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29-511: Portway or Port Way may refer to: Places in England [ edit ] Portway, Worcestershire , a hamlet in Beoley parish, near Redditch Roads in England [ edit ] Port Way , a Roman road between London and Weymouth Portway, Bristol , a road from Bristol to Avonmouth Derbyshire Portway , an ancient track H5 Portway , part of

58-590: A Perpendicular Gothic addition from about 1400 and the north aisle was also rebuilt in the Perpendicular style. The Sheldon Chapel on the north side was added for the recusant Ralph Sheldon in about 1580. Its stone altar is said to be a gift from Pope Gregory XIII . The church was restored in 1885 and the Sheldon Chapel in 1891. The tower has a ring of eight bells. The oldest is the tenor bell, cast in 1601 by Hugh Watts of Leicester . The seventh bell

87-406: A first cousin once removed, Ralph Sheldon, Lord of Beoley and Weston (1653–1720), who was married to Mary Anne, daughter of John Elliot of Gatacre Park, Shropshire. His estates passed to his eldest son and heir, Edward (1679–1746) and then to the latter's eldest son William (1715–1780). His son in turn, Ralph Sheldon, inherited Beoley in 1780, but by 1788 it was said to be heavily mortgaged and he sold

116-503: A good part of the parish by feu, as he was established at Balford Hall in Beoley in the reign of Edward IV (1460–1483). In addition, he bought Benyt's Place in that parish in 1488. Sheldon supported the Yorkists at the battle of Bosworth in 1485, and as a result of the definitive Lancastrian victory there he was deprived of his property, but it was restored to him before he died in 1517. In his Inquisition Post Mortem, held at Pershore , it

145-402: A population of 497 in 2001, and retains public amenities such as a bus route, public house , post office , primary school , local shop selling local produce, and church . The remaining public house is now called "The Queen Elizabeth Inn", after Elizabeth I , who is supposed to have stopped there. According to local legend, Elizabeth I was presented with a hat on her arrival in the village on

174-636: A primary school and a village hall. Its two pubs are the Cross and Bowling Green at Branson's Cross and the Village Inn at Holt End. In birth order: Elmley Castle Elmley Castle is a village and civil parish in Worcestershire , in England , United Kingdom. It is located on the north side of Bredon Hill 3 miles south-east of Pershore in the local government district of Wychavon . The village had

203-472: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Beoley Beoley is a small village and larger civil parish north of Redditch in the Bromsgrove District of Worcestershire . It adjoins Warwickshire to the east. The 2021 census gave a parish population of 984, mostly at Holt End . The parish includes the hamlet of Portway, adjacent to

232-638: Is said to have been responsible for the construction of the manor house at Weston Park in Warwickshire, another Sheldon estate in Long Compton parish. He was succeeded by his eldest son and heir, Edward (1561–1643), also a Royalist. In August 1636, Charles I of England visited Warwick, and a day or two later went on "to Weston at Mr. Sheldon's house with great delight". Edward's son and heir, William Sheldon of Beoley (1589–1659), always resided at Weston Park, where he died. In 1611, he married Elizabeth, daughter of

261-525: The font has a 15th-century octagonal bowl on a 13th-century square base decorated with stonecarved serpents and dragons and the church was much added to in succeeding centuries. It contains grand monuments to Thomas, 1st Earl of Coventry and 17th century effigies of members of the Savage family. The decline in local Christian worshippers has led to a reduced service schedule at the church. The ruins of an important Norman and medieval castle , from which

290-790: The A435 road. It adjoins the Redditch suburb of Church Hill and the civil parishes of Alvechurch , Tanworth-in-Arden , Mappleborough Green and Wythall . The estates of the Benedictine Pershore Abbey included lands at Beoleahe from the 10th century at the latest, when Edgar the Peaceful restored them to the monks in AD 972. The Domesday Book of 1086 records that the abbey held 21 hides of land at Beolege and Yardley . An ancient castle, of which very slight traces remain, belonged successively to

319-525: The Crown in 1487. In 1528 the castle seems to have been still habitable, for Walter Walshe was then appointed constable and keeper, and ten years later Urian Brereton succeeded to the office. In 1544, however, prior to the grant to Christopher Savage (d.1545), who had been an Esquire of the Body of King Henry VIII, a survey was made of the manor and castle of Elmley, and it was found that the castle, strongly situated upon

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348-506: The Shire for Worcestershire, and Sheriff of the same county. Around 1534, William Sheldon purchased 2,000 acres (809 ha) of land at Skilts, between Beoley and his mother's home Ford Hall – lands which had been a grange of Studley Priory. His magnificent tomb is in Beoley parish church. William Sheldon was succeeded by his son, another Ralph Sheldon (1537–1613), who was married to Anne, daughter of Sir Robert Throgmorton of Coughton, who had attended

377-525: The abbey. In the 13th century the toponym was variously rendered Boleye , Beleg or Buley . The superiority of Beoley descended with the de Beauchamps until the death of Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick in 1446, when it passed to his daughter Elizabeth, wife of George Nevill, 1st Baron Latimer . It is said to have remained with the Latimers until John Nevill, 4th Baron Latimer sold it in 1549. William Sheldon of Abberton, however, must have held

406-594: The grid road system in Milton Keynes Sporting clubs [ edit ] Portway Bristol F.C. , a defunct football team Transport infrastructure [ edit ] Portway Park & Ride , bus service in Bristol, England Portway Park & Ride railway station in Bristol, England People [ edit ] Joshua Portway (born 1967), British artist and game designer Thomas Portway (by 1524–1557), English politician Topics referred to by

