The Descendants of Richard Burgh
of Windygates, Leek, Staffordshire:
1450 to Present
by R. Clayton Brough, April 2003
from earlier material he provided for the 1988 RBFO book:
The Ancestors and Descendants of the Broughs of Staffordshire, England
Pedigrees of the
Later Broughs of Staffordshire, England: 1450-2004
A List of Richard Burgh's Descendants
Richard
de Burgh (b.1450) of Brewood, & Alice
Thomas
Burgh (b.1480) of Brewood, & Maude, moved to Middle Hulme. Leek,
in early 1500's
Richard
Burgh (b.1510) of Windygates, Leek
Thomas
Burgh (b.1540) of Windygates, Leek
Richard
Brough (b.1570) & Anne Wright
Thomas
Brough (b.1590/1595) & Elizabeth Cotton
John
Brough (b.1626/1641) & Margaret Trafford...had two sons...
Richard
Brough (chr.1664) & Dorothy Carthwright
Richard
Brough (chr.1700)
Thomas
Brough (chr.1667) & Sarah Barnett
Richard
Brough (chr.1707)
Richard Burgh and His Descendants
Richard Burgh was born about 1510, and
was apparently the second son of Thomas Burgh (born abt. 1480). Like
his father, Richard Burgh (born abt. 1510) was a "leaseholder of
land," and appears to have been moderately successful in securing
and maintaining different land holdings in and around the hamlet of
Windygates, Leek. Richard's land holdings were later inherited by his
eldest and possibly only son, Thomas Burgh (born abt. 1540), who likewise
resided in Windygates during the later 1500's, and who was apparently
married twice.
During the early 1600's, Thomas Burgh
(born abt. 1540) and his family increased their land holdings in Windygates,
and Thomas became recognized as an important "freeholder"
of land. His family consisted of at least two children: Richard Brough
(born abt. 1570) and Thomas Brough (born abt. 1574). By the time of
Thomas Burgh's death, his eldest son, Richard Brough (born abt. 1570)
had married Anne Wright, and with his father's inheritance and possibly
some additional land given to him from Anne's father, Richard Brough
became a rather prosperous Gentleman, Yeoman and freeholder of land.
(It is interesting to note that Richard Brough paid a 10-pound fine
for not taking up his obligatory knighthood under King Charles 1 at
this time.) Eventually Richard Brough and Anne Wright had at least three
children, with their oldest and possibly only son, Thomas Brough, being
born about 1590/1595. Richard Brough died in 1637, leaving most his
inheritance and lands to his son Thomas Brough (born abt. 1590/1595).
[Footnote to the above paragraph:
Originally a "Freeholder of land"
was a man who "held land" directly from the Crown or from
a tenant or sub-tenant of the Crown. However, as time went on, it more
than less meant a person who actually "owned" his own land.]
Before his father's death, Thomas Brough
(born abt. 1590/1595) had married Elizabeth Cotton in 1620. Elizabeth
was a daughter of Walter Cotton and Elizabeth Young who were a very
important and prosperous couple in Staffordshire. Soon after his marriage
to Elizabeth, Thomas combined his own assets with that of his wife's,
and using the skills and knowledge his father had taught him, Thomas
soon became a very prosperous and well-respected individual in Staffordshire.
By 1634, Thomas had acquired the title
of "Gentleman" and had been given a "tenement and land
in Leek Frith, specifically accepted in King Edward VI's grant to Sir
Ralph Bagnall (which was done about one hundred years earlier),"
and had erected a Hall in Windygates--which still stands and serves
as a beautiful farmhouse today, and which has the initials of Thomas
Brough and the date the Hall was built inscribed over the top of its
porch entrance: "T.B. 1634". [The Windygates Hall Farm is
currently owned and operated by Geoffrey and Rose Robinson. Geoffrey
Robinson is a descendant of William Brough (b.1801) and Catherine Oulsnam.]
By 1637, Thomas Brough and Elizabeth Cotton had several "servantmen
and maid servants," and by the 1640's they were the parents of
ten children: three boys and seven girls.



Following his father's death
in 1637, Thomas inherited additional wealth, and by 1653, Thomas Brough
and Elizabeth Cotton owned a number of items and utensils of "pewter,
brass and silver" and held "lands, houses, buildings"
and numerous "impliments of husbandry" in Windygates, Staffordshire
and Clownam, Derbyshire. Thomas Brough died in 1654, with his last Will
and Testament recording him as stating: "I bequeath and command
my soul to Almighty God my Creator[,] trusting through the alone merits
of Christ Jesus to have all my sins forgiven me and to enjoy everlasting
life in the Kingdom of Heaven...."
Thomas Brough and Elizabeth Cotton had
three sons: Richard (born abt. 1624), John (born abt. 1626/1641) and
Thomas (chr.1639). Richard Brough (born abt. 1624), married Rebecca
Fowler of Barthomley, Cheshire County in 1648. It is interesting to
note that Rebecca was given 700 pounds by her father, Richard Fowler
(who in 1617 was the Rector of Barthomley in Cheshire) when she married
Richard Brough. Richard and Rebecca had only one child: Thomas (born
in 1650). Rebecca died shortly after childbirth. In 1652, two years
after his wife's death, Richard Brough became a Church Warden in Leek,
and served in that capacity for one year. He died in 1660, ten years
after his wife's death and at a time when his son Thomas was only ten
years of age. After Richard's death, his ten year old son, Thomas, was
raised by relatives in Leek and nearby areas. Eventually Thomas Brough
(born in 1650) entered Cambridge University and became a barrister of
the Middle Temple and Recorder of Coventry.
[Footnote to the above paragraph:
Rebecca Fowler's father, Richard Fowler,
was presented Rector of Barthomley in Cheshire, on July 17, 1617. He
was incumbent there when the following incident occurred during the
Civil War, in which his son John was killed in the following manner:
"On the 22 of December, 1643, the Royalists passed over the river...and
on Saturday they came to Bartomley...; as they marched they set upon
the church, which had in it about twenty neighbors that had gone in
for safety; but the lord Byron's troop, and Cannought, a major to colonel
Sneyd, set upon them, and won the church; the men fled into the steeple,
but the enemy burning the forms, rushes, mats, etc., made such a smoke
that being almost stifled, they called for quarter, which was granted
by Cannought; but when they had them in their power, they stripped them
all naked, and most cruelly murdered twelve of them, contrary to the
laws of arms, nature and nations. Cannought cut the throat of Mr. John
Fowler, a hopeful young man, and a minor, and only three of them escaped
miraculously, the rest being cruelly wounded." (Burghall's Diary.)]
Thomas Brough and Elizabeth Cotton's son,
John (born abt. 1626/1641), married Margaret Trafford at Leek in 1663.
Margaret was the daughter of William Trafford (a Gentleman of Swythamley
Grange) and Mary Bagnald (of Onecote Hall).
John Brough and Margaret Trafford had
two sons: Richard (chr. at Meerbrook in 1664) and Thomas (chr. at Meerbrook
in 1667). Richard (chr. 1664) married Dorothy Cartwright in 1684. Richard
Brough and Dorothy Cartwright had seven children: Hester (chr. 1686),
Mary (chr. 1688), Thomas (chr.1692), Dorothy (chr. 1695), Parnell (chr.
1699), Elizabeth (chr. 1699) and Richard (chr. 1700). Thomas (chr. 1667)
married Sarah Barnett in 1704. Thomas Brough and Sarah Barnett had four
sons: Richard (chr. 1707 at Leek), William (ch. 1712), Thomas (chr.
1715) and John (chr. 1718).
The following advertisements have been
selected and provided by
Google.com