), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 12 November 1761; died unmarried, 16 April and was buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 22 April 1791;
(9) Josiah Birch (d. 1792), of Leyland (Lancs), said to have been born in 1755 or 1763, but no baptism traced; married, 30 April 1789 at Chorley (Lancs), Anne Dawson, but had no issue; buried at Leyland, 20 July 1792;
(10) Samuel Ogden Birch (1765-1804) (q.v.);
(11) George Birch (b. 1768), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 14 February 1768; merchant in St. Petersburg (Russia); married, 7 December 1804 at the British chaplaincy in St Petersburg, Jane Cramp but had no issue; death not traced;
(12) Scholes Birch (1769-1850) (q.v.).
He lived at Failsworth Lodge from 1763 and rebuilt it in 1770.
He died 29 September 1786 and was presumably buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, since he was commemorated by a memorial there; his will was proved in the PCC, 14 February 1787. His wife died 26 May 1783 and was also buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester.

Birch, John (1756-1828). Second, but eldest surviving, son of Josiah Birch (1723-86) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Scholes of Prestwich (Lancs), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 13 October 1756. Educated at Manchester Grammar School. A director of Backbarrow Cotton Twist Co., in partnership with Robert Robinson, Dave Barker and others, but became bankrupt, 1808; the partners were discharged in 1809. He was unmarried and without issue.
He built Broughton Lodge in Cartmel (Lancs) in the 1780s, but it was sold in 1808 after he became bankrupt.
He died 9 March and was buried at Cartmel, 13 March 1828.

Birch, Samuel Ogden (1765-1804). Fourth son of Josiah Birch (1723-86) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Scholes of Prestwich (Lancs), baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 9 June 1765. Educated at Warrington Academy. Yarn merchant in partnership with his father; he took over the debts of the partnership to trade on his own account in 1793, but went to live in Sicily (probably for his health) around 1800. He was a Steward of the Manchester Royal Infirmary and a supporter of the Lancashire Humane Society. A nonconformist in religion. He married, 16 August 1787 at Manchester Collegiate Church (now Cathedral), Mary (1766-97), daughter of Rev. Humphrey Owen, chaplain of the Manchester Collegiate Church, and had issue:
(1) Elizabeth Birch (1788-1819), born 21 May and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 4 June 1788; married, 23 February 1808 at Acomb (Yorks), Capt. Thomas Gajitan Ragland (d. 1816) of Gibraltar, and had issue two sons (one of whom became a noted missionary in India) and one daughter; died in Gibraltar, 1819; will proved in the PCC, 10 November 1819;
(2) Josiah Birch (1789-1867), born 8 July and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 28 July 1789; merchant in St Petersburg (Russia); married, 14 November 1814 at the British chaplaincy in St Petersburg, Maria (d. 1867), daughter of Noah Cazelet, and had issue three sons and two daughters; died in St Petersburg, 11 April 1868;
(3) John Birch (1791-1806), born 2 February and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 2 March 1791; died young at Broughton Lodge, 25 November 1806;
(4) Thomas Birch (1792-1806?), born 21 February and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 19 March 1792; said to have died in 1806 but burial not traced;
(5) Mary Birch (1793-1804), born 15 September and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 7 November 1793; died young at Messina, Sicily, of the same fever as her father, March 1804;
(6) Charlotte Birch (1794-1812), born 2 November 1794 and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 23 January 1795; died unmarried at Backbarrow (Lancs, now Cumbria), 29 March 1812 and was buried at Cartmel (Lancs), 1 April 1812;
(7) Charles Birch (1795-1842) (q.v.).
He inherited Failsworth Lodge from his father in 1786, and also had a home at Backbarrow. Failsworth Lodge was advertised for sale after his death, and was probably sold to his brother, Scholes Birch (1769-1850).
He died at Messina in Sicily (Italy), 7 March 1804; his will was proved in the PCC, 6 September 1806. His wife is said to have died 1 September 1797, but no corresponding burial can be traced, and a 'Mary Ogden Birch', who was named in Samuel's nuncupative will as his wife, was granted administration of his goods in 1806.

