 |
 |
Lady, stone. Late 14th century |
Knight, oak. C. 1340 |

Priest, late 14th century

Mary Jane Wilkinson (Lyon) (1703)
|

Stanley de Lancey
Willson.

Anne Belt (Bowser) (1735)
Widow of Tho' Belt minister who died in 1677

Ms Gartrude Wren (1637)

Cross and shears |

Rev John Bacon (1827)
Minister of
St Andrew Auckland and Escomb.
Also his wife:
Isabella (1812)

Margaret Maxwell (1807)

Reused brass matrices |

Francis Pewterer
(1738); his wife, Anne (1732), and
their son, Francis (1716)
at 2. He was auditor
and keeper at Auckland Castle
to the Lords
Bishops of Durham.

Lt Col William Glover (?)

Martha Dobson (1837)
|

Mjr-Gen John Anthony Hodgson (1849)
He died at Umrallah, Rohilound District, India, where
he is buried; also his son, Mjr-Gen Hugh Norris Hodgson
(1906); also his grandson, Cpt Charles Edwin
Hodgson (1894) at 32.

Joseph Reay (1783) and
his wife, Margaret (Cuthbert) (1792) |
|
Elizabeth Dinsdale (1907)
Brass with floral border on black marble back |
Edward Maltin DD Lord
Bishop of Durham 1836-1856 'to whom a former east
window
in this church was erected by public subscription.' Brass with
leaf lower border and arms top centre. |
'To the Glory of God and in memory of...'
'...assistant curates of this church...' William George
Selway (1891-1893), Henry Robert Norris (1898), Alfred Randolf
Wilson (1898)., Philip Henry Page (1898-1902). Brass
with vine leaf border and cross top centre, below which crossed
quills. Below this is a plain separate brass: 'Also in memory of
Charles Smith BA (1904-1907)' |
Ernest Maximilien Charles, Marquis
de Kerven de Limoelan BA. (1884) Headmaster of King
James I Grammar School, Bishop Auckland |
|
|

Frances Hoar (Sleigh) (1761)
Old Father Time with scythe and hour glass is often
represented on church monuments. But is the smaller figure the
New Year. It looks rather like the Titan Cronos and one of his
children; surely not. |

John Allison (1805),
merchant; Lt- Col of the Loyal Stockton volunteers; his daughter,
Ann (1790)
aged 18; and his wife,
Jane
(1836) |

Richard Jackson JP (1875)
Twice mayor. 22 years vicar's church warden. And his wife,
Mary (1875) |

Grace Sutton (1814) |

Ann Sleigh (1835) |

Lt Col William Sleigh |
Other
Monuments |
Samuel Smith (1823). Also
his daughters: Elizabeth Hubback (1810). Buried
at Acomb; and Mary James (1839). Also
Elizabeth's husband, George Hubback (1939).
White tablet.
Thomas Troy (1795) Alderman. White tablet with
gable on black base.
Leonard Raisbeck (1843) and his wife,
Mary (Robinson) (1853) White Gothick tablet on black
base.
In memory of Captain James Cook, navigator and
discoverer. A friend of Captain William Christopher. He
frequently stayed at Stockton in the old vicarage and attended
this church. Born at Marton (1728) he was stabbed to death at
Hawaii in the Sandwich Isles, in the course of his third voyage
round the world in (1779)
John Barker (1839), and his wife, Ann
(1860). White tablet with gable surmounted by a cross.
Vice-Admiral Nathan Bruton (1814) Vice Admiral
of the White. White tablet on black base with naval symbols
Richard Dickson (1815) Gothick on black base
Magnus Moat, farmer and his son Thomas
Moat, draper and mercer (1784). Also
Thomas's wife, Ann (1781)
Henry Martin MA (1923) Canon of Durham, Vicar 1885-1916;
his wife, Mary (1923) Brass in frame
Frances Thomas (1857), her daughter, Frances
Juliana (1831) aged 7, and son Charles Forster
(1847) Fought in the 'Chinese War' and died a Dinapore;
'over whose grave a monument was erected as a mark of respect by
his brother soldiers' Romanesque doorway design
Thomas Sheraton (1806) 'born in humble
circumstances in this town, he became through innate
genius and zeal one of the greatest furniture designers and
craftsmen in the history of this country'. Brass
Ruth Harker (Wilkinson) (1975) '...the organ
was moved from Birmingham to Stockton ...in her memory...) Brass
John Walker of Stockton inventor of matches
('friction lights'). Born 24th May 1781, Died 1st May
1859.' Buried at Norton. Brass |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
Euphemia de Clavering (mid
14th) This effigy is in a recess in the south aisle; there
is a second lady with a boy, also in a recess in this aisle, but
13th C. There is another lady - 13th century - on the floor
between the two large tomb chests (see below). |
|
|
Alabaster |
 |

