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About Elizabeth Tyrrell
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wayland/terrill/pafg48.htm
William Tyrell [Parents] was born about 1460 in Ockendon, Essex, , England. He married Elizabeth BODLEY.
Heir to his brother, Hugh in 1468. Lord of the Manor of Bruyn. Another source says that he is a son of Hugh and grandson of Thomas.
Elizabeth Bodley [Parents] was born about 1465 in , , , England. She married William Tyrell.
Co-heiress of her parents and heiress of Dennis Leech of Willingborough.
They had the following children:
M i Humphrey Tyrell
http://www.archive.org/stream/furthergenealog00terrgoog/furthergene...
THE TYRRELL-TERRELL FAMILY.
Th^ founder of this family, known as de Tirel, Tirel,
Tyrel, Tyrell, Tyrrell, Terrell, Tirrell, (and with other va-
riations in the orthography), was Ralf, Sire de Tirel, de
Poix and de Quemanville, son of Walter L, Count of the
Vexin and Amiens.
The Counts of the Vexin were the lords of a district
situated on the northern borders of France as they existed
in the tenth century and which lay between France and the
ducal possessions of the House of Normandy. This little
district, known as the Vexin, was sometimes under the
suzerain control of the Norman dukes and sometimes under
that of the French crown; but finally became absorbed
with Normandy by the latter. The father of Rolf de Tirel,
Walter /., Count of the Vexin, lived about 995 and was lord
proprietor over many lands even beyond the Vexin. He
was the son of Waleran, Count of the Vexin, and hereditary
standard bearer of France, who died in 965. The mother
of Walter I., was Edelgarde, a daughter of the Count of
Flanders and a great-granddaughter of Alfred the Great
of Eng^^nd. Walter I. was also lineally descended from
Pepin le Gros, Charles Martel, Duke of Brabant, and
Charlemagne. He was also lineally descended from the
Dukes of Burgundy. These pedigrees, with the marriages,
from Pepin le Gros, Charles Martel and Charlemagne to
Ralf de Tirel are given in Mr. Tyrrell's history of the
family. Walter I. married Eve, daughter and heiress of
Landry, Count of Dreux. Ralf de Tirel was the fourth son
of this marriage. Ralf, the first to bear the name of Tirel,
had his castle near the village of Tiret on the banks of the
Seine, a short distance below Paris, from which he took
the surname of Tirel Having married a daughter of the
Seigneur of Gu^rnanville, he became in time the Seigneur
of Guemanville, the Chatelain of Pontoise and the Viscount
of Amiens. The little village of Tirel on the banks of the
Seine is now known in modern orthography as Triel, a mere
-10-
transposition of two letters. The ancient spelling of the
village name was Tirel.
From the time of its founder, Ralf, the family name has
been spelled in many different ways, depending on the lan-
guage in which it was spelled and probably on the changing
taste of its different members in a matter of this kinA*. In
the old Norman histories, such as Ordericus Vitalis and
others, it appears in several different ways, such as Tirel,
Tyrell, Tyrrell, etc. In one of the alumni registers of the
University of Oxford in England, containing the graduates
of that old university between 1571 and 1622, Volume II.,
on page 413, the following various spellings are given of
the family name as constituting one and the same family,
viz., Tirrell, Terill, Terrell, Terrill, TirriU, Tyrell and
Tyrrell. The commonly accepted spelling of the family
name in England for the past four hundred years has been
Tyrrell. In the old colonial land records at Richmond, Vir-
ginia, where the first mention is made of the Virginia an-
cestor of the family, the name of William Terrell is spelled
William Tyrrell; and the name of his brother, Richmxmd
Terrell, is spelled in the same early records Richmond
Tirrell. In many parts of Virginia still, and in some other
states where branches of the same family are established,
the name is still pronounced as though it were spelled
Tirrell.
When the author of this pamphlet was the American
Envoy and Minister at Brussels, (1889-1893), his British
colleague was Lord Vivian, a nobleman of most distinguish-
ed ancestry in England. Lord Vivian always called him Mr.
"Tirrell." On the author's explaining to him one day that
his name was spelled "Terrell** and was pronounced as that
name is usually pronounced in America, Lord Vivian re-
plied, "Your name is that of one of the oldest County fam-
ilies in England and the name is spelled in English history
in various ways, but it is always pronounced as though it
were spelled 'Tirrell,' and in England, even if the name
should be written 'Terrell* it would be pronounced 'Tir-
rell' " While the author was making his researches in the
British Museum library he was always addressed by the
officers and attendants about the library as Mr. "Tirrell,"
although they had his card in their hand on which his
\
— 11 —
name was engraved "Terrell." In the French book re-
ferred to in the preface to this little pamphlet the family
name is given as **Tyrrell de Poix/' and in the frequent
references to the family in that history it is always spoken
of in that way when the family name is mentioned. This
addition of the affix de Poix** came from the fact that
among the many titles possessed by Ralf and his descend-
ants was that of Lord of Poix, and ultimately Prince of
Poix. The village of Poix is situated 26 kilometres south-
west of Amiens and 116 kilometres north of Paris, on the
railroad line from Paris to Calais, and on the line from
Amiens to Rouen. (The name of this little village should
be pronounced "Po-ah," and not "Poy," nor "Poyicks").
This French history of the old Norman family found by
the author of this pamphlet in the British Museum library
was prepared by M. Cuvillier-Morel-D'Acy, a distinguished
archivist and genealogist of France. The book was pub-
lished at Paris by the author in 1869, and as the author
states, the data for this elaborate history of this old Nor-
man-French family came from manuscripts preserved for
many centuries in the Moyencourt family, which was re-
lated to the Tyrreil family through descent and intermar-
riages. M. D'Acy says, "The ancient House of the Tyrrells
came from Normandy and was an issue of the first dukes
of Normandy and very old and distinguished. In the char-
ter of the primal church of Rouen in 1030 Walter Tyrrell
is mentioned, and is there stated to be a wealthy nobleman
and a close kinsman or cousin of Robert, Duke of Nor-
mandy." The Robert, Duke of Normandy, here mentioned
is the one familiarly known as Robert, the Magnificent,
and sometimes as Robert the Devil, fifth Duke of Nor-
mandy, who was the father of William the Conqueror. The
English historian of the family, Mr. Tyrrell, gives the ex-
act pedigrees of the family from Ralf, the founder, down
to the present time. These pedigrees have evidently been
prepared with great care and are based upon authorities
easily accessible in England which Mr. Tyrrell regards as
absolutely reliable. In fact, Mr. Tyrrell gives in his book
a list of the authorities he has consulted in the preparation
of his history, and they are, generally speaking, very rare
and expensive books which it would be impossible for any-
— 12 —
one on this side of the Atlantic to be able to consult. They
include many old French and Norman family histories,
books published by archaeological societies, County pedi-
grees, works on extinct titles, books on heraldry, and many
of the earliest books published in the English language on
genealogy. According to these pedigree lists, the second
son of Ralf, Viscount of Amiens, was Fulk de Tirel, who
became the Seigneur of Guemanville and Dean of Evreux.
He married Orielda, who was a daughter of Richard I.,
the third Duke of Normandy. Among the children of Fulk
de Tirel and Orielda was Walter, known in history as Sir
Walter Tyrrell L, Lord of Poix, Castellan of Pontoise, and
a Baron of both France and England. This was the Sir
Walter Tyrrell who accompanied his relative, Duke William
of Normandy, in the expedition which led to the conquest
of England, and who was present at the battle of Senlac
or Hastings.
