Sir Thomas Curwen

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Thomas Curwen, Knight

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Workington Hall, Cumberland , England (United Kingdom)
Death: 1464 (63-65)
Workington Hall, Cumberland , England (United Kingdom)
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Christopher Curwen, of Workington and Elizabeth Curwen
Husband of Anne Curwen
Father of Sir Christopher Curwen; William Curwen; Gilbert Curwen; Ambrose Curwen; Ann Curwen and 5 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Sir Thomas Curwen

  • Sir Thomas Curwen1
  • M, #35334, d. 1464
  • Father Christopher Curwen d. 17 Jul 1450
  • Mother Elizabeth Huddleston
  • Sir Thomas Curwen was born at of Workington, Cumberland, England. He married Anne Lowther, daughter of Sir Robert Lowther and Margaret Strickland. Sir Thomas Curwen died in 1464.
  • Family Anne Lowther
  • Child
    • Sir Christopher Curwen, Sheriff of Cumberland+ d. 1492
  • Citations
  • 1.[S74] Brent Ruesch's Research Notes.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p1177.htm#... ____________________________
  • Sir Thomas Curwen1
  • M, #218705, b. 1402, d. after 1473
  • Last Edited=24 Feb 2007
  • Sir Thomas Curwen was born in 1402 at Workington Hall, Cumberland, England.1 He was the son of Sir Christopher Culwen and Elizabeth Hudleston.1 He married Alice (?) before 1429.1 He married Anne Lowther, daughter of Sir Robert Lowther and Margaret Strickland, before 1430.1 He died after 1473 at Workington Hall, Cumberland, England.1
  • Children of Sir Thomas Curwen and Anne Lowther
    • 1.Gilbert Curwen+1 d. 4 Nov 1483
    • 2.Thomas Curwen1
    • 3.William Curwen1
    • 4.Ambrose Curwen1
    • 5.Margaret Curwen1
    • 6.Elizabeth Curwen1
    • 7.Anne Curwen1
    • 8.Janet Curwen1
    • 9.Isabel Curwen1
    • 10.Sir Christopher Curwen+1 b. c 1430, d. 6 Apr 1499
  • Citations
  • 1.[S146] John F. Curwen, A History of the Ancient House of Curwen of Workington in Cumberland (Kendal, Cumberland, U.K.: Titus Wilson & Co., 1928). Hereinafter cited as History of Curwen in Workington.
  • From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p21871.htm#i218705 _____________________________
  • CURWEN, Christopher (d.1450), of Workington, Cumb.
  • s. and h. of Sir William Curwen* by his 1st w. Ellen. m. Elizabeth (d. aft. 1468), da. of Sir John Huddlestone of Millom castle, 2s. inc. Thomas†. Kntd. by June 1404.1
  • .... Meanwhile, the death in 1441 of his own younger brother, John, sometime governor of Porchester castle, may have strengthened Sir Christopher’s resolve to seek retirement, although he did serve a sixth term as sheriff in 1441, when he was already well advanced in years. By then he had settled a substantial part of his English estates upon his elder son, offering sureties worth no less than 1,000 marks to Sir John Pennington that Thomas would eventually succeed to all of them. Thomas had married Alice, the daughter of (Sir) Robert Lowther*; and it looks as if this undertaking, made in about 1443, marked the betrothal of their own young son, Christopher, to one of Pennington’s daughters.6
  • .... His widow, Elizabeth (who was eventually buried beside him), leased the manor of Thornthwaite and her other dower properties to her elder son for a rent of £20 a year and a promise of full board and lodging. She retained control of her own inheritance in Bampton Patrick until 1468, when she granted the annual revenues of £65 to William Curwen, one of her grandsons. Thomas Curwen pursued a similar career to that of his father, being active for many years in local administration.7
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/cu... __________________________________
  • The Curwens of Workington Hall and kindred families (1880)
  • https://archive.org/details/curwensofworking00jack
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/14/mode/1up
  • The name of Gilbert occurs again in 1397, and, finally,
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/15/mode/1up
  • another mention is made of him in the Family Pedigree. He was twice married ; first to Alice, daughter of Sir Lowther ; she was the mother of William. His second wife was Isabella de Derwentwater, widow of Christopher Moresby ; a fact, I think, sufficiently proved by the Inquisition quoted below. I do not think that there were any children of this union.
