Sir Robert Ogle, Kt., MP

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Robert Ogle, Kt., MP

Also Known As: "Robert V Ogle", "Sir Robert Ogle High Sheriff"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ogle Castle, Whalton, Northumberland, England
Death: August 12, 1436 (56)
Bothal Redesdale, Northumberland, England
Place of Burial: Hexham, Northumberland, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Robert Ogle, of Ogle & Bothal and Joan Ogle
Husband of Matilda Ogle
Father of Margaret Harbottle; Elizabeth ‘Anne’ Middleton; Constance Mitford; Lady Agnes Whitfield; Robert Ogle, 1st Baron Ogle and 5 others
Brother of Joan de Ogle; Margery de Ogle and Sir John Bertram, MP (Ogle)

Occupation: Warden of Roxborough Castle, Knight
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Sir Robert Ogle, Kt., MP

NOTE: While the History of Parliament biography below assigns him 3 sons and 4 daughters (with a footnote which demonstrates that the pedigree is incomplete), The Complete Peerage and Burke's Extinct Peerage (1881) give him 4 named daughters and 4 unnamed ones. Although the additional daughters are shown only in other family's pedigrees, there is no good reason to doubt them.

---

Family and Education

  • b. c.1370, 1st son of Sir Robert Ogle (1353-1409) of Ogle by Joan (c.1358-12 Oct. 1416), 3rd daughter and coheir of Sir Alan Heton† (d. Mar. 1388) of Ingram; brother of John Bertram*.
  • m. 21 May 1399, Maud (d. aft. 1454), daughter of Sir Thomas Gray*, 3 sons 4 daughters
  • Knighted by 30 May 1410.[1]

Offices Held

  • Constable of Norham castle and steward, sheriff, escheator and chief justice of the Bishop of Durham’s liberty of Norhamshire and Islandshire, Northumb. 2 Feb. 1403-d.;
  • justice of special assize, Norhamshire and Islandshire c.1407, 1410.[2]
  • Justice of the peace for Norhamshire and Islandshire c.1408, Northumb. 12 Feb. 1422-d.;
  • palatinate of Durham c.1433.[3]
  • Envoy to Scotland on various diplomatic missions 30 May 1410, 19 July 1413, 6 Aug. 1415, 28 Mar. 1424, 25 Oct. 1429, 4 Mar., 10 May 1434.[4]
  • Commissioner of array, Northumberland July 1410, Mar. 1427, Oct. 1429, Mar. 1430, July 1434;
  • Commissioner to raise a royal loan July 1426, May 1428;
  • Commissioner to hear a case for Bp. Langley of Durham Dec. 1430.[5]
  • Sheriff, Northumberland 10 Nov. 1417-4 Nov. 1418.
  • Constable of Wark castle, Northumb. by 1419,
  • Constable of Berwick-upon-Tweed by 11 Nov. 1423-4 Apr. 1426,
  • Constable of Roxburgh 9 July 1425-d.[6]
  • Sheriff, the Archbishop of York’s liberty of Hexhamshire, Northumb. by 7 Dec. 1435.[7]

Biography

The Ogles were an old and distinguished Northumbrian family, able to trace their ancestry back to the reign of Henry II, if not earlier. Sir Robert Ogle the elder played a leading part in affairs on the Scottish border, and in 1393 he became constable of Roxburgh castle.

Not surprisingly, then, he was able to arrange an extremely advantageous marriage for his eldest son, Robert, the subject of this biography, who, in May 1399, became the husband of Sir Thomas Gray’s daughter, Maud. Through her mother, Joan, a daughter of John, Lord Mowbray (d. bef. 1368), and sister of Thomas Mowbray, duke of Norfolk (d.1399), Maud was related to several members of the English baronage, while her brother, William Gray, was destined to become bishop of London in 1426, and later, in 1431, of Lincoln. At the time of their marriage, the young couple received from Sir Thomas an estate in Lowick.

Further opportunities for advancement came Robert’s way a few months later, on the triumphant return from exile of Henry of Bolingbroke, who mounted the throne on 30 Sept. 1399, and promptly rewarded him with an annuity of 20 marks, payable for life ‘for good and praiseworthy service’. Robert was indeed fortunate to stand well with the King, because after he fell into the hands of the Scots a few months later, Henry IV gave him 100 marks towards the cost of his ransom.8 Bishop Skirlaw of Durham also sought to retain Robert’s services; and when, in 1403, the five principal offices of his liberty of Norhamshire and Islandshire (which were customarily held in plurality by a prominent local figure) fell vacant, he offered him the appointment. Robert was confirmed in office by Skirlaw’s successor, Thomas Langley, three years later, by which time his father, Sir Robert, was growing old and wished to set his affairs in order.

