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Robert Newsham

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Newsham Hall, Newsham Hall Lane,, Woodplumpton, Preston,, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Death: February 09, 1624 (70-71)
Bispham, Blackpool, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of George Newsham and Catherine Colville
Husband of Elizabeth Newsham
Father of Richard Newsham; William Newsham, of Newsham Hall; Thomas Newsham; George Newsham; John Newsham and 5 others
Brother of George Newsham; Bridget Newsham; Anne Newsham; Isabelle Newsham; William Newsham and 1 other
Half brother of Grace Newsham and Henry Newsham

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Robert Newsham

Robert Newsham who was born in Newsham Hall 1553 Robert was at Preston Guild in 1562 and again in 1582 with his father George Newsham and in 1582 Robert had a son called John with him. In 1622 Robert was again at Preston Guild with sons called Richard, William, Thomas, George and John this John is a second son called John the first one having died, The family are living at Woodplumpton at this time in 1622. At the next Preston Guild in 1642 Robert's son Richard is the head of the family and they now live at Preese Hall. Preese is a small village next to Weeton. Two years later 4th November 1644 Preese Hall sold for £550.



Some sources have his mother as Catherine Newsham nee Colville


Married in 1578

Robert6 Newsom (George5, John4, George3, John2, William1) was born 1553 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England, and died February 1624 in Bispham, Lancashire, England. He married Elizabeth Sherbourne Abt. 1578 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England, daughter of Richard Sherbourne and Matilda Bolde. She was born Abt. 1553 in Mitton, Lancashire, England, and died Unknown in Lancashire, England.

More About Robert Newsom:

Burial: February 09, 1624, Bispham, Lancashire. Bispham is located on the Irish Sea coast of Lancashire, England, a few miles north of present day Blackpool.

Notes for Elizabeth Sherbourne:

Right: The tomb of Sir Richard Sherbourne and Matilda (Maude) Bolde, parents of Elizabeth Sherbourne. It is the original tomb in the original location: the Sherbourne Chapel in All Hallows Church, Mitton, Lancashire near Garstang (click on photo for larger view). Elizabeth Sherbourne is said to have lived in Greenhalgh Castle, Lancashire. The lonely and beautiful ruins of the Castle still stand on a grassy knoll overlooking the River Wyre, one kilometer east of the hamlet of Garstang (picture below — click for larger view). A Newsome Family Legend tells of Elizabeth's marriage to Robert Newsom of Newsom Hall which was "not far" away. This union marks the uniting of two old and venerable Lancashire families - the Newshams and the Sherbournes. Both lines abound with individuals of accomplishment and repute, a pattern which continued into the subsequent emigration to the New World in the early 1600's (see notes for William Newsom, Jr.). Of the Sherbournes, Burke's Peerage says, "The family of Sherbourne was of great antiquity and distinction in the county of Lancaster, and possessed Stonyhurst from the time of the early Plantagenets. Under Edward I, Robert Sherburn was Seneschal of Wiswall and Blackburnshire, and in the marshall reign of the third Edward, Sir John Sherburn, attending his royal master in his French wars, served at the siege of Calais..."

There is strong circumstantial evidence, but no proof yet, to support the view that Elizabeth Sherbourne was a daughter (or possibly a niece) of Sir Richard Sherbourne of Stonyhurst and therefore sister to Richard Sherbourne the younger who was "Master Forester of Bowland, Steward of the Manor of Slaidburn, Captain of the Isle of Man and one of Her Majesty's (Elizabeth I) Deputy Lieutenants..." (Burke's Peerage). Key points are that Sir Richard essentially controlled much of the area around Greenhalgh Castle where Elizabeth lived, virtually all Sherbournes in the moderately populated vicinity must have been related, the birth and death dates of all of the individuals concerned are appropriate, and there are land records dating from 1586 which confirm, "Robert Newsom sold lands in Thornton and Wheatley to Sir Richard Shireburn..." (Lancashire Life Magazine, August 1974). Elizabeth Sherbourne's pedigree has tentatively been drawn to reflect this relationship.