Birch, Scholes (1769-1850). Sixth and youngest son of Josiah Birch (1723-86) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Scholes of Prestwich (Lancs), born 28 October 1769 and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 1 March 1770. Twist merchant and spinner in Manchester, in partnership with Maurice de Jongh and others, as Scholes, Birch & Co. He was an officer in the Newton and Failsworth Volunteers (Maj. and commanding officer, 1803). He was elected a member of the exclusive Manchester Billiard Club in 1800, and largely paid for the building of St Saviour's church, Chorlton-on-Medlock (Lancs), where his son became the first rector, 1835. He married, 2 April 1792 at Halifax (Yorks WR), Caroline (1774-1840), second daughter of Joseph Priestley, merchant, of White Windows, Sowerby, Halifax, and had issue:
(1) George Birch (1793-1869), born 16 November 1793 and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 6 February 1794; an officer in the army (Ensign, 1811; Lt., 1812; retired on half-pay, 1817); married, 10 February 1825 at Rotherham (Yorks WR), Eleanor Lucy (1804-90), daughter of Capt. Thomas Butler HEICS, and had issue five sons and four daughters; died at Cheltenham (Glos), 12 August, and was buried at Leckhampton (Glos), 17 August 1869; will proved 3 September 1869 (effects under £14,000);
(2) Harriet Euphemia Birch (1795-1849), born 26 July and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 14 November 1795; died unmarried at Leamington (Warks), 26 August, and was buried at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, 30 August 1849; will proved at York, November 1849 (effects under £3,000);
(3) Henry Birch (1796-1843), born 19 October and baptised at Upper Brook St. Unitarian Church, Manchester, 18 December 1796; in partnership (dissolved 1827) with Maurice de Jongh and his brother Lea Birch, as Birch, de Jongh & Co., merchants and cotton spinners and later a partner in Atkinson, Birch & Saunders of Manchester, attornies (retired 1841); married, 8 February 1832 at St Michael, Toxteth Park, Liverpool, Charlotte (c.1796-1839), daughter of Thomas Downward of Liverpool, and had issue two sons and two daughters; also had an illegitimate son (Edward George Birch of Hamburg (Germany)), who was mentioned in his will; died at Leamington (Warks), 20 October 1843; will proved in the PCC, 14 February 1844;
(4) Lea Birch (1798-1868), born 18 October 1798; in partnership (dissolved 1827) with Maurice de Jongh and his brother Henry Birch, as Birch, de Jongh & Co., merchants and cotton spinners; a trustee of the Cross Street Presbyterian Church, 1840; a leading amateur cricketer with the Lancashire Gentlemen; married, 31 March 1824 at St Philip, Liverpool, Amy (c.1801-68), daughter of Thomas Downward of Liverpool, and had issue four sons and five daughters; lived latterly at Loxley Park, Uttoxeter (Staffs) and Gatcombe House (Devon); died 3 June 1868; will proved 2 September 1868 (effects under £30,000);
(5) Maria Birch (1800-01), born 20 July and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 28 November 1800; died in infancy and was buried at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, 18 May 1801;
(6) Rev. Joseph Birch (1807-71), born 31 March and baptised at Cross St. Presbyterian Church, Manchester, 29 September 1807; educated at Pembroke College, Oxford (matriculated 1827; BA 1831; MA 1837); ordained deacon, 1831, and priest, 1832; vicar of Bywell St Andrew (Northbld), 1841-42; perpetual curate of Brighouse (Yorks WR), 1842-62; chaplain to Mayor of Bristol, 1860-61; vicar of West Teignmouth (Devon), 1862-71; married, 22 May 1833 at Rotherham (Yorks WR), Fanny Lea (1810-68), daughter of Capt. Thomas Butler of Thurcroft Hall (Yorks WR), and had issue three daughters; died 4 May 1871; will proved 16 May 1871 (effects under £4,000);
(7) Ven. Edward Birch (1809-86), born at Broughton Lodge, 17 May 1809 and baptised at St Nicholas Street Presbyterian Church, Lancaster, 1 July 1810; educated at Eton and St John's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1827; BA 1831; MA 1844) and the Inner Temple (admitted 1827); ordained deacon, 1832, and priest, 1833; rector of St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, 1836-68; canon of Manchester Cathedral, 1862-78; vicar of Blackburn, 1868-86, and first archdeacon of Blackburn, 1877-85; married 1st, 29 December 1836 at Manchester Collegiate Church (now Cathedral), Marianne (1817-44), eldest daughter of John Lees of Skircoat, Halifax (Yorks WR), and had issue three sons; married 2nd, 8 January 1846 at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Caroline Isabella (1821-52), eldest surviving daughter of John Sharp JP of Barnfield, Manchester, iron merchant, and had issue one son; married 3rd, 1 March 1855 at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Eliza Maria (1825-1906), eldest daughter of William James Wilson MD, of Clairville, Manchester, and had issue two sons and one daughter; died 9 August 1866 and was buried at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock; will proved 30 September 1886 (effects £18,108);
(8) Thomas Birch (b. & d. 1813), baptised at Laughton-en-le-Morthern (Yorks WR), 15 May 1813; died in infancy and was buried at Laughton-en-le-Morthern, 17 May 1813.
He lived at Failsworth Lodge and later at Broughton Lodge and Stony Dale (built in 1811) in Field Broughton (Lancs).
He died at Brighouse (Yorks WR), 22 January, and was buried at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, 28 January 1850; his will was proved at York, 6 May 1850. His wife died 22 June and was buried at St Saviour, Chorlton-on-Medlock, 27 June 1840.

Birch, Charles (1795-1842). Fourth son of Samuel Ogden Birch (1765-1804) and his wife Mary (1766-97), daughter of Rev. Humphrey Owen, chaplain of the Manchester Collegiate Church, born 27 December 1795 and baptised at Cross Street Presbyterian Chapel, Manchester, 23 May 1796. Educated at Manchester Grammar School. Merchant and director of the Liverpool Royal Bank. JP for Lancashire. He married, 25 March 1837 at Sefton (Lancs), Ellen (c.1801-83), daughter of Francis Rockliff of Liverpool and widow of Robert Blanchard (1781-1834) of Seaforth Vale, Litherland, and had issue:
(1) Lt-Col. Charles Birch (1838-99), of Lympstone Grange (Devon), born 13 March and baptised at Sefton, 11 October 1838; educated at Rugby and Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1856; BA 1860) and Inner Temple (admitted 1860; called, 1864); barrister-at-law, but did not practise; an officer in 3rd battn, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment (Lt., 1860; Capt., 1865; Maj., 1880; hon. Lt-Col., 1885); married, 13 December 1864, Emma Edith Malet (1842-1920), daughter of James Grant Lumsden, and had issue one son (killed in the Boer War, 1900); died 7 July and was buried at Lympstone, 11 July 1899; will proved 26 August 1899 (estate £43,371);
(2) Frances Birch (1840-1919?), baptised at Sefton, 13 February 1840; living, unmarried, in 1902 and probably the woman of this name who died at the Hotel Schweitzerhof, Lucerne (Switzerland), 31 March 1919; her will was proved 10 July 1919 (estate £19,576).
He lived at Litherland House (Lancs); his widow lived for a time in Cheltenham (Glos) and Heston (Middx), but latterly at a house called Broughton Lodge on Putney Hill (Surrey).
He died 2 March, and was buried at St Mary, Edge Hill, Liverpool, 8 March 1842; his will was proved at Lancaster, 22 April 1842. His widow died at Folkestone (Kent), 18 October 1883; her will was proved 7 January 1884 (effects £4,394).

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1925, pp. 140-41; J. Foster, The royal lineage of our noble and gentle families, together with their paternal ancestry, 1887, pp. 17-18;

Location of archives

No significant accumulation is known to survive.

Coat of arms

None recorded.

Can you help?

  • Can anyone show how this family were related to the Birchs of Birch Hall?
  • Can anyone provide fuller ownership information for Failsworth Lodge or Broughton Lodge, after their sale by the Birch family?
  • Can anyone provide portraits or photographs 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 11 May 2026.

Monday, 4 May 2026

(634) Birch of Clare Park

This family descends from the Rev. Jonathan Birch (1684-1735), who was rector of Bakewell (Derbys) and lived at Holme Hall in that parish as a tenant of the Eyre family. It seems likely that he was a descendant of the Birchs of Birch Hall in Rusholme (Lancs), but although his father and grandfather can be identified, the connection to the stem of the family is unclear.
Birch Hall, Rusholme (Lancs): a view of the semi-timbered part of the house,
which dates from the time of the Birchs.
That there was a connection is made more probable by the fact that in 1802 a Robert Birch, who certainly belonged to the main line of the Rusholme Birchs, purchased the freehold of Holme Hall and held it until 1820. 

Holme Hall, Bakewell: the dates chiefly from 1626 but has been much altered.
The Rev. Thomas Birch (1731-1806), with whom the genealogy below begins, was the third son of Jonathan Birch (d. 1735) and followed his father into the church. He became minister of a group of parishes around Alford (Lincs), and he settled at South Thoresby. He and his wife had a large family of ten sons and three daughters, and several of his sons continued the family tradition by pursuing clerical careers: the most successful was the Ven. Dr. Thomas Birch (1766-1840) who was Dean of Battle (Sussex) and Archdeacon of Lewes; while Rev. William Birch (1767-1848) was both rector of Burford (Oxon) and a schoolmaster at Rugby, and Rev. Walter Birch (1774-1829) was a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford and later held livings in Essex and Wiltshire. A fourth clerical son was Rev. Henry Birch (1780-1857), who was ordained deacon in 1802 but then abandoned the Church of England and became a minister in the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion. Other sons went into the army or took to the sea, and the most successful of these were Lt-Gen. John Francis Birch (1776-1856), who served throughout the Napoleonic wars; Jonathan Birch (1772-1848), who retired from a career as captain of an East Indiaman and purchased Pudlicote House (Oxon) in 1822; and Maj. George Birch (1781-1855), who joined the East India Company's Bengal army and eventually returned from India with a substantial fortune. It was George who purchased the recently remodelled Clare Park in Hampshire and moved the family into the landed gentry.

