Alehouse Keepers - see also innkeepers
Joan "Johan" Hill 1577.
Thomas Swetifer 1577. A man of this name was mentioned as one of the overseers of the will of Robert Cocke alias Overshott / Overshote of Marlow, written late 1558, proved 1559.
William Vesy or Veasey or Veysey 1577.
Alehouses did not serve wine. They were domestic houses opened up by licenced (after 1552) individuals for the sale of home brewed ale and beer. Usually the lady of the household was the brewer. You could not necessarily drink within the walls of the ale house - some were takeaway only. It was forbidden to allow games or gambling on the premises.
Bailiff of Marlow
Elizeus Fuller 1508, in Marlow by 1487. Not necessarily in the position of bailiff back then but probably was. Elizeus would have collected rents and any fines levied at the manor court and assisted the sheriff in matters of law and order. His was a position that required literacy.
Bakers
Andrew Hilliard /Hillyarde/ Hellyarde 1567.
Bargemen
Peter Gaffney 1508. A very wealthy man. One with this name wrote a will in 1543 but this may be a son or other relative as that Peter was in 1543 a woodmonger rather than bargeman. However it is not impossible that he offered his wood barge as a cargo vessel when not transporting wood so could have been considered to be following both trades. A transcription of that 1543 will is to appear on this blog later this year.
John Salter who had died in recent years in 1596.
John Seamer / Seymour 1585.
Blacksmiths
John Bampton 1579.
Butchers
Ralph Moore 1582. A man of this name still lived in Marlow in the early 1600s. Possible death 1629.
John Warre 1570.
Carpenters
Robert Devyn 1508.
John Ferne 1529.
Drapers
John Burges 1529.
These were cloth merchants either wholesale or retail.
Glovemakers
Richard Warren, High Street 1565.
Gloves were worn to protect the hands of those doing certain jobs as well as being worn as fashion accessories by both men and women. They could be extremely expensive, especially if bought ready perfumed as "sweet gloves". Pairs might be fashioned from leather, velvet or silk.
Husbandmen and Farmers
John Carter 1508.
John Collard 1508.
John Holton 1592. See yeoman below.
John Kene 1513.
William Lambden 1589.
Richard Lovejoy (Little Marlow) 1561, possibly at Monkton Farm.
Margaret and Reynold Shirwood, both died 1528. Reynold is in the 1524 will of his brother David/Davey here. More on this couple in the future.
Christopher West 1551 (town taxpayers in 1528 included a Thomas West and a Richard West).
Innkeepers
Thomas Baites 1577.
John Fletcher 1577.
John Mathew 1577. This family name most often occurs as Mathewe in the 1500s in Marlow. The name was present in the town by the 1400s.
Roger Smith, the Crown (Upper Crown) 1596. Also shoemaker, a common pairing of occupations at this time! A man of this name lived in Marlow in the early 1600s too.
Inns were higher status than ale houses with more choice of drink, often traveller accommodation and usually some food the latter of which was very basic or absent in an alehouse. A licence was required after 1552 to run an inn. Just after our period, in 1603, the ability of townsfolk to use their own inns and other drinking establishments was severely limited by act of parliament. The authorities emphasized that the original reason for the establishment of such places was simply to give travellers shelter and sustenance while passing through a place rather than to give locals social drinking opportunities. Town residents were allowed to be served in drinking places only as the invited guest of a passing traveller or if as a labourer or artisan they needed to drink and eat during their lunch hour on a work day. It is apparent that the law was at least sometimes circumvented or ignored.
Millwrights
John Jordan 1580.
These built and performed maintenance on mills.
Shoemakers
Mathew Price 1570, High Street.
Roger Smith (also at the Crown, see above).
Weavers
John Bincks /Byncks 1534.
Christopher Gray 1508.
William Priece 1508 - there were some Welsh people connected to Marlow with the last name Ap Rhys or Ap Reece in this era which may explain the origin of his last name. William may be the William Odrington alias Priest whose will is at the National Archives. This William also appears as William Preest and and William Odrington alias Pryste.
Woodmongers
Peter Gaffney. Died 1543. His will is due to appear on the blog next year. If this will is important to you please contact Charlotte and she will post it sooner. See below under Mathew Dignam for more on Peter.
