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Roger (Dutton) Cheadle (abt. 1268 - 1321)

Roger Cheadle [uncertain] formerly Dutton aka de Chedlee
Born about in Cheadle, Cheshire, Englandmap
Ancestors ancestors
Son of and [mother unknown]
Husband of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 53 in Cheadle, Cheshire, Englandmap
Problems/Questions
Profile last modified | Created 16 Aug 2013
This page has been accessed 5,348 times.

Biography

European Aristocracy
Roger Dutton was a member of the aristocracy in England.

Roger de Chedlee[1] alias Chedle[2]

Roger married twice, to:

  1. Joan,[2] with whom he had:
    1. Clemence, who was married to:
    2. Agnes, who was married to Richard de Bulkelegh,[2] alias Bulkele, Bulkylegh, before 18 July, 1326;[1]
  2. Maud.[1] [2]

Roger's wife, Maud, survived him, dying before 18 July, 1326.[1]

Roger, brother Geoffrey, and their mother, recorded as Margaret, appear on record in 1296.

"Toft, William de, against Geoffrey, son of Geoffrey de Cheadle, that he warrant to him a third of 1 Is. 8d. rent in Appelton, and the rent of a third of two swine at mast-time, &c, which Margaret, who was the wife of Geoffrey de Chedle, claimed in dower. [23, 24 Edw. I.pi. 16.]" [3]
"Cheadle, Margaret, who was the wife of Geoffrey de, against Margery, who was the wife of Richard de Kynerdale, guardian of the lands and heir of Richard de Kynerdale. Dower of 2 messuages, 80 acres of land, and 100 acres of wood in Cheadle. The said Margery Touches to warranty Roger, son and heir of Geoffrey de-Chedle. [23, 24 Edw. 1. m. 3, 6, 8.]" [4]

While the William Toft action is against Geoffrey (23,24 Edw. I.), it then appears that Geoffrey has died, by the following year (24,25 Edw. I.), with brother Roger as his heir.

"Cheadle, Margery, who was the wife of Geoffrey de, against Hamond de Dokenfeld and Sibil, his wife. Dower of one messuage, 40 acres of land, 20 acres of wood, and 40 acres of moor and heath in Cheadle. The said Hamond and Sibil vouch to warranty Sibyl, daughter of Richard de Kinerdale, who vouches to warranty Roger, brother and heir of Geoffrey Chedle, son of Geoffrey de Chedle. [24, 25 Edw. 1. m. 18.]" [5]

On 18 July, 20 Edward II [1326], a writ of certiorari was issued to the bailiffs of Maclesfeld, on the complaint of William de Baggeleye alias de Bagylegh and his wife Clemence, and Richard de Bulkele alias de Bulkylegh and his wife Agnes, that the bailiffs had removed them from the manor of Chedle, which they entered after the death of Maud, late the wife of Roger de Chedlee, because Maud had held the manor for life of the inheritance of Clemence and Agnes. An inquisition was then taken at Chester on the Wednesday after St Laurence, which found that the manor of Chedlee was held of the king in chief by service of a knight's fee and was of the inheritance of the said Clemence and Agnes, who are of full age, and it had been held by Maud for her life only, and the bailiff had seized the manor into the king's hand because of the death of the said Roger who held it of the king and by whose assignment Maud held it.[1]

"Historically Hulme Hall lay within the township of Cheadle Moseley, one of two townships into which the ancient manor of Cheadle was divided. In or shortly before 1321 Sir Roger de Chedle, lord of the manor, died leaving no male heirs. The manor passed to his wife but after her death in 1326 was divided between their two daughters. The younger, Agnes, was married to Richard de Bulkelegh. Their share, known as Cheadle Bulkeley, descended through the Bulkeley family until the 18th century when it was sold off to pay the family’s debts. The elder daughter, Clemence, was married to William de Bagylegh. In the mid-17th century this second share of the manor was acquired by the Mosley family whose tenure, though brief, gave it the name of Cheadle Moseley (Arrowsmith 1997, 36)."[6]

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 J E E S Sharp and A E Stamp, MA, ed., Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem and other Analogous Documents Preserved in the Public Record Office. Vol VI. Edward II, (Hereford: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1910), 484. e-Book Internet Archive (https://archive.org/details/cu31924099427845/page/484/mode/1up : accessed 13 October, 2022). Abstract No 760. Maud, Late the Wife of Roger de Chedlee. [C. Edw. II. File 104. (2)].
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Major-General The Hon G Wrottesley, Pedigrees from the Plea Rolls Collected from the Pleadings in the Various Courts of Law AD 1200 to 1500 from the Original Rolls, ed. (1905), 119, e-book Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/pedigreesfromple00wrotrich#page/119/mode/2up accessed 10 November, 2022. [Chester Plea Roll. No. 72. 42—43 E. 3. m. 1.]
  3. Reports from Commissioners, Volume 27, p 45. [1]
  4. Peter Turner, comp, "Appendix 4. Welsh Records. Calendar of Deeds, Inquisitions, and Writs of Dower, Enrolled on the Plea Rolls of the County of Chester; Henry III and Edward I", The Twenty-Sixth Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records [18 February 1865], (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1865), 43, e-book HathiTrust https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015039450500?urlappend=%3Bseq=359%3Bownerid=34524627-358 : accessed 12 October, 2022).
  5. Reports from Commissioners, Volume 27, p 47. [2]
  6. This report presents the results of an archaeological building survey of Hulme Hall, Cheadle Hulme, Stockport, carried out by the University of Manchester Archaeological Unit and commissioned by NPS Property Consultants Ltd on behalf of Stockport MBC. interactive.stockport.gov.uk/edrms/onlinemvm/getimage.asp?DocumentNumber=192622 (broken link not on archive.org 18 December 2023)




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Comments: 6

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Agnes and Clemence were daughters of Roger Dutton of Cheadle and his first wife, Joan. Matilda (Maud) was his second wife.

First proof: DCH/E/275 from discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk Second proof: Pedigrees, p. 119 https://archive.org/details/pedigreesfromple00wrotrich/page/118/mode/2up?view=theater

posted by Karen Cornwell
Is father of Roger Dutton/Cheadle (take your pick of surnames) an Edward Dutton/Cheadle 1240 - 1315 m unknown (possibly Isabella Aston 1242 - c1296) and his father Geoffrey Dutton (no Cheadle) 1207 - 1296 m Margaret Cheadle (no Dutton) 1212 - 1286 then followed by Geoffrey Dutton 1189 - 1249 m Agnes Massey 1188 - 28.10.1255?

I suppose what I am asking is there a generation missing or possibly an Edward that should be Geoffrey?

posted by Malc Rowlands
edited by Malc Rowlands
Sorry, simple question here... how do his names work? Is he a Dutton of Cheadle?
posted by Isaac Taylor
Please review death place (and birth place) as one or both may be non-contemporary-- or just wrong. Stockport is in Manchester, apparently? Cheshire is not.
posted by Isaac Taylor
Hi Isaace

According to Vision of Britain "Stockport.-- parl. and mun. bor., manufacturing town, par., and township, Cheshire."

Although, apparently the people who live there aren't sure whether they live in Cheshire or not, they needed to google it during the Corona virus lockdowns

https://www.cheshire-live.co.uk/news/chester-cheshire-news/coronavirus-lockdown-stockport-cheshire-greater-18692237

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