Sir John Troutbeck, High Sheriff of Chester

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Sir John Troutbeck, High Sheriff of Chester

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Oxhay, Hertfordshire, England (United Kingdom)
Death: September 23, 1459 (42-51)
Albrighton, Shropshire, England (United Kingdom) (Killed in the Battle of Blore Heath)
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir William Troutbeck, Esq. and Lady Joan Troutbeck
Husband of Margaret Troutbeck
Father of Agnes Troutbeck; Elizabeth Knollys; Sir Willam Troutbeck, of Dunham and Cecily Troutbeck
Brother of Joan Troutbeck and Elizabeth Venables

Occupation: High Sheriff of Chester, Knight, HIgh Sheriff of Chester, Lord Dunham
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Sir John Troutbeck, High Sheriff of Chester

From the Cheshire Magazine:

A brief but brilliant name in Cheshire history was that of the Troutbecks. The family seems to have originated from Westmoreland, their ancient coat of arms being three interlaced trouts. Later a wreath of trouts encircled their crest.

Our story begins in 1412 when Prince Henry commissioned William Troutbeck, Chamberlain of Chester. By purchase, William became Lord of Dunham-on-the-Hill, near Helsby.

Stoney Dunham, as it was called, had been held up to this time by the Earls of Arundel. In 1415 the Earl died at Agincourt and William Troutbeck came to own a third of Dunham. He too fought at Agincourt.

By 1444, the whole manor of Dunham was vested in the Troutbecks.

William was succeeded by his son Sir John Troutbeck, Chamberlain of Chester and Sheriff of Cheshire in 1447.

He married the great heiress, Margery, the daughter of Thomas Hulse, of Brunstath (Brimstage), the original settlement of the Domvilles. a younger line of the Barons of Montalt, and one of the most aristocratic families in the country.

To John Troutbeck also passed, through Margery Hulse, the Sergeantry of the Bridge Gate at Chester, hereditary office of the Rabys.

Sir John Troubeck lived at Brimstage Hall and it was from here that he rode out, aged forty-seven, to his last battle, “beneath the banners of Henry V, he fell with the flower of Cheshire on the fatal field of Blore”.



John was killed in the first War of the Roses battle at Blore Heath, Staffordshire, two miles east of Market Drayton.

He lived at Brimstage Hall, Cheshire a fotified manor house.



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Sir John Troutbeck, High Sheriff of Chester's Timeline

1412
1412
Oxhay, Hertfordshire, England (United Kingdom)
1427
1427
England (United Kingdom)
1432
1432
Dunham, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)
1436
July 13, 1436
Dunham On Hill, Cheshire, England
1459
September 23, 1459
Age 47
Albrighton, Shropshire, England (United Kingdom)
????
Cheshire, England