Col. Henry Holmes

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Col. Henry A Holmes, Colonel; Lieut.-Gov. of the Isle of Wight

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kilmallock, Limerick, Ireland
Death: June 18, 1738 (73-82)
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight
Place of Burial: Yarmouth, Isle of Wight
Immediate Family:

Son of Col. Thomas Holmes; Anne Gilbourne and Mrs. Ann Gilbone
Husband of Mary Holmes
Father of Anne Holmes; Elizabeth Troughear; Christopher Holmes; Thomas Holmes, 1st Baron Kilmallock; Margaret Holmes and 13 others
Brother of Robert Holmes; William Holms; Alice Holmes; Robert Holmes; William Holmes and 6 others

Managed by: Will Holmes à Court
Last Updated:

About Col. Henry Holmes

He married Mary Holmes. Mary was born circa 1678. Mary, his cousin, was the daughter of his uncle Sir Robert Holmes and Grace Hooke. Mary died March 1760 in Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, at 81 years of age. Her body was interred 7/03/1760 in Yarmouth, Isle of Wight. also date of 6 April mentioned

MP for Yarmouth 1694 - 1714. Lieutenant-Governor of the Isle of Wight.

The following extract is taken from the Jerome/Heytesbury papers held at the Isle of Wight Record office in Newport.

Wills and Settlements 1692 - 1913

Although the wills and settlements are very extensive, running to some 236 items, arranged, in strictly chronological order, into 28 bundles, the number of documents that are of first rate importance is really rather limited. The main estate was subject ot six major settlements over 150 years and most of the documents here described are little more than subsidiaries to these six important transactions. The major settlements were: the will of Sir Robert Holmes, 1697, unfortunately missing, the marriage settlement of Thomas Holmes and Anne Aspley, 1727, JER/HBY/104/8, the will of Thomas Holmes, 1764, see JER/HBY/208/1, the settlement of Henry Worsley, 1808, JER/HBY/119/1, the will of Leonard Thomas Worsley Holmes, 1825, JER/HBY/123/1, and the marriage settlement of Elizabeth Worsley Holmes and William Henry Ashe à Court, 1833, JER/HBY/124/5.

The sheer bulk of the class is mostly accounted for by the numerous off-spring of Henry Holmes and his wife Mary, the natural daughter of Sir Robert Holmes.

The parish registers of Yarmouth and Thorley record the baptisms of twenty children to this couple of whom eleven, seven girls and four boys, survived to adulthood. In 1727 the entire estate, as it then stood, was settled on the eldest son Thomas in tail male, with remainders to each of his brothers, also in tail male, and a final remainder jointly to his sisters. In the event, none of the brothers produced surviving, legitimate issue at all and by 1760 there was the imminent prospect of a break-up of the estate between seven sister co-heiresses. Thomas Holmes evidently prevailed to release their rights in the Isle of Wight property to himself, in return for which they were indemnified against any claims of his second wife, Catherine , to widows' thirds. The sisters did, however, keep the valuable Limerick estate and the fee farm rents in Wales and much money and ingenuity was expended over the next fifty years in buying back or otherwise acquiring their shares.

Thomas settled his own purchases, notably the Freshwater estate, the property he had recovered from his sisters and further purchases made by his father after 1727 by will. This remarkable document, unfortunately only represented here by a much later copy, JER/HBY/208/1, contained very lengthy provisions to prevent a repetition of the debacle of his own first marriage settlement. To ensure that the estate passed unbroken into a male line he named seven male relations, his two brothers, four nephews and one great nephew, who were to have successive remainders each in tail male, the nephews and great nephew on condition that they took the name Holmes. The first three individuals, his two brothers and nephew Thomas Troughear, all predeceased him without issue and the estate duly passed to the fourth named successor, his nephew Leonard Troughear.

This Leonard Troughear, later second Lord Holmes, had two daughters but no son so, on his death in 1804, the next provisions for inheritance under the will of Thomas Holmes came into operation. By this time, however, the next three successors, John Troughear, Thomas Roberts and Thomas Worsley were all dead and the final provision for "any other son of Robert Worsley of Pidford" was activated. It was in this obscure fashion that the Pidford and Westover estates were united in the person of Henry Worsley of Pidford.

Henry Worsley, who now became Worsley Holmes, seems to have had more relaxed views about what should happen to the estate after his death. He, as life tenant, and his son Leonard Thomas Worsley Holmes, as tenant expectant in tail, entered into a common recovery in 1808 JER/HBY/119/1, for Leonard and his heirs. Leonard had two daughters only and, by his will, JER/HBY/123/1, he settled his entire estate exclusively on the elder, Elizabeth, but wrapped up in an elaborate double trust from which much trouble was to arise, see JER/HBY/126/2. The marriage settlement of Elizabeth and William Henry Ashe à Court, JER/HBY/124/5, did little more than confirm this arrangement. A disentailing assurance was entered into in 1857, JER/HBY/128/2, and a new settlement made for the eldest son of Elizabeth and William Henry, JER/HBY/128/5.

Pidford Farm was settled on Henry Worsley and his heirs in 1748, see JER/HBY/105/9. To Pidford he added numerous purchases of his own. Under his will all this property passed to his son, Leonard Thomas Worsley Holmes, but some of it, including Watergate Farm, was sold in 1815 under an order in Chancery. See JER/HBY/186/5 and IWCRO Ward/276.

There are a number of documents in the wills and settlements dealing with the extremely complex affairs of the insolvent Newport bankers, Henry and John Roberts, who were connected with the Holmes family through Lucretia Sowle, one of Thomas Holmes's sisters and with the Worsleys through Margaret Roberts, sister of Henry Worsley. There is also an interesting and unusual group of deeds under which Leonard Troughear made provision for his mistresses and their children, e.g. JER/HBY/113/3 and JER/HBY/115/5.

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Col. Henry Holmes's Timeline

1660
1660
Kilmallock, Limerick, Ireland
1693
November 1693
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom
1695
1695
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom
1696
1696
1699
November 2, 1699
Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
1699
1700
October 1700
1701
November 1701
1703
January 3, 1703
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom
February 1703
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom