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John de Lacey, 1379

Name
John /de Lacey/
Given names
John
Surname prefix
de
Surname
Lacey
Also known as
Lord of /Cromwellbotham/
Family with parents
father
13501416
Birth: 1350 39 28 Yorkshire, England
Death: 20 July 1416Yorkshire, England
mother
13601380
Birth: 1360 26 24 Tintagel Castle, Cornwall, England
Death: 1380Riding, Northumberland, England
Marriage Marriage1379
1 year
himself
Family with Eleanor de Cromwelbotham
himself
wife
Marriage Marriageabout 1399
2 years
son
14001492
Birth: about 1400 21 20 Cromwellbotham, Yorkshire, England
Death: 1492Brearley Hall, Yorkshire, England
6 years
son
14051474
Birth: 1405 26 25 Halifax, Yorkshire, England
Death: 6 May 1474Halifax, Yorkshire, England
2 years
daughter
14061460
Birth: 1406 27 26 Brombleton, Yorkshire, England
Death: 1460Yorkshire, England
son
Note

In the Spencer Stanhope Manuscripts Collection at the West Yorkshire Archive Service, Bradford there is a Bound volume of Pedigrees of Yorkshire Families (ref. SpSt/6/3/15) from the 18th century with includes a pedigree of Lacy of Cromwellbotham and Brearley.

Cromwellbottom Or Cromwell Bottom.
Area of Southowram (near Halifax, West Riding, Yorkshire) between Brighouse and Elland. Was once the sub-manor of Cromwellbottom.
The name cromwell is Anglo-Saxon and means a crooked stream; thus, the name means the valley of the crooked stream, and is not connected with Oliver Cromwell.

Cromwellbottom Hall
House at Cromwellbottom. The Cromwellbotham family who lived here in the 12th century. The Lacey family lived here from the 13th to the 16th century. Beaumont, Quarmby and Lockwood stayed here with the Laceys the night before they killed Sir John de Eland (1553), sparking off the Elland Feud. John Lacey built a chapel of ease at St Anne's in the Grove Church in 1530. In the early 17th century, it was owned by the Gledhills of Barkisland Hall, then by the Horton family. The present building dates from around 1650. John Hodgson lived here from 1672.

Excerpts from the will of John Lacy: "April 5, 1474, John Lacy of Cromwelbothum. To be buried in the parish church of Halyfax. --- To Johan Lacy, daughter of Gilbert Lacy, for her marriage, x marcs. To John Lacy, son of Richard, xls. --- To every one of the issue of my sons and daughters, a bullock --- To my said son Richard, xx marcs. --- to celebrate for my sole, the souls of my wives, and for the souls of those whose goods I have (justly or unjustly) had, --- Residue to Richard Lacy and Gilbert Lacy my sons --- "

April 11, 1442, Pope Eugenius IV granted and indult to John
Lacy, Lord of Cromwelbothom, and Emmota his wife, of the
diocese of York, to have a portable alter (Cal Papal Leters
1431-47 p. 306)."
"Glover in his pedigree states that he married a Molineaux of
Lancashire; and Watson (Halifax p. 307) says that one John Lacy
married Florence, daughter of Robert Molineaux; that he married
twice is clear from his will; and the preceeding note shows
either he or his father had a wife named Emmota."