Talk:Escape of Charles II

Latest comment: 6 years ago by EEng in topic Flight from Worcester to White Ladies

Untitled

edit

The family who owned Montacute House were called Phelips not Phiilips Is this a typo in the text or a misindentifaction?Olddemdike (talk) 00:27, 13 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

It was certainly Col Edward Phelips, of whom there is a portrait at the house. Have now corrected and added link to house. Martinevans123 (talk) 19:00, 13 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

Disguise as woman

edit

What was the name of the woman Charles disguised himself as? Was it Polly something? VenomousConcept (talk) 10:47, 28 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Are you not getting confused with the flight o f"Charles Edward Stuart" "Bonnie Prince Charlie" who disguised himself as "Betty Burke"?81.174.168.60 (talk) 12:09, 1 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Map requested

edit

--— Preceding unsigned comment added by Darrelljon (talkcontribs) of 11:34, 10 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

 Y

@Darrelljon I have thought that for a long time so your request has prompted me to find one. It is an old one (Fea, Allan (1908)) but the palace names map fairly well onto the names used in the article Monarch's Way -- PBS (talk) 14:43, 4 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Citation needed

edit

I was unaware that quotations required individual citation when a paragraph has a citation at the end. Is the rash of 'citation needed' tags in this article as silly as it seems to be to me? Urselius (talk) 16:02, 27 November 2017 (UTC) @Urselius all quotations need citations. This is a common standard not just on Wikipedia. -- PBS (talk) 10:17, 24 February 2018 (UTC)Reply

I'm a scientist, we don't quote much. But, it isn't quite the cast-iron case you are suggesting. Substantive quotations, that affect the meaning of a passage, are usually given citations; but illustrative quotations or quotations repeated from the same source are often not. These are merely attributed somewhere in the text. Certainly Antonia Fraser's biography has many uncited quotations, though the more substantive ones are. Urselius (talk) 15:22, 24 February 2018 (UTC)Reply
Urselius, it is common in history papers to add an inline citation for all quotation see for example Chicago Style Referencing with Confidence, York University "In-text citation is included in the body of your text and is there to directly show the reader where an idea, piece of information, and/ or a quotation are from. ... For example, if you ... Provide quotations or definitions in your essay ... cite the source". As I said this is a common standard in history articles. -- PBS (talk) 15:15, 26 February 2018 (UTC)Reply

Date of sailing

edit

I noted an anomaly in the narrative account in the article. Namely, the account has Charles leaving Heale House on the 12th, staying at Hambledon that night and arriving at Brighton on the evening of the 15th, leaving on the morning of the 16th. So where was he on the nights of 13th and 14th? The answer is that these dates are wrong. He left Heale early morning on the 13th, stayed at Hambledon on that night, and arrived at Brighton on the evening on the 14th, boarded the Surprise in the early hours of the 15th and set sail later that morning. That means that he escaped English shores on the 15th not the 16th. I see the Coote book (which I don't have) is used as references for the 16th October but I can't see that it makes any sense. Unfortunately, the two book I have, Spenser and Ollard, are not very clear about dates, you have to work it out, but their texts are consistent with my interpretation.

These are some of the many references I found supporting a 15 October departure date:

https://www.glaucus.org.uk/Surprise.htm

https://h2g2.com/entry/A39368640

https://www.glaucus.org.uk/Royal_Escape.htm - includes statement by Col Gunter - I have used this as a reference

http://theroyalmiracle.blogspot.co.uk/2011/10/october-15-1651.html

http://brightonbits.blogspot.co.uk/2011/10/royal-escape.html

https://archive.org/stream/flightofkingfull00feaa/flightofkingfull00feaa_djvu.txt

I have made the change to correct the article

John Price (talk) 12:03, 14 January 2018 (UTC)Reply

Flight from Worcester to White Ladies

edit

There are problems with these sentence:

The royal party headed North through the villages of Ombersley, Hartlebury and Wolverley and then to Kinver. Dubious traditions have it that the party stopped for refreshments at hostelries now known as The King's Arms in Ombersley and the Manor House of Whittington near Kinver

The Monarch's Way is not much use as during this section it follows a scenic route rather than a known route.

The two near contemporary primary sources for the escape state:

Tract I: Samuel Pepys records of this part of the journey

I found them mightily distracted, and their opinions different, of the possibility of getting to Scotland, but not one agreeing with mine, for going to London, saving my Lord Wilmot; and the truth is, I did not impart my design of going to London to any but my Lord Wilmot. But we had such a number of beaten men with us, of the horse, that I strove, as soon as ever it was dark, to get from them; and though I could not get them to stand by me against the enemy, I could not get rid of them, now I had a mind to it.