George Birch (d. 1855) married twice but his only children were a son and daughter by his first wife. His son, George Francis Birch (1834-1908), was the heir to Clare Park, while his daughter, Lydia Caroline (1832-81), married the rising politician, George Sclater Booth (1826-94) of Hoddington House (Hants), who after thirty years as an MP became a privy councillor and was raised to a peerage as Baron Basing. George Francis Birch succeeded his father at Clare Park in 1855 and may have remodelled the house soon afterwards. He pursued a career in the Hampshire militia (retiring as an honorary Lieutenant Colonel) and was a JP for fifty years. In 1861 he married Katherine Montgomery Campbell (c.1835-86), who bore him three sons and one daughter. Their eldest son suffered from learning disabilities, so it was their second son, Francis Herrick Birch (1866-1932) who inherited Clare Park. He was a barrister and JP, who also oversaw school attendance officers in Surrey in the years before the First World War. Despite these sources of earned income, he decided he could not afford to maintain Clare Park and sold it in 1921, while retaining a smaller house on the estate. He married in 1903 and had issue two sons, who both went abroad, ending up in Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), where they died in the 1970s.

Clare Park, Crondall, Hampshire

The estate can be identified with the manor of Badley, which for much of the medieval and early modern period was held jointly with the manor of Pury or Perryland in Bentley parish. The name Clare or Clere Park is first recorded in 1215, when grain was sent from the estate to Waverley Abbey (Surrey), and in 1246, when timber from the estate was selected for building work in London. There seems not to have been a principal residence here, however, until about 1725, when Elizabeth Harding, widow, is said to have built a new house, much of the fabric of which probably survives with the current three-storey building. To all appearances, however, the present house is early 19th century, and when the house was advertised for sale in 1827 it was described as 'a perfectly modern mansion or villa, of stone coloured brick, slated, elegantly fitted up, and replete with every desirable accommodation for a good establishment', on which 'very considerable sums have been expended by the late proprietor during the last four years, in making many important additions to the house; in improving the approaches to the estate; and in bringing the whole into its present perfect and delightful order'. The work was therefore presumably undertaken for Philip Raoul Lemprière (1785-1859), a Jersey landowner, who intended to settle permanently in England but changed his mind and returned to Jersey, where he was Seigneur of Rozel Manor.

Clare Park: the house in 1921. Image: Country Life.

Clare Park: entrance front today.
Clare Park now consists of a stuccoed principal block five bays by four, with a three-bay, two-storey service wing to the left of the entrance front. The central bay of the entrance front is stepped forward and has a semi-circular porch with slender Tuscan columns. The wide eaves of the oversailing hipped slate roof are supported on coupled curved brackets which have an Italianate feel and probably date from later in the 19th century, when the stucco coating of the walls may also have been applied. It seems likely that these were modernisations undertaken by G.F. Birch after he inherited the estate in 1855, but documentary evidence is lacking. Inside, the house is said to have a well-detailed entrance hall and staircase. A century of institutional use has left the house with extensive ancillary buildings, some attached and some detached, which are now used as additional sheltered housing and a private hospital.

Descent: William Blount, Lord Mountjoy, sold 1532 to William Thorpe; to Michael Lyster of Kinnersley (Herefs); sold 1579 to William Peake (d. 1597); to kinsman, William Walle (d. 1639); to son, Joseph Walle (d. 1644); to son, William Walle (fl. 1657)... William Harding (d. 1707); to son, John Harding; to widow, Elizabeth Harding, who built the present house c.1725...Edward Gibson; sold 1753 to John Jennings... sold c.1805 to Philip Raoul Lempriere (1785-1859) of Rosel Manor (Jersey); sold 1827 to Maj. George Birch (1781-1855); to son, George Francis Birch (1834-1908); to son, Francis Herrick Birch (1866-1932), who sold 1921 to William Butler; sold 1923 to Clare Park School (closed 1969); sold 1970 to Active Elderly Housing Association, later Clare Park Private Retirement Residences.

