Ancestral Trails 2016 » William HALE (1632-1688)

Personal data William HALE 

Sources 1, 2

Household of William HALE

He is married to Maria ELWES.

They got married on December 18, 1655 at St Andrew, Holborn, Middlesex, he was 23 years old.Sources 2, 4


Child(ren):

  1. John HALE  ± 1665-????
  2. Mary HALE  1666-????
  3. Jeremy HALE  1668-1734
  4. Alice HALE  1671-1743
  5. Catherine HALE  1673-1704
  6. Henry HALE  1674-1735
  7. Richard HALE  1659-1689 
  8. Bernard HALE  1677-1729 


Notes about William HALE

b. c.1632, only son of Rowland Hale of King’s Walden by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Henry Garway, Draper, of Broad Street, London, lord mayor 1639-40. educated Trinity College Camb. 1649; Grays Inn 1651. married by 1659, Mary Elwes(d. 18 July 1712), daughter of Jeremy Elwes of Broxbourne, Herts., 10 sons (5 d.v.p.) 4 daughters, succeded father 1669.1

Offices Held
Commissioner for militia, Herts. Mar. 1660, captain of militia ft. Apr. 1660, maj. by 1677, lt.-col. by 1680, commr. for assessment Aug. 1660-74, 1679-80, j.p. 1661-83, ?1687-d., dep. lt. 1671-83, 1687-d.2

Biography
Hale was the great-grandson of a London Grocer who bought the manor of King’s Walden in 1576. His mother was the daughter of a prominent City Royalist, but his father, apart from serving as sheriff in 1647-8, played no part in public life. Hale himself, according to his contemporary Chauncy, "was endowed with excellent parts, great integrity and general learning; he was a good philosopher, a great historian, and used an excellent style in writing. [He] was firm to the established Church of England, a kind husband, a provident father, prudent in his house, and very faithful and steadfast to the interests of his country."

He was returned for the county at a by-election soon after succeeding to the estate, and was doubtless reckoned from the first as one of the country party. But he was not active in the Cavalier Parliament, being appointed to only 15 committees, acting as teller in three divisions, and making 16 recorded speeches. In his second session he was involved in a case of some constitutional importance, concerning the jurisdiction of the Lords over Members of the Commons. After successfully defending a suit brought against him in Chancery by Henry Slingsby of Kippax, the master of the Mint, Hale was formally notified that an appeal had been lodged with the Upper House. This apparently unprecedented situation was debated on 4 Mar. 1670, and the Lords were warned to have regard to the Commons’ privileges; but a direct confrontation between the two Houses, such as was to occur over Shirley v. Fagg five years later, was averted when Slingsby discovered that action in Chancery was still open to him and withdrew his appeal. During the summer Hale and a neighbouring justice were severely reproved by the Treasury for issuing their own certificates of exemption from hearth-tax instead of using the printed forms emanating from the Government. ‘We are likewise informed that you intend at the next quarter sessions to move the bench that the form of a certificate by you now allowed may be there agreed to be universally used in your county. It is advisable that you consider well before you propose it.’ No reference to this matter appears in the county records. On 12 Dec. he was teller for adjourning rather than discussing supply. Hale seconded the motion of his neighbour (Sir) John Monson on 10 Jan. 1671 for a bill to banish the assailants of Sir John Coventry. ‘If a man must be thus assaulted by ruffianly fellows’, he said, ‘we must go to bed by sunset, like the birds. ... Would have them hanged, if they could be caught.’3

Hale took an interest in the bill of ease for Protestant dissenters in 1673. He suggested that the first step should be to discover what their complaints were, ‘but it did not please the House’. He believed that ‘we cannot better express our duty to the King than in coming as near to the Declaration [of Indulgence] as we can’. Hence he would leave the licensing of chapels to the crown, and spoke against clauses to exclude dissenters from the House and to require the renunciation of the Covenant. He helped to draw up the address on the state of Ireland. When he took his son over to France he was shocked at the heavy casualties sustained by English troops in the French service, ‘and ’tis said in France they set the crown upon the King of France’s head’. He was naturally appointed to the committees to search for precedents for Shirley v. Fagg, and to inspect the Lords’ Journals about the Ouse navigation bill after they had summoned Sir John Napier as a witness. He favoured the proposal of Henry Eyre for no further supply bills, in view of the thinness of the House. ‘If a motion should be put for a million of money’, he said, ‘there would be few to maintain the battle.’ He was for sending the Four Lawyers to the Tower ‘to avoid confusion’. Sir Richard Wiseman described him as ‘a discreet gentleman, too much governed by his uncle’, William Garway. When Parliament reassembled after the long recess in 1677, he acted as teller against the naming of grand committees, and urged that a resolution should be put to the House on the validity of the prorogation. Shaftesbury marked him ‘thrice worthy’. He returned to the question of English forces in the French service, moving that those who had assisted in recruiting them should be declared enemies to the King and kingdom. ‘They cannot be little ones about the King that suffer these things’, he said. ‘How can we think of securing Flanders whilst we are false to ourselves?’ He ridiculed the Lords bill for educating the children of the royal family as Protestants:

If ever we be so unhappy as to have a Popish prince, we must have recourse to our prayers and not contend with the crown for religion’s sake. ... He is against this bill, which is like empty casks for whales to play with, and rattles for children to keep them quiet.
He was outraged by the misuse of protections by Thomas Wanklyn and moved for his expulsion from the House.4

