Adam DE PESHALE
(-1315)
Anne
(-)
John DE EYTON of The Wildmoors
(Est 1290-)
Adam DE PESHALE of Horsley, Staffs.
(-1346)
Joan EYTON
(Abt 1316-Aft 1377)
Sir Hamon PESHALE, Knt.
(-Bef 1399)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Alicia DE HARLEY

2. Thomasina WASTNEYS

Sir Hamon PESHALE, Knt. 2

  • Born: Peshale Manor, Eccleshall, Staffordshire, England
  • Married (1): Abt 1375
  • Married (2): Bef 1387
  • Died: Bef Jun 1399

   Also called Hamo DE PESHALE. 1

  Research Notes:

21 Mar 1373, Westminster

Commission of oyer and terminer to Hugh, earl of Stafford, Roger Lestraunge of Knockyn, Nicholas Burnell, Hugh de Wrottesle, John Moubray, Thomas de Ingleby, Roger de Kirketon, William Tauk, John de la Pole, William de Chetwynde and John de Grendon, the younger, on complaint by William Trussell of Cublesdon that Adam de Peschale, Richard de Peschale, 'chivaler,' Hamo de Peshale, Thomas Grene of Brugge, Hugh Snell of Stafford, Robert de Merssh, Roger Paternoster, John de Drayton, Richard his son, Richard Pole of Shuffenhale, Nicholas Fililode, Hugh Mortymer, Roger Boulewas, John Smyth of Qualmpole and others, at Shuffenhale, co. Salop, drove away 3 horses, 4 oxen, 6 cows, and 200 sheep of his, worth 40 pounds, and carried away goods, assaulted his men and servants, wounded some and followed others thence to Hales and imprisoned them there, whereby his men and servants dared not stay in his service to till his lands.
Because he gives ½ mark, paid in the hanaper.

Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edw. III, vol. 15, p. 310

----------------------------

Hamon and his wife Alice were named in a deed of 1383, relating to the manors of Bold, Chorlecote, and Wilderhope.

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Family and Education

Younger bro. of Sir Richard Peshale of Chetwynd, Staffs. and of Sir Adam. m. (1) c.1375, Alice, da. and h. of Sir Robert Harley of Harley, Salop, by Joan, da. of Sir Robert Corbet of Moreton Corbet, 1da.; (2) bef. 1387, Thomasina (d. by 1405), da. and h. of Sir Thomas Wastneys of Colton, Staffs., wid. of Sir Nicholas Gresley of Drakelow, Derbys. Kntd. c.1387.

Biography

Hamon was overshadowed by his quarrelsome elder brothers and was frequently drawn into their disputes. Like Adam he was a retainer of Hugh, earl of Stafford, and he ‘et son compaignon’ (unnamed) were among the esquires mustered for one of the military expeditions in which the earl took part (possibly to Calais in 1373 or to Brittany two years later). In 1373 he joined in the raid on Sir William Trussell’s property at Shifnal, Shropshire, in furtherance of Adam’s territorial ambitions there, and four years later he took an active role in Adam’s quarrel with Sir Hugh Wrottesley, during which, arrayed for war and leading 60 similarly armed men, he pursued Sir Hugh’s supporters from Albrighton out of the shire to Wrottesley, all the while hooting and yelling ‘kill the Wrottesley robbers’. Hamon is not known to have performed any service for the Crown, but he was, nevertheless, knighted shortly after his only return to Parliament in 1386, and it was as Sir Hamon that in the following spring he enlisted in the force which put to sea under command of the admiral, Richard, earl of Arundel.

Peshale’s interests in land in Shropshire came through his marriage to Alice Harley, niece of Sir Roger Corbet, which probably took place in 1375 when the reversion of a moiety of the manor of Ashton (Herefordshire) was settled on them. In 1380 they encountered some difficulties when John Lee alleged that Alice was illegitimate, but Bishop Stretton of Coventry and Lichfield certified that this was not the case. Even so, the bulk of Alice’s inheritance remained in the possession of her mother and stepfather, John Darras, who outlived both her and her husband. Peshale acted as an executor for his wife’s other uncle, Sir Fulk Corbet, who died in 1382. His second wife was the heiress of the manors of Colton (Staffordshire), Osgathorpe (Leicestershire) and Seaton (Yorkshire), as well as of two manors and other property in Lincolnshire, which estates were, however, to descend in the family of her son, Sir Thomas Gresley. In addition, Peshale held land in Much Wenlock, Shropshire, and Trent, Staffordshire, although how he had acquired it is unclear.

Sir Hamon was still living at Easter 1396 but died before June 1399, by which date his daughter Elizabeth, wife of Henry Grendon, had inherited his first wife’s estates. After Grendon’s death Elizabeth married Richard Lacon. 3

  Marriage Information:

Hamon married Alicia DE HARLEY, daughter of Robert DE HARLEY "the Simple" and Johanna CORBET, about 1375. (Alicia DE HARLEY was born about 1357.)

  Marriage Information:

Hamon also married Thomasina WASTNEYS before 1387. (Thomasina WASTNEYS died by 1405.)

Sources


1 The Visitations of Shropshire in the Year 1623, Lacon, p. 305.

2 Shropshire Genealogies, Joseph Morris, (10 volumes), vol. 2 p. 956, vol. 6 p. 2944.

3 The History of Parliament: British Political, Social & Local History, (Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993), Hamon Peshale of Salop.


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