Birch family of Clare Park


Birch, Rev. Thomas (1731-1806). Third son of Rev. Jonathan Birch (1684-1735) of Holme Hall, Bakewell (Derbys), and his wife Elizabeth (1688-1756), daughter of John Rayner (1662-1746) of East Drayton (Notts), baptised at Bakewell (Derbys), 27 August 1731. Educated at Repton School and Hertford College, Oxford (matriculated 1750; BA 1755). Vicar of Saleby with Thoresthorpe (Lincs), 1764-1806; rector of South Thoresby (Lincs), 1771-1806; rector of Well with Dexthorpe and Claxby (Lincs), 1772-1806. He married, 12 August 1765 at Algarkirk (Lincs), Mary (1743-1807), daughter of Thomas Wright of Algarkirk, and had issue:
(1) Ven. Dr. Thomas Birch (1766-1840), born 23 July and baptised at Alford (Lincs), 25 July 1766; educated at Merchant Taylors School and St John's College, Oxford (matriculated 1785; BCL 1792; DCL 1797); ordained deacon, 1789 and priest, 1790; an 'amiable, learned and pious' clergyman who was perpetual curate of Northmoor (Oxon), 1801-33; dean of Battle (Sussex), 1801-36 and vicar of Bexhill, 1836-40; archdeacon of Lewes, 1825-40; and vicar of Westfield (Sussex), 1828-40; married, 31 January 1804 at Hampton (Middx), Maria Rosaria (1783-1866), third daughter of Charles Edward Gordon (1750-1832) of Wardhouse (Aberdeens.), and had issue four sons and five daughters; died 25 February and was buried at Bexhill (Sussex), 1 March 1840, but is commemorated by a monument in Battle church; will proved in the PCC, 21 May 1840;
(2) Rev. William Birch (1767-1848), born 23 August 1767 at Alford (Lincs); educated at Rugby School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (matriculated 1783; BA 1787; MA 1792); ordained deacon, 1790 and priest, 1792; a schoolmaster at Rugby School (assistant master, 1788), where he was noted for 'a fist like a sledgehammer, which he pretty freely made use of'; perpetual curate of Astley (Warks), 1808-32; rector of Burford (Oxon), 1826-36; married, 14 August 1790 at Rugby (Warks), Sarah Bucknill (1759-1835) and had issue two sons and one daughter; buried at Rugby, 12 September 1848; will proved in the PCC, 16 November 1848;
(3) Edward Birch (1770-1800), born 15 May and baptised at Alford, 16 May 1770; an officer in the Royal Navy (Lt., 1794); died 22 May and was buried at St Giles, Oxford, 25 May 1800; will proved in the PCC, 26 June 1800;
(4) Elizabeth Birch (1771-84), born 18 June and baptised at Alford, 19 June 1771; died young on 1 April, and was buried at South Thoresby, 3 April 1784;
(5) Jonathan Birch (1772-1848), born 17 August and baptised at Alford, 19 August 1772; a merchant navy captain in the service of the East India Company; a friend of William Charles Macready, the actor and theatre manager, who mentions him in his diaries; lived in retirement at Pudlicote House, Chilson (Oxon), which he purchased in 1822 (and which his son sold in 1864); married, 9 May 1805 at St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Holborn (Middx), Mary Elizabeth (1773-1822), daughter of William Morrice*, and had issue two sons and three daughters; died at the Windmill Inn, Alford (Lincs), while on a visit to his childhood home, 20 September, and was buried at South Thoresby, 23 September 1848; his will was proved in the PCC, 13 December 1848;
(6) Rev. Walter Birch (1774-1829), baptised at South Thoresby, 8 February 1774; educated at Rugby, St. John's College, Oxford (matriculated 1791) and Magdalen College, Oxford (demy, 1791; BA 1795; MA 1798; BD 1805); ordained deacon, 1797 and priest, 1798; Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, 1797-1818; vicar of Stanton St Bernard (Wilts), 1812-29 and Stanway (Essex), 1817-29; married, 12 November 1818 at Stonehouse (Glos), Elizabeth (1787-1872), daughter of Nathaniel Dimock of Stonehouse, and had issue three sons and two daughters; died 8 December 1829 and was buried at Stanway (Essex), where he was commemorated by a monument; his will was proved in the PCC, 26 January 1830;
(7) Samuel Birch (b. & d. 1775), baptised at South Thoresby, 30 May 1775; died in infancy and was buried at South Thoresby, 8 June 1775;
(8) Lt-Gen. John Francis Birch (1776-1856) born 20 August and baptised at South Thoresby, 31 August 1776; an officer in the Royal Engineers (2nd Lt., 1793; Lt., 1796; Capt., 1801; Maj., 1811; Lt-Col, 1813; Col., 1825; Maj-Gen., 1837; Lt-Gen., 1846), who served throughout the Napoleonic Wars;  author of A memoir on the national defence (1808); married, 25 April 1808 at Edinburgh, Clementina (1777-1844), daughter of Sir James Hunter Blair (1741-87), 1st bt., of Dunskey (Wigtowns.), banker and politician, and had issue two sons and three daughters; died at Folkestone (Kent) and was buried at Crondall (Hants), 3 June 1856, where he is commemorated by a monument; will proved in the PCC, 19 June 1856;
(9) Samuel Birch (1777-78), born 5 October and baptised at South Thoresby, 12 November 1777; died in infancy and was buried at South Thoresby, 13 April 1778;
(10) Henry Birch (1780-1857), born 18 June and baptised at South Thoresby, 31 July 1780; educated at St John's College, Oxford (matriculated 1797) and Magdalen College, Oxford (BA 1801; MA 1804); ordained deacon, 1802; curate of Well with Dexthorpe and Claxby (Lincs), 1802, but left the Church of England and became a minister in the Countess of Huntingdon's Connection chapel at Dane House, Brighton (Sussex); married, 11 June 1812 at St Pancras (Middx), his cousin, Penelope Yorke (c.1771-1838), daughter of Rev. John Neville Birch, rector of Leasingham (Lincs), and had issue one son; died 31 May, and was buried at Cranbrook (Kent), 5 June 1857; will proved in the PCC, 10 July 1857;
(11) George Birch (1781-1855) (q.v.);
(12) Mary Birch (1784-1865), born 22 January and baptised at South Thoresby, 2 March 1784; married, 11 January 1815 at Battle (Sussex), as his second or third wife, Samuel Bucknill FRCS (1783-1863) of Rugby, general practitioner, and had issue four sons and one daughter; died 12 November 1865;
(13) Elizabeth Frances Birch (1785-1864), baptised at South Thoresby, 30 March 1785; married, 20 June 1820 at St Andrew, Rugby (Warks), Rev. Charles Eddy (c.1790-1830) of Guilsborough (Northants), and had issue one son and three daughters; died 27 March 1864.
He lived at South Thoresby (Lincs).
He died 22 September, and was buried at South Thoresby, 27 September 1806. His widow died 28 August 1807 and was buried at Battle (Sussex).
* Not John Morrice FSA, as stated by O'Neil; he was her brother.

Birch, George (1781-1855). Tenth and youngest son of Rev. Dr. Thomas Birch (d. 1806) and his wife Mary Wright, born 25 August and baptised at South Thorsby (Lincs), 28 August 1781. An officer in the East India Company's Bengal army (Cadet, 1798; Ensign, 1799; Lt., 1799; Capt., 1810; Maj., 1823; retired 1824), who obtained a staff appointment on the basis of his command of native languages, and held both military and diplomatic postings in the northern provinces of Bengal. He returned to England in the 1820s with a considerable fortune. JP for Hampshire. He married 1st, 15 June 1831, Lydia Diana (d. 1837), daughter of Samuel Francis Dashwood of Stanford (Notts), and 2nd, 23 August 1849 at St Michael, Pimlico (Middx), Louisa (c.1802-83), daughter of John Edwards of Edgbaston (Warks), and had issue:
(1.1) Lydia Caroline Birch (1832-81), baptised at Crondall, 9 April 1832; married, 8 December 1857 at Crondall, Rt. Hon. George Sclater Booth (1826-94), Conservative MP for North Hampshire, 1857-85 and for Basingstoke, 1885-87, and later 1st Baron Basing, son of William Lutley Sclater of Hoddington House (Hants), and had issue four sons and six daughters; died 5 July, and was buried at Upton Grey (Hants), 11 July 1881;
(1.2) George Francis Birch (1834-1908) (q.v.).
He purchased Clare Park in 1827.
He died at Folkestone (Kent), 23 February and was buried at Crondall, 2 March 1855. His first wife died 10 January and was buried at Crondall, 14 January 1837. His widow died 4 November and was buried at Crondall, 8 November 1883; her will was proved 15 March 1884 (effects £1,416).