According to M. D'Acy's book, the House of Tyrrell was
prominent both in Picardy and in Normandy. Its members
made themselves distinguished for their rich seigneurial
possessions and their high positions in this province and
in the neighboring provinces of France. They were pos-
sessed of many fiefs. They were Lords and Princes de
Poix, de Brimen, Conty, Fremontiers, Morenil, and de RiM-
court. They were Viscomtes d'Equennes et de St. Maxent;
t^arons d' Angles et de Prunget and lords of ninety-four
towns in Picardy, Brittany, Berry, Poitou, Touraine, Valois,
Vermandois, etc. The first member of the family to bear the
title of Prince de Poix was Hugues, (in English, Hugh),
^vho was a great-grandson of the first Sir Walter, and who
will be hereafter spoken of. The Hugh Tyrrell who firmly
established the Tyrrell family in England, was this Hugh
Tyrrell L, Prince de Poix. The family in Picardy, in the
male line, died out in 1417, and all its possessions and titles
passed from those of that name to the illustrious House of
Moyencourt, through a female member of the Tyrrell fam-
ily, who had married a Moyencourt. When that family
ceased to exist in the direct male line in 1510, the titles and
possessions passed into the great family of de Crequy, also
descendants, through marriage, of the Tyrrells. The book
— 13 —
gives the direct descent of the possessions and titles as fol-
lows :
House of the Tyrrells, 1030-1417;
House of the Moyencourt and Soissons-Moreml families,
House of de Crequy, 1510-1574: 1417-1510;
House of Blanchefort'Crequy, 1574-1687 ;
House de la Tremoille, 1687-1717;
House de Rouille, 1718-1729 ;
House de Noailles, 1729-
Many of the landed possessions in France of the old
family of Tyrrell de Poix, and such of its titles as have not
become extinct, are now held by Francois Napoleon de
Noailles, Due de Mouchy and Prince de Poix, a lineal de-
scendant of the old Norman-Picardian family.
Sir Walter Tyrrell L, according to the English historian
of the family, was both of Norman and French extraction,
being a descendant of the Norman Dukes and at the same
time a lineal descendant of the Dukes of Burgundy and
Brabant and of the House of Charlemagne. He was the
possessor of the lands of Bussy, Croixrault, Equ^rmes,
Famechon, Fremontiers, Moyencourt, etc. According to M.
D'Acy, his descendants in England are represented by the
well known County family of Tyrrell, Terrell and Tirrell,
established in Hampshire and Essex Counties by him and
his descendants in the earlier years after the Conquest.
Sir Walter Tyrrell I. is lepresented now in France in
descent by two principal branches: first, the Moyencourt
family, and second, the Mouchy de Poix family. The fam-
ily of Tyrrell de Poix figured prominently in the Crusades ;
they held high positions at the courts of the kings of France
in the early days; produced a Grand Admiral of France,
who was killed on the French side at the battle of Agin-
court ; were governors of cities ; and filled many other posi-
tions of importance in the military and civil history of the
north of France.
As before stated, Walter Tyrrell I. accompanied William
the Conqueror to the conquest of England. Being a close
kinsman, or cousin, as M. D'Acy's book calls it, of Duke
William of Normandy,' he asked to have the honor of lead-
ing one of the columns in the first assault upon the English
lines at the battle of Senlac (Hastings) ; he was accorded
— 14 —
this honorable post, and with his large and well trained
band of retainers from Poix he participated prominently
in the assault on the English left wing at the great battle
of October 14, 1066.
The name of Tyrrell is mentioned in the "Cartulaire de
St. Martin de la Bataille," which was a list of the distin-
guished noblemen who took part in this great decisive bat-
tle. See also list published by Andr6 Duchesne for the name
of Gauthier Tyrrell, it being understood that the French
spelling of the English name of Walter is Gauthier. His
name is also inscribed on the walls of the Church of Dives,
at the little port of Normandy, put there in 1861 by one of
the antiquarian societies of France. Duke William's army
assembled for the Conquest at this little port of Dives.
In 1046, Sir Walter Tyrrell I. with Alix, his wife, built
the Chateau de Poix et de Moyencourt, and also the fortress
of Famechon, and he became one of the most powerful lords
of the country and the stem of one of the most illustrious
Houses that ever existed in Picardy. He married twice,
first, a Saxon lady by the name of Olga; and second, Alix,
Dame de Fremontiers, the only daughter of Richard, Seig-
neur de Fremontiers. He had by his first marriage a son.
Sir Walter Tyrrell II. This son, Sir Walter Tyrrell II.,
died before his father, leaving a son. Sir Walter Tyrrell III.
This Sir Walter Tyrrell III. is the member of the family
who, it is said, accidentally Hilled King William Rufus of
England, while hunting with him in New Forest. His name
appears in several documents in Picardy as the grandson
of Sir Walter Tyrrell I. Sir Walter Tyrrell I. died in 1068
or 1080, and was succeeded in his titles and possessions,
both in England and France, by his grandson Sir Walter
III. The latter had accidentally killed the King, as afore-
said, August 2, 1100; he died at one of his chateaux in
Picardy in 1135, after having made a journey to the Holy
Land. The full account of the manner of the death of
King William Rufus will be found in Augustin Thierry's
History of France, and it will be found on examination to
be full of most interesting details. In a recent letter to a
kinsman of the author of this pamphlet, Lieutenant-General
Frank Tyrrell, a retired officer of the English army, in
speaking of the accidental killing of King William Rufus,
— 15 —
refers to the tradition that Sir Walter Tyrrell III., after
the accident, crossed the river Avon on his way to the coast
at a ford which is still called Tyrrellsford. The scene of
all this is in Hampshire, where the first lands that were
granted to Sir Walter I. by William the Conqueror were
located and where the village of Avon-Tyrrell still exists.
In his letter General Tyrrell further says that the forge
in a neighboring village is still shown where Sir Walter
got the shoes on his horse's feet reversed in order to baffle
pursuit. He also says that the Avon-Tyrrell property which
belonged for so many generations to the Tyrrell family
now belongs to Lord Manners.
Sir Walter Tyrrell ILL married, by order of his kinsman,
William the Conqueror, Adelaide Giffard, who was of the
illustrious House of Giffard in Normandy and England,
and who was the granddaughter of Walter Giffard, first
Earl of Buckingham, and daughter of Richard Giffard, one
of the lords of the court of the King of England, and of his
wife Mathilde de Mortemer, daughter of Walter de Mar-
temer, in Normandy.
Sir Walter Tyrrell III. left, by Adelaide, his wife, a son,
Hugh Tyrrell L Sir Walter Tyrrell III. bore all the titles
of his grandfather. Lord of Poix, Vicomte d*Equennes,
Baron de Ribecourt, etc. He was a rich and powerful
nobleman, owning vast possessions in Normandy, Picardy,
Ponthieu, etc. He founded the Priory of St. Denis de Poix,
in 1116, with the consent of his wife and his son Hugh, con-
forming thus to the pious wishes of his father. In 1118
he gave a donation for the support of this priory, to be
obtained out of a portion of his rents from some of his
lands in Langham, England. M. D'Acy, from whose book
the foregoing details have been translated by the author of
this pamphlet, remarks on this donation, "One sees by this
that the Tyrrells at that time possessed large land holdings
in England, and that Walter Tyrrell I. had received his
share of the spoils from the Conquest."
Sir Walter Tyrrell III. founded the Monastery of St.
Pierre de Selincourt and the Abbey of St. Larme. This
monastery and abbey were pronounced to be the most beau-
tiful in all Picardy, nexft after ihe great Cathedral at
Amiens, and they constituted for many generations the
— 16 —
sepulchre of the Tyrrells. They were owned for a number
of years by the family of Ged6on de Forceville, of Amiens,
but they have been in ruins since the revolution of 1789. .
Hugh Tyrrell L, son of Sir Walter Tyrrell III., inherited
the lands and titles of his father and was Lord of Poix,
Vicomte d'Equennes, etc., and qualified as Prince de Poix
in 1153, 1155 and 1159. Hugh confirmed the grants of his
father to the said churches as above mentioned; he also
made one of the Crusades. He married Ada d'Avmale,
the daughter of Etienne de Champagne, Comte d'Aumale.
This Ada d'Aumale was lineally descended from Richard
II., Duke of Normandy, and from Ralf de Mortemer, Baron
of Wigmore. Sir Hugh Tyrrell I. made his will in 1158
and died in 1159, leaving among other sons Walter Tyrrell
IV., who died in 1171 without children, and Hugh Tyrrell
II., who finally succeeded to the titles and possessions of
the family. There were also other children, and among
them, Adam Tyirell, who became the founder of the Moyen-
court family. Sir Hugh Tyrrell II. was a great soldier and
distinguished himself in the Crusades. In the Hall of the
Crusades, in the great palace at Versailles, in Folio 24,
No. 125, is an article on Sir Hugh Tyrrell, Lord of Poix,
and one of the leaders of the Crusades. His coat of arms
is in the third Hall of the Crusades. They are spread upon
the beam which is above the picture representing the
"Raising of the Siege at Rhodes," August 17, 1480. The
escutcheon bears the date of 1147, and is under the name of
Hugh Tyrrell, Lord of Poix. Sir Hugh Tyrrell was ac-
companied to the Crusades in 1190 by four of his cousins,
two of whom perished at the siege of Acre in 1191. Sir
Hugh II. died in 1199 and was buried in the Abbey of St.
