Henry Draycott

Henry Draycott (c. 1510–1572) was an English-born Crown official and judge in sixteenth-century Ireland, who held a number of senior Government offices, including Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland. Despite his apparent lack of legal qualifications, he had a successful highly career as a judge, becoming a Baron of the Court of Exchequer and Master of the Rolls in Ireland. He also became a substantial landowner in the Pale, whose principal estate was at Mornington, County Meath. His daughter Alice died in mysterious circumstances at Dublin Castle in 1576, allegedly a victim of deliberate poisoning.

Background

Draycott was a native of Denby in Derbyshire;[1] his family name probably derives from the nearby village of Draycott. Little is known of his parents or of his early life. Despite his later eminence as a judge, it is not clear when he was called to the Bar or indeed if he was a qualified barrister at all. He is first recorded in Ireland in 1544; his first official post was Treasurer of the Lordship of Wexford, and he received a lease of Crown lands in Wexford.

Administrator

Draycott rose quickly to a position of influence in the Irish administration, becoming Chief Remembrancer, a senior position in the Court of Exchequer. He was elected to the Irish House of Commons as member for Naas in 1560.[2] He was entrusted with a number of political missions to England, and was later a reliable supporter of the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir Henry Sidney; he was given the task of settling a controversy between the Earl of Ormond and the Earl of Desmond, and was involved in the settlement of Munster in 1567.

Draycott was granted substantial properties in Counties Meath and Louth. His main estate was at Mornington; he also owned the manor of Donnycarney, near Drogheda, and property in Dundalk. Like most English settlers in Ireland he was indifferent to the rights of the original landowners, and was willing to assist other members of his class in "finding" (often a euphemism for forgery) title to land; in particular John Hooker, when he was secretary to Sir Peter Carew, refers to the assistance Draycott gave to Carew in acquiring his Irish estates.[3]

Mornington, where Draycott had his principal estate.

Judicial career

Draycott was appointed a Baron of the Court of Exchequer (Ireland) in 1563 and Master of the Rolls in 1566. Although he gained a reputation for integrity, Elrington Ball queries his suitability for either office, since it is not clear if he had any legal qualifications.[4] However the Mastership of the Rolls was then more an administrative than a judicial office and Draycott was undoubtedly an efficient administrator; one of his principal tasks was to peruse, sort and classify the official records. Another objection to his appointment to high office was his chronic ill-health: in 1567 Sir Henry Sidney, the Lord Deputy of Ireland, described him as "a very sick and a weak man".[5] He was chosen as one of the lessees of the King's Inn in the same year.[6] He died in 1572.

Character

Despite his apparent lack of legal qualifications, Draycott has been praised as a judge who was noted for integrity, and as a man whose service to the Crown deserved praise. Less admirable was his greed for acquiring land, not always by the most scrupulous of means, and his willingness to help other settlers to acquire lands by similar transactions. Unlike most English settlers at this time he may have had Roman Catholic sympathies: though like all public officials after 1560 he was by necessity outwardly a Protestant his family within a few years of his death became and remained Roman Catholics.

Queen Elizabeth I had a personal regard for Draycott, and on his death wrote that she was sorry to have lost one whom she esteemed as a good and faithful servant, but trusted that he had exchanged this world for a better one.[7]

Descendants

Draycott was married and had at least three children: John, Alice and a second daughter whose first name is uncertain, and who married Christopher Plunkett, a younger son of the Baron of Dunsany. His widow, Mary, remarried Owen Moore, the Muster Master for Ireland: in 1577 Owen was granted wardship of his stepson John and the right to arrange his marriage.[8] John was knighted as Sir John Draycott: he married Anne Barnewall, daughter of Sir Christopher Barnewall, and had six children.

Death of Alice Draycott

Henry's daughter Alice died in mysterious circumstances after falling ill at a banquet in Dublin Castle in 1576. Rumour had it that she was poisoned accidentally by assassins acting on the orders of the Earl of Leicester, who had been aiming for Leicester's enemy the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex, who had drunk from the same cup as Alice, and also died. The autopsy on Leicester found no evidence of poisoning, and both Essex and Alice probably died of dysentery. Leicester's enemies habitually blamed the death of anyone he had a grudge against on him, but there appears to be no substance to any of these claims.[9]

Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex: he and Draycott's daughter Alice were rumoured to have been poisoned by the Earl of Leicester

Later generations

Draycott's last direct male descendant, Henry Draycott of Mornington, died in 1694 without lawful issue: this led to a notable lawsuit, Draycott v. Talbot[10] in which one Edward Draycott claimed, unsuccessfully, to be Henry's lawful son and heir.

References

  1. Ball, F. Elrington (2004). The judges in Ireland, 1221–1921. Clark, N.J.: Lawbook Exchange. p. 209. ISBN 1584774282.
  2. Ball, p. 210
  3. Tazon, Juan E. The Life and Times of Thomas Stukeley Ashgate Publishing 2003 p. 86
  4. Ball, p. 141
  5. Ball p. 141
  6. Kenny, Colum King's Inn and the Kingdom of Ireland Irish Academic Press p.57 Dublin 1992
  7. Ball, p. 144
  8. Fiants of Elizabeth I 15 September 1577
  9. Brooks E St. John The Death of Alice Draycott (1954) Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society Vol 13 No. 2 p. 179
  10. (1718) Brown's Parliamentary Cases Vol. 2 p. 92
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