George Beeston

Sir George Beeston or Beston (circa 1520-13 September 1601) was an English landowner, courtier, soldier and sailor. He was the captain of the Dreadnought in 1588, Member of Parliament for Cheshire in 1589 and Ranger of Delamere Forest.[1]

Tomb of Sir George in the chancel of St Boniface's Church, Bunbury

Early life

George Beeston was the son of John Beeston (died 1542) and Katherine Calverley, a daughter of Sir George Calverley of the Lea, Cheshire.

According to George Ormerod in his History of Cheshire (1819), his memorial in Bunbury Church states his age as 102 but he was legally declared on an inquisition post mortem to be only 22 years old when he succeeded to his father's estates in 1542,[1] indicating a likely birth year of 1520 and an age of 80 or 81 at death.

Soldier and sailor

He was recorded as one of the captains ordered 'to keep the Narrow Seas' in 1562, and in charge of the land defences at Gravesend, Kent, in about 1576.[1]

For his part in the defeat of the Spanish Armada, Beeston was knighted on the deck of the Ark Royal by Lord Effingham on 26 July 1588.[2]

Beeston had already fought in France and in Scotland. Some of his biography is carved in Latin on his tomb at St Boniface's Church, Bunbury. This is a translation;

"Here lies buried George Beeston, knight, a promoter of valour and truth. He having been brought up from his youth in the arts of war was chosen one of his company of pensioners by the invincible King Henry VIII when he besieged Boulogne, he merited the same under Edward VI in the battle against the Scots at Musselburgh. Afterwards under the same King, under Mary, and under Elizabeth, in the naval engagements as captain or vice-captain of the fleet, by whom, after that most mighty Spanish fleet of 1588, had been vanquished, he was honoured with the order of knighthood; and now, his years pressing heavily on him, when he had admirably approved his integrity to princes, and his bravery to his adversaries, acceptable to God, and dear to good men, and long expecting Christ, in the year 1601 he fell asleep in Him, so that he may rise again in Him with joy.

And together with him rests a most beloved wife, Alice, daughter of (Thomas) Davenport of Henbury, esquire, a matron most holy, chaste, and liberal to the poor, who, when she had lived in matrimony 66 years, and had borne to her husband three sons, John, Hugh, and Hugh, and as many daughters, Ann, Jane, and Dorothy, passed into the heavenly country in the year 1591 with Christ for ever to live.
The dutifulness of their son Hugh Beeston, esquire, the younger, Receiver General of all the revenues of the Crown as well as in the county palatine of Chester as in the counties of North Wales, set up this monument to parents most excellent and beloved.

Hugh Beeston, knight, son of George Beeston, knight, mindful of mortality, and in certain hope of rising again in Christ, placed this monument to his parents, himself, and George Beeston an only son, of the same knightly order, a youth, alas! snatched away by a too early death. Hugh, the father, died in the year of our salvation, 1627, but George, the son, 1611.[3]

Edinburgh

The year after the victory against the Spanish armada, Beeston took a fleet to Scotland for an unknown purpose, and an unfortunate incident embarrassed James VI of Scotland. On 1 June 1589 the veteran sailor arrived in the Forth on the Vanguard followed by Edward Croft in the Tiger with the Achates. On 5 June some of the English crewmen came ashore into Edinburgh to shop and sightsee. Three got in fight in a tavern, one was stabbed, and then as they returned to Leith and their ship they were attacked by a group of Spanish sailors, and one man, a trumpet officer, was killed. Beeston and the English ambassador William Ashby had an audience with James VI on 7 June at the Palace of Holyroodhouse seeking an enquiry and justice. Ashby and Thomas Fowler wrote that the king treated the sailors honourably; James VI gave Beeston a locket set with diamonds and 100 gold crowns to his captains.[4] James also requested that Edinburgh town council give him, his three captains, and the English ambassadors an "honest banquet" in Nicol Edward's house.[5]

He sailed with the ebb tide on 15 June, with James's letter for Elizabeth.[6]

Later life

Beeston was the owner of the manor of Beeston and Beeston Castle.[7] Elizabeth granted him lands in Ireland near Kilmallock conjointly with his cousin Lawrence or Lancelot Bostock.[8]

He died in 1601.

On 19 February 1645 his former residence Beeston Hall was burnt down by the order of Prince Rupert to prevent it being garrisoned.

Family

George Beeston married firstly Alice Davenport (d. 1591). Their children included;

  • Hugh Beeston, married Thomasin Coplestone. Secondly in 1579 Margaret Ireland widow of John Aston, possibly thirdly Mary Chetwode. The children of Hugh and Thomasin included George and John. This George Beeston married Eleanor Cave and died while hunting with King James after a fall from his horse. Eleanor, his widow, married Thomas Roe.[9] John Beeston married Prudence Bulmer, a daughter of Bevis Bulmer.[10]
  • Hugh Beeston, younger, married Margaret Downes (d. 1615), widow of Philip Worth
  • Jane Beeston, married (1) Geffrey Shakerley (2) Christopher Holford.
  • Dorothy Beeston, married John Coplestone.

He married secondly Margaret Ireland (a relation of his son's second wife), they had no children. He married thirdly Mary Chetwode, they had no children. However, it has been suggested that Mary Chetwode was the third wife of his son Hugh Beeston, elder.[11]

References

  1. 'BEESTON, Sir George (c.1520-1601), of Beeston, Cheshire' in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler (London: 1981).
  2. J. Paul Rylands and F. C. Beazley, 'The Monuments of Bunbury Church, part 2', Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, vol. 70 (1918), p. 78.
  3. J. Paul Rylands and F. C. Beazley, 'The Monuments of Bunbury Church, part 2', Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, vol. 70 (1918), pp. 74-6.
  4. Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 22-3.
  5. John Marwick, Extracts from the Burgh Records of Edinburgh: 1573-1589 (Edinburgh, 1882), p. 544.
  6. Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 98-9, 106, Ashby's letter of 3 June 1589 describing the arrival is in British Library Cotton Caligula D I/439, and his letter describing the assault in Cotton Caligula D II/374.
  7. Thomas Harwood, Survey of Staffordshire (Westminster, 1820), p. 424.
  8. BOSTOCK, Lancelot (bef.1533-c.88), of Flint and London,The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, (London, 1981).
  9. George Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 3 (London, 1819) p. 446.
  10. Joseph Lemuel Chester, Allegations for Marriage Licences Issued by the Bishop of London, vol. 1 (London, 1887), p. 228.
  11. J. Paul Rylands and F. C. Beazley, 'The Monuments of Bunbury Church, part 2', Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, vol. 70 (1918), p. 79.
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