Pierre Selincourt. He had married, first, in 1161, Isabelle
de Wignacourt, who was of an illustrious House in Picardy ;
and second, in 1173, Marie de Senarpont, who was also of
distinguished blood.
Sir Walter Tyrrell I. had received from the Conqueror
large tracts of land in Hampshire and in Essex. He did
not live long after the Conquest, but in 1067, when William
I. of England went over into Normandy, Sir Walter Tyrrell
I. was left as one of his High Commissioners for the County
of Essex during his temporary absence. He held the lord-
— 17 —
ship of Laingaham in Essex; was lord of the Manors of
Kingsworthy and Avon-Tyrrell in the New Forest; and also
held the "Sueburga" and "Contona** in Somerset from Os-
mond, Bishop of Salisbury. There is some dispute as to
the date of the death of Sir Walter Tyirell I., as the French
authority so frequently quoted herein gives it as in 1068,
but Mr. Tyrrell in his history of the family gives it as
occurring in 1080. As before said, he was succeeded by
his grandson, Sir Walter Tyrrell III., his son, Sir Walter IL,
having pre-deceased him. The wife of Sir Walter Tyrrell
III., Adelaide, was a cousin of the Conqueror, who had
commanded her marriage to Sir Walter, and she appears to
have lived to a great age, for according to the Pipe Roll of
1136 she was seized as a widow of the Manor of Langham
in Essex. Sir Walter Tyrrell III. joined the first Crusade
and was present at the siege of Jerusalem in 1096. It was
at this time that he adopted what are known as the "Poix**
arms to distinguish himself from his kinsman, the Sire de
Tirel, who was also taking part in the siege. Reference to
this coat of arms will be made hereafter in this pamphlet.
There has been much conflict in the authorities as to just
the manner in which King William Rufus met his death,
and it has been disputed that the accident was due to Sir
Walter Tyrrell III. However, all the authorities agree that
it was purely the result of an accident, as Sir Walter and
the King were great friends and kinsmen and had for many
years been on terms of the greatest intimacy. Late in life
lie made another pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and dying
in 1135 was succeeded by his son, Hugh Tyrrell /., as be-
fore stated, who was the first one of the family to bear the
title of Prince of Poix, and who is mentioned by the Nor-
man historian, Ordericus, as an ardent soldier. Sir Hugh
Tyrrell I. joined the second Crusade of 1146. In the Pipe
Roll he is named as being seized of the Manors of Kings-
worthy near Winchester, Avon-Tyrrell, and also lands at
Ripley, Shirley, and Sopley in the New Forest. This Sir
Hugh gave the chateau and lands of Moyencourt to his
fourth son, Adam, from whom descends the House of Tyr-
rell de Moyencourt, (which name he then took) , represent-
ed in France to this day. As before stated. Sir Hugh Tyr-
rell I. was ultimately succeeded by his son. Sir Hugh Tyr-
— 18 —
rell II., who was the sixth Lord of Poix. Sir Hugh Tyrrell
11. was conspicuously identified with the first conquest of
Ireland by the English and accompanied his cousin, Strong-
how, Earl of Pembroke, to that country in 1169. He was
made Baron of Castleknock in 1173 and was Governor of
Trim in 1183. He was at the siege of Acre in the Crusades
of 1191 and was known as the "Grecian Knight/' Sir Hugh
Tyrrell II. was buried at Selincourt in 1199. He left a
number of children. The eldest son, Sir Walter Tyrrell V.,
succeeded to the titles and possessions of the family in
Picardy and Normandy, under the usual law of primogeni-
ti^e.
Another son of Sir Hugh IL, Richard Tyrrell, succeeded
his father as to the Irish titles and possessions, and became
the second Baron of Castleknock. This Richard Tyrrell of
Castleknock was the founder of all the different branches
of the English-Irish family of Tyrrell. In the history of
the family published by Mr. Tyrrell in 1904, all the pedi-
grees of the descendants of Richard Tyrrell, Baron of
Castleknock, are fully given down to the present time, and
show that the various descendants, in the many centuries
that have elapsed since the family was first established in
Ireland, have held numerous titles and positions of honor
and have been distinguished in the troublesome periods of
Irish history in many ways.
Another son of Sir Hugh Tyrrell IL, Roger Tyrrell of
Hampshire, succeeded to the vast possessions of his father
in Hampshire and in Essex, and became the ancestor of all
of the English branches of the family.
Before taking up the matter of the several branches in
England descended from Roger Tyrrell, it may be interest-
ing to note briefly the subsequent fortunes of the old stock
left in France. Sir Walter Tyrrell V., who had succeeded
to the vast estates and the many titles of the family in
Picardy, Normandy and other parts of France, died in
Picardy in 1228, and was succeeded as to these titles and
possessions by his oldest son. Sir Hugh Tyrrell III., who
was killed in battle in 1272. The latter was succeeded by
Sir William Tyrrell I., who died in 1302. Sir William I.
was succeeded by his oldest son. Sir William II., who died
in 1323. The oldest son of Sir William Tyrrell IL, Sir John
— 19 —
/., succeeded to the various titles and lands, and was killed
at the battle of Cr6cy on the French side in 1346, when
the Black Prince of England won his great victory. He
was succeeded by his son, John 11. , who died in 1361. He
in turn was succeeded by John III., who died in 1381. His
successor, John IV., was killed in battle in 1402, and he
was succeeded by his son, John V., who was Grand Admiral
of France, and who, with his relative, Roques Tyrrell de
toix, was killed at the battle of Agincourt in 1415. These
deaths in this great battle left, as the sole male heir of the
titles and landed possessions in France of the family of
Tyrrell de Poix, a boy twelve years old, Philippe, son of
John v., who died two years later in 1417, thus extinguish-
ing the male line in France of the oldest branch Of the
family. The titles and landed possessions then went,
through the preceding marriage of Marguerite Tyrrell de
Poix to fhibaut Soissons, into the distinguished family of
Moyencourt'SoissonS'Morenil, as hereinbefore stated. Car-
dinal Richelieu, the great Prime Minister of France in
the seventeenth century, was descended, through his ma-
ternal line in the Moyencourt family, from the old Norman
House of Tyrrell de Poix. These data as to the details of
the family history in Normandy and Picardy, after the
settlement of members of the family in England, have been
translated from the elaborate history so frequently referred
to herein, published by M. D'Acy in Paris in 1869.
Coming back to Roger Tyrrell, son of Sir Hugh Tyrrell
II., who, as has been said, became the ancestor of the dif-
ferent branches of the family in England, it may be said
that there is some confusion in the authorities as to the
first two generations after Sir Roger, relative to his mar-
riage and to the names of his children and grandchildren.
It is sufficiently clear, however, and well established that
his great-grandson was Sir Edward Tyrrell, who married
the daughter and heiress of Sir William Borgate of Suffolk.
Mr. Joseph H. Tyrrell, the English historian of the family,
spent many years in the preparation of his book and has
devoted much patient investigation to the early history of
the various English branches of the family, and he states
that it is quite evident that these branches all come from
Sir Walter III. and Sir Hugh I. and II., as Sir John Tyr-
— 20 —
rell of Heron was possessed of the Avon-Tyrrell properties
in Hampshire in the seventeenth century. (It will be
recalled that Hugh I., son of Walter III., owned these lands
in 1159, according to the Pipe Roll.) There is a marginal
note on a pedigree by Segar, Garter King of Arms, stating
that Sir John Tyrrell of Heron sold this Manor early in the
seventeenth century.
Sir Edward Tyrrell, who married the daughter of Sir
William Borgate, as above mentioned, left a son. Sir Hugh
Tyrrell, of Great Thomdon, Essex, who was living in the
time of Edward III. of England. He was the Governor of
Carisbroke Castle, which he defended against the French
in 1378. The son of this Sir Hugh Tyrrell of Essex, Sir
Jame^ Tyrrell, married Margaret, the daughter and heiress
of Sir William Heron, Knight, of Heron in Essex, and thus
became the ancestor of practically the entire family of Tyr-
rell in England, which became known as the Tyrrells of
Heron. Different members of the Tyrrells of Heron in
succeeding generations settled in other counties in Eng-
land, notably in Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Suf-
folk. From the above mentioned marriage of Sir James
Tjrrrell and Margaret of Heron came the several branches
of the family in England known as the Tyrrells of Spring-
field and the Tyrrells of Thornton, to which branches ref-
erences will hereinafter be made.
