Halford baronets of Wistow (first creation, 1641)

The Halford baronetcy of Wistow, Leicestershire, was created in 1641 for Richard Halford in the Baronetage of England. It became extinct in 1780 with the death of the seventh and last baronet.[1]

Escutcheon of the Halford baronets of Wistow

Halford baronets, of Wistow, Leicestershire (1641)

  • Sir Richard Halford, 1st Baronet (c.1580–1658).[1] He was a Royalist, close to Charles I of England, and during the English Civil War the king stayed at Wistow Hall before the 1645 Battle of Naseby, not far to the south.[2][3]
  • Sir Thomas Halford, 2nd Baronet (1638–1679).[1]
  • Sir Thomas Halford, 3rd Baronet (c.1663 – 1690).[1] He was a Tory Member of Parliament for Leicestershire 1689–1690; he died unmarried.[4] He was succeeded by his next brother:
  • Sir William Halford, 4th Baronet (died 1695) who was succeeded by his next brother.[1]
  • Sir Richard Halford, 5th Baronet (died 5 September 1727).[1] Great-grandfather maternally of Sir Henry Halford the physician and first baronet of the 1809 creation. He married Mary Cotton, dau of Rev. William Cotton of Broughton Asley, and had five sons and three daughters, including
    • Sir William Halford, 6th Baronet (1709–1768)ref name="Cokayne"/> and
    • Thomas Halford (died 1766).[1] Father of four sons (of whom the youngest Charles became the 7th and last Baronet), and
    • Elizabeth Halford (c.1703 – 11 June 1772, aged 69) who married John (or William or Thomas) Smalley,[5] an alderman of Leicester, and had with other issue, a second daughter:
      • Hester Smalley (c.1740 – 2 April 1791, aged 51)[6] whose eldest surviving son was

Sir Richard Halford, 5th Baronet, was succeeded by his eldest son

  • Sir William Halford, 6th Baronet (1709–1768) who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his nephew (youngest son of the next brother Thomas Halford)[7]
  • Sir Charles Halford, 7th Baronet (1732 – 21 July 1780) the last baronet of the 1641 creation. Son of Thomas Halford, second son of the 5th Baronet. His widow Sarah remarried 1783 Basil Feilding, 6th Earl of Denbigh.[1]

Notes

  1. Cokayne, George Edward (1902). Complete Baronetage. Vol. II. Exeter: W. Pollard & Co., Ltd. p. 150.
  2. Wotton, Thomas; Kimber, Edward; Johnson, Richard (1771). The Baronetage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets Now Existing ... Illustrated with Their Coats of Arms ... : to which is Added an Account of Such Nova Scotia Baronets as are of English Families and a Dictionary of Heraldry ... Vol. I. G. Woodfall. p. 423.
  3. Hill, John Harwood (1875). The History of Market Harborough: With that Portion of the Hundred of Gartree, Leicestershire, Containing the Parishes of Baggrave, Billesdon, Bosworth ... and Wiston. subscriber. p. 315.
  4. "Halford, Sir Thomas, 3rd Bt. (c.1663-90), of Wistow Hall, Leics., History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  5. The Christian name is given variously in different sources. His funerary monument at Church of St John the Baptist King’s Norton, lists him as John Smalley (d. 19 September 1763) aged 61. Elizabeth Smalley nee Halford died She died June 11, 1772 aged 69 years. Their son Lt. William Smalley died 5 January 1764 aged 28 years
  6. Halford family monuments: A8 – James Vaughan M.D. and Hester Vaughan. Full date of death retrieved 12 March 2009. This describes her father as William Smalley, but her father's funerary monument gives his name as John Smalley and her brother's as William Smalley.
  7. Not his brother as claimed by the Wistow history Archived 2015-10-22 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved and checked 12 March 2009.
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