Genealogy Thrutchley/Anderson/Fitzgerel/Cox/Staley » Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton (1690-1400)

Personal data Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton 

Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7Sources 1, 3, 4, 6
  • Alternative names: Thomas Grey of Hetton, Thomas J Grey
  • He was born in Heton (Northumberland) England.Source 3
  • Alternative: He was born in the year 1863 in New South Wales.
  • He was baptized on October 22, 1690 in Kingscliffe, Northamptonshire, England.
  • Alternative: He was baptized on October 19, 1783 in Ednam, Roxburgh, Scotland.Source 4
  • He died on November 26, 1400.Source 3

    Fout Attention: Deceased (November 26, 1400) before baptism (October 22, 1690).


Household of Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton

He had a relationship with Jane de Mowbray.


Child(ren):

  1. Agnes de Grey  ????-1451 


Notes about Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton

Thomas Grey (constable)From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Thomas Grey (of Heaton))Jump to navigationJump to searchSir
Thomas Grey of HeatonArms of Sir Thomas Grey of Heaton:- gules, a lion rampant and a bordure indented argent:[1] variation - a baton azure[2] Crest:- 1: Scaling Ladder 2: Rams Head[3]Diedbef. Mar 1344AllegianceEnglandService/branchArmyRankKnight BanneretCommands heldWarden of Cupar Castle
Keeper of Norham Castle
Deputy Constable of Berwick-upon-Tweed
Keeper of Mitford CastleBattles/warsAction at Lanark (1297)
Siege of Stirling Castle (1304)
Ambush at Cupar Castle (1308)
Battle of Bannockburn (1314)
Capture of Berwick (1318)
Siege of Norham (1322)
Invasion of England (1326)Spouse(s)Agnes de BaylesRelationsThomas Grey (chronicler)Sir Thomas Grey of Heaton, Northumberland was a soldier who served throughout the Wars of Scottish Independence. His experiences were recorded by his son Thomas and provide a rare picture of the day to day realities of the wars. His career was blemished by his suicidal charge at the Battle of Bannockburn, which was a contributing factor to the devastating English defeat, but is perhaps best known for his role in the tale of Sir William Marmion the chivalric knight of Norham Castle.
Contents· 1Career and Life· 1.1Early life
· 1.2Siege of Stirling Castle (1304)
· 1.3Ambush at Cupar Castle (1308)
· 1.4Battle of Bannockburn (1314)
· 1.5Norham Castle
· 1.6Later career