From his aged mother, Ellen Bertram (d.1403), Sir Robert had recently inherited a life interest in the manor and castle of Bothal. First the reversion and then the life interest itself were settled upon his second son, John, to whom he paid an annual rent of £200 for use of the property, until, in 1409, the young man himself took up residence there. John, who had already adopted the name of Bertram, was clearly his father’s favourite, for he, rather than Robert, was chosen to execute the elderly knight’s will. Another brother, named Alexander, had already been promised land and tenements in Ingram, Angrave and Tynemouth, but he died young without issue. Although Robert now stood to inherit Alexander’s share, along with all the rest of the family estates, comprising the manors and castles of Ogle, Hepple, Newstead, Sewingshields, Flotterton and North Middleton, the manors of Ellingham, Saltwick, Nedderton, Larbottle and Shilvington, and other holdings in over 30 Northumbrian villages, he still bitterly resented the loss of Bothal, which he determined to seize for himself at the first opportunity.[9]

Sir Robert died on 31 Oct. 1409, and although he had wished to be buried in a splendid and costly tomb at Whalton, an outbreak of plague made necessary his immediate interment at Hexham. Robert had, no doubt, already begun mustering a private army (which was said to number over 200 strong and to include a contingent of Scots), for within a matter of hours, before the funeral had taken place, he was on the march to Bothal. Despite protests from two j.p.s, Sampson Hardyng* and Sir John Widdrington*, he proceeded to invest the castle, to evict his brother, to make off with goods worth an estimated £200 and to destroy other property and crops valued at the same amount. Bertram’s strongly worded protest to the Parliament of 1410 elicited a prompt response, which led to the restoration of the castle and his brother’s appearance, under heavy sureties, before the royal council.

Even so, Robert was far too powerful a figure to suffer disgrace for long. Not only did he gain custody of his inheritance as soon as an assignment of dower had been made to his widowed mother, but he also obtained probate of his father’s will, having assumed without legal title his brother’s role as executor. His relations with Sir John Widdrington appear to have improved, too, since in February 1410 the two men briefly shared between them a valuable cargo of merchandise and Scottish prisoners which had been wrecked off the Northumbrian coast, but which was eventually confiscated by the Crown. Given, moreover, that he was knighted at about this time and sent off on an embassy to Scotland, Sir Robert can hardly be said to have lost any of his influence at Court.[10]

Sir Robert Ogle was related by marriage to Edward, duke of York, and his brother, Richard (cr. earl of Cambridge in 1414), to both of whom, in February 1412, he offered securities of 100 marks. The reason for this transaction is now unclear, but a few months later Sir Robert became closely involved in other dealings with Sir Richard Arundel, who provided guarantees worth 600 marks that he could enjoy, uninterrupted, the tenancy of land in Ellingham, Newstead and ‘Osberewyke’ in Northumberland. Some of these holdings, at least, came to him as a result of the partition of the estates of John Heron, an undertaking which seems to have been effected without the rancour and hostility characteristic of such events, and which actually led Sir Robert to strike up a friendship with the other claimant, Robert Harbottle*.

Plans for a marriage alliance between their two families may well have been mooted at this juncture, as a means of reuniting the properties in single ownership, although it was not until 1424, some years after Harbottle’s death, that one of Ogle’s daughters married his son and heir. The latter’s accession to the extensive estates of Sir Bertam Monbourcher* shortly afterwards made this a particularly shrewd move in terms of dynastic politics. Sir Robert was, meanwhile, confirmed in his annuity of 20 marks by Henry V in January 1415, and clearly felt little sympathy for any plot to overthrow the house of Lancaster. Both his brother-in-law, Sir Thomas Gray, and his kinsman, the earl of Cambridge, did, however, conspire against the King at Southampton in July following, and were executed for treason just before the royal army set sail for France. Sir Robert wisely kept his distance in the north, loyally protecting the Scottish border from invasion. He entered the House of Commons for the first time in March 1416, having already attended at least one of the parliamentary elections for Northumberland some three years earlier. (He was later present at those of 1421 (May) and 1427 as well.) The death of his mother, Joan, at a fairly advanced age in the autumn of 1416 further enhanced his position in county society, since besides her customary third share of the Ogle estates, she also held land in Lowick, Coldmartin, Bamburgh, Unthank and Tritlington in Northumberland, which had belonged to her late father, Sir Alan Heton. All of this descended directly to Sir Robert, whose landed income must by now have been quite considerable, notwithstanding periodic devastation by the Scots.[11]