435-437: The manor to a Thomas Holmes. Holmes separated Beoley Hall (see below) and 300 acres (120 ha) of land from the rest of the manor and sold off both to separate buyers. The Sheldons' main manor house at Beoley was originally Balford Hall. In September 1643 William Sheldon's manor house at Weston Park was ransacked and cattle and goods "to a great value" taken away by soldiers. The following December his manor house at Beoley

464-420: The new proprietor Thomas Holmes had the east wing rebuilt to plans by John Sanders , with two storeys built to the same height as the original three and a portico with four Tuscan columns. On the south end of the east wing, a bow window was added to the ground floor in 1791; a matching window was subsequently added to the first floor above. The main staircase is lit by a round skylight. In 1968 Beoley Hall

493-505: The noble families of Mortimer, Beauchamp, and Holland. Roger Mortimer (died 1214), Lord of Wigmore first appears in the pipe roll for 1174–1175, when he owned land in Shropshire and Worcestershire, and his daughter Joan Mortimer (died 1225) married Walter de Beauchamp of Elmley, Worcestershire, according to the Annals of Worcester. In 1378 John Holland, First Duke of Exeter and Earl of Huntingdon

522-647: The reception of Anne of Cleves . A Roman Catholic , Ralph Sheldon was a courtier at the Court of Queen Mary, and for a time a courier for Mary Queen of Scots between her place of confinement and Scotland. He is frequently mentioned in State Papers as a recusant . In 1594 there is a reference to an alleged premeditated rebellion in North Wales, "the chiefest aid for which is to come from Ralph Sheldon," and to his sending an emissary to Louvain "with letters to Cardinal Allen". He

551-657: The recusant William Petre, 2nd Baron Petre . Considered "a man of literary taste", Sheldon was a Royalist and at various times during the early years of the Civil War he was, in his turn, harassed as "a Popish delinquent". After the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660, Beoley was restored through Richard Sheldon to William's son, the antiquary Ralph Sheldon (1623-1684). He was married to Henrietta Maria, daughter of Thomas, 1st Viscount Savage, but had no issue. Beoley then passed to

580-414: The road from the nearby town of Pershore . The slope upwards out of the village at that point is still known as 'Besscaps'. The remains of a stone cross are still present in the centre of the village. Its age is unknown, and a significant portion remains underground. The church of St. Mary dates from the end of the 11th century, the chancel shows herringbone pattern stonework in the external walls,

609-465: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Portway . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Portway&oldid=1169612375 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description

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638-487: The village derives its name, are located in the deer park , just over half a mile south, on Bredon Hill . The castle is supposed to have been built by Robert d'Abitot le Despenser in the years following the Norman Conquest . After his death (post 1098) it descended to his brother, Urse the sheriff, and on his death c. 1108, it then fell to his son and heir, Roger d'Abitot, who was unfortunately banished c. 1114, and it

667-597: Was burnt to the ground and all his goods and cattle "plundered by the soldiers." In 1648 the Parliamentarian authorities sequestrated Beoley. It was restored to the Sheldons in 1660, who had the present Beoley Hall built after the Restoration, either late in the 17th or early in the 18th century. It is a neoclassical house with an H plan, originally entirely three-storeyed, built of brick and entirely stuccoed . In 1791

696-445: Was cast in 1611 by one of Leicester's Newcombe family of bellfounders . The fourth bell was cast in 1622 by Henry III Oldfield of Nottingham. Richard Sanders of Bromsgrove cast the third bell in 1708 and the fifth in 1709. John Rudhall of Gloucester cast the seventh bell in 1789, which completed a ring of six. In 1999 this was increased to eight by adding a treble and a second bell cast by Whitechapel Bell Foundry . Beoley has

725-407: Was granted lands by his half-brother King Richard II which included Buley Castel, this part being forfeited on 14 April 1385, though other lands were restored to him elsewhere. The de Beauchamp family of Elmley Castle , ancestors of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick , were mesne lords of the manor from the 12th century until about 1265, when they acquired the overlordship (superiority) from

754-452: Was imprisoned in the Marshalsea in 1580 for recusancy , but released on medical grounds. Ralph was succeeded at Beoley by his eldest son, William (c. 1500–1570), who possessed the manors of Weston, Warwickshire, Abberton (jointly with his brother Francis), and by then virtually the whole parish of Beoley: some 4000 acres (over 1600 ha). He was Receiver at the Court of Augmentations, Knight of

783-447: Was in poor condition, but since 1986 it has been a Grade II listed building , now divided into apartments. The oldest parts of the Church of England parish church of St Leonard date from the early part of the 12th century and include the chancel arch. The south arcade dates from the early or middle part of the 13th century and the north arcade from about 1300. The west tower is

812-459: Was said that Sheldon owned Balford Hall and seven other houses and 460 acres (186 ha) of land in Beoley, and more elsewhere in Worcestershire and Warwickshire . In his will he made bequests to the churches at Beoley and Abberton and to Pershore Abbey. Sheldon was succeeded at Beoley by his son Ralph (died 1546), who was married to Philippa, daughter of Baldwin Heath of Ford Hall, Wootton Wawen. Ralph

841-452: Was then bestowed upon his sister Emmeline d'Abitots' husband, Walter Beauchamp. It remained in the powerful Beauchamp family as their chief seat until William de Beauchamp inherited the earldom and castle of Warwick from his maternal uncle, William Maudit, 8th Earl of Warwick , in 1268. Thereafter, Elmley Castle remained a secondary property of the Earls of Warwick until it was surrendered to

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