· 2Family and descendants
· 3References
· 4Bibliography
· 5External links
Career and Life[edit]Early life[edit]Thomas was serving under William de Hesilrig, Sheriff of Clydesdale as early as 1297.[4] Following William Wallace's nighttime assassination of the Sheriff at Lanark, Gray was left for dead, stripped naked in the snow.[4] He only survived because of the heat from the houses burning around him and was rescued the next day and his wounds healed.[4]
Thomas was knighted before September 1301 and served with the King's Lieutenant for Scotland, Patrick IV, Earl of March at Ayr.[5]
In May 1303 Sir Thomas found himself under the command of Hugh de Audley encamped at Melrose Abbey when they were attacked at night by a much larger force led by John Comyn.[6] Grey was beaten to the floor and taken prisoner but most of his comrades were slain.[7]
Siege of Stirling Castle (1304)[edit] SpringaldEdward I had captured most of Scotland by April 1304 and embarked upon a nineteen-week siege of the last significant uncaptured fortress at Stirling Castle using twelve siege engines which included the massive trebuchet called "Warwolf".
Thomas Grey fought at the siege under the command of Henry de Beaumont, jure uxoris 4th Earl of Buchan.[8] A hook thrown from a siege machine ensnared de Beaumont one day, and was about to haul him to his death upon the castle walls, when Thomas freed him in the nick of time and dragged him to safety.[8]
Just as Thomas had performed this act of bravery he was struck in the head by a large bolt fired from a springald (a large multi-man crossbow) just below his eyes.[7] He collapsed to the ground lifeless and preparations for a quick burial were made.[8] Just as the funeral ceremony started, Thomas suddenly stirred and opened his eyes, much to the astonishment of the funeral party.[8] He subsequently staged a full recovery.[8]
It is from this event that Thomas Grey perhaps adopted a ram's head as the crest of his coat of arms as a light-hearted reference to his thick skull.[3]
Thomas became closer to the Beaumont family, who were kinsmen of both the King and Queen, and was drawn into court life. In 1305 Grey acted as attorney for Henry de Beaumont's sister Isabella de Vesci.[5] In December 1307 Thomas took custody of Robert Bruce's sister Christina following the execution of her husband Christopher Seton for his part in the murder of John Comyn, Guardian of Scotland.[9]
Ambush at Cupar Castle (1308)[edit]Upon the death of Edward I he was succeeded by his son Edward II and Sir Thomas Grey attended the coronation at Westminster Palace in February 1308.[10] As Thomas returned to Cupar Castle, of which he was the then Warden, he was ambushed by Walter de Bickerton, a supporter of Bruce.[10]
Thomas was heavily outnumbered, having only twenty six men at arms compared to the four hundred men commanded by Bickerton.[10] Deciding that he could not avoid the ambush he decided to charge the heart of Bickerton's men using lance and the shock of his horse to down many of the enemy.[10] Seeing the success of his aggression he was joined by his men at arms and together they succeeded in overthrowing many of the enemy and stampeded their horses.[11]
Before starting the charge, Thomas had instructed his grooms to follow at a distance carrying a battle standard.[10] As they came into view of Bickerton's confused men they mistook the grooms for another formation of soldiers and took flight.[11] Grey and his men drove one hundred and eighty of Bickerton's abandoned horses to his castle as booty.[11]
Battle of Bannockburn (1314)[edit]Sir Thomas' lack of discipline at the Battle of Bannockburn was undoubtedly the low point of his career but he was not alone and the English defeat is often recognised as being caused by both poor leadership by Edward II and hot-headedness. On the first day of the battle Thomas was in one of the two cavalry forces alongside Robert Clifford and Henry de Beaumont. The Scalacronica's account of events follows;
Robert Lord de Clifford and Henry de Beaumont, with three hundred men-at-arms, made a circuit upon the other side of the wood towards the castle, keeping the open ground. Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, Robert de Brus's nephew, who was leader of the Scottish advanced guard, hearing that his uncle had repulsed the advanced guard of the English on the other side of the wood, thought that he must have his share, and issuing from the wood with his division marched across the open ground towards the two afore-named lords.
Sir Henry de Beaumont called to his men: "Let us wait a little; let them come on; give them room".
"Sir," said Sir Thomas Gray, "I doubt that whatever you give them now, they will have all too soon".
"Very well" exclaimed the said Henry, "if you are afraid, be off".
"Sir," answered the said Thomas, "it is not from fear that I shall fly this day."
So saying, he spurred in between Beaumont and Sir William Deyncourt and charged into the thick of the enemy. William was killed, Thomas was taken prisoner, his horse being killed on the pikes, and he himself carried off with the Scots on foot when they marched off, having utterly routed the squadron of the said two lords. Some of the English fled to the castle, others to the king's army, which having already left the road through the wood had debouched upon a plain near the water of Forth beyond Bannockburn, an evil, deep, wet marsh, where the said English army unharnessed and remained all night, having sadly lost confidence and being too much disaffected by the events of the day.
— Sir Thomas Gray, Scalacronica, translated by Herbert Maxwell[12][13]
The next day the demoralised English were heavily defeated and King Edward was rushed from the scene by his bodyguard.
Norham Castle[edit] The ruins of the keep of Norham Castle.Following their victory at Bannockburn, the Scottish attacked and raided the north of England repeatedly over the ensuing years. Sir Thomas was garrisoned at Berwick-upon-Tweed in 1318 which fell to Robert Bruce following an eleven-week siege. Grey was subsequently recompensed £179 arrears of wages for himself and fourteen men at arms and for horses he had lost.[14]
In 1317 Grey's patron Henry de Beaumont and his brother, the newly appointed Bishop of Durham, Lewis de Beaumont were kidnapped by Gilbert de Middleton before being released. Middleton was executed and his lands confiscated. In May 1319, as reward for his services, Thomas was granted 108 acres at Howick, Northumberland that formerly belonged to a supporter of Gilbert de Middleton, John Mautulent.[15]
Grey was appointed in 1319 as Sheriff of Norham and Islandshire and Constable of Norham Castle[16] where he was to be based for eleven years.[17] During this time Norham remained under a state of almost perpetual siege and it is Thomas' rescue of the chivalric knight Sir William Marmion that he is probably best known for.[18]
A two year truce expired in 1322 and Thomas promised King Edward to recruit an extra twenty men at arms and fifty hobelars to reinforce Lewis de Beaumont's existing garrison to protect both Norham castle and the March.[9] By September 17 Norham found itself besieged by one hundred Scottish men at arms and one hundred hobelars.[9] The king sent Thomas money to pay his garrison and requested that he send frequent reports of the situation and reassured the people around the castle that any losses in crops and goods would be made up to them.[9]
Edward II agreed to a thirteen-year truce with Robert Bruce in March 1323 and, three months later, Thomas was given permission to go to Scotland to resupply Norham Castle with corn and ammunition and to replace its ploughs and carts which had been destroyed in the preceding years.[15] He imprisoned eighty Scots at Norham who had, coming from overseas, landed at Lindisfarne and attempted to reach Scotland and on 2 October was ordered to send them to the Sheriff of York at York Castle.[19]
On 9 July 1325 Grey was ordered to accept back into the King's Peace all those of Northumberland who had joined the Scottish through poverty or other urgent needs.[15]
Later career[edit]During the buildup to the impending Invasion of England of 1326 Sir Thomas was first granted more land at Howyk[15][9] and then in August ordered to join John de Sturmy, Admiral of the Fleet of the North, alongside other captains and their ships, to help defend the hugely unpopular Edward II from his wife Isabella and her lover Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March.[15] Thomas was ordered to "compel" ships from Northumberland ports to join the fleet and to supervise their departure for Orwell, Suffolk in early September.[20] No naval conflict occurred and, landing at Orwell on 24 September, Isabel and Mortimer seized control of England with virtually no opposition, with most of Edward's orders having been ignored. Edward II was imprisoned and replaced on the throne by Edward III.
Edward III resumed hostilities with the Scottish and, shortly after the defeat of the Scottish at Halidon Hill in July 1333, Thomas was appointed as Deputy Constable of Berwick.[21]
In about 1334 Sir Thomas was granted Mitford Castle and the hamlet of Mollisdoun[22] and in October 1335 he was granted custody of the lands and marriage of the heir of Andrew de Grey in Berwick.[15]

