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Margaret <I>Huddleston</I> Salkeld

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Margaret Huddleston Salkeld

Birth
Cumbria, England
Death
20 Nov 1506 (aged 25–26)
Cumbria, England
Burial
Mealsgate, Allerdale Borough, Cumbria, England Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
According to IPM C. Series II, Vol. 19 (39) #66, Margaret was "ae 30 yrs and more" at the IPM Monday p St Matt 21 Hen VII [Mon 28 Sep 1506 - 30 = 1476]. Margaret was ae 23 on 21 Oct 22 Hen VII, the day of her brother's IPM, meaning she was born about 1484. IPM C. II, Vol. 20 (22). I have used the average of these two dates as her estimated year of birth.

Lancelot of Gowbarrow, s/o John Salkeld of Gowbarrow, s/o Robert of Tymparon, s/o Hugh Salkeld married before 1505, Margaret Huddleston, d/o Sir Richard Huddleston and Lady Margaret Neville. Upon the death of Margaret's brother, Richard, she and Lancelot inherited half the manors of Blennerhasset and Upmanby, and lands in Penrith, the other half going to Margaret's sister Joan and her husband Hugh Fleming.

Lancelot and Margaret had only one child, son Thomas Salkeld, who married Mary Vaux, daughter of William Vaux and Jane Leybourne.

Regarding the Coat of Arms, of Salkeld of Whitehall. No satisfactory pedigree of this family is at present forthcoming. Nicolson and Burn, i, p. 169, state that the Salkelds added the Hudleston arms and quarterings to their achievement after the marriage of Lancelot Salkeld and Margaret, sister and co-heir of Richard Hudleston (living 1495) of Millom. By this marriage they were certainly entitled to quarter Hudleston, Millom, Boyvill and Fenwick (for blazonings see under le FLEMING), but the Hudleston heiress who married Lancelot Salkeld had no right to Stapleton and the Stapleton quarterings as Nicolson and Burn suppose, for these were brought into her family by the marriage of her uncle, Sir John (d. 1511), with Johanna Stapleton. The existing pedigrees of the various Salkeld families (who intermarried incidentally on more than one occasion) are hopelessly inaccurate and contradictory. A trick in the Visitation of 1615 gives the coat [photo at left] Fretty and a chief as a quartering in the achievement of Lancelot Salkeld (d. 1610) of Whitehall, leaving it unnamed. None of the Whitehall pedigrees support that family in an assumption of a Salkeld of Corby quartering.

No Stone Remains
===========================================
Source(s):
- IPM C Series II, Vol. 19 (39)
- IPM C Series II, Vol. 20 (22)
- Lists of Early Chancery Proceedings. Public Record Offic Lists and Indexes Volumes. Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515, Vol: 3, Page: 112, Bundle: 115.
- Hudleston, Christophe Roy and Robert Stevely Boumphrey. Cumberland Families and Heraldry: With A Supplement to an Armorial for Westmorland and Lonsdale. Kendal, Great Britain: Titus Wilson; [Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society; Extra series, Vol. 23.], 1978.
- Nicolson, Joseph, Richard Burn, and William Nicolson. The History and Antiquities of the Countries of Westmorland and Cumberland. London: W. Strahan, 1777.
- Burke, John. A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry; or, Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank: but uninvested with heritable honours. London, England, UK: Colburn, 1837-1838.
- Saint-George, Richard, William Dugdale, and Joseph Foster. Pedigrees Recorded at the Heralds' Visitations of the Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland Made by Richard St. George, Norry, King of Arms in 1615, and by William Dugdale, Norry, King of Arms in 1666. Carlisle: C. Thurman and Sons, 1891.Wife of Lancelot Salkeld of Gawbarrow.

Sister and co-heiress of Richard Huddleston (d. 1502/30), from whom she inherited the manors of Blennerhasset and Upmanby.
According to IPM C. Series II, Vol. 19 (39) #66, Margaret was "ae 30 yrs and more" at the IPM Monday p St Matt 21 Hen VII [Mon 28 Sep 1506 - 30 = 1476]. Margaret was ae 23 on 21 Oct 22 Hen VII, the day of her brother's IPM, meaning she was born about 1484. IPM C. II, Vol. 20 (22). I have used the average of these two dates as her estimated year of birth.

Lancelot of Gowbarrow, s/o John Salkeld of Gowbarrow, s/o Robert of Tymparon, s/o Hugh Salkeld married before 1505, Margaret Huddleston, d/o Sir Richard Huddleston and Lady Margaret Neville. Upon the death of Margaret's brother, Richard, she and Lancelot inherited half the manors of Blennerhasset and Upmanby, and lands in Penrith, the other half going to Margaret's sister Joan and her husband Hugh Fleming.

Lancelot and Margaret had only one child, son Thomas Salkeld, who married Mary Vaux, daughter of William Vaux and Jane Leybourne.

Regarding the Coat of Arms, of Salkeld of Whitehall. No satisfactory pedigree of this family is at present forthcoming. Nicolson and Burn, i, p. 169, state that the Salkelds added the Hudleston arms and quarterings to their achievement after the marriage of Lancelot Salkeld and Margaret, sister and co-heir of Richard Hudleston (living 1495) of Millom. By this marriage they were certainly entitled to quarter Hudleston, Millom, Boyvill and Fenwick (for blazonings see under le FLEMING), but the Hudleston heiress who married Lancelot Salkeld had no right to Stapleton and the Stapleton quarterings as Nicolson and Burn suppose, for these were brought into her family by the marriage of her uncle, Sir John (d. 1511), with Johanna Stapleton. The existing pedigrees of the various Salkeld families (who intermarried incidentally on more than one occasion) are hopelessly inaccurate and contradictory. A trick in the Visitation of 1615 gives the coat [photo at left] Fretty and a chief as a quartering in the achievement of Lancelot Salkeld (d. 1610) of Whitehall, leaving it unnamed. None of the Whitehall pedigrees support that family in an assumption of a Salkeld of Corby quartering.

No Stone Remains
===========================================
Source(s):
- IPM C Series II, Vol. 19 (39)
- IPM C Series II, Vol. 20 (22)
- Lists of Early Chancery Proceedings. Public Record Offic Lists and Indexes Volumes. Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515, Vol: 3, Page: 112, Bundle: 115.
- Hudleston, Christophe Roy and Robert Stevely Boumphrey. Cumberland Families and Heraldry: With A Supplement to an Armorial for Westmorland and Lonsdale. Kendal, Great Britain: Titus Wilson; [Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society; Extra series, Vol. 23.], 1978.
- Nicolson, Joseph, Richard Burn, and William Nicolson. The History and Antiquities of the Countries of Westmorland and Cumberland. London: W. Strahan, 1777.
- Burke, John. A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry; or, Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank: but uninvested with heritable honours. London, England, UK: Colburn, 1837-1838.
- Saint-George, Richard, William Dugdale, and Joseph Foster. Pedigrees Recorded at the Heralds' Visitations of the Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland Made by Richard St. George, Norry, King of Arms in 1615, and by William Dugdale, Norry, King of Arms in 1666. Carlisle: C. Thurman and Sons, 1891.Wife of Lancelot Salkeld of Gawbarrow.

Sister and co-heiress of Richard Huddleston (d. 1502/30), from whom she inherited the manors of Blennerhasset and Upmanby.


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