Sheriff Hutton Church

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The Church of St Helen and the Holy Cross and the Chapel of St Nicholas, the heart of the Neville lands, and place of the alabaster effigy of the young son of Richard III

 

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This page accompanies the History of Sheriff Hutton to 1500.

 

Directions

Follow the A64 from York to Malton. You can either take the minor road which passes through Flaxton and on to Sheriff Hutton, or, if you’re heading south from Malton, the minor road that passes through Welburn and Bulmer.

If you drive through Bulmer, you pass through the lands of Bulmer and Stittenham, adjacent settlements to the Sheriff Hutton lands, which were also recorded in the Domesday Book. The ancient house of Bulmer were probably Saxon Thanes and might have been of Scandinavian origin. At the time of King Edward the Confessor, Ligulf was Lord of Bulmer. The Anglo-Saxon word bulemaer means ‘famous bull’. Traditionally the Bulmer family were descendants of Norsemen and reputed in sagas to have descended from Odin.

These were all lands within the Hundred of Bulford which comprised a scattering of settlements to the north of York.

As you drive into Sheriff Hutton you will see the ruins of the old castle which is now in private hands.

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You might find this information sign in the middle of the village.

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Sheriff Hutton Castle

The Castle is in private hands, but you can walk around the boundary of the castle along a footpath. This was the castle built by John Neville from 1382 after he had been granted licence to crenellate. He therefore built this large castle, similar in design to Bolton Castle in Wensleydale, with tall corner towers and high domestic buildings around a courtyard. The new castle became the heade and capitall residence of his heirs and later the dwelling of many key players in the national story.

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Victorian Plan Sheriff Hutton Castle

This second castle of Sheriff Hutton, started by John Neville in 1382 was completed by Ralph Neville in 1398. In that year there was an appointment by Ralph Nevill, Earl of Westmorland, Lord Nevill, and Joan, his wife, of John Convers and John de Seton, as their attorneys to receive seisin of the manor and castle of Sheriff Hutton.

This was one of the three great castles and seats of the House Neville, along with Raby Castle near Barnard Castle and Middleham Castle in Wensleydale.

The Nevilles were the powerful noble family of Yorkshire, with their rivals, the Percys. They wielded increasing power as the descendants of Edward III started to form into two camps of York and Lancaster. The family split into separate lines in 1440 and Raby Castle returned to the branch of the family which was strictly the senior. However it was Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury and his son Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, the Kingmaker who became the most influential players during the Wars of the Roses, from their seat which was focused on Middleham and Sheriff Hutton.

The Young Yorkist Richard of Gloucester was brought up by the Nevilles, mainly at Middleham, but he would have also come to Sheriff Hutton and in 1473 he was appointed by his brother, the Yorkist Edward IV, as Lord Lieutenant of the North of England, from his base in these Neville lands.

In March 1483 Edward IV fell ill on a fishing expedition and died. In a power struggle with the family of Edward’s widow, the Woodvilles, Richard took control of the young new king, Edward V, as Protector, appointed by his brother. Before long Richard’s nephews, Edward and his brother, the princes in the tower, disappeared and Richard of Gloucester became King as Richard III. Whether he was a villein or a heroic King will depend on your reading of the history.

Richard III sent his niece, Elizabeth of York, sister of the brothers in the tower, and other prominent members of the royal household, to Sheriff Hutton. Elizabeth was believed to have taken walks at the Neville Oak, a prominent tree in the deer park, within sight of the castle.

In 1484 Richard III established a royal household at Sheriff Hutton for the young Edward Plantagenet, 17th Earl of Warwick, son of the wine-drowned George, Duke of Clarence and John, Earl of Lincoln. Although Richard himself preferred to live in Middleham, in 1484 he made the castle at Sheriff Hutton one of the two centres that housed the Council of the North. The other was at Sandal, another property of the House of York. This Council was the administrative structure that Richard established to govern the north following his accession as King of England. As an administrative entity, it survived into the seventeenth century.

The historian P M Kendall described Sheriff Hutton Castle as a stone chalice holding the royal blood of the house of York.

By 1485 Richard III was dead, killed at Bosworth, the Crown seized by the Tudor dynasty.