Mr. J. H. Tyrrell, in his "History of the Tyrrells," gives
the detailed pedigrees, lists of marriages and complete line
of descent from Baron Richard Tyrrell, of Castleknock, and
Sir Roger Tyrrell of Hampshire, all of the twelfth century,
down, with scarcely a missing link in the chain, to the pres-
ent representatives of the family in Ireland and England.
He does not always give the names of all the children bom
in the successive generations, but does give most of them
and the oldest son in each case who inherited the lands and
title.
The old coat of arms adopted by Sir Walter Tyrrell III.,
known as the "Poix" arms, is carefully described in heraldic
language, with an illustration of its appearance, in the
elaborate publication of M. D'Acy. This was the coat of
arms selected by Sir Walter to distinguish his bearings
from the arms of his elder kinsman, the Sire de Tirel, who
— 21-
took part with him also at the siege of Acre in 1096, during
the first Crusade.
Armorial bearings were probably assumed by Rolf, Sire
de Tirel, about the year 970 A. D., for the device of his
oldest son, Hilduin, was a shield "Vair." This word "Vair"
is used in heraldic language to indicate the different tinc-
tures or colors and their method of arrangement on the
shield, the word itself indicating a peculiar kind of fur
which was largely in use about the tenth century. Sir
Walter Tyrrell /., who came to England with the Conqueror,
also bore "Vair" on his shield, as did his son and grandson.
The arms of Poix, assumed by Sir Walter Tyrrell III., at
the siege of Jerusalem, were as follows : Gules, with bend
argent, together with six crosses, recrossed with small
crosslets and pointed in gold, posed three and three. M.
D'Acy, referring to the coat of arms of the family of Tyrrell
de Poix, says, "It is in this manner that this coat of arms
is represented painted in the historic museum at Versailles
in the third hall of the Crusades." The swords on it, with
crosses recrossed, were evidently symbolic of the fact that
the prominent members of the family in Picardy had taken
distinguished parts in the Crusades. After this, changes
seem to have been made in some features, for Sir Hugh
Tyrrell 11. , born about 1130, bore "Vair, on a chief gules,
a demi-lion rampant, or," and on succeeding to the titles
and possessions of Poix in 1171 he became entitled to bear
also the "Poix"arms. Some time after the conquest of
Ireland by the English under Strongbow, the following
arms were adopted either by Hugh Tyrrell 11. or by some
of his descendants in Ireland: "Gules two bars ermine,
between seven crosses pattees or, three, three, and one; on
a chief argent a demi-lion rampant gules." (Harleian MSS.
4036.) The motto used by the descendants of Hugh Tyrrell
in Ireland probably dates from the year 1100 and consisted
of the old Latin motto used in Picardy, "Veritas Via Vitae."
It would seem that Roger Tyrrell of Hampshire, the son
of Hugh Tyrrell IL, who inherited all of the possessions of
the latter in Hampshire and Essex, and his descendants
never used the old "Poix" arms nor the old motto in Latin
above given. Very early in the establishment of the family
in England, the coat of arms seems to have been taken
— 22-
which has ever since been identified with the Tyrrells of
Heron and the different branches of the family descended
from them. This coat of arms goes back into the twelfth
or thirteenth century and consisted of the arms in silver,
within a bordure engrailed, gules, two chevrons, azure;
with the motto, "Sans Dieu Rien;" and with a crest of a
peacock's tail issuing from the mouth of a boar's head,
couped, erect. This is the coat of arms of which an illus-
tration appears at the head of this little pamphlet. In the
pamphlet issued two years ago by the author there was
a mistake in the motto given connected with the coat of
arms. It there appears as "Sans Crainte." This, the
author has learned, is an error, as the motto, "Sans
Crainte" belongs exclusively to that branch of the Tyrrells
of Heron known as the Tyrrells of Boreham House in Es-
sex, who are the descendants of John Tyrrell of Billericay
in Essex, and who are still represented in England by
Colonel John TufnelUTyrrell, of Boreham House, Essex.
This motto, "Sans Crainte," was originally that of the
Highams of Boreham, whose daughter and heiress married
John Tyrrell of that branch of the family, and in this way
that motto became connected with the old coat of arms of
the Tyrrells of Heron, but applicable only to that particular
branch of the family. The old motto, "Sans Dieu Rien,"
is that of the Essex Tyrrells and is the only one which any
of the American descendants of the Tyrrells of Heron would
have the right to use; and this is for the reason also that the
motto of "Sans Crainte" was placed on the coat of arms of
the Boreham House Tyrrells after the first Virginia an-
cestor had left England.
The Standard of the Tyrrells of Heron was "The Cross
of St. George, azure, on a wreath argent and gules, a boar's
head couped and erect argent; and issuing from the mouth
a peacock's tail. The other charges consisted of six repe-
titions of the Badge." The Badge of the Tyrrells of Heron
was "Three long bows fretted in triangle," which after-
wards took the form of a continuous knot. The descriptions
of the Standards and Badges are from the MSS. of Sir
Christopher Barker, Garter King of Arms, who died in
1549. (Harleian MSS. 4633 and "Excerpta Historica".)
— 23 —
The pennon of the Tyrrells was the Badge on a triangu-
lar flag gules.
A very interesting description of the arms of the TirrelU
Tyrrell family, told in heraldic language, will be found in
a very rare book in the Virginia State Library at Richmond,
called the "Visitations of Essex, part 1, page 299. The
description here given will show how the early generations
of the family in England gradually built up their coat of
arms from the original shield of the Tyrrells of Heron by
additions taken from probably the coats of arms respect-
ively of the different families into which the earliest mem-
bers of the family had married, such as the Borgates, the
Coggeshalls, the Swynfords, the Flamberts, etc.
In this same book of the "Visitations" there will be found
very interesting lists in quaint and old-fashioned spelling
of the pedigrees of the different English branches from the
time of Sir Walter Tyrrell III. in England down to about
the year 1550.
In speaking of the coat of arms that decorates one of the
title pages of this little pamphlet, it may be stated inci-r
dentally that the tiger supporters would not be permissible
now in England, as supporters are never used in England
except when there is an actual existing title to be sup-
ported, and as all the titles in the Tyrrell family, such as
Tfn'i ' Mpfl. etr J have long since become extinct in Eng-
land. The author has simply given the tigers in the illus-
tration as having at one time formed part of the ancient
coat of arms of the Tyrrells of Heron.
Much valuable information as to the English branches
of the family may be found in Burke's "Extinct and Dor-
mant Baronetcies," a book easily found in the old book
shops in England and possibly in some of the book stores
of Boston and New York. Pages 536, 537, 538 and 539
in that book are devoted to the lineage of the Tyrrell fam-r
ily, from its first establishment in England by Sir Walter
Tyrrell III. down to a late period in the eighteenth cen-
tury. Burke remarks: "The family of Tirrell is one of
great note and antiquity, and for more than 600 years its
Chief, in a direct line, enjoyed the honor of Knighthood."
In the long list of pedigrees in this book it will be noticed
that the same differences exist in the manner of spelling
— 24 —
the surname that have been mentioned in M. D'Acy's book
and also in the history of the family prepared by Mr. Tyr-
rell. In Burke's list the name is frequently spelled Tirrell,
Tyrrell, etc., and frequently the surname of the son is
spelled differently from that of the father. All this goes
to show that these different spellings were of one and the
same family name, and that like many other old family
surnames in England there have been many changes in the
form of spelling from one generation to another. In Burke's
list of the first five or six generations from Sir Walter
Tyrrell III. down to Sir Edivurd Tyrrell, who married the
Suffolk heiress by the name of Borgate, he makes a num-
ber of errors, stating that the ancestor was succeeded in a
direct line by, first, his son. Sir Henry Tyrrell; and the
latter by Sir Richard; and he by Sir Edward; and he by
Sir Geofrey; and he by Sir Lionel, etc., down to Sir Edward.