 |
 |
The Neville tomb showing the
tomb chest; the weepers or angels are missing. In the foreground
is 13th century lady referred to above. |
 |
It is difficult to see from the long shots
exactly what the feet of the three effigies are resting on. They
do follow the frequent arrangement of the ladies' feet resting
on dogs and the knight's feet resting on a lion but the animals
themselves each rest on a pair of seated monks reading at a
double lectern. |
A Tangled Web - A Simplified Who
Was Who |
Ralph Neville, Earl
of Westmoreland married, as his second wife,
Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt, himself a son
of King Edward III. She was one of the four Beaufort children - she had
three brothers - of John of Gaunt and his mistress,
Kathryn Swynford; all of the four children were thus
illegitimate, not that that worried anyone at all, except when
it came to inheritance. John of Gaunt later married Kathryn and
the Beauforts were made legitimate, not because of this
subsequent marriage (that law did not arrive until 1926
and then with some restrictions) but by Act of
Parliament. However, there was a proviso to this act: the
Beaufort line was barred from the throne. Not that this worried
anyone either: later the much married Lady Margaret Beaufort was
to become mother of Henry VII (Tudor).
Ralph and Joan had a number of descendants who were to make marks of
varying degrees on history. However we will discuss just two of
their children
here. A genealogical table would be needed to understand all these
complicated inter-relationships.
Their son
Richard Neville married Alice
Montague, who was heiress to the Earldom of Salisbury,
thus becoming Earl of Salisbury. Not that it did
him a lot of good in the long term as he joined the Yorkist
faction during the Wars of the Roses, and was beheaded after the
Battle of Wakefield.
His son, another
Richard Neville, known to history
as the Kingmaker, married Anne Beauchamp,
heiress of the Earldom of Warwick, so becoming Earl of
Warwick and as well Earl of Salisbury
after his father's execution. He was initially a Yorkist but,
because he felt he wasn't as influential as he would like to
have been, swapped over to the Lancastrians who looked an easier
option. Not a good move: he was killed at the foggy
Battle of Barndet, trying to escape from the field.
This Richard Neville had two daughters (actually three, one,
Margaret, was illegitimate), Isabel and
Anne, both of whom will reappear below.
Another child of Ralph and Joan, this time was a
girl, Cecily Neville known, rather
delightfully, as the Rose of Raby, having been born in
Raby Castle and, it is said, a girl of remarkable beauty. She married
Richard, Duke of York, who was quite lucky to have
inherited that title as his father was Richard, Earl of
Cambridge, brother of Edward, 2nd Duke of
York, and both sons of Edmund of
Langley,
1st Duke of York, a son of King Edward III.
Now Richard, Earl of Cambridge took part with others in the
Southampton plot to depose Henry V - himself a
grandson - but a legitimate one - of John of Gaunt, whom we have
mentioned above - just before Henry was about to embark to
France in his attempted conquest. The aim of plot was for Henry
to be replaced not by Richard, Earl of Cambridge but by
Edmund Mortimer, whose sister Anne Mortimer,
Richard had married. The Mortimer family were descended
from Lionel, Duke of Clarence, the 3rd son of
Edward III but by the female line. However Edmund Mortimer had
no wish to become king (not a secure job at the time)and reported the plot to King Henry;
Richard, Earl of Cambridge and the other conspirators were
promptly executed. Edward, 2nd Duke of York played no part in
his brother's conspiracy and sailed to France with King Henry
only to be killed at the Battle of Agincourt. He died
childless and his nephew - son of the executed Richard, Earl of
Cambridge - was curiously and, as it turned out, inadvisably - allowed to inherit the title.
So Cecily, the Rose of Raby, was married to Richard, 3rd Duke of
York who felt he had a better claim to the throne than did the
rather useless King Henry VI, Henry V now having died young: he was after
all descended from the third son (Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of
Clarence) of Edward III, albeit via his mother and, as
mentioned, via the female
line anyway and from the fifth son (Edmund, Duke of York) via
his father. The lines of the first and second son were extinct.
A better claim he felt than the King who was only descended via
the fourth son (John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster). A claim that
led to the Wars of the Roses but to came to nothing as
Richard was executed - like Richard Neville, Earl of
Salisbury - after the Battle of Wakefield.
But Richard and Cecily had three sons: Edward, Duke of York
(who was to become Edward IV), George, Duke of
Clarence (who was to be drowned in a butt of wine) and
Richard, Duke of Gloucester (who was to become
Richard III). Edward was captivated by and later married the lovely - and Lancastrian -
widow Elizabeth Woodville but the estates and daughters of of
the dead Richard Neville were shared out between the brothers,
George marrying Isobel and Richard marrying Anne.
To round off this tale that all of the sons of these marriages
came to an untimely ends: Edward's two sons were the 'Princes in
the Tower'; George's son, Edward, Earl of Warwick was imprisoned
and later executed by Henry VII (allegedly on the grounds that he
had attempted to escape from the Tower of London with the pretender Perkin Warbeck but it
is also said that Henry had him executed at the request of
Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain as a condition of their
daughter, Katherine of Aragon marrying Henry's son, Arthur, the
never to be future king; and Richard's son, Edward of Middleham, died young.
Thus ended the male Yorkist line - but not the ladies!
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Henry Neville, 5th
Earl of Westmoreland (1567) with his second and third
and wives, Jane (Cholmeley) and her sister
Margaret (Gascoigne)
The monument was made of oak by John Tarbotons.
It now appears black in most areas. Note that the feet are
reating on a number of dogs. In the top left picture can
be seen again the 13th century lady referred to above. |
 |
 |
 |
Left:
Katharine Margaret, Countess of Darlington (1807)
Above: Henry,
2nd Earl of Darlington (1792) Also shown below
where a relief of Raby Castle, which he restores, can be seen
Right: Margaret, Countess of Darlington
(1800)
All three of these monuments are by Robert Cooke of
London |

