Constituency Dates
Derby 1640 (Apr.), 1640 (Nov.), 1640 (Nov.), (Oxford Parliament, 1644)
Family and Education
b. c. 1598, 1st s. of Thomas Allestry of Alvaston, and 1st w. Anne, da. of Roger Barker of Alvaston.1C142/474/67; Vis. Derbys. (Harl. Soc. n.s. viii), 11. educ. Derby sch.;2Derby School Reg. 1570-1901 ed. B. Tacchella, 20. G. Inn 16 Nov. 1618,3G. Inn Admiss. 152. called 9 Feb. 1625;4PBG Inn, i. 268. St John’s, Camb. Lent 1619.5Al. Cant. m. (1) 9 Apr. 1629, Sarah (d. 2 Sept. 1638), da. of Thomas Smith of Derby, 3s. (2 d.v.p.) 4da. (2 d.v.p.); (2) 8 Mar. 1641, Mary (d. 1 Apr. 1679), da. of George Agard of Foston, Derbys., wid. of Edward Smith of ?Ashbourne, Derbys. 3s. (1 d.v.p.) 4da.6All Saints, Derby par. reg.; Sheffield City Archives, BHD/20; Vis. Derbys. 11. suc. fa. 14 Nov. 1630;7C142/474/67. d. 4 Sept. 1655.8Vis. Derbys. 11.
Offices Held

Local: commr. charitable uses, Derbys. 17 Feb. 1632, 16 June 1635.9C192/1, unfol.; C93/15/24. Feodary, c.1634–27 Nov. 1640.10WARD5/32, unfol.; CSP Dom. 1640–1, p. 223. Commr. gaol delivery, Derby 17 Nov. 1638;11C181/5, f. 119. disarming recusants, Derbys. 30 Aug. 1641;12LJ iv. 385a. assessment, 1642.13SR.

Parish: assessor and auditor, All Saints, Derby 1635–7. Vestryman by Dec. 1638–d.14The Churchwardens’ Audit and Vestry Order Bk. of All Saints, Derby 1465–1689 ed. R. Clark (Derbys. Rec. Soc. xxxvi), 82, 86, 87, 94, 104, 112.

Civic: recorder, Derby by Nov. 1638–13 Dec. 1644.15C181/5, f. 119; CJ iii. 374a; LJ vii. 96b, 97b.

Estates
his fa. was fined £12 10s. for distraint of knighthood.16E407/35, f. 34. In 1630, Allestrye inherited the capital messuage of Alvaston and lands and tenements in Alvaston and Boulton, Derbys.17C142/474/67. In 1633, he and another gentleman purchased messuages, lands and tithes in Lea, Over Holloway and Nether Holloway, Plaistow, Tansley and Wheatcroft, Derbys. for £1,410.18Add. 6705, ff. 11v, 24-5; Derbys. RO, D76/ME/10-11; D1088/MT/13-14. By 1637, he and another gentleman owned messuages in Yeldersley, Derbys.19Add. 6672, f. 274. In 1645, estate consisted of messuage and lands in Derby worth £20 p.a.; tithes in Alvaston and Boulton and lands and tenements in Mackworth, Derbys. worth £46 p.a. (but mortgaged to his brother); lands and tenements in Alvaston worth £64 p.a.; a tenement during the life of his wife worth £88 p.a.; an estate for life in lands in Osmaston and Derby worth £46 p.a.; and a chamber in Gray’s Inn, Mdx.20SP23/175, pp. 185-6.
Address
: of Alvaston and All Saints, Derbys., Derby.
Will
2 July 1655, pr. 8 Aug. 1658.21PROB11/266, f. 311.
biography text

Allestrye belonged to a junior branch of a family that had settled at Allestree, two miles north of Derby, by the thirteenth century.22D. Lysons, S. Lysons, Magna Britannia, v. p. cliii. His grandfather, an innholder, represented Derby in four Parliaments during the mid-sixteenth century and served five terms as the town’s bailiff.23HP Commons, 1509-1558, ‘William Allestry’. Having entered the legal profession, Allestrye was called to the bar at Gray’s Inn in 1625, and by 1638 he had been appointed recorder of Derby. In the elections to the Short Parliament in the spring of 1640, he and Alderman Nathaniel Hallowes were returned for the town, with Allestrye taking the senior place.24Supra, ‘Derby’. He made a few minor contributions to debate, but received no committee appointments in this Parliament.25Aston’s Diary, 34, 77, 163.