Birch, George Francis (1834-1908). Only son of George Birch (1781-1855) and his wife Lydia Diana, daughter of Samuel Francis Dashwood of Stanford (Notts), born 6 January and baptised at Crondall, 11 March 1834. Educated at Brighton, Rugby and Trinity College, Cambridge (admitted 1852; BA 1856). An officer in the Royal East Middlesex Militia (Capt., 1856) and later in Hampshire Militia (Capt., 1858; Maj., 1875; hon. Lt-Col., 1881; retired 1882). JP (from 1858) and DL for Hampshire and JP for Surrey; he was chairman of the Aldershot and Odiham Petty Sessions. He married, 29 October 1861 at Woodhouse (Leics), Katherine Georgina Montgomery (c.1835-86), daughter of Hugo Montgomery Campbell of The Hollies, Enville (Staffs), and had issue, with a premature, stillborn daughter born in 1863:
(1) George Reginald Birch (1864-1930), born 27 August and baptised at Crondall, 29 August 1864; suffered from learning disabilities and lived at Normansfield Hospital, Teddington (Middx); died unmarried, 12 April 1930;
(2) Francis Herrick Birch (1866-1932) (q.v.);
(3) Lydia Mary Birch (1868-1953), born 2 February and baptised at Crondall, 15 March 1868; self-employed gardener; died unmarried, 21 June and was buried at Crondall, 25 June 1953; will proved 21 November 1953 (estate £11,742);
(4) Arthur Charles Birch (1870-1936), born 24 September and baptised at Crondall, 23 October 1870; an officer in the Royal Artillery (2nd Lt., 1890; Lt., 1893; Capt., 1900; retired 1901 but returned to colours, 1914; Maj., 1915), who served in Boer War (when he was a prisoner of war) and First World War; died unmarried, 25 August 1936 and was buried at Crondall; will proved 22 October 1936 (estate £9,747).
He inherited Clare Park from his father in 1855.
He died 18 August and was buried at Crondall, 20 August 1908; his will was proved 5 December 1908 (estate £3,756). His wife died at Thurmaston Hall (Leics), 6 October 1886.

Birch, Francis Herrick (1866-1932). Second son of George Francis Birch (1834-1908) and his wife Katherine Georgina, daughter of Hugo Montgomery Campbell of The Hollies (Staffs), born 23 February and baptised at Crondall, 8 April 1866. Educated at Winchester, Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1884; BA 1887) and Inner Temple (admitted 1888; called 1891). Barrister-at-law on the Western circuit and at Hampshire area Quarter Sessions until c.1914; Superintendent of School Attendance in Dorking, Reigate and Godstone divisions of Surrey, 1903; JP for Hampshire from 1912. He married, 25 July 1903 at Holy Trinity, Chelsea (Middx), Constance Somerville (1864-1956), daughter of Gen. Sir Charles Cameron Shute, kt., MP for Brighton, 1874-80, and had issue:
(1) Charles Francis Birch (1904-74), born 13 September and baptised at Ewshot (Hants), 23 October 1904; educated at Charterhouse; racehorse trainer at Ogbourne (Wilts); served in Second World War with Royal Air Force, but evidently emigrated to Southern Rhodesia later; married, 3 January 1934, Catherine Alice Anne (k/a Nancy) (1909-88) (who m2, 1979, Charles Alexander Kennedy (1900-81)), only daughter of William John of Marlborough Grange, Cowbridge (Glam.), and had issue one son and two daughters; died at Bulawayo (Zimbabwe), 19 August 1974; administration of goods granted 17 May 1975 (estate in England & Wales, £860);
(2) George Arthur Birch (1909-70), born 13 January 1909; educated at Winchester; had a varied career including being a tobacco planter in Southern Rhodesia and later a stockbroker in England and a shipping merchant in South Africa; served in Second World War with Royal Artillery; married, 3 March 1934 in Southern Rhodesia, Margaret (1910-75) (who m2, Abel Lawrence Peirson jr. (1897-1983) of Dorset, Bennington, Vermont (USA)), second daughter of William Smith-Wilson of Sao Paolo (Brazil), and had issue one son; died in Zimbabwe in October 1970.
He inherited Clare Park from his father in 1908, but sold it in 1921 and lived subsequently at West Kennett Farm, Marlborough (Wilts) and Beaumont House, Crondall. His widow lived latterly at Bognor Regis (Sussex).
He died 6 November 1932; his will was proved 15 December 1932 (estate £40,106). His widow died 16 February 1956; her will was proved 2 August 1956 (estate £4,405).

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1952, p. 182; J.B. Payne, A monograph of the house of Lempriere, 1862, pp. 10-11; J.S. Buckley, The history of Birch in Rusholme, 1910, pp. 9-15; VCH Hampshire, vol. 4, 1911, pp. 5-14, 27-30; B.L. O'Neil, The Birch family history, 1998; M. Craven & M. Stanley, The Derbyshire country house, 2001, pp. 120-21; M. Bullen, J. Crook, R. Hubbuck & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Hampshire - Winchester and the North, 2010, p. 234;

Location of archives

No significant accumulation is known to survive.

Coat of arms

None recorded.

Can you help?

  • Can anyone provide portraits or photographs 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 4 May 2026.

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

(632) Binney of Pampisford Hall

Binney of Pampisford 
The Binney family are said to have been resident in the Worksop area for several generations before the time of Thomas Binney (1762-1835), with whom the genealogy below begins. Thomas was a corn merchant and maltster, who acquired Morton Hall near Gainsborough and was eventually in partnership with his sons Richard (1796-1875) and Mordecai (1805-63), who operated branches of the family firm in Wakefield (Yorks WR) and Kingston-upon-Hull (Yorks ER) respectively. In 1830, however, father and sons were declared bankrupt, and although the sons eventually emerged from the stigma of bankruptcy and pursued other careers, Morton Hall seems to have been sold and Thomas himself died in 1835.
Morton Hall, near Gainsborough.


Thomas had married twice and produced seven sons and two daughters, and most of the sons who survived to adulthood took up trades and occupations connected with agriculture. Only one became a farmer as such, and he eventually emigrated to Australia, where the family evidently lost sight of him, for in 1865, two years after his death, they were advertising for news of him or his children. The sole exception to the pattern of agricultural pursuits was Thomas' youngest son, Edward William Binney (1812-81), who was articled to a solicitor in Chesterfield and after completing his legal studies in London, set up in practice in Manchester in 1836. From an early age he manifested an interest in scientific and geological matters, and once settled in Manchester he increasingly applied himself to understanding the complex geology of the Lancashire coalfield. In 1851 he entered a partnership with Dr James Young FRS, another geologist, for the extraction of paraffin from a seam of bituminous coal and shale in Scotland. This was financially highly rewarding and by 1865 he had not only made large profits from the business but was able to sell it to a joint-stock company for £120,000. This was the source of the family's later wealth. Edward himself bought Ravenscliffe House, a large house on the seafront at Douglas (Isle of Man) which had been built in 1849, and used it as an occasional residence, while retaining his main home at Cheetham Hill on the northern outskirts of Manchester.