Family and descendants[edit]He married Agnes de Bayles and had the following issue:
· Sir Thomas Grey, Soldier and Chronicler
Thomas is an ancestor of the Earl Greys of Tankerville, Baronet Grey of Chillingham, Baron Greys of Powis and Baron Greys of Werke.

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton


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Sources

  1. Burke’s Family Records (Indexed), Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com
  2. Ancestry Family Trees, Ancestry Family Tree / Ancestry.com
  3. Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015, Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com
  4. Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com
  5. Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1532-1812, Ancestry.com, Northamptonshire Record Office; Northampton, England; Register Type: Parish Registers; Reference Numbers: 187p/2 / Ancestry.com
  6. North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000, Ancestry.com, Book Title: Genealogy of the Denny family in England and America : descendants of John Denny of Combs, Suffolk, / Ancestry.com
  7. Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015, Ancestry.com

Historical events

  • The temperature on October 19, 1783 was about 10.0 °C. Wind direction mainly south. Weather type: omtrent helder mist. Source: KNMI
  • Erfstadhouder Prins Willem V (Willem Batavus) (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was from 1751 till 1795 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden)
  • In the year 1783: Source: Wikipedia
    • February 5 » In Calabria, a sequence of strong earthquakes begins.
    • April 15 » Preliminary articles of peace ending the American Revolutionary War (or American War of Independence) are ratified.
    • April 18 » Three-Fifths Compromise: the first instance of black slaves in the United States of America being counted as three fifths of persons (for the purpose of taxation), in a resolution of the Congress of the Confederation. This was later adopted in the 1787 Constitution.
    • August 4 » Mount Asama erupts in Japan, killing about 1,400 people. The eruption causes a famine, which results in an additional 20,000 deaths.
    • September 3 » American Revolutionary War: The war ends with the signing of the Treaty of Paris by the United States and the Kingdom of Great Britain.
    • November 4 » Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Symphony No. 36 is performed for the first time in Linz, Austria.
  • Graaf Albrecht (Beiers Huis) was from 1389 till 1404 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Graafschap Holland)
  • In the year 1400: Source: Wikipedia
    • February 14 » Richard II of England dies, most probably from starvation, in Pontefract Castle, on the orders of Henry Bolingbroke.
    • March 23 » The Trần dynasty of Vietnam is deposed, after one hundred and seventy-five years of rule, by Hồ Quý Ly, a court official.
    • September 16 » Owain Glyndŵr is declared Prince of Wales by his followers.
    • November 11 » Siege of Aleppo (1400) during Timur's conquest of Syria.


Same birth/death day

Source: Wikipedia


About the surname Grey of Hetton


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Duane Thrutchley, "Genealogy Thrutchley/Anderson/Fitzgerel/Cox/Staley", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogy-thrutchley-anderson-fitzgerel-cox-staley/I282050816476.php : accessed May 12, 2024), "Sir Thomas J Grey of Hetton (1690-1400)".