In the elections to the Long Parliament that autumn, Allestrye and Hallowes stood for Derby again, but on this occasion they faced competition from two local gentlemen, Thomas Gell* and Christopher Fulwoode. The corporation interest was firmly behind Allestrye and Hallowes, whereas Gell and Fulwoode, although not without friends in Derby, were essentially interlopers. On election day, 19 October 1640, Gell and Fulwoode commanded sufficient support among the freemen to demand a poll. But their request was refused by the mayor, who returned the two corporation candidates. Gell and Fulwoode protested to the Commons that the mayor’s refusal of a poll was not only illegal but also an infringement of the town’s charter. Allestrye and, to a lesser extent, Hallowes evidently agreed, for although they apparently took their seats, they avoided making any contribution to the House’s proceedings while the committee of privileges considered the case. In mid-December 1640, Allestrye informed Fulwoode that ‘he was so tender of the welfare of the town’ he would yield to any ‘indifferent motion’ in order to preserve the mayor and corporation from legal action and the censure of the House.26Supra, ‘Derby’; Procs. LP iii. 134, 136. This conciliatory approach seems to have paid off, for on 25 March 1641, the House passed over the mayor’s indiscretion and resolved simply that a new election be held for the town.27CJ ii. 113a. According to the parliamentary diarist Sir Simonds D’Ewes, Allestrye and Hallowes ‘were both contented without any further dispute of the House to depart out of the same’ and to acknowledge their return void.28Procs. LP iii. 134. Anticipating that the Commons would order another election, Derby corporation had spent the previous months drumming up support for their candidates among the freemen. The new election was held on 14 April 1641, and as Fulwoode had feared, Allestrye and Hallowes were returned again, this time without serious opposition.29Supra, ‘Derby’.

Allestrye was one of the least active Members of the Long Parliament. He was named to just one (very minor) committee and took no recorded part in debate.30CJ ii. 205b. His poor showing as a Parliament-man notwithstanding, he was apparently considered sound in religion, for the Commons nominated him in August 1641 as a commissioner for disarming recusants in Derbyshire.31CJ ii. 267b; LJ iv. 385a. He was present in the House on 7 May 1642, when the Commons ordered him to write a letter of thanks to a group of Derbyshire magistrates.32CJ ii. 563a. However, by early June he had returned to Derby (without taking official leave of the House), and he was in Nottingham on 22 August when the king set up his standard.33SP23/175, p. 185; Derby Local Studies Lib. DBR/E/1, unfol. He later claimed that his presence in the town on 22 August was purely coincidental.34Harl. 164, f. 244v. Nevertheless, his absence aroused the suspicion of the Commons, which on 2 September suspended him from sitting pending investigation by the committee for absent Members.35CJ ii. 750a. In mid-November, the House went one step further and summoned him to Westminster under guard to answer for his negligence of its proceedings.36CJ ii. 845b, 851b. If at any point Allestrye had contemplated joining the king’s party he now thought better of it, for he obeyed this summons, and on 9 December the House received what was essentially a favourable report on him from the committee for absent Members. Allestrye had

confessed that he had gone out of town [London] without leave and had stayed long in the country, and that when his Majesty had imposed [a levy of ] £1,200 upon the town of Derby, he had paid £20 of it and that he had done [it] to avoid further mischief. But he was sorry for it and was resolved to declare himself to be ready to live and die with the House and to contribute according to his ability. And that it was true that he was at Nottingham whilst the [king’s] standard was set up there, but that he went upon private business of his own, and that if anything else could be objected against him after his admission into the House he would be ready to answer it and to stand and abide the pleasure of the House.37Harl. 164, f. 244v.