In the more accurately prepared lists given in Mr. Tyrrell's
elaborate history of the family, this is all shown to be an
error, and the true descent was as follows: Sir Walter
Tyrrell III. was succeeded by his son. Sir Hugh I., and he
by Sir Hugh II., Prince of Poix, who was the ancestor who
permanently established the family both in England and
Ireland and who took part in the conquest of Ireland and
in the Crusades. On the death of Sir Hugh II., his body
was taken and deposited in the old mausoleum of the family
in Picardy at Selincourt. He was succeeded in his titles
and possessions in France, as has before been said, by his
oldest son, Walter Tyrrell V. Another son, Richard, who
was the second Baron of Castleknock, became the founder
of the Irish branches of the family, and another son of
Hugh II., Roger Tyrrell of Hampshire, who was a son by
the second marriage with Marie de Senarpont, inherited his
lands and possessions in England and became the founder
of all the English branches of the family. Sir Roger Tyr-
rell was succeeded by his son. Sir Edward, and he by his
son. Sir Galfrid, and the son of Sir Galfrid was the Sir
Edward Tyrrell who married Jane or Joan, the daughter
and heiress of Sir William Borgate. The earlier members
of the family in England, such as Sir Walter III., Sir Hugh
I. and Sir Hugh II., spent much of their time still in France,
living at times in their various chateaux in Picardy, and
_2&^
were still, to all intents and purposes, noblemen of Picardy
as well as Barons in England. Sir Walter Tyrrell III.,
while living in one of his castles in Picardy, was visited
there by Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury.
There is another error which is frequently met with in
statements as to the prominent members of the Tyrrell
family in early days, and that is, that the Chevalier Bayard
du Terrail, the Knight "sans peur et sans reproche," was
a distinguished member of the family. This statement is
not true. The family name, or surname, of the Chevalier
was Bayard, just as Tyrrell is the surname of the family
in question. The affix, "du Terrail," was not a surname
at all, but was simply an indication as to the locality from
which the Chevalier's family came. The name Terrail in
French means "pottery works," and is pronounced in
French, as nearly as it can be expressed in English, "Ter-
rye." This family was a Burgundian family from the east-
ern borders of France, and the gallant Chevalier was born
in that province of Burgundy known as Dauphine, and his
family became entirely extinct a few generations after his
death. This family of Bayard du Terrail had no connection
whatever with the family of Tyrrell de Poix of Normandy
and Picardy.
During the investigations of the author of this pamphlet
in the British Museum Library, he came across an interest-
ing little brochure, published by Mr. Peter G. Laurie, called
"The Tyrells of Heron, in the Parish of East Horndon."
The author found this to be an exceedingly interesting ac-
count of the County family of the Tyrrells which had been
settled in Essex for over 500 yearsi on lands probably
originally granted during the time of, or shortly after, the
Conquest. These Tyrrells of Heron were descendants of
Sir Roger Tyrrell of Hampshire, and their Manor House
located near East Homdon was occupied by the family for
a number of centuries, down to a period early in the seven-
teenth century, when Sir John Tyrrell, who was born in
1571, sold this Manor House and its lands, known as Heron
Hall, and went to live at Springfield near Chelmsford in
Essex County. The author read this pamphlet with great
interest and opened up a correspondence from London with
Mr. Laurie, who was temporarily occupying his beautiful
— 26-
country seat near East Horndon in Essex, known as
"Heroncourt/ Herongate, near Brentwood, Essex. The
result of this correspondence was that Mr. Laurie invited
the author of this pamphlet and his wife to visit the place
near his country seat, where the old Tyrrell Manor House,
known as Heron Hall, had been located, and near which
Was the old Tyrrell Chapel, in which were buried many
niembers of the family back to the thirteenth century. Mr.
Laurie kindly put himself at the service of the author and
offered to accompany the party when the locality should
be visited and to show the spots of interest in that neigh-
borhood, inviting them afterwards most courteously to take
tea under the shade of his beautiful oaks, where an Ameri-
can descendant of this old Essex County family could have
the opportunity of meeting the members of his family. So,
in August, 1906, the author and his wife went down to the
little station of Brentwood, on the main line of the Great
Eastern Railway, about twenty miles northeast of London.
Driving out to Mr. Laurie's place, the party met the courte-
ous and scholarly gentleman, who rode with them to visit
Tyrrell Chapel, located about a mile from his country seat.
East Horndon is a village and parish on the road from
Brentwood to Orsett and is about three miles south from
Brentwood railway station and about twenty-two miles
from London. The little church visited is cabled the Church
of All Saints, and is an edifice of red brick, erected about
the time of Henry V., and consists of a chancel and a large
aisle on the south called the Tyrrell Chapel, and a smaller
chapel on the north, a nave, transepts, south porch, and a
massive but somewhat stunted tower at the west end con-
taining four bells, the lower stage of which tower is used
as a vestry. In the chancel floor is an interesting slab with
inscription: "To Sir Thomas Tyrrell, son and heir of Sir
John Tyrrell, Knight, and Alice, his wife," dated 1422.
There are also monuments in the north and south chapels
to other members of the family buried in the vaults below
at different periods, among others. Sir John Tyrrell, died
1675, and Dame Martha, his wife, died 1670. The chancel
referred to is enriched with handsomely carved bosses.
Against the south transept there is an altar tomb, said to
be a memorial of the burial here of the heart of Queen Anne
— 27 —
Boleyn, who was beheaded May 19, 1536. The chapel on
the north side is called the Marney Chapel; the name,
Mamey, came from the marriage, in the early part of the
sixteenth century, of Sir Thomas Tyrrell of Heron to Anna,
daughter of Sir John Mamey, Knight, of Essex. High upon
the wall of the old church in the interior, was fastened an
ancient helmet, said to be part of the armor of old Sir
John Tyrrell, who fought at the battle of Agincourt under
Henry V. in 1415. The helmet has been placed in the
church for many hundred years. Fastened to the top of
the helmet, in bronze, was the crest of the Tyrrell family,
the boar's head with the peacock's tail issuing from the
mouth, towering above the helmet six or eight inches; as
one might say, like the plume of Henry of Navarre. The
helmet was battered here and there with dents received by
the doughty old knight in battle. Also nailed up along side
the helmet were the bronze jointed gauntlets of the old
mediaeval hero. These relics of the church are carefully
guarded and are held very sacred. In the vaults under the
chapel were buried Sir James Tyrrell of Heron, 1476; Sir
John Tyrrell, who distinguished himself in the Civil War
in the time of Cromwell on the side of the King; Sir
Charles, Sir Edward, and other members of the family.
There was also a highly prized alabaster slab tablet to the
memory of Lady Alice Tyrrell, upon which were outlined
her figure and face, placed in the church in 1422, seventy
years before America wtas discovered. This was Lady
Alice, daughter of Sir William Coggeshall and wife of Sir
John Tyrrell, of Agincourt fame. The mother of this Lady
Alice Tyrrell was Antiocha, who was the daughter of the
famous English soldier. Sir John Hawkwood, Knight, of
Essex, who for many years, during the wars between the
Guelphs and Ghibellines in Italy, was the commanding gen-
eral of the armies of Florence. A magnificent portrait of
him was seen by the author of this pamphlet in 1906 hang-
ing in the Duomo or Cathedral at Florence, Italy. The little
church at East Horndon is now undergoing restoration,
and all of these relics iare most carefully preserved and pro-
tected. A rectory house was built in 1877 at the village of
Herongate. The village is about three-quarters of a mile
north of the church. About a mile from the old chapel and
— 28 --
about a quarter of a mile from the village of Herongate
is the site of the old Manor House of Heron Hall, the home
of the Tyrrells of Heron for over five hundred years. Heron
Hall was built in the thirteenth or fourteenth century. It
was an imposing edifice constructed of brick, with a large
central quadrangular court, and an extensive terrace on the
east side, and was entirely surrounded by a moat. At each
of the four comers stood massive round towers. The old
building was destroyed about a hundred years ago or more,
and no trace of it can now be seen; but the old moat which
surrounded the Hall is still in existence and contains water ;
a small portion of the old garden wall is also still to be
seen. The Hall was located on a noble site, commanding a
view of twenty miles of the valley of the Thames and the
hills of Kent on the other side of the river. The plan of
old Heron Hall, as it formerly existed, made in 1788, may
still be seen at the residence of Mr. Laurie, known as Heron-
court. Mr. Laurie himself is a vestryman in the old church,
and being of antiquarian tastes and having lived in this
part of Essex County for many years, he prepared his
pamphlet on this old Essex County family on account of the
local interest attaching to it. As he explained to the
author on this visit, it was a family which dominated this
portion of England for many centuries, and its members
held the very highest positions in the County. That par-
ticular local branch living in this part of the County had
died out in the latter part of the eighteenth century, when
its last member, the Countess of Arran, died.
