Sir Richard Pollard, MP

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Sir Richard WIlliam Pollard, of Horwood MP

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kings Nympton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
Death: November 10, 1542 (34-43)
Kings Nympton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
Place of Burial: Devon, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Lewis Pollard, MP and Agnes Pollard
Husband of Thomasina Govitt and Jacquetta Pollard
Father of Sir John Lewis Pollard, 12th GG and Sir John Pollard, MP
Brother of Lady Jane Stukeley; Sir Hugh Pollard; Philippa Paulet; Elizabeth Pollard; Robert Pollard, of Honyton and 7 others
Half brother of Elizabeth Chamberlain

Managed by: Lloyd Alfred Doss, Jr.
Last Updated:

About Sir Richard Pollard, MP

Family and Education b. by 1505, 2nd s. of Sir Lewis Pollard of Kings Nympton, Devon by Agnes, da. of Thomas Hext of Kingston, nr. Totnes, Devon. educ. M. Temple, adm. 4 July 1519. m. by 1528, Jacquetta, 1da. of John Bury of Colliton, Devon, 3s. inc. Sir John 1da. Kntd. 16 Jan. 1542.4

Offices Held Autumn reader, M. Temple 1535, ?bencher by 1535.5

Servant of Sir William Courtenay I by 1532; j.p. Devon 1532, Mdx. 1537-d., western circuit 1540-d.; King’s remembrancer May 1536-d.; third gen. surveyor, office of gen. surveyors Feb. 1537, second 1539; sheriff, Devon 1537-8; member, council in the west 1539; steward, late possessions of Henry, Marquess of Exeter 1539-d.; second gen. surveyor, ct. gen. surveyors of the King’s lands May 1542-d.6

Biography Richard Pollard began his career as a practising lawyer; he had chambers above the gateway to the Middle Temple, received annuities from Cornish and Devonshire abbeys, and served on the council of the south-western magnate, Sir William Courtenay. The employment by Courtenay, which included accompanying him on monastic visitations, brought Pollard to the attention of Cromwell, for whom he was working before Courtenay’s death. In the summer of 1535, at Cromwell’s request and in company with other common lawyers, he met several doctors from the court of arches to discuss spiritual jurisdiction. Afterwards he wrote to Cromwell about the unsatisfactory nature of the meeting, and suggested: if it may stand with the King’s grace’s pleasure and yours, it were better to devise a remedy that the temporal judges may hereafter have jurisdiction of all such crimes and causes as the ecclesiastical judges have had jurisdiction heretofore, and by that means we shall have but one law within this realm, which I think better in my poor mind than to have several laws.Although his radical proposal was not adopted, Pollard continued in favour and his name appears often in Cromwell’s remembrances. His experience suggests that he was the ‘Pollarde’ who supplied a series of entries found appended to a set of law reports made by Justice John Spelman.7

The suggestion that Pollard was returned for Taunton to the Parliament of 1536 rests on the appearance of his name on a list, seemingly of nominees for the bishop of Winchester’s boroughs, written by Cromwell on a document probably of that year. Cromwell had sat for Taunton in the Parliament of 1529 (with William Portman, who also appears on the above list for that borough), but he presumably transferred to a knighthood of the shire in 1536, although there is no evidence for this. In the next two Parliaments Pollard sat for Devon: his knighthood of that shire was a measure of his local and official standing, and it was amplified by his being knighted in the parliament chamber at the opening of Parliament on 16 Jan. 1542. Two weeks later, together with his fellow-Members Richard Catlyn, John Caryll and Sir Roger Townshend, Pollard was approached by the city of London to sponsor a bill for cleaning the Fleet ditch. Pollard’s brother-in-law, Sir Hugh Paulet, was sheriff on the occasion of his second election for the county.8

