William Wynter

Admiral Sir William Wynter (c. 1521 – 20 February 1589[1]) held the office of Surveyor and Rigger of the Navy for 40 years, from 1549 until his death in 1589, and combined that with the office of Master of Navy Ordnance from 1557. He was an admiral and principal officer of the Council of the Marine under Queen Elizabeth I of England and served the crown during the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604).[2][3] He was returned four times to parliament in Elizabeth's time.[1]

The Mynyon was William Wynter's command in 1552 and used in the evacuation of French troops from the Siege of Leith in 1560

Admiral Sir

William Wynter
Bornc. 1521
Brecknock, Powys, Wales
Died(1589-02-20)20 February 1589
Years of service1544-1589
RankAdmiral, Vice-Admiral of England
Commands heldAdmiral of the Irish Sea
Master of Naval Ordnance
Surveyor and Rigger of the Navy
Keeper of the Storehouse, Deptford Yard
Battles/warsSiege of Leith
Spanish Armada
Spouse(s)Mary Langton

Personal

Wynter was born at Brecknock, the second of five sons of John Wynter (died 1545),[4] a merchant and sea captain of Bristol and second Treasurer of the Navy (1544-1545),[5] a friend of Thomas Cromwell's. His mother was Alice, daughter of William Tirrey of Cork, Ireland.[6][3] His sister Agnes Winter (died 1574) in her second marriage became the first wife of the diplomat Thomas Wilson (1524-1581), and was the mother of his children.[6] William's brothers Arthur Wynter and George Wynter also held important positions in relation to the Navy.[7]

William was schooled in the Navy. He took part in the 260 ship expedition of 1544, which burned Leith and Edinburgh,[8] and in 1545 he served in Lord Lisle's channel fleet. In July 1546 he held the office of Keeper of the King's Storehouse at Deptford Strand.[9] In 1547 he took part in Protector Somerset's expedition to Scotland and victory at Pinkie, and in 1549, in an expedition to Guernsey and Jersey.[10][11]

In April 1549 Wynter was appointed Surveyor of the Navy, succeeding his colleague Benjamin Gonson, who was simultaneously appointed Treasurer of Marine Causes. Gonson held his post until his death in 1577, and Wynter his until 1589, so that this partnership was a constant feature of the naval administration through the third quarter of the sixteenth century.[1]

In December 1549, as captain of the Mynion, he captured the prize of a French ship, the Mary of Fécamp, laden with sugar. A reward of £100 was to be shared out among the crew of 300.[12] In 1550, he superintended the removal of the ships from Portsmouth to Gillingham in the Thames Estuary; Edward VI owed him £471 for a voyage to Ireland in 1552,[13] and, in 1553, he went on a voyage to the Levant.[14] In 1554, Wynter spent several months in the Tower of London under suspicion of involvement in Thomas Wyatt's rebellion against Mary I of England, until he was pardoned in November.[1]

In 1557, Wynter was appointed Master of Navy Ordnance, a post he held along with the Surveyorship for the rest of his life.[15][16] On 22 May 1558, Wynter brought ships from Dunkirk to Dover which were sailing on to Portsmouth.[17] He was present at the burning of Le Conquet in July 1558.[11]

At about this time William Wynter married Mary Langton, one of the daughters of the London merchant Thomas Langton, citizen and Skinner (died c. 1550) and his wife Mary Matthew of Colchester.[6] The marriage reflected civic and mercantile interest: Mary Matthew, Wynter's mother-in-law, became Dame Mary Judde (died 1602),[18] as the third wife of the Lord Mayor Sir Andrew Judde, a leading representative of the Muscovy Company, who died in 1558:[19] she afterwards married the London alderman, citizen and Clothworker James Altham of Mark Hall, Latton, Essex (died 1582).[20] Mary Langton's sister (Wynter's sister-in-law) Jane Langton was the wife of John Barne, son of the leading Muscovy merchant and Lord Mayor, George Barne (died 1558).[21][22] Edward Wynter, eldest son of William and Mary, was born in 1560.[23]

