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Sir William Sneyde, Knt. of Bradwell, who m. 1st, Ann, dau. and heiress of Thomas Barrowe, Esq. of Flookersbrooke, near Chester, and had issue,
I. Ralph, his heir
II. George, of Madeley, Gent.
I. Mary, m. to John Delves, Esq. of Doddington, co. Chester
II. Elizabeth, m. to Henry, 12th Lord Audley, who d. 1564
III. Ann, m. to William Young, Esq. of Kainton, co. Salop
IV. Jane, m. to Thomas Trentham, Esq. of Rocester
V. Margaret, m. 1st to John Somerford, Esq. of Somerford, co. Chester, who d. 11 Aug. 1577; and 2ndly, to Gilbert Domville, Esq. of Lymme, co. Chester, and dying 2 Oct. 1592, was interred at Astbury.
Source: Burke, Landed Gentry
There is considerable confusion as to the Christian name and identity of her father. The inscription on the monument in Wolstanton church describes Anne as the daughter of Thomas Barrow of Flookersbrook: Here lie the bodies of Sir William Sneyd of Bradwell, knight, and Dame Anne, his wife, one of the daughters and heirs of Thomas Barrow of Flookersbrook in the county of Chester, esquire, who had 5 sons and 10 daughters, which Sir William died the 6 of June 1571. On the monument are the arms of Sneyd impaling Barrow, for which see Ward, John, The Borough of Stoke-Upon-Trent, (London: W. Lewis & Son, 1843), pp. 118-19 at: https://books.google.ca/books?id=M6QLAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA118 For the testator’s alleged father-in-law, Thomas Barrow, son of Thomas Barrow of Chester, see The Cheshire Sheaf, supra, pp. 176, 397 at: https://books.google.ca/books?id=iG8uAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA397
The Chester family of Barrow, springing originally from the neighbouring township and parish of Barrow, near Tarvin, first appear as merchants and tradesmen in Chester city towards the middle of the 15th century. Fifty years afterwards [=1500] we find Thomas Barrow, of Chester, investing his merchant savings in the purchase of the estate of Flookersbrook, and taking, along with William Sneyd, another prosperous citizen, a leading part in the municipal management of Chester, and sharing with him in its highest honours. In process of time Sir William Sneyd, grandson of the above, married Anne Barrow, daughter and heiress to Thomas, son of the above-named Thomas Barrow, of Flookersbrook, and so acquired that Cheshire property. . . . [inscription on monument is then quoted]. The authority of the inscription on the monument is called into question by two sources which state that Anne was the daughter of Robert (not Thomas) Barrow. A document dating from 1544/5 states that William Sneyd, esquire, and Anne, his wife, ‘one of the heirs of Robert Barrow, esquire, deceased’, have sold certain lands to James Hurleton of Chester. See CHES 11/53: http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C764176
Another document, dated 1543/4, states that John Crosby, clerk, has recovered certain lands against William Sneyd and Anne, his wife, ‘one of the daughters and heirs of Robert Barrow’. See The Twenty-Eighth Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, (London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1867), p. 160 at: https://books.google.ca/books?id=b3ZIN-Lh4fIC&pg=PA160&lpg=PA160 Grazebrook agrees that the testator’s first wife was the daughter of Robert Barrow, but adds to the confusion by stating that the testator married ‘Alice’ (rather than Anne), ‘da. and h. to Robert Barrow of Chester’. ‘Alice’ may be Grazebrook’s own interpolation, as the original pedigree in italics appears to read merely ‘. . . filia . . . . Barrow de Flokersbrooke juxta Chester’. Moreover in a note Grazebrook adds that another pedigree found in Harleian MS. 6128 records that Roger Barrow of “Flowkersbrooke” had issue three daughters and coheirs, viz., Anne, wife of Henry Port of Chester (father by her of Sir John Port); Jane, wife of Sir William Sneyd; and Margaret, wife of Hamon Dickfield of Ditton. See Grazebrook, H. Sydney, ed., The Heraldic Visitations of Staffordshire, (London: Mitchell and Hughes, 1885), pp. 273-4 at: https://books.google.ca/books?id=gfwcAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA273
The ODNB agrees that Sir John Port was, in fact, the son of Henry Port (d.1512) and Anne Barrow, daughter of Roger Barrow: Port, Sir John (c.1472–1540), judge, was one of the sons of Henry Port (d. 1512) and his first wife, Anne, daughter of Roger Barrow of Chester. Henry was a mercer in Chester who served as mayor of that city in 1486. . . . However according to Hughes, citing Cheshire manuscript pedigrees, Anne Barrow, wife of Henry Port, Mayor of Chester in 1486, was the daughter of Robert (not Roger) Barrow. See Hughes, T., ‘Mr. Justice Port’, Notes and Queries, 2nd Series, Vol. IV, (London: Bell & Daldy, 1857), p. 137 at: https://books.google.ca/books?id=bEhR-4dkd_gC&pg=RA1-PA137
On balance, then, it seems probable that the testator’s first wife, Anne Barrow, was the daughter of Robert Barrow, despite the inscription on the testator’s tomb. For the mother of Sir John Port (d.1540), said to have been Anne Barrow, daughter of Roger Barrow, see the will of Sir John Port, TNA PROB 11/28/58.
Children:
Source: THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES PROB 11/54/430
1511 |
1511
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Shipham, Norfolk, England
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1527 |
1527
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Keele, Staffordshire, England
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1538 |
1538
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Bradwell, Cheshire, England
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1539 |
1539
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1546 |
1546
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Keele, Staffordshire, England
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1553 |
1553
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Bradwall, Stafford, UK
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1602 |
1602
Age 91
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Bradwell, Cheshire, England
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