Above:
Sophia,
Duchess of Cleveland (1859)
Right: see above
Far right: General interior view of the church; some of the
monuments shown elsewhere can be seen in the background. The
wall monument in the forground is to Mary Lee (1812)
Note: there is also a reference in Pevsner's
County Durham to John Lee, Attorney-General (1793) with bust
and books on a table and Mary Lee (1813) by Nollekens.
I do not have a photograph of this monument but the Mary
Lee to the far right died in 1912, was the widow of
John Lee and the monument is signed by Nollekens.
It is likely this is the same person and the date in
Pevsner is an error. |
 |
 |

 |

 |
William Henry, 1st Duke of
Cleveland (1842) White marble by
Sir Richard Westmacott
|
 |



|
Above is a row of similar wall tablets to the Vane family; from
left to right: 1) Henry de Vere Vane, 9th Baron
Barnard (1918) and his wife, Catherine Sarah
(1918). 2) Henry Cecil Vane, Cpt R.F.A
(1918) Died at Rouen of illness contracted on service
and buried ar St Sever Cemetery. 3) Ralph
Frederick Vane, Cpt Durham Light Infantry (1928)
To the right a series of similar monuments to the
Trotter family; from top to bottom: 1) Lt Col
William Kemp Trotter DL JP (1911) 4th Durham L I
Special Reserve; formerly Cpt in the Duke of Wellington's West
Riding Regt. 2) Kate Trotter
(1941) wife of Lt Col W K Trotter; and her daughter
Ada Drydon Fife (1982) 3)
Lt Col William Dale Chaytor Trotter JP (1983)
11th Hussars; and his wife, Gladys Mona Trotter
(1996)
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
Left:
Alice
Burton (Blackett) (1722)
Above: Caroline, Duchess of Cleveland (1883)
Right: Frances Davison (1799) The then
Vicar's wife.
Far right: Thomas Scarth (1835) |
 |
 |
Etchings by C A Stothard from
Staindrop Church:
Top left: This is the 13th century lady, who is at the
side of the 5th Earl's monument but has not been individually
photographed.
Top right and bottom:
Ralph Neville, Earl of Westmoreland (1425)
and two wives, Margaret (Stafford) and
Joan (Beaufort). |
|