The committee further reported that ‘whereas it had been objected against him that he had led 500 men to Nottingham [for the king], that could not be proved’. His case provoked a long debate, but in conclusion it was ordered that he be re-admitted to the House.38Harl. 164, f. 244v; CJ ii. 881b. Three days later (12 Dec.), he declared his assent to the vote for assisting Robert Devereux, 3rd earl of Essex, with life and fortune, and he offered to contribute £50 to Parliament’s war-chest.39CJ ii. 884b.

Allestrye’s commitment to the parliamentarian cause proved both lukewarm and short-lived. He seems to have been entirely inactive at Westminster following his return (he received no appointments), and a few weeks after the king’s proclamation of 20 June 1643, requiring all ‘loyal’ MPs to present themselves to his headquarters at Oxford, he abandoned his seat entirely.40SP23/175, p. 185. It is not clear what motivated his withdrawal from Westminster, or his subsequent adherence to the king’s party. The advance of the royalist army of William Cavendish, 1st earl of Newcastle, into the north midlands that summer may have influenced his decision. It is also possible that he objected to the idea of a military alliance with the Scottish Covenanters, which was dominating the agenda in the Commons by July 1643. On 10 September, the Derbyshire county committee sent up ‘divers articles’ against him, alleging (among other things) that he had refused to prosecute papists, that he had contributed to the royalist war effort but given nothing to Parliament, and that he associated with ‘malignants’.41CJ ii. 281b; Add. 18778, f. 72v; Add. 31116, p. 169; Bodl. Nalson XII, f. 51; HMC Portland, i. 130. But the House was evidently not convinced by these charges, for rather than call time on his parliamentary career (such as it was) it ordered him (on 28 September) to attend its service on pain of sequestration.42CJ iii. 256b. On this occasion, however, Allestrye ignored the summons to Westminster, and on 19 October the Commons disabled him from sitting and ordered the Derbyshire county committee to sequester his estate.43CJ iii. 281b.

Early in 1644, Allestrye confirmed his royalist allegiance by attending the Oxford Parliament, which the king had summoned in order to raise money to help repel the invading Scots.44SP23/175, p. 187. The Commons responded by ordering that Allestrye be discharged from his place as recorder of Derby – although it took the Lords almost a year to assent to this measure.45CJ iii. 374a; LJ vii. 96b, 97b. On 27 January 1644 he signed the letter from the two Houses at Oxford to the earl of Essex, urging him to compose a peace.46Rushworth, Hist. Collns. v. 573. By his own admission, Allestrye attended the Oxford Parliament for a total of two months, but did not give his assent to the Oxford Parliament’s vote of 12 March proclaiming the Parliament-men at Westminster traitors. Moreover, although he ‘constantly continued in his Majesty’s garrisons and quarters’ for most of the war, he claimed that he never bore arms against Parliament nor executed any royal commission.47SP23/175, pp. 185-7.

By the autumn of 1645, Allestrye considered the king’s cause lost, and on 2 October he surrendered himself to the Derbyshire county committee. In his petition to the Committee for Compounding*, he asked that allowance be made for his ‘wasted’ personal estate, his debts (which amounted to £1,200) and the smallness of his landed estate.48SP23/175, pp. 185-7. The committee set his fine at £737 – or a third of his estate – which he reckoned excessive, ‘considering that he is much in debt and at present debarred from his profession as barrister-at-law’.49CCC 991; CCAM 420. The Commons confined itself to having him brought to the bar of the House on 29 November and placing him in the custody of the sergeant-at-arms for a week thereafter.50CJ iv. 358a, 365a. The following year, he succeeded in persuading the Committee for Advance of Money* to lower its 1644 assessment upon him from £600 to a mere £40 in regard of his parlous financial state.51CCAM 420.

