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NOTE: In 1620, Robert Honywood, the son of Mary Waters, wrote a pedigree of the Bright family of Royton. states that Elizabeth and George had 13 children.
Constituency Dates: NEW WINDSOR 1586
Family and Education
b. 1549, 1st s. of John Woodward by Margaret, da. of George Bulstrode of Hedgerley Bulstrode. educ. ?Eton 1561. m. (1) Katherine, da. of Thomas Woodford of Britwell, 3s.; (2) Elizabeth, da. of Robert Honywood of Charing, Kent, and Markshall, Essex, 3s. d.v.p. 9da. suc. fa. 1567.
Offices Held
Clerk of the works, Windsor castle and steward of honour of Windsor from July 1579; receiver of the revenue in the Exchequer for the castle and honour by 1587.
Biography
Woodward was returned for Windsor by virtue of his office at the castle. His religious sympathies probably lay with the puritans, who were strong at Windsor. On 18 Nov. 1586 he was one of the seven Members of the Commons who urged the necessity of the execution of the Queen of Scots, in reply to Queen Elizabeth’s plea that some other solution might be found; and he was added to the committee which was to confer with the Lords on this ‘great cause’. In his will, made 3 Jan. 1598, he renounced all other means of salvation save Christ, expressed confidence that he would be received into ‘the glory of eternal life’, and asked to be buried ‘without pomp’. His wealth still lay in the woods which had given his family its name. He instructed three trustees, of whom his brother-in-law Michael Heneage was one, to have 16 acres of trees felled in each of the 18 years following his death and to allocate the annual profits to his children, each in turn. Woodward was buried at Upton 30 Jan. 1598.
Vis. Bucks. (Harl. Soc. lviii), 131-2; Eton Coll. Reg. ed. Sterry, 377; PCC 28 Crymes, 37 Lewyn; N. and Q. (ser. 12), iv. 234; PRO Index 16774, f. 6; W. H. St. John Hope, Windsor Castle, 275-6; The King’s Works, iii. 414; Lansd. 55, f. 19; 106, f. 1; CPR, 1558-60, p. 108; D’Ewes, 403.
Ref Volumes: 1558-1603, by Author: Alan Harding
William James Woodward. History informs us that several persons bearing the name of Woodward suffered persecution among the Friends of England, and one of them, named Henry, died in prison. In Worcestershire we find the names of Joan, John, Richard and Thomas, all of whom suffered more or less for their religious opinions. From careful research we find that there appears to have been as many as five different settlements of those bearing the name of Woodward in the early colonization of this country. They settled in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland and Virginia. Those of Maryland, in the counties of Anne Arundel and St. Mary's were found there among the earliest settlers, near St. Anne's chapel, which is supposed to be one of the earliest churches of the Episcopal denomination in America. The Woodwards of Virginia antedate all others of the early settlers. Henry Woodward came to Virginia in the ship "Diana," and was living at Hog Island, with Jane, his wife, in 1624. The Rev. James Bacon, of England, first cousin of Sir Francis Bacon, married Martha, a daughter of George Woodward, of Buckinghamshire, England, and had issue, Nathaniel, born 1620, died in 1692, member of council in Virginia, 1657; burgess of York, 1659; acting governor, 1689; this was not the rebel. During the reign of Charles, fifteen thousand families had been ruined for their religious persuasions, and on the accession of James, twelve hundred Friends were released from filthy prisons and noisome dungeons, in which five thousand had perished for conscience's sake. In 1690 grants of land were made in North Carolina to William and Samuel Woodward. In 1719, grants were made to Henry, James and Edward Woodward. We find other records as follows: Thomas Woodward, clerk of the assembly, in March, 1655 ; Thomas Woodward, of the Isle of Wight, in 1678; Thomas Woodward constituted sole surveyor of North Carolina, in 1662. Captain Henry Woodward was an active participant in the French and Indian wars, .... etc.
1549 |
April 10, 1549
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Probably Burgate, Suffolk, England
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1571 |
August 1, 1571
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1572 |
September 6, 1572
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1573 |
September 21, 1573
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Upton, Buckinghamshire, England
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1574 |
August 12, 1574
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1575 |
August 29, 1575
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1576 |
September 16, 1576
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1577 |
August 25, 1577
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England
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1579 |
January 29, 1579
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Upton, Buckinhamshire, England.
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