
3.022 ASK c.1800 PLA
Property map showing a portion of Godfrey Wright’s estates
Paper Scale: unk Size: 34*32 cm Condition: fair (old repair)
I don’t normally post maps from outside Bradford on this site but I will happily make an exception for this beautiful plan of Askwith, which is a village between Ilkley and Otley, north of the Wharfe valley. The map is undated but stylistically looks late eighteenth or early nineteenth century. Its title is: ‘a map of the estate of Godfrey Wright Esq. in the Lordship of Askwith in the West Riding of Yorkshire’. Someone has written ‘planted by him’ in modern-looking pencil script by a patch of woodland in the centre of the map and on the back it is annotated ‘Snowdon’.
Askwith is NW of Otley but where are we exactly? I would estimate north-east of the village centre and due east of Snowden Carr Road. This map mentions field names, tenants and other local land-owners, Wm. Vavasour, Thomas Newsome, the local Vicar’s tithes, and Sir Henry Ibbetson Bt. There were two men of this last name, father and son, and the son died in 1795. The plan map could be of this date but it’s possible that an older version was kept up to date as required. The plan employs different colours to designate the fields of several tenants but the landowner is clearly Wright. The watercourse illustrated is called the Wash Burn, now the River Washburn.
If you spend time studying nineteenth century maps of the Bradford district you will be certain to come across the name of Godfrey Charles Wright, of Hooton Pagnall, Doncaster, as a major landowner. The Rev. Godfrey Wright (1780-1862), as he is normally described, possessed property in what would later become the the city centre but also at Horton, Manningham, Baildon, Eldwick and elsewhere. On this map his designation as ‘esquire’ not ‘Reverend’ may mean that he is still a young man and has not yet been ordained. He was born in 1780. He was awarded a Cambridge University MA in 1807 and presumably became a ‘clerk in holy orders’ a few years later, although I don’t have an exact year for this. The first of his appearances in the local press that I can trace is from 1819, when he subscribes 2 guineas to Leeds General Infirmary. At that time he is already being referred to by his clerical title. Wright does not seem to have lived in Bradford for any prolonged period, if at all. His wife died in 1821 and certainly by 1822 he was resident at Bilham House, Hooton Pagnell, where he remained for the next 40 years. In the 1820s his visits to London were recorded in ‘fashionable arrivals’ newspaper columns. Later, in census reports, he described himself as a ‘clergyman without cure of souls’, and usually had an indoor and outdoor staff of a dozen or more. He was still living at Hooton Pagnall (with 10 servants) at the time of the 1861 census, and he died the following year.
According to newspaper reports Godfrey Wright subscribed to hospitals in Bradford as well as Leeds, and was a member of the Camden Society with, presumably, an interest in early British history. He was described after his death as a staunch Conservative and left £80,000 to his heirs in 1862 which equates, according to the National Archives currency converter, to £3,452,800 at 2005 values. It is very natural to wonder how a clergyman acquired all this wealth and property. Victorian Bradford historian William Cudworth believed that Godfrey Wright’s prosperity resulted from a relationship with three important local families: the Swaines, the Fields, and the Booths. That there was such a connection seems certain since Wright used all three surnames as his own sons’ middle names. A collection of Wright papers in the West Yorkshire Archives (Bradford) contains much earlier material relating to the Swaines and Booths. Cudworth also suggested that Wright benefited indirectly from the estate of Abraham Sharp of Horton Hall, the famous mathematician. This appears to be true although the amount involved may not have been very significant. There is little doubt that, however he acquired them, the fields and cottages in his possession became substantially more valuable as building space in an expanding Borough of Bradford became increasingly required for new roads, mills, dwellings and public buildings. Wright owned the land on which Little Germany and St George’s Hall were eventually built, for example. Consequently Wright reaped a substantial fortune from the prosperity of the Bradford borough, a fact that occurred to his contemporaries if newspaper reports are to be believed.
Readers will have heard, I am sure, of Abraham Sharp who was a distinguished mathematician and scientist. He lived and worked at Horton Hall in Little Horton Green although sadly the hall was demolished many years ago. Cudworth mentions a certain ‘Dr Swaine of Hall Ings’ who was an eminent apothecary and a great friend of Abraham Sharp. There is also a Swain (sic) tablet in Bradford cathedral which commemorates William Swain of Bradford and his family:
William Swain d.1737 aged 71
Son, William d.1715 aged 20
Son, Abraham d.1732 aged 34
Abraham Swain (brother of elder William) d.1731 aged 58
Son, Abraham d.1733 aged 28
I think it is reasonable to assume that only wealthy families of some consequence had commemorative tablets inside the old Parish Church. The monument was erected by Mary and Elizabeth Swain, co-heiresses of the family. Mary seemingly stayed single but Elizabeth was to make a significant marriage. George II became king in 1727. The following year, according to a West Yorkshire Archives indenture, two spinsters Elizabeth & Beatrix Field (daughters of William Field ‘late of Bradford’) are involved financially with an Abraham Swaine. He is possibly the elder man of this name on the Parish Church tablet. The document mentions a great many fields, barns and dwellings. Some familiar place names are: Goodman’s End, Silsbridge and Penny Oak, all in Bradford. One dwelling is occupied by ‘the widow Beatrix Field’ who is likely, I suppose, to be the girls’ mother. Clearly the Field family must also be linked to Godfrey Wright if their family papers ended up in his archive.