During this same month of August, 1906, the author of
this pamphlet visited the old University town of Oxford,
and, in looking over the Alumni registers of that Univer-
sity, he found that Sir Timothy Tyrrell of Oakley in Bucks,
as well as his son. Sir Timothy 11. , were both graduates of
the University of Oxford. These members of the family
are referred to in Evelyn's Diary as living in a beautiful
country seat near Oxford, called Shotover, (from the
French, Chateau Vert). The name of this Sir Timothy
Tyrrell will be found in Burke's book above referred to in
these notes, on page 538 in a foot note. It has generally
been considered in the traditions of the Virginia Tyrrells
that the first Virginia ancestor was a descendant of this
— 29 —
Sir Timothy Tyrrell of Oakley in Bucks. The date, of the
arrival of the first members of the Tyrrell family in Vir-
ginia seems to be involved in some obscurity. It is a tra-
dition that a Thomas Terrell (or Tyrrell) arrived in Vir-
ginia about 1637, and a James TyrreU in 1648, but nothing
has ever been learned as to these two immigrants, or as
to any descendants from them. It is known, however, that
Richmond and William Tyrrell, or Terrell, arrived in Vir-
ginia from England about the middle of the seventeenth
century. The author of this pamphlet is a lineal descendant
in direct line from William Terrell, one of these first two
immigrants, and the line of his descent from this ancestor
will be given hereinafter. In the old colonial land records
at Richmond, Va., in the first mention made of William's
arrival and his connection with lands, his surname is spelled
"Tyrrell." In the same records, where the first mention
is made of his brother Richmond, the name of the latter is
spelled "Tirrell." There is a deed referred to in the William
and Mary Quarterly, Volume 13, page 264, whereby Rich-
mond Terrell conveys to Henry Wyatt a tract of land in
New Kent County, Va. The date of the deed is April 29,
1670, and in it the grantor reserves 100 acres, which he
says he had previously given unto his brother William Ter-
rell, and which has since been sold by the latter to Francis
Waring. This deed clearly shows that Richmond and Wil-
liam were brothers.
The traditions among the descendants of William and
Richmond Terrell are sometimes contradictory as to just
where in England the two brothers came from, and as to
the exact year of their arrival. They are all in accord,
however, in saying that the two came from the old family
of the Tyrrells in England and were descendants of the
stock established there by Sir Walter Tyrrell III. As be-
fore stated, the tradition generally relied upon is that
William and Richmond were the sons of William Tyrrell,
who was the son of Sir Timothy Tyrrell I. of Oakley. This
Sir Timothy Tyrrell was the son of Sir Edward Tyrrell of
Thornton and belonged to that branch of the Englisn fam-
ily known as the Tyrrells of Thornton, who were an off-
shoot of the Tyrrells of Heron. This William Tyrrell, son
of Sir Timothy Tyrrell I., was killed at the battle of Chester
— 80 —
in 1644, during the Civil War in England. Richmond and
William Terrell were both large land owners in Virginia
at a very early period after their arrival. The family tra-
ditions are that they came to Virginia with some sort of
official authority in connection with the crown lands in
Virginia, either as surveyors or in some other important
capacity. It has generally been supposed that the large
grants of land received by both of these immigrants came
for their services in connection with their official position.
It is a significant fact that the Christian name of Timothy
was largely used in the first two or three generations of
the descendants of both Richmond and William, and that
among the children of William were five who bore the exact
Christian names of five of the children and grandchildren
of Sir Timothy Tyrrell of Oakley in Bucks. As to whether
these two Virginia colonists, Richmond and William Terrell,
were lineally descended from Sir Timothy Tyrrell I., or
from Sir Edward of Thornton, is not yet quite clearly
established in the mind of the author of this pamphlet;
but that they came from the old stock of the Tyrrells of
Heron, and probably the Tyrrells of Thornton, is substan-
tially established in many ways. Among the descendants
of William now living in the State of Georgia, there is an
old gold watch, said to have been brought over by William
from England, and still held in the family as a valuable
relic, which has engraved upon it the old crest of the Tyr-
rells of Heron, namely, the crest of the boar's head with
the peacock's tail issuing therefrom. Moreover, there is
another branch of the family in Virginia an old ring, hand-
ed down from many generations back in that State, with
the same crest engraved thereon.
Sir Timothy Tyrrell I. of Oakley was the son of Sir
Edward Tyrrell of Thornton, as before stated, and a de-
scendant of the Tyrrells of Heron, and was born in 1575.
In the correspondence which the author has had for a year
past with Mr. J. H. Tyrrell, the English historian of the
family, Mr. Tyrrell has intimated that the Virginia ancestor
of the family probably came from the branch known in
England as the Tyrrells of Thornton. In a letter dated June
9, 1908, from Mr. Tyrrell to the author, giving his views on
this subject, he says among other things, "It may interest
— 81 —
you to know that no matter from what branch of the Eng-
lish house the American families come, they are of Royal
descent, as you will see by the enclosed chart, which do not
trouble yourself to return to me." Included in this letter
was a very elaborate chart, carefully prepared by Mr.
Tyrrell from the authorities so accessible in England, show-
ing the line of descent from Edward /., King of England,
and Eleanor of Castile, his wife, to Sir Edward Tyrrell of
Thornton, through the marriage of Joan Plantagenet, the
daughter of Edward /., to Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Glou-
cester. Joan Plantagenet is sometimes called in history
Joan of Acre, as she was bom during the siege of Acre in
the Crusades, where Edward I., then Prince of Wales, was
taking part, accompanied by Eleanor of Castile, his wife.
There are doubtless many families in America who are
descended from Royal ancestors, but it is not always easy
to establish this fact by accurate lists of the marriages and
pedigrees.
In a Republic like that of the United States, where
transcendent genius, relying upon character, industry and
opportunity, can enable a man to rise from the depths of
poverty and obscurity to the loftiest station of usefulness,
honor and fame, like the immortal Abraham Lincoln, de-
scent from Royalty, no matter how regular and honorable,
seems of trivial importance indeed. In many cases, the
character of a Sovereign has been so disreputable or vicious
that to have him as an ancestor would be anything but
creditable. However, as Edward Plantagenet (Edward I.
of England), was a great law giver, soldier and statesman,
and probably the ablest King that England ever had, one
whose strong personality, keen intelligence and vigorous
character were deeply impressed upon English history, it
may possibly be a matter of curious genealogical interest
for descendants of this old English County family to read
the line of descent so carefully prepared by Mr. Tyrrell,
showing the lineage of the Tyrrells of Thornton from the
Plantagenet King. Therefore, the author will here insert
the chart which was sent to him as above described.
— 82-
Royal Descent of English Branch of Tyrrell,
From the Two Marriages of Joan Plantagenet.
Edward I. King of England m. Eleanor of Castile;
j
Joan Plantagenet m. Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester;
Eleanor de Clare m. Hugh Despencer, Earl of Gloucester;
Isabel Despencer m. Richard Fitzalan, 5th Earl of Arundel ;
Philippa Fitzalan m. Sir Richard Serjeaux;
Elizabeth Serjeaux m. Sir William Marney ;
Sir John Marney m. Agnes Throckmorton;
Anna Marney m. Sir Thomas Tyrrell of Heron ;
Sir William m. Eleanor Sir Thomas Tyrrell m. Elizabeth
Tyrrell D' Arcy. of Ockendeii \ Le Brun ;
William Tyrrell m. Elizabeth Bodley ;
Humphrey Tyrrell m. Jane Ingleton;
of Thornton.
George Tyrrell.