As a royal surveyor, Pollard was concerned with the suppression of the lesser Kent, Surrey, Sussex and Yorkshire monasteries in 1537, as well as of Glastonbury and Reading abbeys between the parliamentary sessions of 1539. He supervised the defacement of the shrines at Bury St. Edmunds, Winchester and Canterbury, where he was described as so busy night and day ‘in prayer with offering unto St. Thomas’ that he had ‘no idle worldly time’ to spare until his ‘spiritual devotion’ was completed. The recipient of numerous gifts and annuities (in 1541 he was assessed for subsidy in London at £230 in lands and fees), Pollard acquired his greatest prize with the grant in 1540 of Forde abbey—then in Devon—which he had leased the previous year. He was nominated as a founder member of the council in the west in 1539 with permission to attend at his pleasure or when summoned.9

The fall of Cromwell did not arrest Pollard’s progress: he was one of the outstanding civil servants of the period, and when the new court of general surveyors was instituted he was appointed its joint first officer. His death on 10 Nov. 1542 removed the prospect of yet higher office and of the establishment of his family in greater state. It is not known who replaced him for the last two sessions of the Parliament of 1542. He had made his will on 31 Mar. 1541, providing for his wife, children and servants. The upbringing of his children was confided to his wife, his elder brother and his brother-in-law Paulet. To Sir William Fitzwilliam I, Earl of Southampton, and Sir John Russell, Baron Russell, he left rings, and to Sir Richard Rich (the overseer) a salt. He named his cousins John Pollard and Humphrey Colles executors.10

Ref Volumes: 1509-1558 Author: A. D.K. Hawkyard Notes 1.LP Hen. VIII, x. 40 (ii) citing Cott. Otho C10, f. 218. 2. E159/319, brev. ret. Mich. r. [1-21. 3. C219/18B/159. 4. Date of birth estimated from education. Vis. Devon, ed. Vivian, 598; PCC 27 Pynnyng; Hutchins, Dorset, iv. 527. 5.LP Hen. VIII, ix; Reps. of Sir John Spelman, i (Selden Soc. xciii), p. xxv. 6.LP Hen. VIII, v-xvii. 7. Ibid. v-xiv; L. Snell, Suppression of Rel. Foundations of Devon and Cornw. 66; J. Youings, Dissolution of the Monasteries, 54; SP1/95, f. 121; G. R. Elton, Reform and Renewal, 133-4; Reps. of Sir John Spelman, p. xxv. 8. Cott. Otho C10, f. 218; Wriothesley’s Chron. i (Cam. Soc. n.s. xi), 133; City of London RO, Guildhall, rep. 10, f. 242v. 9. W. C. Richardson, Tudor Chamber Admin. 258; LP Hen. VIII, viii-xvii; Devon Monastic Lands (Devon and Cornw. Rec. Soc. n.s.i.), xxi, 13; RCHM, W. Dorset, 240-66; DKR, x(ii), 25; E179/144/120. 10. W. C. Richardson, Ct. Augmentations, 78; PPC, vii. 113-280 passim; C142/65/25; PCC 25 Pynnyng.

Sir Richard Pollard (1505-1542), MP for Taunton (1536) and Devon (1539, 1542)

Birth: 1505 Kings Nympton Devon, England Death: Nov. 10, 1542 Kings Nympton Devon, England

2nd son of Sir Lewis Pollard (c.1465-1526) of King's Nympton, Justice of the Common Pleas from 1514 to 1526[10] and MP for Totnes in 1491. Knighted: 16 Jan. 1542.

Mother: Agnes Hext Pollard daughter of Thomas Hext, a prominent lawyer of Kingston.

He was MP for Taunton (1536) and Devon (1539, 1542). King's Remembrancer of the Exchequer and a law reporter. He was assistant of Thomas Cromwell in administering the surrender of religious houses following the Dissolution of the Monasteries and was employed particularly as a surveyor who visited the premises and made a detailed valuation of the house's assets and income. He resided chiefly at Putney, Surrey, thus near the Royal Court.

On 25 October 1537 the manor of Combe Martin was granted by King Henry VIII to Sir Richard Pollard, as the entry in the "Letters & Papers of King Henry VIII" records under the heading "grants October 1537": "Ric. Pollard. Grant of the manor and borough of Combmeston, Devon, with reservation of gold and silver mines, &c. Hampton Court, 20 Oct. 29 Hen. VIII. Del. Westm., 25 Oct. 1537—P.S." Sir Richard's son Sir John Pollard sold the manor of Combe Martin to his tenants and the demesne lands to his servant William Hancocke.