In October 1417, Sir Robert travelled to Warkworth castle with his friend, Sir John Widdrington, to witness a confirmation of the charters of Hulne priory by the young earl of Northumberland. He had, perhaps, already been made constable of Wark castle on the Scottish border by this date, and was certainly in command there when, in 1419, it fell into the hands of the Scots. While ostensibly negotiating a truce, Sir Robert employed a cunning stratagem to retake the castle, and the enemy garrison was put to the sword. The Scottish chroniclers denounced such unchivalrous conduct and condemned his brutality:

Now, to conclude, a richt weill ma be kind,

Crudelitie with cruelnes dois end.

But his success here led to other military appointments, and added appreciably to his reputation as a commander. In 1423, for example, he served as a captain in France under the banner of his kinsman, John Mowbray, Earl Marshal (cr.duke of Norfolk in 1425), whose receiver-general paid him an advance of over £500 in March of that year as wages for himself and a force of 80 men. By the following November, however, he had taken command of the royal castle at Berwick-upon-Tweed; and in June 1425 he indented with the government to serve for three years as captain of Roxburgh castle. His fees and expenses were fixed at £1,000 a year in peacetime and double that sum in periods of warfare, although, even when Anglo-Scottish relations were fairly amicable, he still found it hard to meet all the routine costs of victualling, paying and housing the garrison. Yet, notwithstanding these problems, which grew worse by the year, he remained in office as constable until his death, when he was owed almost £1,200 in unpaid wages.[12]

During the course of his long and eventful career, Sir Robert faced other financial difficulties, some of which resulted in litigation. In May 1421, for instance, he was pardoned a sentence of outlawry incurred because of his refusal to appear in court when being sued for debts totalling £133. One of his creditors was the prior of Durham, against whom he evidently bore considerable rancour. At about this time he stood bail for a neighbour who had behaved threateningly towards the prior; and much later, in 1431, he gave welcome support to John Manners* when the latter was forced to submit to a grossly partial award made by the same old adversary in a private dispute. (His daughter, Jenetta, probably then married Manners’s second son, Robert, who had just become heir apparent to the family estates and was looking for a suitable wife.) Since Sir Robert’s brother and erstwhile enemy, (Sir) John Bertram, was related by marriage to the man whom Manners stood accused of murdering, the whole affair clearly presented a good opportunity for the settling of old scores. As a senior official in Bishop Langley’s liberty of Norhamshire, Sir Robert had to render regular accounts, and here, too, delays and arrears inevitably occurred. On at least three occasions the bishop took heavy financial securities from him. In April 1426, for example, he had to surrender bonds worth £1,405 as an earnest of his readiness to submit accounts for his entire term of office; and in 1431 a special commission was set up to investigate evasions and concealments in his bailiwick. He had by then been outlawed yet again for failing to answer his creditors, although his mounting indebtedness in no way prevented him from taking advantage of various opportunities to extend and consolidate his estates. Thus, between December 1422 and April 1423 he exchanged his manor of Saltwick in Northumberland for property in and around the Durham village of Windlestone, and a few years later he acquired additional holdings in Unthank. On the marriage of his eldest daughter, Margery, to Robert Harbottle’s son and heir, he was obliged to part with the above-mentioned land in Ellingham, but this loss was offset, in 1429, by the grant to him of the manor of Bradford during the minority of Thomas Wetewode, a royal ward. Sir Robert also received a charter of free warren on his demesnes at Hepple from the Crown, no doubt to atone for the government’s failure to pay his wages on time.[13]