Guisnes Court, Tolleshunt Darcy (Essex)
Ravenscliffe House, Douglas (Isle of Man)















Edward married in 1856 and produced three sons and three daughters. His eldest son, Edward William Binney (1857-96) settled in London but died relatively young. The second son, Thomas Godfrey Binney (1861-1943) was a militia officer and in 1906 bought Guisnes Court at Tolleshunt d'Arcy (Essex), but after his wife's death in 1923 he emigrated to the USA, where he died at San Diego in California. The third and youngest son was James Binney (1868-1935), who became a barrister in 1894. He evidently had ambitions to enter politics, and twice stood for parliament in the Crewe division in 1908 and 1909, but was unsuccessful. He purchased Pampisford Hall (Cambs) in 1893, and added considerably to the collection of conifers in the grounds, acquiring many specimens during his own adventurous travels. 

James Binney married twice, and although his first wife died after only three years of marriage, she left him a son and heir, Richard Christian Cecil James Binney (1897-1966), who duly inherited the Pampisford estate. Cecil, as he was generally known, went to Oxford, where he became one of the founders of the student magazine Cherwell, and then to the Inner Temple, from whence he was called to the bar in 1923. He stood for parliament in 1929 as a Liberal but was not elected, and had a parallel career as a writer of short stories. During the Second World War he was attached to the War Office and Pampisford Hall was used for a time as a reception centre for evacuees. Cecil remained unmarried until 1953, and had no children. When he died in 1966, the Pampisford estate passed to his much younger half-brother, Hector Binney (1919-86), a larger-than-life character who travelled extensively in Europe buying furniture, ceramics and other works of art for a collection which was largely dispersed by sale after his death. After he inherited Pampisford, he became a passionate speaker about the conifer collection in the grounds, but the gardens themselves were neglected during his ownership. On his death, the estate passed to his daughter Arabella (b. 1952), who soon afterwards married Bo Killander (b. 1958). The grounds of the house were extensively damaged in the storms of 1987 and 1990, and this prompted replanting and the start of a programme of restoration of the house and grounds which continued into the 21st century.

Pampisford Hall, Cambridgeshire

The house was first built about 1830 by an unknown architect, on newly-enclosed farmland, for William Parker Hamond (d. 1873), whose ancestors had owned the estate since about 1710 but had been non-resident. As first built it was apparently a moderate-sized villa with the principal rooms along the south-east front. Shortly after the sale of the family's Haling Grove estate at Croydon (Surrey) in the 1860s, Parker Hamond enlarged Pampisford Hall to the designs of George Goldie, creating a new nine-bay south-west front in Italianate style with the centre recessed behind a loggia of banded columns, and a new entrance front to the north-east. The southern three bays on both fronts represent the earlier house. Inside, Goldie created a new entrance hall with an encaustic tiled floor and a chimneypiece carved by Arthur Hayball of Sheffield, a grand staircase and a dining room. A little later, in 1875, all the principal rooms were redecorated in the Italian and French Renaissance styles, and they have been little altered since that time. 

Pampisford Hall: entrance front before 1912.
The large entrance porch is dated 1893 and must have been added immediately after James Binney bought the house. Further additions came in 1912, when he added a ballroom at the northern end of the house - replacing the servants' hall - and a new west wing and a conservatory projecting from the south-east front. The house was used briefly in 1939-40 as a reception centre for boys evacuated from London, but the property has remained in the Binney family. 

Pampisford Hall: the layout of the grounds in 1895, from the 1st edn 25" map.
Formal gardens in the Italian style were designed by Robert Marnock after 1840, and there are significant remains of this layout, but the layout was considerably enlarged and remodelled between 1869 and 1872. The park was already notable for its trees by the mid 19th century, and visitors were welcome every Sunday in the 1870s. The grounds now contain an even finer collection of conifers than they did 150 years ago, with over 1,000 foreign species, many of them collected by James Binney and his elder son. The site was badly affected by the great storms of 1987 and 1990 and was partially replanted with advice from Alan Mitchell. The timber-framed conservatory was restored in the early 21st century.

Descent: built for William Parker Hamond (d. 1873); to son, William Parker Hamond (d. 1884); to cousin, Col. R.T. Hamond, who sold 1893 to James Binney (1868-1935); to son, Richard Christian Cecil James Binney (1897-1966); to half-brother, Hector Danneskold Brudenell Binney (1919-86); to daughter, Arabella Cecilia Bruce Binney (b. 1952), later wife of Bo A.L. Killander (b. 1958).

Binney family of Pampisford Hall


Binney, Thomas (1762-1835). Son of Thomas Binney (1726-83) of Worksop (Notts) and his wife Elizabeth Hannah, daughter of Thomas Casson of Thorne (Yorks WR), born 23 January 1762. Corn merchant and maltster, in partnership with his sons Richard and Mordecai; the firm became bankrupt in 1830. He married 1st, 3 November 1791 at Worksop, Elizabeth (1772-97), daughter of Robert Cowley of Worksop, and 2nd, 19 May 1804 at Gringley-on-the-Hill (Notts), Elizabeth (1772-1843), daughter of James Cross of Gringley-on-the-Hill, and had issue:
(1.1) Eliza Cowley Binney (1792-1875), born 11 August and baptised at Worksop, 13 August 1792; married, 6 May 1813 at Gainsborough (Lincs), Johann Christian Mann of Rostock (Germany), but had no issue; died at Rostock, 27 September, and was buried there, 30 September 1875;
(1.2) Ann Binney (1793-1876), born 15 November and baptised at Worksop, 17 November 1793; married, 15 May 1827 at Gainsborough, Robert Hesleden (1790-1867), and they emigrated to Australia in 1838-39; died without issue at Kew, Victoria (Australia), 18 June, and was buried there, 21 June 1876;
(1.3) Thomas Casson Binney (1795-1865), born 3 May and baptised at Worksop, 6 May 1795; grain and timber merchant of Hull (Yorks ER) and corn factor at Wakefield (Yorks WR); married, 14 November 1822 at Rochdale (Lancs), Isabella Holt of Rochdale, and had issue two sons and four daughters; died 21 June and was buried at Worksop, 24 June 1865; will proved 26 January 1866 (effects under £100);
(1.4) Richard Binney (1796-1875), born 10 June and baptised at Worksop, 19 June 1796; corn merchant in Wakefield (bankrupt, 1830) and later a stockbroker in Leeds; lived in Leeds and later Doncaster; married, 5 May 1823 at Halifax (Yorks WR), Jane (1803-42), daughter of Joseph Walker of Mearclough House, Halifax, and had issue nine sons and two daughters; died in London, and was buried at Bethnal Green Cemetery (Middx), 1873;
(2.1) Mordecai Binney (1805-63), born 19 June 1805; corn merchant in Hull, bankrupt in 1830, who lived later at Retford (Notts); married, February 1841 at Hull Registry Office (and previously in Hamburg), Mary Anne Krumbhaar (1816-56) of Hamburg (Germany), and had issue four sons and one daughter; died 1 June 1863 and was buried at Worksop, where he and his wife are commemorated by a monument;
(2.2) James Cross Binney (1807-63), born 20 April 1807; farmer at Pilham (Lincs); married, 12 August 1831 at Pilham, Susanna (1806-53?), daughter of Rev. William Dunkin, rector of Pilham, and had issue two sons and one daughter; after his wife's death he emigrated to Brisbane, Queensland (Australia); died 13 December 1863;
(2.3) Henry Casson Binney (1809-38), born September 1809; tanner (bankrupt, 1837); married, 29 January 1835 at St John the Baptist, Chester, Mary Ann Oxley (d. 1837), and had issue one daughter (who died in infancy); died 29 October and was buried at Worksop, 3 November 1838;
(2.4) William Edward Binney (b. & d. 1811), born 13 March and baptised at Gainsborough, 2 April 1811; died in infancy, 16 May, and was buried at Gringley-on-the-Hill, 19 May 1811;
(2.5) Edward William Binney (1812-81) (q.v.).
He lived at Morton Hall, Gainsborough (Lincs), which was probably sold after his bankruptcy, although he was still described as 'of Morton' in 1831; he lived subsequently at Wakefield (Yorks WR).
He died at West Stockwith (Notts), 16 November, and was buried at Worksop (Notts), 23 November 1835. His first wife died 17 December 1797. His widow died 10 July 1843.