Marriage: "4 July 1519. m. by 1528, Jacquetta, 1da. of John Bury of Colliton, Devon, 3s. inc. Sir John 1da. " - Source: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/

CHILDREN: 1. Sir John Pollard (1527/8-1575), MP for Plympton Erle, Barnstaple, Exeter and Grampound. - Source: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/ 2. SON 3. SON 4. DAU.

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He had made his will on 31 Mar. 1541, providing for his wife, children and servants. The upbringing of his children was confided to his wife, his elder brother and his brother-in-law Paulet. To Sir William Fitzwilliam I, Earl of Southampton, and Sir John Russell, Baron Russell, he left rings, and to Sir Richard Rich (the overseer) a salt. He named his cousins John Pollard and Humphrey Colles executors. - - Source: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/ 

Family links:

Parents:
 Lewis Pollard (1465 - 1526)
 Agnes Hext Pollard (1475 - ____)

Children:

 John Pollard (1508 - 1575)*

Siblings:

 George Pollard (____ - 1544)*
 Anne Pollard Moore (1496 - ____)*
 Hugh Pollard (1498 - ____)*
 Joan Pollard Stukeley (1500 - ____)*
 Philippa Pollard Poulet (1504 - 1560)*
 Richard Pollard (1505 - 1542)
 Robert Pollard (1512 - 1576)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial: King's Nympton Church Kings Nympton North Devon District Devon, England

Created by: W. Pollard Record added: Oct 31, 2013 Find A Grave Memorial# 119614781



Family and Education b. by 1505, 2nd s. of Sir Lewis Pollard of Kings Nympton, Devon by Agnes, da. of Thomas Hext of Kingston, nr. Totnes, Devon. educ. M. Temple, adm. 4 July 1519. m. by 1528, Jacquetta, 1da. of John Bury of Colliton, Devon, 3s. inc. Sir John 1da. Kntd. 16 Jan. 1542.4

Offices Held

Autumn reader, M. Temple 1535, ?bencher by 1535.5

Servant of Sir William Courtenay I by 1532; j.p. Devon 1532, Mdx. 1537-d., western circuit 1540-d.; King’s remembrancer May 1536-d.; third gen. surveyor, office of gen. surveyors Feb. 1537, second 1539; sheriff, Devon 1537-8; member, council in the west 1539; steward, late possessions of Henry, Marquess of Exeter 1539-d.; second gen. surveyor, ct. gen. surveyors of the King’s lands May 1542-d.6

Biography Richard Pollard began his career as a practising lawyer; he had chambers above the gateway to the Middle Temple, received annuities from Cornish and Devonshire abbeys, and served on the council of the south-western magnate, Sir William Courtenay. The employment by Courtenay, which included accompanying him on monastic visitations, brought Pollard to the attention of Cromwell, for whom he was working before Courtenay’s death. In the summer of 1535, at Cromwell’s request and in company with other common lawyers, he met several doctors from the court of arches to discuss spiritual jurisdiction. Afterwards he wrote to Cromwell about the unsatisfactory nature of the meeting, and suggested: if it may stand with the King’s grace’s pleasure and yours, it were better to devise a remedy that the temporal judges may hereafter have jurisdiction of all such crimes and causes as the ecclesiastical judges have had jurisdiction heretofore, and by that means we shall have but one law within this realm, which I think better in my poor mind than to have several laws.Although his radical proposal was not adopted, Pollard continued in favour and his name appears often in Cromwell’s remembrances. His experience suggests that he was the ‘Pollarde’ who supplied a series of entries found appended to a set of law reports made by Justice John Spelman.7