  • His son, William, seems early to have taken a very active and prominent part in the stirring events of his time. We first find mention of him in 1376, when he was appointed Constable of "Loghmaban Castle," .... etc. .... He was twice married ; the first time to Elyn, one of the three co-heiresses of Robert de Brun, of Drumburgh Castle, from whose family Brunstock took its name. By her he got a considerable property, consisting of one-third of Bothell, part of Torpenhow, and lands near Carlisle. It does not appear that he had any family by her, although
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/16/mode/1up
  • his descendants long continued to give as their own arms quarterly, 1 & 4 Curwen, 2 & 3 Brun, being azure, a lion rampant argent charged with five lozenges gules, langued and armed of the same. There may have been some connection between the Curwens and Bothell previous to this marriage, or the heiress may have been a ward of Sir Gilbert, for in the year 1357 John Coron (note the spelling) of Bothill was buried in the churchyard of Saint Michael, Torpenhowe. A list of the lands said to have been held by William Culwen under Maud de Percy, heiress of the Lucies, at the time of her death in 1398/9, is appended. Between 1399 and 1403 William had a grant from Henry, Earl of Northumberland, Constable of England, and Hotspur, his son, of all their rights in the Manors of Wyrkyngton, Seton, and Thornthawyte in Derwent felles ; and it is especially worthy of note that the grant is "Willmo de Curwen," being the first time we find in the recognized family an authenticated departure from the old spelling of Culwen. I gather from no mean authority that the endorsement "Wilyam de Curwen" is probably in the autograph of the grantee. Mons'r. William de Culwenne was summoned from Cumberland to the King's Privy Council in 1401. Sir Willam's second wife was Margaret, daughter of Sir John Croft, of Claughton, Lancashire, by whom he had, at least, one son, Christopher.
  • Sir Christopher Curwen was Lord of Workington from 1404 to 1450, .... etc.
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/18/mode/1up
  • .... etc. He died July 17, 1450.
  • His wife, Elizabeth de Hudelston, survived him. She was living 7 Edwd. IV (1468). Her survival to this late period clears up a difficulty which has occasioned Canon Knowles and myself much thought in connection with the arms on the monument. It will be observed that the arms at the head of the dexter side are those of Curwen impaling lozengy for Croft, being the arms of Christopher's father and mother ; the next are those of Curwen and Hudleston, his own and those of his wife ; the third coat Curwen only ; the fourth, Curwen impaling six annulets or, for Lowther, their son's arms and those of his wife ; and the last, Curwen impaling the eldest son of Pennington, who pre-deceased his father ; which last were the arms of Christopher, the grandson of the entombed pair, and those of his wife. He raised the monument, his grandmother
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/19/mode/1up
  • having survived to see him holding the estate, which fell into his hands about the year 1470. And so they lie, — .... etc.
  • Sir Christopher was succeeded by his son Thomas, who was Sheriff of Cumberland 28 & 35 Henry VI, Knight of the Shire for that County 14, 20, 27 & 38, and for Westmorland 28th of the same reign. His wife, Anne, was daughter of Sir Robert Lowther. I quote below two
  • https://archive.org/stream/curwensofworking00jack#page/20/mode/1up
  • statements respecting him from the notes to the old pedigree.
  • A second Christopher succeeded his father Thomas. His first wife was Anne, daughter of John, eldest son of Sir John Pennington, who pre-deceased his father. His second wife was Catherine, daughter of Sir Richard Salkeld, of Rosgill. .... etc. ____________________________________
  • LOWTHER, Robert (d.1430), of Lowther, Westmld. and Newton Reigny, Cumb.