Not surprisingly, in view of their mutual involvement in local government and the defence of the north, our Member remained on friendly terms with the earl of Northumberland. The latter agreed to act as an umpire when, in 1425, Sir Robert became embroiled in a dispute with Sir William Elmeden, although the responsibility of making an award fell upon a group of neighbouring landowners, including Sir John Widdrington. Six years later Sir Robert repaid the earl’s kindness by standing surety for him as keeper of certain crown estates in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. Both he and his eldest son, Robert, who became keeper of Berwick-upon-Tweed castle in February 1434, were listed among the Northumbrian gentry who were to take the general oath, drawn up in the following May, that they would not assist disturbers of the peace. Robert Ogle the younger was captured by the Scots during a border raid some months later, and although his father managed to raise the sum of 750 marks demanded as ransom, the effort placed a great strain upon his over-stretched finances. He had already been obliged to lend £800 to the Crown for military preparations against the Scots; and if a petition presented to Parliament after his death is to be believed, such were the arrears of pay at Roxburgh that he was forced to mortgage his estates to feed the troops there. Certainly, as the executor of his will, Robert Ogle the younger faced a number of lawsuits for debt, and claimed, with apparent justice, that well over a year’s fees and wages were still outstanding.[14]

Sir Robert died in early August 1436, and was survived by his widow, Maud, who lived on for another 18 years if not longer, secure in possession of an impressive dowry. Robert Ogle the younger succeeded his father as both constable of Roxburgh and senior official in the bishop of Durham’s liberty of Norhamshire. Not unexpectedly, given Robert’s circumstances, Bishop Langley demanded immediate securities of £1,000 from him as a guarantee of his financial probity, and it is interesting to note that one of his sureties was his uncle, (Sir) John Bertram, who had by then been reconciled to the senior branch of the family. By marrying his four daughters to the sons of, respectively, Robert Harbottle, John Manners, Sir John Middleton* and William Mitford*, Sir Robert had built up an even stronger network of connexions among the Northumbrian gentry than that which he had inherited from his father at the beginning of the century.[15]

Ref Volumes: 1386-1421

Author: C.R.

Notes

Variant: Dogle.

  • 1. H.A. Ogle, Ogle and Bothal, 44, app. pp. xi, xii, xxii; Arch. Aeliana, n.s. xxiv. 118; CIPM, xii. nos. 592-4; Rot. Scot. ed. Macpherson etc. ii. 194. The pedigree of the Ogle family given in CP, x. 24-31, mentions Sir Robert’s eldest daughter, Margery (m. Robert, s. and h. of Robert Harbottle), but omits her sisters Jenetta (m. Robert, s. of John Manners), Elizabeth (m. John, son of Sir John Middleton) and Constance (m. John, s. of William Mitford).
  • 2. Arch. Aeliana (ser. 4), xxi. 28; DKR, xxxiii. 99.
  • 3. DKR, xxxiii. 99, 141.
  • 4. Rot. Scot. ii. 194, 214, 247, 268, 286, 287; Foedera ed. Rymer (Hague edn.), iv (2), 42.
  • 5. Surtees Soc. clxix. no. 892.
  • 6. R.L. Storey, Thomas Langley, 153; Rot. Scot. ii. 237; Northumb. RO, Swinburne (Capheaton) ms, 2/51; E404/41/344, 345, 44/310, 50/363, 51/124; Cal. Scots Docs. nos. 984, 1098.
  • 7. Ogle, 44 and app. p. xii.
  • 8. CP, x. 24-31; Arch. Aeliana, n.s. xxiv. 118; CCR, 1399-1402, p. 6; Cal. Scots. Docs. iv. no. 566.
  • 9. Ogle, 40-41, app. pp. x, xxii; CPR, 1405-8, p. 144; Arch. Aeliana (ser. 4), xii. 94; CCR, 1413-19, p. 332; Surtees Soc. clxiv. no. 150; Feudal Aids, iv. 81, 83, 85, 87, 88-89.
  • 10. RP, iii. 629; Storey, 142; CFR, xiii. 187; DKR, xxxiii. 99; CPR, 1408-13, p. 180; CCR, 1409-13, pp. 39-40.
  • 11. CCR, 1409-13, pp. 327, 359-61; CPR, 1413-16, p. 290; C219/11/2, 12/5, 13/5; CFR, xiv. 174; Ogle, app. p. xxii; CIPM, xvi. nos. 592-4; Hist. Northumb. ii. 243.
  • 12. Storey, 153; Metrical Chron. Scotland ed. Turnbull, iii. 499-500; Hist. Northumb. v. 44; Bull. IHR, xxvii. 194; E404/41/344-5, 44/310, 50/363, 51/124; SC8/132/6584; Cal. Scots Docs. iv. nos. 984, 987, 998, 1006, 1008, 1013, 1015, 1024, 1031, 1033, 1034, 1045, 1048, 1050, 1052, 1060, 1072, 1077, 1080, 1083, 1098.
  • 13. CPR, 1416-22, p. 346; 1422-9, p. 512; Storey, 81-82, 84; DKR, xxxiii. 124; CCR, 1419-22, pp. 274-5; Hist. Northumb. xi. 380-1; Newcastle-upon-Tyne Rec. Ser. vii. 153, 177, 188-9; CFR, xv. 288; CChR, vi. 1.
  • 14. CCR, 1422-9, p. 210; 1429-36, pp. 123, 339, 392; PPC, iv. 204; CP, x. 29; SC8/132/6584.
  • 15. Ogle, 44, app. p. xxii; CCR, 1435-41, p. 76; Newcastle-upon-Tyne Rec. Ser. vii. 189; CFR, xiv. 307.