The suggestion that Pollard was returned for Taunton to the Parliament of 1536 rests on the appearance of his name on a list, seemingly of nominees for the bishop of Winchester’s boroughs, written by Cromwell on a document probably of that year. Cromwell had sat for Taunton in the Parliament of 1529 (with William Portman, who also appears on the above list for that borough), but he presumably transferred to a knighthood of the shire in 1536, although there is no evidence for this. In the next two Parliaments Pollard sat for Devon: his knighthood of that shire was a measure of his local and official standing, and it was amplified by his being knighted in the parliament chamber at the opening of Parliament on 16 Jan. 1542. Two weeks later, together with his fellow-Members Richard Catlyn, John Caryll and Sir Roger Townshend, Pollard was approached by the city of London to sponsor a bill for cleaning the Fleet ditch. Pollard’s brother-in-law, Sir Hugh Paulet, was sheriff on the occasion of his second election for the county.8

As a royal surveyor, Pollard was concerned with the suppression of the lesser Kent, Surrey, Sussex and Yorkshire monasteries in 1537, as well as of Glastonbury and Reading abbeys between the parliamentary sessions of 1539. He supervised the defacement of the shrines at Bury St. Edmunds, Winchester and Canterbury, where he was described as so busy night and day ‘in prayer with offering unto St. Thomas’ that he had ‘no idle worldly time’ to spare until his ‘spiritual devotion’ was completed. The recipient of numerous gifts and annuities (in 1541 he was assessed for subsidy in London at £230 in lands and fees), Pollard acquired his greatest prize with the grant in 1540 of Forde abbey—then in Devon—which he had leased the previous year. He was nominated as a founder member of the council in the west in 1539 with permission to attend at his pleasure or when summoned.9

The fall of Cromwell did not arrest Pollard’s progress: he was one of the outstanding civil servants of the period, and when the new court of general surveyors was instituted he was appointed its joint first officer. His death on 10 Nov. 1542 removed the prospect of yet higher office and of the establishment of his family in greater state. It is not known who replaced him for the last two sessions of the Parliament of 1542. He had made his will on 31 Mar. 1541, providing for his wife, children and servants. The upbringing of his children was confided to his wife, his elder brother and his brother-in-law Paulet. To Sir William Fitzwilliam I, Earl of Southampton, and Sir John Russell, Baron Russell, he left rings, and to Sir Richard Rich (the overseer) a salt. He named his cousins John Pollard and Humphrey Colles executors.10

Ref Volumes: 1509-1558 Author: A. D.K. Hawkyard Notes 1. LP Hen. VIII, x. 40 (ii) citing Cott. Otho C10, f. 218. 2. E159/319, brev. ret. Mich. r. [1-21. 3. C219/18B/159. 4. Date of birth estimated from education. Vis. Devon, ed. Vivian, 598; PCC 27 Pynnyng; Hutchins, Dorset, iv. 527. 5. LP Hen. VIII, ix; Reps. of Sir John Spelman, i (Selden Soc. xciii), p. xxv. 6. LP Hen. VIII, v-xvii. 7. Ibid. v-xiv; L. Snell, Suppression of Rel. Foundations of Devon and Cornw. 66; J. Youings, Dissolution of the Monasteries, 54; SP1/95, f. 121; G. R. Elton, Reform and Renewal, 133-4; Reps. of Sir John Spelman, p. xxv. 8. Cott. Otho C10, f. 218; Wriothesley’s Chron. i (Cam. Soc. n.s. xi), 133; City of London RO, Guildhall, rep. 10, f. 242v. 9. W. C. Richardson, Tudor Chamber Admin. 258; LP Hen. VIII, viii-xvii; Devon Monastic Lands (Devon and Cornw. Rec. Soc. n.s.i.), xxi, 13; RCHM, W. Dorset, 240-66; DKR, x(ii), 25; E179/144/120. 10. W. C. Richardson, Ct. Augmentations, 78; PPC, vii. 113-280 passim; C142/65/25; PCC 25 Pynnyng.

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Sir Richard Pollard, MP's Timeline

1503
1503
Kings Nympton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
1528
1528
1536
1536
St Neot, Cornwall, England
1542
November 10, 1542
Age 39
Kings Nympton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
????
Kings Nympton Church, Devon, England, United Kingdom