Binney, Edward William (1812-81). Fifth and youngest son of Thomas Binney (1762-1835) and his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter of James Cross of Gringley-on-the-Hill (Notts), born 7 December 1812 and baptised at Gainsborough, 1 March 1813. Educated at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar Sch., Gainsborough and articled to a solicitor in Chesterfield (Derbys). Solicitor in Manchester from 1836, but he became increasingly occupied by scientific and geological affairs and entered in 1851 into a partnership with Dr James Young FRS for the extraction of paraffin from bituminous coal and shale, with works at Bathgate in Scotland and Leigh (Lancs), which they subsequently sold for £120,000 in 1865. He had an expert knowledge of the Lancashire coalfield, and became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1856 and also of the Geological Society, 1853. He was one of founders of the Manchester Geological Society (President, 1857-59, 1866-67) and the Manchester Literary & Philosophical Society, of which he was successively secretary, vice-president and thrice president. He married, 28 August 1856*, Mary Christiana (1827-82), fourth daughter and co-heiress of Rev. David Jones (d. 1868), rector of Hope Bagot (Shrops.), and had issue:
(1) Edward William Binney (1857-96), born 13 December 1857; educated at King William's College (IoM) and Manchester University; law student; married, 14 February 1888 at St Dunstan's-in-the-West, London, Anne Alexandra Efford (1863-1906), daughter of William Henry Weekes, of Lambeth (Surrey), builder, but had no issue; died 13 October 1896 and was buried at Heston (Middx), where he is commemorated by a monument;
(2) Thomas Godfrey Binney (1861-1943), born 27 May and baptised at Hope Bagot (Shrops.), 15 September 1861; an officer in the North Irish Militia brigade of Royal Artillery (Lt., 1884; Capt.); owned Guisnes Court, Tolleshunt d'Arcy (Essex), 1906-23, but made it available as a VAD Hospital in First World War; married, 31 October 1882 at Douglas (IoM), Susan Lockhart (1865-1923), eldest daughter of Rev. Canon W.T. Hobson, incumbent of Douglas (IoM) and later rector of Playden (Sussex), and had issue six sons; after his wife's death he emigrated to the USA and died at San Diego, California (USA), 27 December 1943; his will was proved 14 September 1944 (estate in England, £2,863);
(3) Maud Elizabeth Binney (1863-1937), born 1 July 1863 and baptised at Hope Bagot, 11 May 1864; married, October 1884, Francis Sowerby (1856-1931) of Hawerby Hall, Coxwold Hall and Beelsby Hall (Lincs), son of J. Sowerby, and had issue three sons and three daughters; lived latterly at Hatfield (Herts); died 10 April 1937; will proved 5 July 1937 (estate £715);
(4) Alice Hannah Binney (1864-1955), born 6 September 1864 and baptised at Hope Bagot, 18 June 1865; married, 8 July 1885 at St Peter, Eaton Sq., Westminster (Middx), Col. Samuel Richard Grubb (1855-1921) of Kiltinan Castle (Co. Tipperary), son of Richard Davies Grubb, and had issue one son and one daughter; died at Clonmel (Co. Tipp.), 29 August 1955; will proved at Waterford, 8 November 1955 (estate £100)
(5) Joan Cross Binney (1865-1939), born 10 November 1865 and baptised at Hope Bagot, 15 April 1866; married, October 1888, Lt. George Bailie Guthrie (1861-1900) of Craigie (Angus) and had issue one daughter; died 14 January 1939; will proved 2 March 1939 (estate £25,375);
(6) James Binney (1868-1935) (q.v.).
He lived at Morton Hall, Gainsborough (Lincs) and later at Cheetham Hill, Manchester. After he made his fortune, he invested in a large seafront house, Ravenscliffe House, at Douglas (IoM), which was sold in 1884, following his death.
He died 19 December, and was buried at Worksop (Notts), 23 December 1881; his will was proved 31 March 1882 (effects £109,278 in the UK). His widow died at Ludlow (Shrops.), 4 May and was buried at Hope Bagot, 10 May 1882; administration of her goods was granted to her second son, 30 May 1883 (effects £241).
* The date is given thus in Burke's Landed Gentry, but I have been unable to trace the marriage, which seems not to have been recorded at Hope Bagot.