So we, that is, my Lord Duke of Buckingham, Lauderdale, Derby, Wilmot, [Colonel] Tom Blague, Duke Darcey, and several others of my servants, went along northward towards Scotland; and at last we got about sixty that were gentlemen and officers, and slipt away out of the high-road that goes to Lancastershire, and kept on the right-hand, letting all the beaten men go along the great road, and ourselves not knowing very well which way to go, for it was then too late for us to get to London, on horse-back, riding directly for it, nor could we do it, because there was yet many people of quality with us that I could not get rid of.

So we rode through a town short of Wolverhampton, betwixt that and Worcester, and went thro', there lying a troop of the enemies there that night. We rode very quietly through the town, they having nobody to watch, nor they suspecting us no more than we did them, which I learned afterwards from a country-fellow.

We went that night about twenty miles, to a place called White Ladys, hard by Tong-Castle,... (pages 5–6)

  • Fea, Allan (1903), "The King's own narrative as dictated to Samuel Pepys (Tract I)", After Worcester fight, Londo n & New York: J. Lane
Tract II: The History of his Sacred Majesties Most Miraculous Preservation after the Battle of Worcester etc

Before His Majesty was come to Barbon's Bridge, about half a mile out of Worcester, he made several stands, faced about and desired the Duke of Buckingham, Lord Wilmot, and other of his commanders that they might rally and try the fortune of war once more: But at the bridge a serious consultation was held, and then perceiving many of the troopers to throw off their arms and shift for themselves, they were all of opinion, the day was irrecoverably lost, and that their only remaining work was to save the King from those ravenous wolves and regicides; whereupon His Majestie by advice of His Council, resolved to march with all speed for Scotland; ...

Immediately after this result, the Duke asked the Lord Talbot (being of that country) If he could direct the way northwards? His lordship answered that he had one Richard Walker in his troop (formerly a Scout-master in those parts, and who since dyed in Jamaica) that knew the way well; who was accordingly called to be the guide, and performed that duty for some miles; but being come to Kinver heath, not far from Kidderminster, and day light being gone, Walker was at a puzzel in the way.

Here His Majesty made a stand, and consulted with the Duke, Earl of Derby, Lord Wilmot, etc.. To what place He might march at least to take some hours rest; the Earl of Derby told His Majesty that in his flight from Wiggan to Worcester, he had met with a perfect honest man, and a great convenience of concealment at Boscobel house (before mentioned) but withall acquainted the King it was a recusants house; and it was suggested that those people (being accustomed to persecution and searches) were most like to have the readiest means and safest contrivances to preserve him ; His Majesty therefore inclined to go thither.

The Lord Talbot being made acquainted therewith and finding Walker dubious of the way, called for Mr. Charles Giffard (a faithful subject and of the ancient family of Chillington) to be his Majesties conductor, which office Mr. Giffard willingly undertook, having one Yates a servant with him, very expert in the ways of that country; and being come near Sturbridge, it was under consideration whether His Majesty should march through that town or no and resolved in the affirmative and that all about His person should speak French to prevent any discovery of his Majesties presence.

Meantime General Lesley with the Scottish horse had in the close of the evening taken the more direct way northward by Newport, His Majesty being left only attended by the Duke of Buckingham, Earl of Derby, Earl of Lauderdail, Lord Talbot, Lord Wilmot, Col. Thomas Blague, Col. Edward Roscarrock, Mr. Marmaduke Darcy, Mr. Richard Lane, Mr. William Armorer, (since knighted,) Mr. Hugh May, Mr. Charles Giffard, Mr. Peter Street, and some others, in all about 60 Horse.

At a house about a mile beyond Sturbridge, His Majesty drank, and eat a crust of bread, the house affording no better provision, and as His Majesty rode on, he discoursed with Col. Roscarrock touching Boscobel house and the means of security which the Earl of Derby and he found at that place.

However Mr. Giffard humbly proposed to carry His Majesty first to Whiteladies (another seat of the Giffards) lying but half a mile beyond Boscobel, where He might repose himself for a while and then take such further resolution as His Majesty and Council should think fit. ... (pages 71–74)

 
Map of Worcestershire in 1642. Showing the main roads, garrisons and battlefields. The six roads numbered on the map are the important thoroughfares that linked Worcester with the rest of the country. The one of interest here is number 3: of which John William Willis-Bund writes

The map provided by The Worcestershire historian John William Willis-Bund shows that if they left Worcester by the north road (numbered 3) over the Barbourne Bridge it would have taken them through Ombseley and Hartlabury. But then it is not clear.