Allestrye seems to have eschewed public affairs for the remainder of his life. He died on 4 September 1655 and was buried at All Saints, Derby, on 6 September.52Vis. Derbys. 11; All Saints, Derby par reg. In his will, he referred to debts of £350 and lands held on lease in two unspecified locations, presumably in Derbyshire, worth £100 a year. He charged his brother George and half-brother Roger with the provision of a ‘godly and virtuous’ education for his younger children.53PROB11/266, ff. 311r-v. Roger Allestry† sat for Derby in the 1660 Convention and the Cavalier Parliament, and Roger’s son William† represented the town in 1685.54HP Commons 1660-1690.

Author
Oxford 1644
Yes
Notes
  • 1. C142/474/67; Vis. Derbys. (Harl. Soc. n.s. viii), 11.
  • 2. Derby School Reg. 1570-1901 ed. B. Tacchella, 20.
  • 3. G. Inn Admiss. 152.
  • 4. PBG Inn, i. 268.
  • 5. Al. Cant.
  • 6. All Saints, Derby par. reg.; Sheffield City Archives, BHD/20; Vis. Derbys. 11.
  • 7. C142/474/67.
  • 8. Vis. Derbys. 11.
  • 9. C192/1, unfol.; C93/15/24.
  • 10. WARD5/32, unfol.; CSP Dom. 1640–1, p. 223.
  • 11. C181/5, f. 119.
  • 12. LJ iv. 385a.
  • 13. SR.
  • 14. The Churchwardens’ Audit and Vestry Order Bk. of All Saints, Derby 1465–1689 ed. R. Clark (Derbys. Rec. Soc. xxxvi), 82, 86, 87, 94, 104, 112.
  • 15. C181/5, f. 119; CJ iii. 374a; LJ vii. 96b, 97b.
  • 16. E407/35, f. 34.
  • 17. C142/474/67.
  • 18. Add. 6705, ff. 11v, 24-5; Derbys. RO, D76/ME/10-11; D1088/MT/13-14.
  • 19. Add. 6672, f. 274.
  • 20. SP23/175, pp. 185-6.
  • 21. PROB11/266, f. 311.
  • 22. D. Lysons, S. Lysons, Magna Britannia, v. p. cliii.
  • 23. HP Commons, 1509-1558, ‘William Allestry’.
  • 24. Supra, ‘Derby’.
  • 25. Aston’s Diary, 34, 77, 163.
  • 26. Supra, ‘Derby’; Procs. LP iii. 134, 136.
  • 27. CJ ii. 113a.
  • 28. Procs. LP iii. 134.
  • 29. Supra, ‘Derby’.
  • 30. CJ ii. 205b.
  • 31. CJ ii. 267b; LJ iv. 385a.
  • 32. CJ ii. 563a.
  • 33. SP23/175, p. 185; Derby Local Studies Lib. DBR/E/1, unfol.
  • 34. Harl. 164, f. 244v.
  • 35. CJ ii. 750a.
  • 36. CJ ii. 845b, 851b.
  • 37. Harl. 164, f. 244v.
  • 38. Harl. 164, f. 244v; CJ ii. 881b.
  • 39. CJ ii. 884b.
  • 40. SP23/175, p. 185.
  • 41. CJ ii. 281b; Add. 18778, f. 72v; Add. 31116, p. 169; Bodl. Nalson XII, f. 51; HMC Portland, i. 130.
  • 42. CJ iii. 256b.
  • 43. CJ iii. 281b.
  • 44. SP23/175, p. 187.
  • 45. CJ iii. 374a; LJ vii. 96b, 97b.
  • 46. Rushworth, Hist. Collns. v. 573.
  • 47. SP23/175, pp. 185-7.
  • 48. SP23/175, pp. 185-7.
  • 49. CCC 991; CCAM 420.
  • 50. CJ iv. 358a, 365a.
  • 51. CCAM 420.
  • 52. Vis. Derbys. 11; All Saints, Derby par reg.
  • 53. PROB11/266, ff. 311r-v.
  • 54. HP Commons 1660-1690.