William Woodhouse (naval officer) explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
William Woodhouse
Birth Date:1517
Death Date:22 November 1564
Birth Place:Waxham, Norfolk, England
Serviceyears:1533-1564
Rank:Lieutenant Admiral
Commands:HMS Primrose
Keeper of Queenborough Castle
Master of Naval Ordnance
Vice-Admiral in the Channel
Vice-Admiral of Suffolk
Vice-Admiral of Norfolk
Lieutenant of the Admiralty

Lieutenant Admiral Sir William Woodhouse (by 1517 – 22 November 1564) was an English naval commander and administrator who rose to the rank of Lieutenant of the Admiralty and was head of the Council of the Marine later called the Navy Board. He also served as a Member of Parliament of the Parliament of England from 1545 to 1564. He was prominent during an important time of the Navy Royal's development in the later half of the Tudor period.

Naval career

Woodhouse was a naval commander and administrator who served under Henry VIII of England. He went to sea early in life and his career advanced through service to the King. He was granted offices in Lynn Norfolk, and was appointed Escheator for Norfolk and Suffolk from 1538 to 1539. This was followed by his being appointed bailiff of the manor of Gaywood in 1540. In September 1542 he was appointed Captain of HMS Primrose until January 1543.[1]

In February 1543 he was appointed admiral of four ships in the North Sea. In November 1543 he took charge of 10 ships stationed at Portsmouth with the intention of attacking French fishing waters. Appointed Vice-Admiral of the Fleet of the Earl of Hertford's expedition to Scotland in early 1544, he was knighted in Leith, Scotland on 13 May 1544. He was next appointed Vice-Admiral in the Channel and Vice-Admiral at Boulogne from July to November 1544 serving under Admiral Sir Thomas Seymour. In April 1546 he was appointed a member of the Council of the Marine and made Master of Naval Ordnance from 1546 to 1552. His next appointment came in 1552 when he was given the office of the Keeper of Queenborough Castle which he held until 1553.[2]

In December 1546 he was appointed head of the Council of the Marine as Lieutenant of the Admiralty until 1564. In 1554 he was appointed as both Vice-Admiral of Suffolk and Vice-Admiral of Norfolk until 1564. In 1557 he was a commander with John Clere of a fleet sent against Scotland. Clere died fighting at Kirkwall.[3]

In October 1558 he was appointed for a second time Vice-Admiral in the Channel until January 1559. He remained as head of the Council of the Marine until 22 November 1564 when he died in office. The post of Lieutenant of the Admiralty then fell into abeyance until 1604.[2]

Political career

Woodhouse was also served as a Member of the Parliament of England elected for Great Yarmouth from 1545 to 1553, for Norfolk in 1558, Norwich from 1559 to 1563, and Norfolk again from 1563 to his death in 1564.[4] He is described as "of Hickling, Norfolk".

Family

This family of the Woodhouses was a distinct family from that of the Woodhouses of Kimberley and the later Earls of Kimberley, and bore, for their arms, quarterly, azure, and ermine, in the first quarter a leopard's head, or; which arms belong to the family of Power, and Francis Blomefield found these Woodhouses to be formerly styled Woodhouse, alias Power.[5]

Sir William Woodhouse was the younger son of John Woodhouse of Waxhame and his wife Alice, daughter of William Croftes of Wyston in Norfolk.[6] His elder brother was Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Woodhouse.

Woodhouse married firstly Anne, daughter of Henry Repps of Thorpe Market in Norfolk, and had:

He married secondly Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Sir Philip Calthorpe, knight. Elizabeth was the widow of Sir Henry Parker, knight, the son and heir of Henry Parker, 10th Baron Morley.

Children of second marriage:

Bibliography

  1. Bindoff, Stanley Thomas (1982). The House of Commons, 1509-1558: History of Parliament Trust. Woodbridge, England: Boydell & Brewer. .
  2. "Woodhouse, Sir William (by 1517-64), of Hickling, Norf". The History of Parliament. History of Parliament Trust.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bindoff . Stanley Thomas . The House of Commons, 1509-1558: History of Parliament Trust . 1982 . Boydell & Brewer . Woodbridge, England . 9780436042829 . 653–655 . en.
  2. Bindoff. pp.653-655.
  3. C. S. Knighton & David Loades, Navy of Edward VI and Mary I (Navy Records Society, 2011), pp. 342-5.
  4. Web site: WOODHOUSE, Sir William (by 1517-64), of Hickling, Norf.. The History of Parliament. 27 June 2012.
  5. Francis Blomefield & Charles Parkin, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk, vol. 9 (London, 1808), p. 353.
  6. 'Woodhouse', in W. Rye (ed.), The Visitacion of Norfolk, made and taken by William Hervey, Clarencieux King of Arms, anno 1563, enlarged with another Visitacion made by Clarenceux Cook: with many other descents (etc.), Harleian Society XXXII (London 1891), pp. 320-23, at p. 321 (Internet Archive).
  7. 'Reppes', in Rye (ed.), The Visitacion of Norfolk, pp. 230-31 (Internet Archive).
  8. 'Hundred of Giltcross, West-Herling', in F. Blomefield, ed. C. Parkin, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk, Volume I (William Miller, London 1805), pp. 297-312, at pp. 305-06; 'St Cleere's Manor, North Tudenham', Volume X (William Miller, London 1809), pp. 263-64 (Google).
  9. Daniel Gournay, Record of the House of Gournay, 1 (London, 1848) p. 412.