'Sir Robert Ogle, Sheriff of Northumberland [1],[2],[3]

  • 'M, b. between 1380 and 1384, d. 12 August 1436
  • Father Sir Robert Ogle [2] d. 31 Oct 1410
  • Mother Joan Heton [2] b. c 1342, d. 12 Oct 1416
  • ' Sir Robert Ogle, Sheriff of Northumberland Warden of Roxborough Castle. He was born between 1380 and 1384 at of Ogle, Hepple, Shilvington, & Saltwick, Northumberland, England; Age 26 and 30 in 1410.[2] He married Maud Grey, daughter of Sir Thomas Grey, Constable of Norham, Steward, Sheriff, Escheator, & Chief Justice of the episcopal liberty of Norhamshire & Islandshire, Earl Marshal and Joan Mowbray, circa 21 May 1399; They had 3 sons (Robert, John, & William) and 7 daughters (Margaret/Margery, Anne, Constance, Joan/Jane, (wife of John Lilburne), (wife of Thomas Lisle), and (wife of Sir Matthew Whitfield).[4],[2],[3] Sir Robert Ogle, Sheriff of Northumberland died on 12 August 1436.[5],[2]
  • 'Family Maud Grey b. c 1382, d. a 1454
  • Children
    • ◦Elizabeth Ogle+[6] b. c 1401
    • ◦Margaret Ogle+[7],[6],[8] b. c 1405
    • ◦Sir Robert Ogle, 1st Lord Ogle+[5],[6] b. c 1406, d. 1 Nov 1469
    • ◦Joan Ogle+[6],[9] b. c 1410, d. a 3 Feb 1462
    • ◦William Ogle, Esq., Constable of Prudhoe Castle+[6] b. c 1412, d. 10 Aug 1474
  • Citations
  • 1.[S6723] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties, 1215, by F. L. Weis, 4th Ed., p. 11; Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists, by David Faris, p. 206; Wallop Family, p. 598.
  • 2.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 396.
  • 3.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 257.
  • 4.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 353.
  • 5.[S11568] The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. X, p. 29.
  • 6.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 396-397.
  • 7.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 375.
  • 8.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 338.
  • 9.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 489.
  • http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p733.htm#i...
  • ___________
  • 'Robert OGLE (Sir Knight)
  • 'Born: ABT 21 May 1389, Ogle, Northumberland, England
  • 'Died: 12 Aug 1435/6, England
  • 'Notes: Warden of Roxborough Castle.
  • Father: Robert OGLE (Sir Knight)
  • Mother: Joan De HETON
  • 'Married: Maud GREY 21 May 1399, Tankerville, Northumberland, England
  • Children:
    • 1. Robert OGLE (1° B. Ogle)
    • 2. John OGLE (Sir Knight)
    • 3. Agnes OGLE
    • 4. William OGLE of Choppington
    • 5. Jennet OGLE
    • 6. Anne OGLE
    • 7. Margery OGLE
    • 8. Margaret OGLE
    • 9. Joan OGLE
    • 10. Elizabeth OGLE
    • 11. Constance OGLE
  • http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/OGLE.htm#Robert OGLE (Sir Knight)2ñ

Ogle family

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Ogle family was prominent in Northumberland from before the time of the Norman Conquest. The ancient family seat was at Ogle, near Whalton. Their manor house there was licenced for crenellation in 1341, and became known as Ogle Castle

Medieval Barons

Sir Robert Ogle (c1379-1436) was a key figure in the 15th century defence of the northern border against the Scots. In 1407 he was Constable of Norham Castle and Sheriff and Escheator of Islandshire and Norhamshire then the most northern counties of England. In 1417 he was High Sheriff of Northumberland and was appointed Warden of Roxburgh Castle in 1425.