Pepys states that Charles and his party "and slipt away out of the high-road that goes to Lancastershire, and kept on the right-hand, letting all the beaten men go along the great road...

The Worcestershire historian John William Willis-Bund writing in 1905 states on page 8 next to the map that road number (3.) "Another branch [of the London road], also going to the north, after crossing Barbourne Bridge, went to the left through Ombersley and Hartlebury; here it again branches off the road to the right, going through the parishes of Chaddesley Corbett and Belbroughton, past Hagley andPedmore to Stourbridge into Staffordshire. This is the road by which Charles II went after the Battle of Worcester. The road to the right at Hartlebury passed through Kidderminster, and so on to Bridgnorth."

On pages 255-256 he expands on this using Pypes as one of his primary sources but adds a letter from Richard Baxter, a Kidderminster divine and Roundhead Chaplin:

J. W. Willis-Bund secondary source account

At Barbourne bridge Charles had to decide what he would do. He says he was anxious to go to London, but he was dissuaded by his friends from doing this. There were a large number of fugitives, including most of the Scotch horse, who had refused to fight when wanted, and when not wanted would not leave the King. Charles had a difficulty in shaking them off.

They all went on together through Ombersley to Hartlebury. There, where the Stourbridge road turns off to the right from the Kidderminster road [see the map], Charles, with Wilmot, the Duke of Buckingham, and a few others, left the mass of fugitives to go on to Kidderminster, and turned down through Chaddesley Corbett parish, past Hagley and Pedmore, to Stourbridge, or as Charles says himself:

We slipt away out of the high road that goes to Lancashire, and kept on the right hand, letting all the beaten men go along the front road . . . So we rode through a town short of Wolverhampton, betwixt that and Worcester.

At Stourbridge there was a troop of Parliament horse, but they were not keeping any look out and Charles was able to get by without causing an alarm. From Stourbridge he went on to Kinver and there got into Staffordshire.

It was fortunate that he changed his route from the main road to the right. Those who went on to Kidderminster were not so lucky. Riding at a rapid rate they woke up the townsmen as they passed through. According to [Richard] Baxter's account :

Kidderminster being but 11 miles from Worcester the flying army passed, some of them through the town and some by it. I was newly gone to bed when the noise of the flying horse acquainted me with the overthrow, and a few of one of Cromwell's troops that guarded Bewdley Bridge, having tidings of it, came into our street and stood in the open market place, before my door, to surprise them that passed by. And so when many hundreds of the flying army came together, when the 30 troopers cried "stand" and fired at them, they either hasted away or cried quarter, not knowing in the dark the number it was that charged. And so as many were taken there as so few men could lay hold on, and till midnight the bullets flying towards my door and windows, and the sorrowful fugitives hastening by for their lives, did tell me of the calamitousness of war.

The usually accepted version, which agrees with Charles' own account, is that he passed through Stourbridge, but a place is shown at Wolverley, in the dell below the bank on which Lea Castle stands, as the precise spot over which Charles crossed on his way to Kinver and Boscobel (see Noake, Notes and Queries for Worcestershire, p. 325).

Wherever the spot was where Charles left the County it is doubtful if he ever returned to it. ...

If one accepts that Charles did not continue up the Worcester Kidderminster road but branched off if at Hartlebury (see the map) then for anyone who knows the area it is very unlikely that he crossed the river Stour near Wolverley as that just north of Kidderminster and well removed from the main road that goes from Hartlebury to Stourbridge. If he had crossed at Wolverley then Kinver heath is possible, but it would be well out of his way to go from Kinver to Stourbridge and to do so he would have first had to recross the Stour to have been able to do what is stated in the Pepys account "We rode very quietly through the town, they having nobody to watch, ..."

As Kidderminster and Stourbridge were the only town of any size (apart from Dudley) between Worcester and Wolverhampton and clearly Charles could not go through Kidderminster (see above what Richard Baxter wrote of what happened that night in Kidderminster), then the Wolverley then Kinver line is unlikely. The Wolverley tradition seems to be one of those types folk tails that people often attach to events like this and there is no primary source for Charles crossing the river Stour below Lea Castle (just upstream and on the other bank from Wolverley). The Kinver heath location is mentioned in the (Tract 2), but given the geography it seems to contradict Tract 1 (Pepys) account.