Hale had ‘so gained the hearts of the people that ... the freeholders would choose him contrary to his inclinations’ at the first general election of 1679, though he desired to be excused for reasons of health. He was marked ‘worthy’ on Shaftesbury’s list and voted for exclusion. He was named to no committees, but when (Sir) Stephen Fox produced the list of excise pensioners, he expressed the hope that they would clear themselves of receiving rewards for their votes. Hale refused all solicitation to stand for re-election in the autumn, but after nomination both by the exclusionist peers and the gentry consented to serve in 1681. He played no known part in the Oxford Parliament, but was removed from local office as a Whig two years later.5

Hale was a personal friend of Richard Hoare, the banker, and a cheque, or ‘drawn note’, of his is the earliest remaining in the archives of Hoare’s Bank. He also became the principal partner in the Friendly Society, a mutual fire insurance fund, which competed with the Fire Office, founded by Nicholas Barbon†. James II sought to prevent competition between the two by giving each the exclusive right to issue new policies in alternate years. Hale was restored to the lieutenancy at the end of 1687 and may have been reckoned a Whig collaborator. But he died on 25 May 1688, aged 56, and was buried at King’s Walden. His will suggests liquid assets predominating over his landed estates. He bequeathed to his younger sons and daughters legacies totalling £16,000 and annuities of £400 p.a. His eldest son died in the following year, but his grandson sat for Bramber and St. Albans as a Whig.6
SOURCE: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/hale-william-1632-88
Ref Volumes: 1660-1690
Author: E. R. Edwards
Notes
1. Clutterbuck, Herts, iii. 132-3; Misc. Gen. et Her (ser. 1), iv. 134; PCC 94 Exton.
2.Parl. Intell. 16 Apr. 1660; Herts. Recs. i. 213; CSP Dom. 1671-2, p. 53; CJ, ix. 284.
3. Clutterbuck, iii. 132; Chauncy, Herts. ii. 207; HMC 8th Rep. pt. 1 (1881), p. 140; Grey, i. 223-5, 334; CJ, ix. 132; Cal. Treas. Bks. iii. 605-6.
4. Grey, ii. 38, 71, 93-94, 117; iii. 121-2, 160, 249; iv. 89, 255-6, 294; v. 51; Dering, 122; CSP Dom. 1673-5, p. 610.
5. Chauncy, ii. 207; Bodl. Carte 228, f. 134; Grey, vii. 331.
6.Gent. Mag. vii. 294-5; Sel. Charters (Selden Soc. xxviii), 208-10; Clutterbuck, iii. 135; PCC 94 Exton.

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Timeline William HALE

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Ancestors (and descendant) of William HALE

William HALE
1568-1634
Rose BOND
1570-1648
Rowland HALE
1600-1669

William HALE
1632-1688

1655

Maria ELWES
1640-1712

John HALE
± 1665-????
Mary HALE
1666-????
Jeremy HALE
1668-1734
Alice HALE
1671-1743
Henry HALE
1674-1735
Richard HALE
1659-1689
Bernard HALE
1677-1729

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Sources

  1. Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015, Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com
  2. London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812, Ancestry.com, London Metropolitan Archives; London, England; Reference Number: P69/AND2/A/002/MS06668/005 / Ancestry.com
  3. UK and Ireland, Find A Grave Index, 1300s-Current, Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com
  4. London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812, Ancestry.com
    An agreement and intent of Marriage betwene WILLIAM HALE of Grayes Inn Esq sonne and heir of ROWLAND HALE of Kings Walden in the County of Hertford Esq and MARY ELWES of this parish daughter of JEREMIAH ELWES late of Boxborne in the County of Hertford Esq ...... was published on three Lord's dayes in the Church of Innocences Holborne (...) On the 2nd On the 9th and On the 16th daye of December 1655. They were marryed by Edward Roberts Esq Justice of the Peace the eighteenth day of December aforesaid 1655
    / Ancestry.com

Historical events

  •  This page is only available in Dutch.
    Van 1650 tot 1672 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Eerste Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In the year 1655: Source: Wikipedia
    • March 8 » John Casor becomes the first legally-recognized slave in England's North American colonies where a crime was not committed.
    • March 25 » Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is discovered by Christiaan Huygens.
    • August 23 » Battle of Sobota: The Swedish Empire led by Charles X Gustav defeats the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
    • September 8 » Warsaw falls without resistance to a small force under the command of Charles X Gustav of Sweden during The Deluge, making it the first time the city is captured by a foreign army.
    • December 18 » The Whitehall Conference ends with the determination that there was no law preventing Jews from re-entering England after the Edict of Expulsion of 1290.
    • December 27 » Second Northern War/the Deluge: Monks at the Jasna Góra Monastery in Częstochowa are successful in fending off a month-long siege.
  • Stadhouder Prins Willem III (Huis van Oranje) was from 1672 till 1702 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden)
  • In the year 1688: Source: Wikipedia
    • May 10 » King Narai nominates Phetracha as regent, leading to the revolution of 1688 in which Phetracha becomes king of the Ayutthaya Kingdom.
    • September 26 » The city council of Amsterdam votes to support William of Orange's invasion of England, which became the Glorious Revolution.
    • November 1 » William III of Orange sets out a second time from Hellevoetsluis in the Netherlands to seize the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland from King James II of England during the Glorious Revolution.
    • November 5 » William III of England lands with a Dutch fleet at Brixham.
    • December 9 » Glorious Revolution: Williamite forces defeat Jacobites at Battle of Reading, forcing flight of James II from the country.
    • December 11 » Glorious Revolution: James II of England, while trying to flee to France, throws the Great Seal of the Realm into the River Thames.

About the surname HALE

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When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I77000.php : accessed June 14, 2024), "William HALE (1632-1688)".