— 33-
After the death of Joan's first husband, the Earl of
Gloucester, she jnarried a second time, her second husband
being Ralf de Monthenner. The line of descent from this
second marriage was as follows :
Her son, Sir Thomas Monthermer m. Margaret ;
Margaret Monthermer m. Sir John de Montacute;
Sir Simon Montacute m. Elizabeth Boughton;
Thomas Montagu m. Christian Bassett ;
John Montagu m. Alice Halcot ;
William Montagu m. Mary Butline ;
Richard Montagu m. Agnes Knotting ;
Thomas Montagu m. Agnes Dudley;
Sir Edward Montagu, Chief Justice, m. Helen Roper;
Eleanor Montagu.
— 34 —
George Tyrrell, who was descended from the first mar-
riage of Joan Plantagenet, married Eleanor Montagu, who
was descended from the second marriage of Joan. Their
oldest son was Sir Edward Tyrrell of Thornton, who mar-
ried, first, Mary Lee, and, second, Margaret Aston. From
the first marriage Sir Edward had a son. Sir Edward Tyr-
rell, Baronet, of Thornton, who married Elizabeth Kings-
miU, daughter of Sir William Kingsmill, who was also of
Royal descent. By the second marriage of Sir Edward
Tyrrell of Thornton he had a son. Sir Timothy Tyrrell I.
of Oakley in Bucks, who married Eleanor Kingsmill, also
a daughter of Sir William Kingsmill From this chart it
will easily be seen that there were three branches of the
family, all of which were descended from Joan Plantagenet,
namely, the branch headed by Sir William Tyrrell, who
married Eleanor D'Arcy, and the two branches headed re-
spectively by Sir Edward Tyrrell, Baronet, and Sir Timothy
I. of Oakley.
Sir Timothy Tyrrell I. was Master of the Buckhounds
to King James I. and King Charles I. He was succeeded in
his title by his oldest son. Sir Timothy Tyrrell IL, who
was of Oakley in Bucks, and also of Shotover in the County
of Oxford. The latter was also of the Privy Chamber of
King Charles I.; he was Colonel in the Royal Army, Gov-
ernor of Cardiff, and General of the Ordnance. One of his
sons, James Tyrrell, was a historian of some distinction,
having written a general history of England in five vol-
umes. In M. D'Acy's book, referred to in the foregoing
part of these notes, he speaks of the historian, James Tyr-
rell, as a descendant of the old Norman-French family of
Tyrrell de Poix, and mentions the fact that this James
Tyrrell had written considerably on the subject of the old
family in France.
As to the place in England from which Richmond and
William Terrell came, there is much obscurity, owing to
the absence of documentary evidence on that point and to
the long period that has elapsed, about two hundred and
fifty years, since they came to the colony. One tradition
is that they came directly from Richmond, England; and
it is somewhat significant in this connection that the resi-
dence of Sir Timothy Tyrrell 1., while he was an official
— 85 —
member of the household of King Charles I., must have
been in the neighborhood of Richmond, as the residence of
the Stuart Kings was at Hampton Court nearby. It has
been insisted by some that the first Tyrrells in Virginia
came from England via the West Indies. It is known that
Usher Tyrrell, one of the sons of Sir Timothy II., located
himself in Jamaica. He had married a daughter of Van
Tromp, the Dutch Admiral, and had children. At that
early date the route via the West Indies was frequently
taken by the colonial immigrants. Bristol, on the west
coast of England, was quite accessible to the Tyrrells in
Oxford and Bucks ; and equally so, probably, was the route
down the Thames, which would also be convenient to any
member of the old stock left still in Essex, as Langham,
Ramsey-Tyrrells, Boreham House, Springfield, Thornton,
Heron Hall, and other places in Essex, where the Tyrrells
had lived and flourished in the thirteenth, fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries, were all within a short distance of that
river. The Civil Wars in England caused the emigration
of many members of the old cavalier families, especially
the younger sons who could not inherit under the laws of
primogeniture, to the colony of Virginia. The Tyrrells
ha4 largely taken the losing side in the conflict, and some
of the more adventurous spirits among the younger mem-
bers of the family evidently desired to shake the dust of
England from their feet and seek their fortunes in the
new world. William and Richmond may not have left Eng-
land until after the Restoration of Charles II., although
Richmond is said to have arrived as early as 1656.
Therefore, being members of a family which had been
loyal to King Charles I. in his great contest with Parliament,
they may have obtained under the Restoration from Charles
II. some authoritative position with reference to the crown
lands or Royal hunting grounds in the colony of Virginia.
Reference Has been made herein already to the tradition
in the family that the first ancestors came out from Eng-
land under some such Jloyal authority.
The Tyrrell family m Ireland has produced many men
of great distinction in the history of that country. Many
were conspicuous in the wars that have devastated Ireland,
and a number who have headed the different branches of
the family in that country have borne the title of Baron
and have been distinguished as owners of imposing castles
and large possessions of lands. Many of these Irish Tyr-
rells were graduates of Trinity College, Dublin, and occu-
pied many high positions in connection with the Corpora-
tion of that city.
All along through the pages of English history from the
thirteenth century down, the members of the family have
been distinguished for patriotic and conspicuous service to
their country. Sir John Tyrrell fought with the Black
Prince in 1356 at the battle of Poitiers. Reference has al-
ready been made to the presence of old Sir John Tyrrell,
High Sheriff of Essex, at the battle of Agincourt in 1415.
Sir William Tirrell was killed at the battle of Barnett in
1471, fighting desperately at the side of Warwick, the King
Maker. Another Sir William Tyrrell was executed during
the Wars of the Roses as a Lancastrian in 1461. The only
member of the family, in these early days, who seems to
have disgraced the family, was Sir James Tyrrell, who
was a supporter of Richard III., and who has been charged
with having caused the murder of the two sons of Edward
IV. in the Tower of London, at the behest of his Sovereign.
This Sir James was a son of Sir William Tyrrell of Gipping
in Suffolk, who was a descendant of the Tyrrells of Heron.
During the great Civil War in England between Parliament
and Charles I., many members of the family, as has been
said, were distinguished for loyal services, mainly in the
Royal army. Notably among them was Sir John Tyrrell;
whose wife was Martha, daughter of Sir Laurence Wash-
ington of Wiltshire, who was of the same family as the
illustrious George Washington. These are the "Sir John"
and "Dame Martha" hereinbefore referred to as being
buried in Tyrrell Chapel. Sir Thomas Tyrrell, Judge of
the Common Pleas, was one of the Commissioners of the
Great Seal to Oliver Cromwell, and seems to have been one
of the few of the family who were on the side of Parlia-
ment. Sir John Tyssen Tyrrell of Boreham House, near
Chelmsford in Essex, a descendant of Sir Thomas Tyrrell
of Heron, died in 1877. The representative of this branch of
the family now in England is Colonel John Tufnell-Tyrrell.
There is a tablet in Westminster Abbey to the memory of
— 87 —
Richard Tyrrell, who was a distinguished Admiral in the
naval service of England in the eighteenth century and was
a member of one of the Irish branches of the family. All
the evidence points to the fact that the family was what is
known in England as an old County family, the members
of which were always prompt to go to the front when duty
called. The position of High Sheriff of Essex County,
which in England is a position of great note and dignity,
was held for many years by different members of the fam-
ily. Old Sir John Tyrrell, who fought at Agincourt, was
repeatedly elected Speaker of the House of Commons in the
fifteenth century. Sir Timothy Tyrrell IL was famous for
his princely hospitality at his beautiful country place six
miles from the city of Oxford. Everyone who is descended
from this old historic family may feel proud of the fact
that it was a representative of good Norman-English stock ;
and that in the various positions which its members occu-
pied in the civil and military history of their country, they
generally and uniformly conferred high credit upon the
family. They never seem to have forgotten that their fore-
fathers had been leaders of men, prominent in the early
history of France and taking conspicuous parts in the Cru-
sades.