As father of the 1st Baron Ogle he was the head of the family which included seven successive Barons and many later junior branches of the family. For further details of the main line of the family see Baron Ogle

The last of this main line was the daughter of the 7th Baron (d 1597), Catherine Ogle who herself was created Baroness Ogle in 1628 and who in 1591 had married Sir Charles Cavendish whose successsors were to be Dukes of Newcastle and Earls of Ogle

Ogle of Eglingham

Henry Ogle of Eglingham was a nephew of Robert, 1st Baron Ogle. He aquired the manor of Eglingham, near Alnwick, Northumberland in 1514. His nephew Luke Ogle (1510-1597) , who was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1565, built a new manor house ( later to become known as Eglingham Hall) on the site of an existing pele tower.

The Ogles of Eglingham were strongly Parliamentarian during the Civil War and Henry Ogle (1600-1669) was a parliamentary commissioner for raising forces. He was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1644 and was created a Knight of the Shire in 1654. His brother Nicholas was Deputy Lieutenant in 1645 and representative for Northumberland in the Little Parliament of 1653.

Henry's son John (1621-1686) was High Sheriff in 1654 during the Commonwealth. Henry's grandson John (1649-1687) emigrated to Delaware, USA and his son Samuel Ogle became Provincial Governor of Maryland.

Robert Ogle rebuilt Eglingham Hall in grand style, creating a two storey, seven bayed mansion house, incorporating the old manor house as its west wing.

After some 400 years in occupation the Ogles sold the estate in about 1900.

Ogle of Choppington and Burradon

Another nephew of Robert, 1st Baron Ogle, was Gawen Ogle who built a tower house at Choppington, then in Bedlingtonshire (now North Tyneside) of which no present trace remains, in 1500. His grandson Oliver (d 1616) acquired the manor of Burradon near Longbenton including a tower house, in two tranches in 1569 and 1596. His son Lancelot (1582-1640) improved the accomodation at Burradon Tower in 1633.

Lancelot's only daughter Jane married a cousin, James Ogle of Causey Park and the Burradon house was abandoned. By 1769 it was reported to be ruinous. The estate was later inherited by Janes grandson, William Wallis, who changed his name to William Wallis Ogle, and was eventually sold outside the family in 1849

Ogle of Kirkley

Henry Ogle (1525-1580) the grandson of the 3rd Baron Ogle held lands at Kirkley, near Whalton, Northumberland under Lord Eure. His sons Mark and Cuthbert each bought a part of the Manor from Lord Eure in about 1612 and in 1632 Cuthbert built a new manor house, Kirkley Hall, there, closeby the site of the old house.

Cuthbert's grandson joined the navy and ultimately became Admiral Sir Chaloner Ogle (1681-1750).

Dr Nathaniel Ogle (1726-1739) of Kirkley was an army physician under the Duke of Marlborough and was Deputy Lieutenant of Northumberland in 1715. His son Rev. Newton Ogle (1726-1804) was Prebendary of Durham Cathedral and Dean of Winchester Cathedral and in 1728 replaced the old house with a substantial mansion.

Another son Chaloner Ogle (1726-1816) like his elder second cousin and namesake also joined the navy and became on Admiral. He was created a Baronet in the year of his death. For details of his successors see Ogle Baronets.

Rev John Saville Ogle (1767-1853) son of Newton, Canon of Salisbury Cathedral and in 1832 he substantially extended and improved Kirkley Hall. He repurchased from the Duke of Portland the ancient family estates at Ogle.

The Kirkley estate was sold outside the family in 1922.

Ogle of Kings Worthy, Hampshire

See Ogle of Kirkley above and Ogle Baronets

Ogle of Causey Park

The manor of Causey Park was a possession of the Ogles, acquired with Bothal as a result of intermarriage with the Bertram family in the 14th century. Robert 4th Baron Ogle granted the estate to his younger brother Sir William Ogle (1493-1542) whose grandson John built a new tower house on the site of the earlier Pele tower in 1589.