It is possible to go from Stourbridge to Kinver, but to do so would have been out of his way as the usual route from Stourbridge to Wolverhampton would be through Amblecote (what is now the A491), but it would be a possible rout if Charle's guides lost their way once through Stourbridge.

This Google Map link helps to explain what I mean.

I would suggest that we follow Willis-Bund as an authoritative secondary source (given he was a local historian), but mention the folk tail of Lea Castle; and Kinver from tract 2 as an alternative route.

-- PBS (talk) 17:38, 15 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Shouldn't we be using modern secondary sources on this e.g. [1][2]? EEng 18:14, 15 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
What do those sources say about the first night of the escape? -- PBS (talk) 08:29, 16 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
I don't know; I'm just pointing out that there are more modern sources. I'll get them if you want, but I hesitate to get too involved just now because I'm a bit overloaded and there's a lot of context of which I'm ignorant. (Fascinating period, of course -- one of my favorite people is John Wilkins). EEng 15:28, 16 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
OK, I got those two + one more, all specifically on Charles' flight. But it may be some time before I can really look at them in relation to the question at hand. Can we suspend this conversation for two or three weeks? EEng 18:28, 16 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
No worries, but I have also invited others to the section. -- PBS (talk) 19:23, 16 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
Here's another (Edwardian) account by an Allan Fea (1910) (whoever he was, author of "Secret Chambers and Hiding-places", etc.) who says Charles crossed the river at Blakeshall (see page 10) (which is near the aptly-named Kingsford. Just sayin'. Martinevans123 (talk) 21:00, 16 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
  • I do not think this is one that we or anyone else can solve. I doubt that anyone really knew the route even during Charles II's reign. I have lived most of my life in the immediate area and know it well, including land history. As I write this I have before me a 19th-century facsimile of Blount, Boscobel and Kingston, Wanderings of Charles II ... (1933).
  • One difficulty arises from what was meant by Kinver Heath. The normal interpretation would be an area of heath considerably larger than the present Kinver Edge. If they had gone that way, they would have crossed Cookley Bridge and gone through Blakeshall, but there is (and was) no direct road: the present lanes are much as they were in the 17th century, except that there may still have been open fields. They might have ridden over open fields, but there may still have been crops to be harvested, which makes this unlikely. The other alternative is that the heath meant was a much larger tract of land bounded approximately by the present A449 (at times a little to the east), A451 (and some land east of this towards Hagley and Pedmore) and north to A458. That enormous heath (a large part in Kinver parish) extended to within half a mile of Stourbridge. They debated whether to go through Stourbridge (Blount) and did so. This suggests that they followed A449 and A451. A more direct route would have been by A450 through Hagley, but that would not take them on to anything that could be called 'Kinver Heath'. If they went through Stourbridge, they would have continued up A491 and presumably through Himley on A491, though how they might have got from there to Boscobel or White Ladies (both part of the estate of the Catholic Giffard family of Chillington Hall). Another possibility is that they turned slightly west at Wordsley, which would have taken them on to Ashwood, another large common. These commons derived from the area being within Kinver Forest. A trooper of Lord Talbot comes into the story. One of the Talbot houses was Grafton Manor, so that a tenant on that estate may have been a guide, but perhaps got beyond the area he knew well.
  • This is a case where are only sources are a few oral accounts, written down a decade (even several decades) later by people who did not know the area from hazy memories. All we (or earlier modern historians) can do is interpret those primary sources. WP tends to prefer secondary sources, but in a case such as this, the opinion of early 20th century historians is no better than that of a WP editor. Willis-Bund was a distinguished Worcestershire historian, but he lived somewhere near Worcester and that is the area that he would have known best. Equally the so-called Monarch's Way does not help on the issue of where Charles went: it consists of footpaths collected to celebrate the route. However Charles would have travelled on main roads, which often used much the same routes in his time as now.
  • As indicated, the Blakeshall theory depends on an improbable interpretation. Bringing in Kingsford is plain wrongheaded romanticism. The place has had that name since medieval times and the etymology of the name is probably not related to "king". There was a royal hunting lodge in Kinver Forest, but it was Stourton Castle and was granted at fee farm with the manor and custody of the forest in 1189.
  • The passage we are discussing has the citation Modd 2001. This appears to be an article in what I suspect is a popular historical journal. This is no more authoritative than my view or that of any other modern historian. The idea that they visited the Kings Arms at Hartlebury or Whittington Inn has no historical basis. A lot of claims about Whittington Inn are pure invention: it was not an inn at the time, but probably a freehold farmhouse. Peterkingiron (talk) 18:18, 21 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
    • I have amended and amplified the text, along the lines described above, doing my best to portray the various views as to the route. As stated I am a historian and know the area well, having studied its local history for over 40 years. O hope that this is not going to start an edot-war. I am missing a page number from Willis-Bund. Peterkingiron (talk) 20:14, 21 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for the bold edit Peterkingiron, however I think that you have misunderstood Willis-Bund when you added "They may have been the party of fugitives observed by Richard Baxter passing through Kidderminster." Using Baxter as a primary source, Willis-Bund concludes that the royal party broke away from a larger group of cavalry before that group encountered a Roundhead interception detachment in Kidderminster (detached from the force of Colonel Robert Lilburne and Major Mercer who were guarding Bewdley Bridge).