Greenhalgh Castle was built in 1490 by Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby, and was one of the last - perhaps the last - Royalist strongholds in Lancashire resisting the radical Commonwealth/Parliamentary movement of Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War. The castle took its name from the local village of Greenhalgh which pre-dated its construction. It was never actually owned or controlled by any member of the Greenhalgh family, though there was strong alliance between John Greenhalgh (then Governor of the Isle of Man), much of his family, and the royal Stanleys against Cromwell. Interestingly, the Stanleys were Protestant - not Catholic like most of the opponents of Cromwell. Yet they steadfastly maintained their loyalty to Catholic King Charles I. One of John Greenhalgh's brothers administered the Last Rights to Lord Derby at his execution for treason by Cromwell. King Charles I himself was executed on January 30, 1649. Presumably, Lord Derby's death took place at about the same time.

Also in 1649, Greenhalgh Castle was razed on the personal order of the vindictive Cromwell. Local farmers were invited to dismantle the walls and utilize the fieldstones for buildings on their farms, an invitation many among them accepted. Only one of the original four towers remain.

Evidence of Newsome (Newsham) involvement in the political affairs of the time may be found in a list of "Lands and Estates of several other persons forfeited for Treason, to be sold... 20th Day of May, 1642." An Andrew and a Nicholas Newsham, both of Plumpton (modern Woodplumpton near Newsham), Lancashire, and almost certainly relatives of the Newshams of Newsham Hall, appear prominently on the list. Isle of Man Governor John Greenhalgh appears on the same list. So it is virtually certain that Newsome ancestors were strong Royalist Catholics, fought against Cromwell alongside the great Lancashire families of the day - the Greenhalghs, Stanleys Kighleys, Fleetwoods, Molyneuxs and Sherbournes - and forfeited lands as a consequence.

The source for the "traitors list" is "An Index of the Names of the Royalists Whose Estates were Confiscated During the Commonwealth" compiled by Mabel G. W. Peacock, London, Longmans, Green & Company, 39 Paternoster Row, Hertford, Printed by Stevin Austin & Sons, 1878.

Children of Robert Newsom and Elizabeth Sherbourne are:

15 i. Richard7 Newsom, born 1579 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England; died 1632. He married Barbara Fleetwood

Notes for Richard Newsom:

Richard Newsom was the last of the Newsoms to live in Newsham Hall. After at least seven generations in the family, the Hall was sold to a Thomas Wilson in about 1630. Richard died two years later.

+ 16 ii. William Newsom, Sr., born 1584 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England; died Unknown in England.

17 iii. Thomas Newsom, born 1586 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England; died 1634. He married Anne Hedges; born in Chalberry, Oxford, England.

Notes for Thomas Newsom:

Thomas Newsom was a London tailor. His 1634 will is "proved."

18 iv. George Newsom, born 1588 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England.

19 v. Alice Newsom, born 1592 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England. She married Thomas Sharples 1610 in Lancashire, England; born in Lancashire, England.

20 vi. Ellen Newsom, born 1594 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England. She married Henry Lundhop; born in Lancashire, England.

21 vii. Grace Newsom, born 1596 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England. She married James Draper; born in Cockerhouse, Lancashire, England.

22 viii. Bridget Newsom, born 1598 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England.

Notes for Bridget Newsom:

Bridget and her sister Catharine are said to have married in Ireland.

23 ix. Catherine Newsom, born 1600 in Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England.

Information added by HRH Prince Kieren de Muire von Drakenberg



Please see _The Visitation of the County Palatine of Lancaster_, by William Flower, 1567, for the genealogy of the Newsoms from William [1445] through Robert Newsom [1553]. You will find it under "Newsams of Newsamhall." I tried to add it here, but the image was too big.

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Burial: February 09, 1623/24, Bispham, Lancashire. Bispham is located on the Irish Sea coast of Lancashire, England, a few miles north of present day Blackpool. He became a free holder--status of free man--in 1600. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=geer_fami...

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Robert Newsham's Timeline

1553
1553
Newsham Hall, Newsham Hall Lane,, Woodplumpton, Preston,, Lancashire, United Kingdom
1579
1579
Woodplumpton, Lancashire, United Kingdom
1584
1584
Newsham Hall, Newsham, Lancashire, England
1586
1586
Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England
1588
1588
Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England
1590
1590
Woodplumpton, Lancashire, United Kingdom
1592
1592
Preston, UK
1594
1594
Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England
1596
1596
Newsom Hall, Lancashire, England