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Tixall Gatehouse

Coordinates: 52°48′15″N 2°01′57″W / 52.8041°N 2.0324°W / 52.8041; -2.0324
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tixall Gatehouse: the medieval mansion was demolished, but the Gatehouse still stands
Tixall Gatehouse photographed in Jan 2022

Tixall Gatehouse is a 16th-century gatehouse situated at Tixall, near Stafford, Staffordshire and is all that remains of Tixall Hall which was demolished in 1927. The gatehouse is a Grade I listed building. Tixall was used as a prison for Mary, Queen of Scots for two weeks in 1586.[1]

History

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The manor of Tixall was held for many years by the Littleton family until 1507 when the Littleton heiress married Sir John Aston. The medieval manor house was replaced by Sir Edward Aston, High Sheriff of Staffordshire, in about 1555 and the Gatehouse was added in about 1580. The Gatehouse is a three-story rectangular structure, the balustraded facade of which is decorated with three orders of twinned columns. There are four octagonal corner turrets topped with cupolas and weather vanes.

Tixall House and Gatehouse (c. 1686) by R. Plot. Tixall was the family seat of the Lords Aston of Forfar. The false witness Stephen Dugdale alleged that it was one of the meeting places of the supposed conspirators of the Popish Plot (c 1680 ).

The Astons were later raised to the baronetage and to the peerage, with the title Lord Aston of Forfar.[2] Walter Aston, 2nd Lord Aston of Forfar became a recusant Catholic. After his death it was alleged, as part of the bogus accusations in the Popish Plot, that he received Jesuits at Tixall, and in August and September 1677 held meetings at Tixall attended by William Howard, 1st Viscount Stafford and Aston's steward Stephen Dugdale where the assassination of Charles II was plotted.[3] Amidst the Popish Plot allegations, one contemporary witness, William Skelton, described finding Dugdale and Stafford talking alone together in the Little Parlour and the Great Parlour (a dining-room next to Aston's chamber) at Tixall in September 1678. A letter from Stafford mentioning a plot was allegedly found in Aston's study.[4]

On the death of the sixth Lord Aston the estate passed to his sister, who had married Thomas Clifford (see Clifford-Constable baronets). Clifford replaced the old house with a new mansion in about 1780 but retained the Tudor Gatehouse. Several local families were descended from the Astons, including the Levetts of Lichfield (and later of Wychnor Park).[5]

The Cliffords sold the Tixall estate to Earl Talbot of nearby Ingestre Hall in about 1835 and thereafter the property was let out to tenants. The Hall itself was demolished in 1927, leaving only the Gatehouse standing, and the estate was broken up when sold off piecemeal in 1960. In 1968 the Landmark Trust bought the Gatehouse which, following restoration, is now available for holiday lets.[6]

Mary, Queen of Scots at Tixall

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Mary, Queen of Scots was imprisoned here for two weeks in 1586. Her jailer Amias Paulet had gone to assess the hall in September 1585 as a more permanent residence. Paulet thought the house was suitable but argued it would be a pity to make Sir Walter Aston and his household of 100 persons move out, as his high standing and religion was good for the region. Aston argued that the move would disturb his farming and he would be forced to sell his sixty cattle and his plough oxen.[7]

On 11 August 1586, the English authorities decided to act on the Babington plot. Mary was out riding from Chartley with Bastian Pagez, her doctor Dominique Bourgoing and others, and they were surprised by armed soldiers who took them to Tixall in order to search Mary's rooms at Chartley and seize her papers.[8] An account of the affair by the French ambassador Châteauneuf calls Tixall "Norbethilsal".[9]

Francis Walsingham sent an order to Paulet from Windsor Castle on 25 September 1586 not to take Mary back to Chartley and keep her at Tixall as Elizabeth planned for Mary to go to Fotheringhay Castle. Paulet had taken Mary back to Chartley, however, before the new orders. As she left Tixall with Paulet and Walter Aston, Mary wept and said to some poor people at Tixall's gate, "I have nothing for you, I am a beggar as well as you, all is taken from me."[10]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ David Templeman, Mary, Queen of Scots: The Captive Queen in England (Exeter: 2016), p. 224.
  2. ^ The Scots Peerage, Vol. I, Sir Robert Douglas, ed. James Balfour Paul, David Douglas, Edinburgh, 1904.
  3. ^ Dugdale, Stephen, Information of Stephen Dugdale delivered at the House of Commons, November, 1680, London (1680): Tryal of William Viscount Stafford for high treason, London (1681)
  4. ^ Smith, John, A discourse occasioned by the late conspirators dying in the denyal of their guilt: with particular reflections on the perjury of Will. Viscount Stafford, London (1681)
  5. ^ A Genealogical Account of the Mayo and Elton Families of the Counties of Wilts and Hereford, Charles Herbert Mayo, privately printed by Charles Whittingham and Co., London, 1882
  6. ^ Tixall Gatehouse (details, pictures, floorplans, etc) Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Morris, John, ed., Letter Book of Amias Paulet (1874), pp 98-102; Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 8 (1914), p 113 (extracts only)
  8. ^ Guy, John, Queen of Scots: The True Story, (2005), pp 469-480: Chantelauze, Régis de, ed., Marie Stuart, son procès et son exécution: d'après le journal inédit de Bourgoing, son médecin, la correspondance d'Amyas Paulet, son geôlier et autres documents nouveaux, Plon (1876)
  9. ^ Sheila R. Richards, Secret Writing in the Public Records (HMSO, 1974), p. 56.
  10. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 8 (1914), pp 628, 632.

References

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52°48′15″N 2°01′57″W / 52.8041°N 2.0324°W / 52.8041; -2.0324