I agree with Willis-Bund analysis that Charles II did not go through Kidderminster, as I am sure that if Charles had gone through Kidderminster, just as it is reported in Tract I that he sneaked through a town without a an alert guard (Stroubridge), he would certainly of remembered the memorable event of a dash through Kidderminster with its alert guard, and mentioned it to Pepys (Pepys first heard about the escape from Charles in person on 23 May 1660 (8.5 years after the escape) while accompanying Charles back to England from exile Holland, the published version in Tract I was recorded 20 years later on 5 Oct. 1680 – 29 years after the escape).

Where you and Willis-Bund disagree is where Charle's smaller party broke away from the Kidderminster bound party. Willis-Bund suggests A450 (at Hartlebury) while you are suggesting (I presume the Chester Road that skirts Kidderminster to the east by about a quarter of a mile and joins the A451. Before the modern ringroad was built in the late 60s (or was it the early 70s?), I presume that the A449 and A451 joined inside Kidderminster at the junction of Worcester St, Blackwell St.

The problem with you analysis while I think that journeying up the A451 is a possibility that explains the Kinver Heath in Tract II better then Willis-Bund's theory, but it ought not to be included in this article unless we can find a secondary source to cite (likewise your criticisms of Willis-Bund's hypothesis). It is the same problem as we encountered way back on the River Teme article, where we had to wait for you article to be published in a reliable secondary source before we could include you conclusions in that Wikipedia article :-)

Also I agree that if they did indeed cross the Stour near Wolverley then Cookley bridge is far more likely than a river fording in a dell near Lea Castle as they are close to each other (google map) -- unless Cookley bridge was guarded -- but there no primary source for either option and -- unless they recrossed the Stour somewhere else -- such a crossing contradicts the primary sources of them sneaking sneaking though a town (Tract I), and the mention of Stourbridge in Tract II. Unless of course Stourton (the location of the old Stewpony) was large enough to have a garrison in which case if it were Stourton and not Stourbridge then the Wolverhampton road (A449) throught Cookley and Stourton is an alternative to the A451 to Stourbridge.

-- PBS (talk) 21:10, 25 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Ridiculous. Everyone knows that the A491 wasn't built until the reign of George II. Anyway, I still have those sources on my shelf and will try to get back to them before I go on vacation in May. EEng 04:08, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
According to the article on A491 it was "turnpiked" in 1753 (in the reign of George II), but what makes you so sure that it was a new road and not a road improvement? It seems to me likely that there was a road from Stourbridge to Ambelcote and beyond before the reign of George II, because if not, why was the bridge there and where did the road go north of the Stour? -- PBS (talk) 10:10, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
I argued in 'Some roads out of North Worcestershire' Transactions of Worcestershire Archaeological Society 3rd ser. 20 (2006), 88-9, describing it as the road to Stafford that the road Hartlebury-Hagley-Stourbridge-Kingswinford cross-Wolverhampton was Saxon in origin, if not older. This is the route favoured by Willis-Bund. Most early turnpikes involved the improvement of existing roads, rather than the creation of new ones. Perhaps more problematic might be A451 Kidderminster-Stourbridge, but this is shown on an estate map of c.1735 (for Iverley) and before the inclosure of Iverley Hay in the late 17th century was across heathland from Broadwaters on the edge of Kidderminster to the end of north end of Norton Road Stourbridge, so that there would have been no difficulty in going that way. I was not seeking to imply that any of the suggested routes was new: it is merely a question of which one was followed. Peterkingiron (talk) 18:20, 26 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
I've still got the sources on my shelf, but I'm still traveling. Stand by. EEng 04:44, 17 June 2018 (UTC)Reply