 

Sheriff Hutton Church

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The Church of St Helen and the Holy Cross is at the end of the road which heads east from the castle.

The Sheriff Hutton lands were at the edge of the royal forest of Galtres. Bertram de Bulmer built the first castle in the village during the reign of King Stephen, in 1140. The remains of the original castle, with ancient monument status, are still visible in the south of the churchyard. The earthworks suggest that the castle was built at a time of technical transition from the motte and bailey design to the keep and bailey structure.

It was when Bertram built the first castle that the village adopted its new name. Hutton stems from the Old English hoh, a projecting piece of land, and tun, a farmstead. The prefix Sheriff originates in the association with the Bulmer family, Bertram de Bulmer being sheriff of York in 1115.

The Norman Church was built in or about 1100. It comprised a tower, a nave and the first half of the chancel or choir. The earliest recorded reference to the existence of a church was a gift to St Mary’s Abbey York by Sir Nigel Fossard, who died in 1120, of the Church of St Helen and the Holy Cross. There is a small window above the west door that may date from before 1100. The Norman building may have re-used blocks from York's Roman walls.

The twelfth century church at Sheriff Hutton was a small aisleless building with a western tower. The first alteration appears to have been the rebuilding of the chancel in the first half of the thirteenth century.

Ranulph de Neville (18 October 1262 to 18 April 1331), the first Lord Neville married Euphemia de Clavering, and they had fourteen children. Their eldest son, Robert Neville (c1297 to 1319), the Peacock of the North, died before Ranulph, so his second son Ralph Neville, 2nd Baron Neville (c 1291 to 5 August 1367) succeeded to the inheritance.

Ranulph later married Margery de Thwenge, daughter of John de Thwenge and Joan de Mauley.

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The tomb of Sir Edmund Thweng, who died at the Stirling, though not the famous Battle of Stirling Bridge against William Wallace of 1297, in the Anglo-Scottish Wars in 1344, lies in Sheriff Hutton’s Parish Church. He was born in about 1280 in Cornborough, near Sheriff Hutton, and was Margery’s brother. He married Isabel Constable and they had a son, Marmeduke de Thweng. Sir Edmund de Thwenge of Cornburgh died on 15 October 1344 and was buried at Sheriff Hutton, where his effigy in mail armour still lies in the North Chapel.

Ralph’s wife, Alice Neville had the Neville Chancery Chapel built in the parish Church at Sheriff Hutton to say mass for deceased members of her family, and assigned le Frith close and other lands for its support.

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Victorian Plan of the Church at Sheriff Hutton

William Farnedale of Shyrefhoton died on or about 23 February 1397, leaving his will.

In the name of God Amen. I, William Farnedale, on 23 February 1398, in good memory, make my testament in this manner. Firstly, I bequeath my soul to God and the Blessed Mary and all the Saints, and my body to be buried in the Churchyard at Schyrefhoton. Item, I bequeath as mortuary payment, the best animal I have. I bequeath to be burned around my body, as candles, 8lbs of wax. Item, I bequeath to the High Altar for sins forgiven, 4s. Item, I bequeath to a Chaplain to celebrate divine services for my soul in the Parish Church of Schyrefhoton for a whole year, 100s. Item, I bequeath to the fabric of St Peter’s York, 6s 8d. Item, I bequeath to Sir John Ferriby, Robert Gyllyng and William Barneby, 6s 8d each (20s). I bequeath to the Church of Schirefhoton for putting lead on the south roof, 20s. Item, I bequeath to each Canon of the Monastery of Marton 12d. I bequeath to every Chaplain ministering on the day of my funeral, 6d. Item, I bequeath to my wife Juliana, 4li and to my son Richard, 4li. Item, I bequeath to every poor person on the day of my burial 1d. Item, I bequeath to my son Richard my small sword with all my knives. Item, I bequeath to my daughter Helen, two cows. Item, I bequeath to my daughter, Agnes 2 bullocks and two plough beasts. Item, I bequeath to Richard Batlay 2 bullocks, Item, I bequeath to Margaret Batlay 2 bullocks and 2 plough beasts. I bequeath the rest of my goods to my wife Juliana, my son Richard and my daughter Helen. And I appoint Sir John Alwent, Rector of the Parish Church of Midelham, Juliana Farndale, Richard Farndale and William Huby, my executors. In witness whereof I have set my seal. Witnesses: Sir Robert de Hoton, Prior of Marton and Sir John de Park, Chaplain and many others, date as above.