Mission to Scotland, 1559-1560

The Lyon, Wynter's flagship in 1560, from the Anthony Roll of 1547
The Swallow was storm-damaged off Flamborough Head on 16 January 1560
The Pinnace Saker followed Wynter to Scotland as a supply ship

Wynter was sent with a fleet to Scotland in January 1560 during the crisis of the Scottish Reformation commanding the Irish Squadron. In Scotland, Protestant lords, known as the "Lords of the Congregation" challenged the Catholic Regent Mary of Guise who was supported by French forces.[24] Wynter commanded a fleet to guard against French landings in Scotland in 1559, while diplomatic efforts were made to negotiate sending an English army to aid the Scottish Protestants. After a briefing at Gillingham, Wynter left Queenborough in the Lyon on 27 December, and sailed from the Lowestoft sea road on 14 January with 12 men-of-war followed by two supply ships, the Bull and the Saker. After the fleet was dispersed by a storm off Flamborough Head on 16 January, the damaged Swallow, Falcon, and Jerfalcon were left at Tynemouth, and the rest of the fleet passed Bamborough Castle to Berwick upon Tweed, where 600 hand gunners were embarked.[25]

Wynter's fleet enters the Firth of Forth

The Duke of Norfolk, commander in the North, gave Wynter orders to hinder any French landings in the Firth of Forth. He was to avoid battle, pretending he came up-river by chance without any official commission. At Coldingham bay, Wynter paused to send a copy of his log, which survives, to London.[25] He was observed by Lord John Stewart, Commendator of Coldingham, a half-brother of Mary, Queen of Scots.[26]

Eight ships including the Antelope and Lyon carried on into the Firth of Forth towards the fortress Island of Inchkeith on 21 January 1560. Wynter's blockade was immediately effective in preventing communication by sea from Edinburgh to the French garrison at Dunbar Castle. Although he could not do as much as he wished because his small landing boats were lost in the storm, he captured two French ships loaded with armaments. At first, the French had thought that Wynter's fleet were French ships bringing more troops, and their response was to send these boats loaded with munition for Henri Cleutin who was advancing on St Andrews. Instead, Cleutin was forced to race back to Stirling overland, and William Kirkcaldy of Grange delayed him by cutting the bridge over the Devon at Tullibody.[27]

On 24 January 1560, Wynter allowed the Scottish Snawdoun Herald John Patterson with the trumpet messenger James Drummond aboard the Lyon, who demanded to know his business in Scottish waters. As instructed, Wynter told Snawdoun he had been bound for Berwick, and came into the Forth expecting "friendly entertainment" as the nations were at peace. As the French forts had fired on him, and he had heard of the political situation in Scotland, he had taken it upon himself to aid the Lords of the Congregation against the "wicked practices of the French," and so Elizabeth I of England knew nothing of it. Patterson and Drummond visited the English fleet four times.[28]

Wynter's actions and speech to the Herald were reported to the Privy Council of England. To maintain the pretence he was instructed not to bring any ships he captured to England, but to berth them in the friendly harbours of Dundee and St Andrews which were in Protestant hands.[29] As late as 16 February 1560, Norfolk sent the Chester Herald, William Flower, to Mary of Guise who declared the English fleet had arrived in the Firth by accident. She claimed that the Lords of the Congregation had revealed advance knowledge of Wynter's mission and were in communication with him. Flower replied that he had no knowledge of ships or letters. While this ineffectual diplomacy continued, the Lords of the Congregation concluded the Treaty of Berwick with Norfolk, which set conditions for English intervention. Some of the sons of the leading Protestants were given up as hostages to guarantee the treaty, and these boys were delivered to Wynter.[30]

Siege of Leith

Wynter continued to harass shipping and then supported the English army brought in by the Treaty of Berwick to the Siege of Leith. He burnt seven ships under d'Elbouf; not only that, all supplies were cut off from France. He kept up a naval bombardment of the town. On Saturday, 7 May 1560, Wynter waited for a signal to sail up the Water of Leith and land 500 men on the quayside called the Shore, but the signal never came as the English assault on the walls had failed.[31]

