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Children:
_Thomas CARR I "The Immigrant"______+ | (1648 - 1711) _Thomas CARR II______| | (1664 - 1737) m 1704| | |_Mary GARLAND? _____________________ | (1650 - 1736) _John CARR __________| | (1706 - 1778) | | | _Cornelius DABNEY I "The Immigrant"_+ | | | (1631 - 1693) | |_Mary DABNEY ________| | (1680 - 1748) m 1704| | |_Susanna JENNINGS? _________________ | (1650 - ....) | |--Dabney CARR Sr. | (1743 - 1773) | ____________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |____________________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ____________________________________ | | |_____________________| | |____________________________________
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Mother: ELIZABETH WARHAM |
Eastwell St. Mary's Church-Monuments
The Monument to Sir Moyle Finch and his wife,Elizabeth, Countess
of Winchilsea at the V&A Museum, London. Originally from St.
Mary's Church, Eastwell
The tomb chest to Sir Thomas Moyle and Katherine, his wife, from
Eastwell Church
The supposed resting place of Richard Plantagenet, the natural
son of Richard III
The detailed wording from the side of the Richard Plantagenet
Tomb
The wording on the side of the tomb, now encrusted with lichen,
reads as follows:
REPUTED TO BE
THE TOMB OF
RICHARD
PLANTAGENET
22 DECEMBER, 1550
The tomb pictured above and the tomb chest pictured to the left
are now far from their Kent home at the Church of St. Mary in
Eastwell Park and are exhibits at the Victoria and Albert Museum
in London.
The tomb to Sir Moyle Finch (1551 - 1614) and his wife,
Elizabeth (1556 - 1634), who became Viscountess of Maidstone in
1623 and subsequently, Countess of Winchilsea in 1628.
Originally the monument had eight marble columns supporting a
canopy. The bases of those columns can still be seen on the
monument although they were removed in 1756, long before the
Church became unsafe. The monument was carved by Nicholas Stone
who was the most important English sculptor or the early 17th
century.
The other tomb chest, also in the Victoria and Albert Museum, is
in many respect the more interesting, not because of the size or
decoration but because of the person it was made for and the
related story. As it states under the picture on the top left,
it was made for Sir Thomas Moyle (d. 1560) and his wife
Katherine (d. after 1560) who was the Grandfather of Sir Moyle
Finch who is depicted on the tomb in the top picture. What is
particularly interesting is why Sir Thomas Moyle and his tomb
are linked to the rough stone tomb and the person underneath it
which still remains at Eastwell, against what would have been
the North Chancel wall.
I do not often quote from other books but in this case, the
story as told in Arthur Mee's, "Kent", tells the tale perfectly
and reads as follows:
"...Sir Thomas Moyle, building his great house here, was much
struck by a white bearded man his mates called Richard. There
was a mystery about him. In the rest hour, while the others
talked or threw dice, this old man would go apart and read a
book. Now there were very few working men who could read in
1545, and Sir Thomas on this fine morning did not rest till he
had won the confidence of the man and got his story from him.
Richard told Sir Thomas that he was brought up by a
schoolmaster. From time to time a gentleman came who paid for
his food and schooling and asked many questions to discover if
he was well cared for. One day when the boy was in his early
teens the gentleman said he was going to take Richard on a
visit. It must have been a very exciting journey, made on
horseback across 15th century England to an unknown goal. At
length they came to a vast camp all a-buzz with knights and
bowmen. The boy was brought to a tent, where he saw a stately
man in a rich suit of armour.
He put his hands on the boy's shoulders, and, gazing at him,
said: "Richard, I am your father, and if I prevail in tomorrow's
battle I will provide for you as befits your blood. But it may
be that I shall be defeated, killed; that I shall not see you
again."
The boy asked, stammering: "Sir, Father! Who are you?"
"I am King of England today," said the man; "but only Heaven
knows what I may be tomorrow, for the rebels are strong. If the
Earl of Richmond wins the day he will seek out Plantagenets and
crush them. Tell no one who you are unless I am victorious."
The next day a man came riding from the battle crying: The King
has lost! The reign of the Plantagenets was over. The Tudors had
begun. It was the end of the long civil wars. Each time the
crown had changed hands there had been wholesale murder among
all the boys and men related to the king just dead. So Richard
went in terror of rope or axe, poison or dagger. He obeyed his
father's bidding. Never did he breathe a word of his birth. He
described himself as a poor orphan.
He had been happy. He had been able to earn, by honest toil,
enough money to give him lodgings and bread; he had found much
consolation from reading; and he had gained truer friends than
princes usually have.
Sir Thomas Moyle, listening to this wonderful story, determined
that the last Plantagenet should not want in his old age. He had
a little house built for him in the park, and instructed his
steward to provide for it every day. Richard was able to spend
his last years in reading and in walking about the lanes of
Eastwell. He is lost in history, but he is in the register of
burials here, and a tomb, certainly earlier than his date, which
remains among the ruins is pointed out as his burial-place."
[end of quote]
Richard Plantagenet was the illegitimate son of Richard III and
after the Battle of Bosworth, fled back to Kent and worked on
the Eastwell Estate, supposedly as a carpenter although I have
seen another source which says he was a stone mason. I am not
sure why the comment should be made in the above quote that the
tomb "is earlier than his date" as the stone could well have
been reused from another source. This is particularly pertinent
because when the tomb of Sir Thomas Moyle was examined at the
Victoria and Albert Museum, that too was found to have been
constructed from stone that had previously been used elsewhere.
Anyway, it would be nice to believe the individual who might
have been the last of the Plantagenet line (or possibly a King
of England if the Battle of Bosworth had ended differently) lies
here peacefully in these beautiful surroundings. (This may, of
course, bit a little romantic! In the book, "The Royal Bastards
of England" [delicate title] by Wilson and Curteis, Richard III
is credited with managing to sire as many as seven bastard
children. It is beyond the scope of these pages of who might
have succeeded to what position as a result of Richard's little
dalliances!)
http://www.digiserve.com/peter/eastwell-sm2.htm
[401495]
Of Wye, Kent, England
_WALTER MOYLE _______+ | (.... - 1470) _JOHN MOYLE _________| | | | |_MARGARET LUCOMBE ___+ | _JOHN MOYLE _________| | (.... - 1530) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_ANNE DARCY _________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--THOMAS MOYLE Knt. of Eastwell | (1488 - 1560) | _____________________ | | | _NICHOLAS WARHAM ____| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_ELIZABETH WARHAM ___| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Margaret BERRY |
_WILLIAM I STROTHER of Kirknewton________+ | (1597 - 1667) _William II STROTHER "the immigrant"_| | (1630 - 1702) m 1651 | | |_________________________________________ | _Joseph STROTHER ____| | (1685 - 1766) | | | _Anthony III SAVAGE Esq. "the immigrant"_+ | | | (1605 - 1695) | |_Dorothy SAVAGE _____________________| | (1635 - 1716) m 1651 | | |_Alice STAFFORD _________________________+ | (1610 - ....) | |--Margaret STROTHER | (1730 - ....) | _(RESEARCH QUERY) BERRY _________________ | | | _James BERRY ________________________| | | (1670 - 1739) | | | |_________________________________________ | | |_Margaret BERRY _____| (1690 - 1734) | | _________________________________________ | | |_Grace POWELL _______________________| (1670 - 1734) | |_________________________________________
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