  • s. and h. of Sir John Lowther† (d.c.1382) of Lowther and Newton Reigny by his w. Margaret Preston, and bro. of William I*. m. bef. Sept. 1398, Margaret (bef. 1365-16 July 1449), da. of William Strickland (d. 30 Aug. 1419), bp. of Carlisle (1400-19) by Isabel, da. of Thomas Warcop of Warcop, Westmld., wid. of Sir John Derwentwater* (d.c.1396) of Castlerigg, Cumb., 6s. inc. Hugh† and William II*, 3da. Kntd. by Jan. 1404.1
  • .... Family affairs must have consumed a good deal of Sir Robert’s attention, since he was then busy executing the will of his father-in-law, and not long afterwards he began negotiations for the marriage of his daughter, Isabel, to the son and heir of Sir William Leigh*. Her sister, Alice, became the wife of (Sir) Christopher Curwen’s elder son, Thomas†, so this was clearly a time for, cementing alliances among the local gentry.5 .... etc.
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/lo... ______________________________
  • Christopher Curwen (died 1450) was an English soldier, administrator and politician.
  • He was the son of Sir William Curwen of Workington, Cumberland and his first wife Alice. He succeeded his father in 1403 and was knighted by 1404.
  • He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Appleby in September 1397, for Cumberland in November 1414, 1423, 1425, 1427, 1431 and 1432.[1]
  • He was appointed High Sheriff of Cumberland for 1415–16, 1423–24, 1427–28, 1433–34, 1437–38 and 1444–45. He was also a Justice of the Peace for Cumberland from 1435 to 1439 and 1443 to 1448.
  • From 1417 he saw military service under John, Lord Neville, in Henry V’s second expedition against the French, as leader of 44 lances and 113 archers. He was made keeper of the castle of Danville in Normandy and in 1419 he and his male heirs were granted in perpetuity the castle of Cany-en-Caux and the lordship of Caux, which had been confiscated from the Duke of Bavaria.
  • He died in 1450 and was buried at Workington church. He married Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir John Huddlestone of Millom Castle; they had two sons. He was succeeded by his elder son, Thomas.
  • From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Curwen_(MP) ___________________________
  • Thomas CURWEN (Sir)
  • Born: ABT 1405, Workington, Cumberland, England
  • Died: 1463
  • Father: Christopher CURWEN of Workington (Sir)
  • Mother: Elizabeth HUDDLESTON
  • Married: Anne LOWTHER (dau. of Robert Lowther and Margaret De Strickland)
  • Children:
    • 1. Christopher CURWEN (Sir)
    • 2. Elizabeth CURWEN
    • 3. Margaret (Joan) CURWEN (b. AFT 1428)
    • 4. Gilbert CURWEN of Stubbe
    • 5. William CURWEN
    • 6. Thomas CURWEN
    • 7. Gilbert CURWEN
    • 8. Ambrose CURWEN
    • 9. Anne CURWEN
    • 10. Janet CURWEN
    • 11. Isabel CURWEN
  • From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/CURWEN.htm#Thomas CURWEN (Sir)1
  • The royal lineage of our noble and gentle families. Together with their paternal ancestry. Volume 2, by Foster, Joseph, 1844-1905. Published 1884. page 126-132 "The Descent of Henry Fraser Curwen, Esq., of Workington Hall, from the Blood Royal of England."
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Sir Thomas Curwen's Timeline

1400
1400
Workington Hall, Cumberland , England (United Kingdom)
1422
1422
Workington Hall, Workington, Cumberland, England (United Kingdom)
1444
1444
of Workington, Cumberland, England
1448
1448
of Workington, Cumberland, England
1450
1450
of Workington, Cumberland, England
1452
1452
Workington, Cumberland, England (United Kingdom)
1452
of Workington, Cumberland, England
1456
1456
of Workington, Cumberland, England
1460
1460
of Workington, Cumberland, England