Binney, James (1868-1935). Third and youngest son of Edward William Binney (1812-81) and his wife Mary Christiana, daughter and co-heiress of Rev. David Jones, rector of Hope Bagot (Shrops.), born at Douglas (IoM), 14 August 1868. After being orphaned in 1882 he was made a ward in Chancery. Educated at Giggleswick, Rugby and Trinity Hall, Cambridge (matriculated 1887; BA 1892; MA 1898) and Middle Temple (admitted 1889; called 1894). Before attending university he travelled in Europe with a tutor. Barrister-at-law. An officer in 3rd battn., King's Regiment (2nd Lt., 1890; Capt., 1892; retired 1901). JP and DL for Cambridgeshire; High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire, 1903-04. A Conservative in politics, he stood unsuccessfully for Parliament in the Crewe division, 1908, 1909. He travelled extensively in Europe, India, Egypt, the West Indies and South America, and was a notable collector of conifers which he added to the gardens at Pampisford. Author of a short biography of his father, The centenary of a nineteenth-century geologist (1912). He married 1st, 4 January 1894 at Whiston (Lancs), Cecilia de Anyers (1872-97), younger daughter of Capt. Henry Rudolph de Anyers Willis of Halsnead, Whiston, and 2nd, 9 July 1907 at Great Bedwyn (Wilts), Lady Violet Louisa Marjory (1880-1923), daughter of Henry Augustus Brudenell-Bruce (1842-1911), 5th Marquess of Ailesbury, and had issue:
(1.1) Cecilia Ermyntrude Alice Binney (1896-1941), born 4 February and baptised at Pampisford, 29 February 1896; educated at Girton College, Cambridge; language teacher; married, 1938, Maurice Henry Black (1910-91), musician; died 19 March and was buried at Rose Hill Cemetery, Oxford, 24 March 1941; administration of goods granted to her brother, 11 March 1942 (estate £920);
(1.2) Richard Christian Cecil James Binney (1897-1966) (q.v.);
(2.1) Merlin Brudenell Binney (1908-76), of St Annes Heath, Virginia Water (Surrey), born 5 August and baptised at Pampisford, 20 October 1908; educated at Radley, 1922-23, and St Catherine's College, Cambridge; died unmarried at the Holloway Sanatorium, Egham (Surrey), 18 May 1976; administration of goods (with will annexed) granted 14 June 1977 (estate £3,109);
(2.2) Olivera Rowena Binney (1910-86), born 3 September and baptised at Pampisford, 20 October 1910; educated at Heathfield School, the London School of Economics and the Open University (BA 1979); Vice-President of Royal College of Nursing; a member of the Governing Body of the Church in Wales; JP for Glamorganshire (from 1954); appointed OBE, 1967; a Dame of Grace of the Order of St John; married, 24 May 1934 at Pampisford, Col. Sir Cennydd George Traherne KG (1910-95), of Coedarhydglyn, Cardiff (Glam.), son of Cdr. Llewellyn Edmund Traherne; died 22 October 1986; will proved 16 April 1987 (estate £187,255);
(2.3) Hector Danneskold Brudenell Binney (1919-86) (q.v.).
He purchased Pampisford Hall in 1893 and also owned property in Lancashire.
He died 3 September and was buried at Pampisford, 6 September 1935; his will was proved 19 December 1935 (estate £115,230). His first wife died 25 March and was buried at Pampisford, 30 March 1897. His second wife died 26 August 1923; her will was proved 29 November 1923 (estate £6,644).

Cecil Binney (1897-1966) 
Binney, Richard Christian Cecil James (1897-1966).
Only son of James Binney (1868-1935) and his first wife, Cecilia d'Anyers, younger daughter of Capt. Henry Rudolph d'Anyers Willis of Halsnead (Lancs), born 27 February 1897. 
Educated at Eton, and then served in the First World War with Royal West Kent Regiment (Lt.), before completing his education at Balliol College, Oxford (matriculated 1919; BA 1923; MA) and Inner Temple (admitted 1921; called 1923). Barrister-at-law with chambers in 6 Kings Bench Walk, London; employed in Second World War as civilian assistant to the General Staff in the War Office, 1940-43. A freeman of the City of London. While an undergraduate at Oxford he became one of the founders of Cherwell magazine. He was a Liberal in politics and stood unsuccessfully for Parliament in the Uxbridge constituency, 1929, and he also enjoyed considerable success as a writer of short stories. He married, 14 August 1953, Elaine (1904-2002), daughter of G.L.K. Finlay of Edinburgh, but had no issue.
He inherited Pampisford Hall from his father in 1935.
He died 2 October and was buried at Pampisford, 6 October 1966; his will was proved 4 November 1966 and 7 April 1967 (estate £379,790). His widow died aged 97 on 26 January 2002; her will was proved 24 October 2002.

Binney, Hector Danneskold Brudenell (1919-86). Second son of James Binney (1868-1935) and his second wife, Lady Violet Louisa Marjory, daughter of Henry Augustus Brudenell-Bruce, 5th Marquess of Ailesbury, born 5 December 1919 and baptised at Pampisford, 9 January 1920. He served in the army in the Second World War. He was a bon vivant and a larger-than-life character, who travelled extensively throughout Europe, amassing an impressive collection of furniture, ceramics and works of art, especially objects with romantic or historical associations; his collection was sold after his death. On succeeding to his family property, he became known as an eccentric conservationist and spoke passionately about his collection of rare conifer trees. He married 1st, (div. by 1960), Jutta Katharina Marie Elizabeth Antonia von Haxthausen (1916-2004), and 2nd, Oct-Dec 1960, Ann Elizabeth (1926-2017), daughter of Lt-Col. Bernard Ewart Hammond-Davies (1894-1969), and had issue:
(1.1) Arabella Cecilia Bruce Binney (b. 1952) (q.v.);
(2.1) Theresa C. Bruce Binney (1958-2013), born Apr-Jun 1958; had issue three sons and one daughter; died at her home at Wolf Hall Manor, Burbage (Wilts), 25 April 2013.
He inherited Pampisford Hall from his half-brother in 1966.
He died 15 May 1986; administration of his goods (with will annexed) was granted 3 December 1986 (estate £1,678,429). His first wife married 2nd, [forename unknown] Bowen and died in February 2004. His second wife died 21 March 2017.

Binney, Arabella Cecilia Bruce (b. 1952). Only child of Hector Danneskold Brudenell Binney (1919-86) and his first wife, Jutta Katharina Marie Elizabeth Antonia, daughter of Walter Paul Wilhelm von Haxthausen, born 23 December 1952 and baptised at Great Bedwyn (Wilts), 23 June 1953. She married, August 1987, Bo A.L. Killander (b. 1958), and had issue:
(1) Calixta Emily M.G. Binney Killander (b. 1989); educated at Ampleforth and Warren Wilson College, North Carolina (USA); created an award-winning regenerative farming and organic vegetable business (Flourish Produce) on 80 acres of the estate;
(2) Karl Frederick Killander (b. 1992), born 6 March 1992; a competitive shooting specialist, who has represented Great Britain in skeet shooting.
She inherited Pampisford Hall from her father in 1986.
Now living. Her husband is now living.

Principal sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1972, pp. 67-68; VCH Cambs, vol. 6, 1978, pp. 105-13; S. Bradley & Sir N. Pevsner, The buildings of England: Cambridgeshire, 3rd edn., 2014, p. 633; T. Mowl & L. Mayer, The historic gardens of Cambridgeshire, 2013, pp. 165-68.

Location of archives

Binney family of Pampisford: deeds, manorial records, estate and family papers, 1672-1925 [Location unknown: for further information contact The National Archives]

Coat of arms

Per saltire, or and azure, four horses' heads couped at the neck counterchanged

Can you help?

  • Can anyone provide portraits or photographs 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 22 April 2026.