Saddlers Wills

[posted by Gavin Robinson, 2:30 pm, 10 August 2008]

Way back in October 2006 (when this blog was all shiny and new) I wrote about female saddlers in London during the English Civil War. My work on saddlers and harness makers (male as well as female) is quite open-ended. I don’t know exactly where I’m going with it, so I’m just tying to find out as much as I can about these individuals and their families when I get the chance. A while ago I searched the records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury for wills of people I was interested in. These are available through DocumentsOnline, but I found it cheaper to print out copies while I was at the PRO (20p per sheet as opposed to £3.50 per will). I didn’t find a will for everyone (some might have had their wills proved in other courts) but I came up with a lot of hits. Recently I finally got round to transcribing them (which was good palaeography practice) and publishing the transcripts on Your Archives.

Although wills tend to come in a standard form, that structure can contain a lot of variety. They can tell us about people’s wealth, business activities, and families, and contain all kinds of incidental details which shed some light on their lives. Below is a selection of some of the more interesting things I found, with links to the full transcripts.

First of all, another possible female saddler. Sarah Rawlinson was the widow of Nathaniel Rawlinson, who had some huge contracts to supply the New Model Army. I haven’t found a will for him yet, but Sarah’s will says that he left her all his estate. So far I don’t know whether she carried on running the business.

Most saddlers seem to have had good relationships with their wives. It’s not unusual for a testator to name his wife as sole executrix and leave her the residue of his estate. Not William Deacon. He instructed his executors to make sure that his wife didn’t embezzle anything from his estate and to deny her any legacies other than her customary widow’s third if she didn’t co-operate!

William Chevall left only one shilling to his niece, saying that he would have left her more if she hadn’t got married without his permission!

Thomas Harrison, who lived in the parish of St Botolph’s Aldgate, wasn’t a major player in supplying armies with saddles during the First Civil War, but he was very wealthy. His will shows that in 1650 he had shares in two ships, and was due £700 for one of them. He had loaned £300 to parliament to support the war effort, and left £100 towards his own funeral expenses. He also seems to have had a feckless son-in-law. This is the only saddler’s will I’ve come across which actually mentions saddles.

The Pease family were well known in the saddlery trade. William senior and William junior both became master of the London Saddlers Company. They also controlled a property empire in London and the surrounding counties, so their saddlery business might not even have been their largest source of income. William senior had nine children at the time he made his will, and divided his freehold, copiehold, and leasehold lands between his daughters as well as his sons. Many testators were confident of their own salvation, but William junior was more confident than most, expecting “a crowne of glory in the Kingdome of Heaven amongst the elect”.

John Munnings, one of the biggest harness makers, was unusual in that he didn’t bother commending his soul to god at the start of his will. He divided most of his estate, including leases on various property, between his wife and daughter.

Richard Beighton’s will reveals that he was born in Warwickshire, something which would be almost impossible to find out from other sources. He also held lands in Middlesex and Hertfordshire, and had a cousin called Alice Cooper.

Nicholas Collard wasn’t a saddler but his complete will happened to be on the same page as one that I was interested in so I transcribed it anyway. He died in debt and his executors refused to carry out their duties, so administration was granted to his chief creditor instead. (I’m quite pleased with myself for understanding enough Latin to work that bit out.)

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