William Blundell | |||
Issue: | Nicholas Blundell | ||
House-Type: | gentry | ||
Birth Date: | 15 July 1620/1625 | ||
Death Date: | 24 May 1698 | ||
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William Blundell (15 July 1620[1] /1625 – 24 May 1698), sometimes styled "of Crosby", was an English landowner and topographer and an officer in the Royalist army during the English Civil War.
William was born at Crosby Hall, Lancashire, the son of Nicholas Blundell by Jane, daughter of Roger Bradshaigh, of Haigh, near Wigan, into a family of ancient landed gentry. The Blundells were recusant Roman Catholics and William was probably sent to be educated at one of the schools that were then secretly maintained by Catholics in various parts of England. At the age of fifteen, around 1640, he married Ann, daughter of Sir Thomas Haggerston, Bart., of Haggerston, Northumberland, and Alice, née Banaster.[2]
At the outbreak of the Civil War in 1642, William accepted a captain's commission from Sir Thomas Tildesley, authorising him to raise a company of one hundred dragoons for the Royal cause. He joined in the march to Lancaster, where he received a serious wound when his thigh was shattered by a musket-shot. From then until the end of the war his life was marked by privation and financial anxieties. Under a law of 1646 by which no Papist delinquent could compound for his estate, all his real property was seized and remained in the control of the commissioners for nine or ten years. Eventually he repurchased it at a cost of 1,340l, but he was further burdened with the arrears of the rents reserved to the Crown, arising out of frequent grants for recusancy, some of which had never been discharged. These went back as far as the reign of Elizabeth, and William was forced by the government to pay 1,167l. 15s. 6½d. The cost of making out the enormous bill added to the account an additional 34l. 10s. 2d. This extraordinary document, a roll of twenty feet in length, is still preserved.
After the Civil War Blundell retired to Crosby Hall, where he died 24 May 1698 in the seventy-eighth year of his age, and was buried in the family chapel of St Helen's Church, Sefton. His estate was inherited by his son and heir, the diarist Nicholas Blundell.[3]