Remember the two Swaine girls, Mary & Elizabeth? Mary Swaine may be the ‘Aunt Swaine’ who lived in Hall Ings, dying in 1759. Her sister Elizabeth Swaine definitely married Rev Charles Booth snr. They had a number of children including Charles Booth jnr. who was born in 1734. Fortunately the will of Rev Charles Booth snr. survives in the West Yorkshire Archives. Amid the legal language there are three important facts: Rev Charles Booth was a wealthy man himself with much cash and property. Sarah & Beatrix Booth were his only surviving daughters who were left £500-£1000 each, which would be hundreds of thousands of pounds in a modern money equivalent. Finally, Charles Booth jnr. was his only surviving son being made executor, land inheritor and residuary legatee. The lands involved include Ovenden and, I am glad to say, Askwith. I think then that we can be certain that the map I have selected displays property that Godfrey Wright eventually inherited from Charles Booth jnr.
Charles Booth jnr. was a wealthy young barrister. He changed his name to Charles Swaine Booth after inheriting yet more property from his aunt who, as I say, was presumably Mary Swaine of Hall Ings. By this means I believe he obtained the whole of the Booth and Swaine inheritances, but he had one more piece of financial luck, and one more name change, to come. A lady called Hannah Gilpin had already changed her own name to Hannah Gilpin Sharp. Essentially Hannah had inherited Abraham Sharp’s Horton estate via his niece Faith Sawrey who died in 1767 without any children. As you may have guessed Charles Swaine Booth was to marry Hannah. After 1769 the couple lived together at Horton Hall under their final married names of: Charles SB Sharp (1734-1805) & Hannah Gilpin Sharp (1743-1823). The custom at the time would have been for Charles to have acquired control of his new wife’s considerable wealth. A married woman could not own property of her own but in rich families her future could be protected by a marriage settlement, which was in some ways like a modern pre-nuptial agreement. Under such a settlement some property was placed in the hands of trustees who would manage it to provide an income for a wife or, in due course, a widow. Thus the interests of a wife would be protected if the husband was a poor businessman, or developed expensive hobbies like drinking or gambling. She was, of course, still dependent on the business acumen of the trustees but rental properties or consolidated stocks will have represented secure investments.
A marriage settlement between Charles and Hannah survives and Hannah seems to have been well provided for after her husband’s death in 1805. When he died Charles had no living brothers or children and was clearly in need of an heir. He seems to have left his own considerable property to his sisters Sarah & Beatrix, but when in turn they died without children control of the inheritance was passed to Godfrey Wright although on the face of it he was a rather distant family member. The closest common relative would appear to be the Rev Marmaduke Drake, a vicar in Derbyshire, who was Godfrey Wright’s great grandfather and who married a Field. If any local historian has studied this extended family I would be pleased to learn more.
Godfrey Wright was born in 1780 at Kimberworth, Rotherham and educated at Hipperholme Grammar School (like Sir Robert Peel) and Trinity College, Cambridge after 1799 (MA 1807). He married in 1812, at Huddersfield, Mary Stables (1790-1821) but his wife died at Bath while still a young woman. Wright was already described as being ‘of Bilham House’. He was also Lord of the Manor of Marton, Sinnington, near Pickering, NRY. In the 1800s his land agents were reported as being Joseph Smith and then Thomas Hirst of Hall Ings, Bradford. Wright was involved in a legal action, Rawson v. Wright, brought by the Lord of the Manor against him in 1825 for the erection of the Waterloo market in Hall Ings (Charles St). Rawson won although Cudworth records that Godfrey Wright attracted considerable public sympathy since more market accommodation was certainly needed in Bradford. Wright was also involved in some controversy over paving Hall Ings in 1836. In 1850 he owned the land on which a public hall (St George’s) was built and got £15,000 for it (Bradford Observer October 17 1850). The Bradford Observer in February 26 1857 stated that he owned The Beehive Inn and other ‘low’ dwellings in the Silsbridge Road area. This Beehive estate was eventually purchased by the Council from his trustees for £5,775, in 1864.
Cudworth states that Hannah Gilpin Sharp (aka Madam Sharp) long outlived her husband finally dying in 1823 at the age of eighty. Godfrey Wright didn’t inherit all the Sharp property although he was executor of, and beneficiary from, Hannah Gilpin Sharp’s will. The Hall and the associated land went to Mrs Ann Giles, who also figures regularly as a landowner in maps of Bradford and Horton. I assume that this property was managed for her by trustees. My conclusion is that in the nineteenth century people could do well financially by surviving and being prepared to change their surnames. If you want to learn the fascinating history of Horton Hall, both before and after Charles Swaine Booth and Hannah Gilpin Sharp, you must read the excellent Sharp to Blunt by local historian Astrid Hansen (Bradford Libraries, 2000). Copies are available in the Local Studies Library.
I do enjoy reading about and studying the maps you post on here 😉
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