Yeomen
John Cockar (Little Marlow) 1594
Thomas Colard 1529. In 1524 one of the wealthiest men to appear on the lay subsidy rolls for Great Marlow.
Mathew / Mathie Dignam 1582. The normal pronunciation for the name Mathew would have been "mat-ee" hence the variant spelling which may look odd to modern eyes. Mathew was the son of Thomas and Cecily Dignam of Amersham. His mother Cecily was the daughter of John Jerrard of Amersham, who also had property in Beaconsfield. Thomas Dignam had Marlow property though he was based in Amersham. He is the Thomas Dignam who was left a house in Marlow in the will of Peter Gaffney in 1543. This property, it was alleged, was sold by Thomas to Tucher Spencer but Mathew Dignam refused to believe this or give it up following his father's death. The issue was unsettled at the time of Tucher's own death in 1584. I have a digital copy of Peter Gaffney's will and it will appear on the blog next year. Matthew also had a brother called Thomas. A Ralf Dygnam presumably another relative lived in Marlow in 1524.
Robert Draper. His wife Agnes, known as Agnes Farmer alias Draper was a widow by 1579. He left her a house in the High St which she eventually let out to others. She died in 1592. The couple had sons James and Thomas Farmer alias Draper. James inherited his mother's house in Marlow. Thomas was M.P for High Wycombe in 1563. Both sons had property in Cookham as well as Marlow and seem to have lived in both places at different times. The Marlow property of Thomas included mills at Gossmore and the the minor estate of Bradlyes in Cookham. Thomas was married to a Margaret in the 1550s but based on the quarterings of the coat of arms displayed by his son and heir John it is speculated that he was also married to a daughter of John Barker of Wokingham which would be an Anne or a Bridget. Thomas Farmer alias Draper died in 1608 / 09. It is likely that he is the Thomas Farmer of Marlow appointed in 1588 as one of the overseers of the will of William Rice Esquire of Medmenham near Marlow.
John Holton 1592. Possible death 1610. Is he also the glovemaker mentioned above?
John Littlepage (Little Marlow) 1594.
John Lynne or Linne 1579. Also a man of this name had a close of land off West Street in 1577 and one of that name was resident somewhere in Marlow in 1580. These mentions may all relate to one man or to several identically named relatives. It is of course difficult to tell for sure.
Peter Phyllps / Phillips 1565. A Peter Phyllips was described as "of Medmenham" and a tailor in 1568 and appears to be the same man as the 1565 Peter of Marlow. He owned some land in Marlow town centre. Peter was the son of a Thomas Phillips who died in 1549, and the brother of Richard Phillips who also had some Marlow property.
Thomas Ponde, active by 1587 when he sold Blounts Farm. Will proved 1597. Wife Mildred. His will is transcribed on the blog here.
Michael Turnor 1577. The Turnor family (presuming every Turnor was related) were one of the most prominent middling families of Marlow at the time. The spelling Turnor and not Turner is consistent. Michael at one point lived in a house next to the churchyard. The next occupant of that house was John Ponde son of Thomas Ponde above.
Robert Ward, 1582, lived High Street.
Gentry, clergy and labourers not included.
A post all about life in 1500s Marlow will appear on the blog soon.
Compiled by Charlotte Day. ©Marlow Ancestors. You are very welcome to use my research for local or family history purposes with credit to this blog.
Sources:
Property deeds, wills
Records of Buckinghamshire volume 8 1903 p456.
The Urban Experience: A Sourcebook : English, Scottish, and Welsh Towns, 1450-1700. Kiribati, Manchester University Press, 1983.
The Soveraigns Prerogative and the Subjects Priviledge. Comprised in Severall Speeches, Cases, and Arguments of Law Discussed Between Our Late Soveraign Lord King Charles, and the Most Eminent Persons of Both Houses of Parliament etc Together with the Grand Mysteries of State etc compiled by Thomas Fuller. Published by Henry Marsh, 1660 London.
https://www.hungerfordvirtualmuseum.co.uk/?view=article&id=704&catid=32 (licensing acts).