The siege was ended by the negotiation of the Treaty of Edinburgh of 1560 which was the effective conclusion to the 'Auld Alliance'. Lord Burghley reported to the Privy Council that all spoke well of Wynter's conduct and he "was to be cherished." In July, Wynter discussed his fleet's return to Gillingham for re-fitting in dry-dock, but "the most expert officers of the Admiralty" sent the fleet to active service at Portsmouth, on their way escorting the ships evacuating the French army from Scotland to Calais.[32]

Peacetime and projects

Between 1560 and 1562, Winter purchased Lydney Manor in Gloucestershire as his residence.[2] The estate included the manors of Lydney Warwick, Lydney Shrewsbury, and Purton.[33]

Wynter helped save the Palace of the Bishop of London from fire by advising the Mayor of London, William Harpur to demolish the roof of the adjacent north aisle of St Paul's Cathedral when the church caught fire after being struck by lightning on 4 June 1561.[34]

In September 1561, Wynter and Benjamin Gonson joined with Sir William Garrard and the merchants Anthony Hickman and Edward Castelyn to propose a voyage to Guinea to be led by John Lok (who had conducted the "first Guinea voyage" in 1554). The articles were for a map and survey of the Guinea coast, its sea inlets and havens, its hinterland and resources, with a commission to identify a suitable site for a fortress in the king of Habaan's country. News was to be sought of the merchants left in Benin during the previous voyage.[35] In December Lok declined the proposal, partly because the Minion was in poor condition, but Garrard, Hickman and Castelyn next combined with Sir William Chester and Thomas Lodge to promote the Guinea voyage of 1562-63.[35]

In 1563, William served in the fleet off Le Havre. In 1570, he was sent by Elizabeth I to escort Anna of Austria on her sea journey from the Netherlands to marry Philip II of Spain.[36]

Rivalry in office

Wynter's brother George Wynter had been appointed Clerk of the Ships in November 1560 and held the position until his death in 1581.[7] John Hawkins (who married a daughter of Benjamin Gonson's in 1559) was appointed to succeed George Wynter in June 1567, but did not do so. In 1572 Hawkins and George Wynter were among those commissioned to clear the seas of pirates and freebooters. In the following year William Wynter was knighted at Gillingham,[37] but in 1577 he was passed over for the office of Treasurer of the Navy in favour of Hawkins,[1] a promotion which would have doubled his income. Hawkins immediately made for himself an enemy of Sir William Wynter, presenting Lord Burghley with detailed accusations of mismanagement and corruption throughout the Admiralty, and portraying Wynter as the senior figure responsible.[38] Both Hawkins and Wynter held their positions, and Sir William and his brother George received handsome returns on their investment in Sir Francis Drake's voyage of 1577. Although there were periods of apparent reconciliation, Wynter later supported charges of dishonesty against Hawkins,[39] and wrote critically of him to William Cecil.[40]

In c. 1575 the translator Richard Eden (died 1576) dedicated to Sir William Wynter his translation of the Latin Treatise of Continuall Motions (compiled from Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt and Giambattista Benedetti by Jean Taisnier and published in Cologne in 1562[41]) , made at the suggestion of his friend Richard Jugge (died 1577), Printer to the Queen's Majesty. Claiming long acquaintance with Wynter, in the dedicatory preface Eden remarked that he sought

"to consecrate and dedicate the same to some worthie personage, whose fame, aucthoritie, and dignitie, myght defende them from the evyll tongues of such as are more redie rather to reproove other mens dooynges, then to doo any good them selves. And therfore (gentle Maister Wynter) knowing your aucthoritie and fame in well deservyng, and honorable service unto your Prince and Countrey, to be suche as all men thynke so well of, and so greatlye esteeme, to whom (rather then unto you) may I dedicate this booke of Navigation?"[42]

In 1578 William Bourne dedicated to Wynter his book called The Treasure for Traveilers, a work concerning the use of the astrolabe and other instruments, the calculation of distances by latitude and longitude, the measuring of superficies and solid bodies, the measuring of the weight of ships in the water, and considerations of the natural causes affecting coastal topography and land formation. His dedicatory letter, addressing Wynter, remarked, "no person in this Land hath such great iudgement and knowledge in martial affaires by Sea, both touching the shipping, for that purpose, and also for the provision for the same, as your woorship hath: and as for your courage, valiantnesse, and wisdome, which is not unknowne unto the worlde..."[43]

Operations off Ireland

In 1571, during the first of the Desmond Rebellions one of Wynter's ships was seized at Kinsale by James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, the Irish rebel.