His great grandson James (1634-1664) married his cousin Jane Ogle of Burradon thereby merging the two branches of the family. James Ogle was a Royalist during the Civil War, was regarded as a delinquent by Parliament and was charged with treason. His estates were forfeit but he was pardoned and allowed to compound for £324 for the return of his property.

James' son William Ogle (1653-1718) was Member of Parliament for Northumberland 1685-89. Williams son Henry Ogle (1685-1761) was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1737. In addition to the Ogle estates of Causey Park and Burradon he inherited through his wife Anne Orde a third of the substantial North Durham properties of William Orde MP of Sandybank. He substantially extended and imporoved Causey Park House in the 18th century.

After some 400 years of Ogle ownership the estates were sold by William Wallis Ogle in 1849

References

The History and Antiquities of North Durham (1852) Rev James Raine MA pp 371-2

A History of Northumberland (1926) Miss M H Dodds pp 501-511

Choppington

Burradon

Causey Park



Sir Robert Ogle, Sheriff of Northumberland & Northamshire, Constable of Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northam, Roxburgh, & Wark Castles

http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p733.htm#i...



Sir Robert Ogle III[1]

b. c.1370[8] or 1379[9]

d. 1436[9] or 1437[7]

Parents

Robert Ogle and Joan Heaton[10][11]

Marriage and Issue

m. Maud Grey 21 May 1399.[9][8] Issue:[3][12]

Sir Robert Ogle[3][13] (b. 1406)[6] Sir John[3] or John Ogle, Esq.[13] Sir William[3] or William Ogle, Esq[13][14] Margaret[3] "Margery" m. Bertram Harbottle Isabel (Elizabeth) m. John Middleton Constance m. Sir John Mitford, Knt.[13] Anne m. William Heron Jenetta "Joan or Janet" m. Robert Manners dau. m. Matthew Whitfield[13] dau. m. John Lilburne[13] dau. m. Thomas Lisle[13] Occupation

Warden of Roxborough Castle; Knt.[9] Beaten at Battle of Piperdean (10 Sep 1436)[9][15]


www.geni.com/media/proxy?media_id=6000000187177522843&size=large


Sources

  1. "Bertram, John (d.1450), of Bothal, Northumb," (n.d.). The History of Parliament. The History of Parliament Trust, n.d. Web. 24 Jan. 2014.
  2. Bothal Conservation Area: Character Appraisal, (2008). North of England Civic Trust, (pp. 14). www.wansbeck.gov.uk. PDF.
  3. Burke, J. (1831). A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Extinct, Dormant, and in Abeyance ... England. London: H. Colburn & R. Bentley. Google Books. Web. 12 Jan. 2014.
  4. Burley, P., Elliot, M. & Watson, H. (2013). The Battles of St Albans: Battleground War of the Roses. pp.33. Pen and Sword. Ebook.
  5. Flower, W. (1881). The Visitations of Yorkshire in the Years 1563 and 1564. (pp. 233). Google Books.
  6. Hodgson, John, and John Hodgson-Hinde. A History of Northumberland in Three Parts: Part 2. Vol. 2. N.p.: E. Walker, 1832. Google Books. Web. 26 Jan. 2014.
  7. Northumberland castle and fortalices in 1415. www.gatehouse-gazetteer.info
  8. Ogle, H.A.(1902). Ogle and Bothal: History of the baronies of Ogle, Bothal, and Hepple. FamilySearch.org. eBook.
  9. "Ogle, Sir Robert (c.1370-1436), of Ogle, Northumb," (n.d.). www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  10. Richardson, D. (2011). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, (2nd ed., pp.390). Google Books. (see screenshot [1]).
  11. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd Edition ... Page 391. < GoogleBooks >
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Sir Robert Ogle, Kt., MP's Timeline

1380
May 21, 1380
Ogle Castle, Whalton, Northumberland, England
1400
1400
Probably Bellingham, Northumberland, England
1401
1401
Kirkley, Northumberland, England
1402
1402
Kirkley, Northumberland, England
1405
1405
Probably Kirkley, Ponteland, Northumberland, England
1406
1406
Ogle Castle, Whalton, Northumberland, England
1410
1410
Ogle, Northumberland, England
1410
Northumberland, England
1412
1412
Probably Kirkley, Northumberland, England