In concluding these notes, the author of this sketch de-
sires to give his own line of descent from his Virginia
ancestors. He has been a resident of San Antonio, Texas,
for over thirty years, and is a native of Indiana. His father
was Williamson Terrell, who was bom in Clark County,
Kentucky, June 12, 1805; his mother was Martha Jarrell,
who was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, in 1808. She was
the daughter of James Jarrell and Rachel Powell, his wife,
who both came to Kentucky from Dover, Delaware. Wil-
liamson Terrell was the son of Captain John Terrell, who
distinguished himself in the early Indian campaigns in the
West, under Harmar, St. Clair and Wayne, and who was
present at Harmar's defeat and at Wayne's great victory
over the Miami Indians at the battle of the Maumee Rapids,
or "Fallen Timbers," August 20, 1794. The author's grand-
father. Captain John Terrell, was bom in Spotsylvania
County, Virginia, April 3, 1772, and moved to Kentucky
with his father in 1787. John Terrell married Abigail
Allan, the author's grandmother, who was the daughter of
Archibald ADan of Albemarle County, Virginia, and who
was the sister of Chilton Allan, the famous Kentucky law-
yer, who represented the Ashland district in Congress for
ten years after Henry Clay had been sent to the Senate.
The writer's great-grandfather was Henry Terrell, Henry
Terrell II., as he is called in the family, to distinguish him
from his own father, who was also named Henry. Henry
Terrell II. was born in Caroline County, Virginia, March
29, 1735. He married Mary Tyler, who was the daughter
of Captain William Tyler, and who was born in Virginia
in 1743. The father of Henry Terrell II. was Henry Terrell
I., as he is called, who was a lawyer and wealthy planter
and who lived near Golansville, in Caroline County, but
who was born in Hanover County, Virginia. Henry Terrell
I. was bom about the year 1695 and died in 1760. A copy
of his will is in the possession of his descendant, Colonel
Lynch M. Terrell of Atlanta, Ga., together with a copy of
the inventory of his estate; and they show that he was a
man of large wealth, as property values went at that early
day in the colony. He left large, improved tracts of land
to each of his several sons, and disposed in his will of a
large amount of personal property. Henry Terrell I. was
a man of considerable influence in the colony ; as was quite
common in that day, he combined several occupations and
was a lawyer, a merchant and a planter. He made large
shipments of goods for the use of his plantations from the
port of Bristol in England, and he exported the surplus
products of his land, being a large producer especially of
tobacco. He was somewhat proud of his family lineage;
lived in the comfortable style of a country gentleman, and
was rather aristocratic in his ways and bearing. He was
married twice; first, to Annie Chiles, a young lady of a
family then quite well known and distinguished in the early
colonial history of Virginia, several members of that family
having been members of the House of Burgesses, and one
a Lieutenant Colonel of Virginia Militia. Secondly, Henry
Terrell I. married Sarah Woodson, the daughter of Tarlton
Woodson. The great-grandfather of the writer of this
pamphlet, Henry Terrell II., was a son by the first mar-
riage with Annie Chiles. Henry Terrell I. was one of the
— 39 —
younger sons of the Virginia ancestor, William Tyrrell or
Terrell, (as the name is written both ways in the early
colonial land records). The wife of William Terrell was
Susannah Waters; and the tradition in the family is that
Susannah came from England to America to meet and
marry her husband, William, accompanied by a retinue of
servants and escorted by her husband's brother. There is
even a romantic story connected with their marriage. It
is said that the family of William in England was Catholic,
but that while he was a student at the University of Ox-
ford he became a Protestant, thus deeply angering his fam-
ily ; that he had courted Susannah, who was also of Catholic
family, many of the old English families still being ad-
herents of that faith at that time. William went to the
Virginia colony thus somewhat under his family's dis-
pleasure; he was followed later on by Susannah, escorted,
as above stated, by his brother; and the marriage took place
in Virginia. Of course this is all tradition and it cannot
be stated to have any very solid foundation.
The oldest son of William and Susannah Terrell was
named Timothy, and the descendants of this son Timothy
are quite numerous today in Indiana, Missouri and Colo-
rado. As before stated, it is rather significant that for
several generations there was always a Timothy among
the descendants of both William and Richmond. There was
one daughter of the marriage of William and Susannah
whose name was Anna,^ and who married David Lewis, from
which marriage there are many descendants among the
oldest families in the State of Virginia. Another son of
William and Susannah was David Terrell, who married
Agatha Chiles, a sister of the Annie Chiles who had married
his brother, Henry Terrell I. From this marriage of David
Terrell and Agatha Chiles are descended numerous
branches of the family in Texas and other southern states ;
and among David's descendants is the Hon. A. W. Terrell,
of Austin, Texas, now in his eighty-second year, and still
a man of great physical and intellectual vigor, who has been
prominently identified with the history of Texas for nearly
sixty years, and who was the American Minister to Turkey
during the last administration of President Cleveland.
Among the descendants of another son of William, the an-
, — 40 —
cestor, Joel, is the Hon. Joseph M. Terrell, lately Governor
of Georgia; and there are also many descendants of this
son still living in that State. There are also many de-
scendants in Virginia and other southern states of Rich-
mond, the brother of William, and one of the first two
ancestors in Virginia. William Terrell, the ancestor, lived
in St. Paul's Parish, Hanover County, Virginia, and he and
his wife, Susannah, were both members of the established
church, (Episcopal). This fact may lend some color of
truth to the story of their both having recanted from the
Catholic faith in England. There is a deed on record in
Virginia from William and Susannah Terrell to their son,
Henry Terrell, dated March 16, 1725, for a tract of 400
acres of land situated in King William County. William
Terrell, the ancestor in Virginia, died at a very advanced
age in 1727.
The writer of this little pamphlet has never specially
interested himself in tracing down the various branches of
the American Terrells from their original Virginia ances-
tors, and has no special knowledge on this subject further
than that of knowing his own direct descent from William
Terrell. Other members of the family, notably two cousins
of the author, the late General W. H. H. Terrell, of In-
dianapolis, and his brother. Colonel Lynch M. Terrell, of
Atlanta, Ga., have most industriously and thoroughly en-
gaged during the last twenty years in accumulating a vast
amount of information on the different branches of the
family, descended from the two Virginia ancestors. The
author of this sketch has only sought to investigate care-
fully the early history of the Norman-French progenitors
of the stock and the English forefathers, and to trace the
direct connection between the first Virginia ancestors and
the particular branch of the TjnTells of Heron from which
they undoubtedly came. This work has been done from
time to time, in the leisure moments of a busy professional
life; and if the results of his researches as set forth in this
pamphlet shall prove to be interesting to the many mem-
bers of the family throughout the United States, the author
will be amply compensated for his labors. He desires, in
concluding these notes, to express in this public manner,
the deep sense of obligation he feels to Mr. Joseph Henry
— 41 —
Tsrrrell, the English historian of the family, for ilie kind
consideration he has received at his hands and for the many
extremely valuable suggestions he has made from time to
time by way of aid to the author in his researches and in
the preparation of this little pamphlet.
The descendants of this old Essex County family, thus
transplanted to Virginia soil some two hundred and fifty
years ago, have worthily maintained in America the sturdy
and patriotic qualities characteristic of their stock in the
mother country. As governors, senators, judges, and other
prominent officers in the civil administration of their state
and nation, they have taken their full share of honors and
credit. In the wars on the borders of Virginia in colonial
days ; at Guilford Court House, King's Mountain and York-
town in the Revolution; in the Indian campaigns in the
West under Harmar, Wayne and Harrison; at Talladega,
the Horseshoe Bend and New Orleans under the indomita-
ble Jackson; at Shiloh, Perryville, Cedar Creek, Cold Har-
bor, and on many other desperate battle fields of the late
Civil War, both in the Federal and Confederate armies,
the American descendants of the old Norman-French fam-
ily of Tyrrell de Poix have nobly sustained with their cour-
age and blood the chivalric record established by their
knightly forefathers at the siege of Acre in the Crusades,
and at Cr6cy, Poitiers and Agincourt.
References
- Barron, Caroline. Medieval London Widows, 1300-1500. (1994). < GoogleBooks >
- https://archive.org/details/visitationscoun01banngoog/page/n160/mod...
- http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/Probate/PROB_11-32-613.pdf SUMMARY: The document below is the will, dated 18 December 1548 and proved 3 December 1549, of Humphrey Tyrrell (d.1549), esquire, of South Ockendon, Essex, whose wife, Jane Ingleton, was the ward of John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford, and whose father was a half-brother of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk.
Elizabeth Tyrrell's Timeline
1500 |
January 1500
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Wokingden, Essex, England
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1518 |
1518
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Thornton, Buckinghamshire, England
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1522 |
1522
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Thornton, Buckinghamshire, England
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1524 |
1524
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England
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1526 |
1526
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Ockendon, Essex, England
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???? |
Dunscombe, Devon, England
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