In 1579, he commanded the squadron off Smerwick in Ireland, cutting off the sea routes and seizing the ships of the papal invasion force, which was landed by Fitzmaurice in the company of Nicholas Sanders launching the Second Desmond Rebellion; during this campaign, he assisted in the siege of Carrigafoyle Castle.[44]

Spanish Armada

Engraving by J Pine (1739) after the lost tapestries of the Armada, with medallion portrait of Sir William Wynter in the border, lower centre

On 21 July 1588, Sir Francis Drake wrote, at the request of Lord Howard, to notify Lord Henry Seymour and Sir William Wynter of the approach of the Spanish Armada.[45] Wynter joined the main fleet of Lord Howard off Calais and proposed the fire-ship plan to drive the Spaniards from their anchorage.[46] He took part in the battle off Gravelines on 29 July, which was the only time in his career when he had hard fighting. During the engagement, he received a severe blow on the hip when a demi-cannon toppled over.[47] It is said that he was the only one to have understood the completeness of the navy's defence, assessing from his experience at Leith that the enemy army's transport would require 300 ships, while Howard and Drake thought that the invasion of England might still take place despite the naval repulse delivered to the armada.

His portrait was included in the Armada Tapestries.[48]

Offices held

Wynter held command in numerous expeditions[49][1]

Sir William Wynter died on 20 February 1589, aged 68: his will was proved in the following March. He requested to be buried in the chapel which he had recently made at Lydney church.[51] A Latin verse eulogy by William Patten was published in that year.[52] His wife had pre-deceased him, but her mother, Dame Mary Judd, survived until 1602.[53]

Issue

Wynter married Mary Langton, daughter of Thomas and Mary Langton. Dame Mary Wynter died 4 November 1573, at the Wynters' house in Seething Lane in the City of London, and was buried at Lydney, Gloucestershire.[54] They had issue:

References

  • Richard Bagwell, Ireland under the Tudors 3 vols. (London, 18851890).
  • Lee, Sidney, ed. (1900). "Winter, William" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 62. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Notes