William Farndale was clearly a wealthy man by his death. He was able to fund a year of prayers for his soul by paying 100s. He gave 6s to St Peter’s in York and 20s for re-leading the south roof of the church at Sheriff Hutton. He was able to donate 1d to every poor person in the parish on the day he died. He gave his sword and knives to his soldier son, Richard Farendale of Sherifhoton. He gave two cows to Helen and 2 bullocks and two plough beasts to Agnes. He gave other animals to Richard and Margaret Batlay. The residue of this estate went to his wife, Juliana and to Richard.

This was the time when the focus of the Nevilles was on building their new castle between 1382 and 1398.

In 1473, Richard of Gloucester, future Richard III, and his wife Anne Neville had a child, Edward, though he was sickly and stayed within the protection of Middleham Castle. After Richard became King he visited York in 1483 and held a ceremony of investiture for his son, Edward, Prince of Wales, his heir.

The young Edward, Earl of Warwick, Pince of Wales, sometimes called Edward of Middleham, the son of Richard III and Lady Ann Neville died aged 11 at Middleham in 1484. Richard and Anne met the young boy’s body at Sheriff Hutton. His alabaster tomb effigy is in the Neville Chantry Chapel of the Parish Church of St Helen and the Holy Cross at Sheriff Hutton, though he is not buried there.

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The memorial is a cenotaph, not a tomb, as the body was buried elsewhere at an unknown place. The present position of the cenotaph in the north east corner of the church is not where it was intended to stand. From past records, it would seem that the monument has had several sites within the church. Made of alabaster, it has suffered over the years and during the twentieth century, it was twice restored at the Ricardian Society’s expense.

Edward’s death created a power vacuum. There was no heir.

 

Sheriff Hutton Park

About a kilometre to the southeast of the church is Sheriff Hutton Park, which has belonged to the manor since 1335, when licence was granted Ralph de Nevill to impark his woods of Sheriff Hutton and make a deer-leap therein. It was in the park that Elizabeth of York, sister of the two young princes in the tower, one day to be wife to the new Tudor King Henry VII, sometimes wandered beneath the Neville oak.

In 1615 Sir Thomas Ingram was appointed to the offices of ranger and keeper of the Sheriff Hutton park. Sheriff Hutton Park itself, south of the castle, in the Forest of Galtres, was granted seven years later to Arthur Ingram, for life, with remainder to his elder son the younger Sir Arthur Ingram, keeper of the castle and steward of the honour of Sheriff Hutton from 1627. In 1621 he built the New Lodge there as his country residence, his main house being Temple Newsom near Leeds

Sir Arthur Ingram (c1565 to 1642) was an English investor, landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1610 and 1642. He was influential and his financial schemes kept James I and Charles I independent of Parliament and he grew rich. He has been celebrated for his financial skill and ruthless self-interest and characterized as a rapacious, plausible swindler who ruined many during a long and successful criminal career.

In 1637 the hall went to Arthur’s third son Sir Thomas Ingram (1614 to 1672), a royalist in the Civil War, who removed large quantities of stone from Sheriff Hutton castle to build stables and a brewhouse, the Rangers House. Thus began the final decline of the castle.

In 1649 the deer and timber contained in the park at Sheriff Hutton were valued at a very high price. At that date there were two dwelling-places within its enclosure. One of these was the Great Lodge, a brick messuage with large and handsome rooms, chapel, gallery and walled court and garden wherein are severall litle Mounts with Statues thereon placed.

Originally the house in Sheriff Hutton Park was Jacobean in its architecture. This house still survives but about one foot inside the present Queen Anne exterior built in 1732.

The Ingram family, by way of various marriages, maintained lordship of the park until 1904, when it passed to the Honourable Edward Frederick Lindley Wood.

The ruins of the castle are quadrangular, with a large open court in the centre, flanked with high square towers. A considerable part of the warder's tower, over the eastern gateway, still remains.

 

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There is also a chronology of Sheriff Hutton, with source material.