  1. M.R.P. / P. W. Hasler (1981). "Wynter, William (c.1528-89), of Deptford, Kent and Lydney, Glos". The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981. Crown copyright and The History of Parliament Trust 1964-2012. Institute of Historical Research: Boydell and Brewer.
  2. Laughton, John Knox, "Winter, William", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, vol. 62, retrieved 30 June 2020
  3. D. Loades, 'Winter, Sir William (c. 1525–1589), naval administrator', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (OUP 2004).
  4. Will of John Wynter or Winter of Deptford, Kent (P.C.C. 1546, Alen quire). Read a transcript at bris.ac.uk (Department of History, University of Bristol).
  5. 'Appendix II: Biographical Notes. Winter, John, Paymaster or Treasurer of the Navy', in C.S. Knighton and D.M. Loades (eds), The Navy of Edward VI and Mary I, Navy Records Society (Ashgate Publishing, Farnham (UK) and Burlington VT 2011), p. 570 (Google).
  6. 'Wynter. Pedigree No. 1', in J. Macleane and W.C. Heane (eds), The Visitation of the County of Gloucester taken in the year 1623, (&c.), Harleian Society XXI (1885), pp. 271-74, at p. 273 (Internet Archive).
  7. 'Appendix II: Biographical Notes. Winter, Arthur' and 'Winter, George, Clerk of the Ships (1560-1582)', in C.S. Knighton and D.M. Loades (eds), The Navy of Edward VI and Mary I, Navy Records Society (Ashgate Publishing, Farnham (UK) and Burlington VT 2011), pp. 569-70 (Google).
  8. 'ccxi.38, June 20. - Wynter to Walsyngham', in J.K. Laughton, State Papers Relating to the Defeat of the Spanish Armada, anno 1588, 2 vols, Navy Records Society I & II (1894), I, pp. 212-17, at p. 213 (Internet Archive). Cited in DNB.
  9. '1334. William Watson (24 July 1546)', in J. Gairdner and R.H. Brodie, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Vol. XXI Part 1: January-August 1546 (HMSO, London 1908), pp. 654-63 (British History Online, accessed 12 June 2023]. Cited in History of Parliament.
  10. W.L. Clowes, The Royal Navy, A History from the Earliest Times to the Present, 5 vols (Sampson Low, Marston and Company, London 1897), I, p. 469 (Internet Archive).
  11. 'ccxix.36, December 20. - Wynter to Walsyngham', in Laughton, Defeat of the Spanish Armada (Navy Records Society, 1894), II, pp. 309-13, at p. 311
  12. C.S. Knighton and D.M. Loades (eds), The Navy of Edward VI and Mary I, Navy Records Society (Ashgate Publishing, Farnham (UK) and Burlington VT 2011), pp. 570-72.
  13. Samuel Haynes, A Collection of State Papers, (William Bowyer, London 1740), p. 127
  14. W. B. Turnbull, Calendar of State Papers Foreign, Edward VI, 1547-1553 (HMSO, London 1861), p. 254 no. 632
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  18. Will of Dame Mary Judd or Judde, Widow of Latton, Essex (P.C.C. 1602/03, Montague quire).
  19. Will of Sir Andrew Judde (P.C.C. 1559, Welles quire).
  20. Will of James Altham of Latton, Essex (P.C.C. 1586, Rowe quire).
  21. Slack, Paul (2004). "Judde, Sir Andrew (c.1492–1558)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37622. Retrieved 8 April 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) Subscription or UK public library subscription needed to view online
  22. 'Altham', in W.C. Metcalfe (ed.), The Visitations of Essex, Harleian Society, 2 Vols. XIII-XIV (London 1878-1879), II, pp. 538-39 (Internet Archive).
  23. M.R.P., 'Wynter, Edward (c.1560-1619), of Lydney, Glos.', in P.W. Hasler (ed.), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603 (from Boydell and Brewer 1981), History of Parliament online.
  24. T. C. Smout, A History of the Scottish People, 1560-1830 (Collins, 1969), p. 53.
  25. Joseph Stevenson, Calendar of State Papers, Foreign, Elizabeth, 1559-1560 (HMSO, London 1865), pp. 294-5
  26. Joseph Bain, Calendar of State Papers, Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 293-95.
  27. 'John Knox's History of the Reformation', Book 3, in David Laing, The Works of John Knox, Bannatyne Club (Edinburgh 1848), II, p. 14 (Google).
  28. Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 11, p. 10.
  29. Calendar of State Papers, Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 291–306
  30. Calendar of State Papers, Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 322, 344
  31. Calendar of State Papers, Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 387, 393, 396, 400
  32. Calendar of State Papers, Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 435, 445, 447, 449
  33. A.P. Baggs and A.R.J. Jurica, 'Lydney: Manors and other estates', A History of the County of Gloucester, Volume 5: Bledisloe Hundred, St. Briavels Hundred, the Forest of Dean, ed. C.R.J. Currie and N.M. Herbert (V.C.H., London 1996), pp. 46-84 (British History Online, accessed 21 April 2021).
  34. The True Report of the Burning of the Steeple and Church of St Pauls, London (1561), reprinted in A.F. Pollard, Tudor Tracts (A. Constable and Co. Ltd., Westminster 1903), at p. 405 (Internet Archive).
  35. 'Certaine articles deliuered to M. John Lok', and 'Letter of Iohn Lok', in E. Goldsmid (ed.), Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English nation collected by Richard Hakluyt, Vol. XI: Africa (E. & G. Goldsmid, Edinburgh 1889), pp. 164-67 (Internet Archive).
  36. "LETTER SIGNED, AT THE HEAD ("ELIZABETH R"), TO LORD CHARLES HOWARD". Sothebys. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  37. W.A. Shaw, The Knights of England, 2 vols (Lord Chamberlain's Office/Sherratt and Hughes, London 1906), II, p. 75 (Internet Archive).
  38. P. Gosse, Sir John Hawkins, The Golden Hind Series (John Lane, The Bodley Head Ltd., London 1930), pp. 157-62 (Internet Archive).
  39. W.H. Smyth, 'On certain passages in the Elizabethan Life of Sir John Hawkins' (comm. 7 June 1849), Archaeologia XXXIII (1849), pp. 195-208, at pp. 197-98 (Google).
  40. Oppenheim, Administration of the Navy, I, p. 393 ff (Google).
  41. J. Taisnier, Opusculum perpetua memoria dignissimum, de natura magnetis et ejus effectibus, Item de motu continuo (Apud Joannem Birckmannum, Cologne 1562). Pageviews at Google.
  42. 'To the ryght woorshipfull Syr Wylliam Wynter, Knyght, Maister of the Ordinaunce of the Queenes Maiesties Shippes, and Surueyor of the sayd Shippes', in R. Eden (translator), A Very Necessarie and Profitable Booke Concerning Nauigation, compiled in Latin by Ioannes Taisnierus, &c. (Richard Jugge, London c. 1575). Full text at Umich/eebo.
  43. 'To the Right worshipfull syr William Winter Knight' (&c.), in William Bourne, A Booke called the Treasure for Traveilers: Devided into Five Bookes or Partes, Contaynyng Very Necessary Matters for All Sortes of Travailers, eyther by Sea or by Lande (Thomas Woodcocke, London 1578), at sect. ii (Google): for original pageviews see Yale University Reader, image 5.
  44. R. Bagwell, Ireland under the Tudors, 3 vols (Longmans, Green, and Co., London 1885-1900), III, pp. 47-48, pp. 57-58, pp. 65-68, and pp. 71-73 (Internet Archive).
  45. J. Barrow, The Life, Voyages and Exploits of Admiral Sir Francis Drake (John Murray, London 1843), pp. 289, ff (Google).
  46. R.P. Cruden, The History of the Town of Gravesend in the County of Kent (W. Pickering, London 1843), pp. 253-54 (Google).
  47. 'ccxiv.7. August 1. - Wynter to Walsyngham', in Loughton, Defeat of the Spanish Armada, II, pp. 7-14 (Internet Archive).
  48. William Thomson, Tapestry Weaving in England (London, 1914), p. 33 (Internet Archive).
  49. Childs, David (2009). Tudor Sea Power: The Foundation of Greatness. Seaforth Publishing. p. 298. ISBN 9781473819924.
  50. 'Patent, 18 November 1577', Calendar of Patent Rolls, Elizabeth I, Vol. VII (HMSO 1982), p. 531, no. 3625.
  51. Will of Sir William Wynter of Lydney, Gloucestershire (P.C.C. 1589, Leicester quire).
  52. W. Patten, In Mortem W. Wynter Equitis Aurati (Thomas Orwinum, London 1589), (8pp). View Title Page at Proquest.
  53. Will of Dame Mary Judde (P.C.C. 1602).
  54. 'Winter, Captain William', in A. Brown (ed.), The Genesis of the United States of America: A Narrative of the Movement in England, 2 vols (Houghton and Mifflin/The Riverside Press, New York/Cambridge 1897), II, p. 1056 (Google).
  55. H.G. Nicholls, The Forest of Dean: An Historical and Descriptive Account (John Murray, London 1858), pp. 24-44 and passim (Google).
  56. 'Wynter. Pedigree no. II', in Maclean and Heane, The Visitation of the County of Gloucester (&c.), pp. 274-79, at p. 278 (Google).
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