DONNA BINGHAM MUNGER
My Own Website
Author, Educator, Historian, Genealogist
DONNA BINGHAM MUNGER
My Own Website
Author, Educator, Historian, Genealogist
Robert de Bingham, the first at Melcombe Bingham was mentioned in the Hundred Rolls of 1273. The younger brother of William de Bingham of Sutton, Robert acquired the Manor of Melcombe in Dorset upon his marriage with Lucy Turberville, daughter of Sir Richard Turberville. Thomas Hardy used the Turberville name in his classic story, Tess of the D' Urbervilles, in which the character Parson Tringham is said to refer to the Reverend Charles William Bingham.
The Melcombe Binghams have armorial bearings entirely different from those of Nottingham Binghams. The Melcombe line has been traced for almost eight centuries and is still extant today. The line has given rise to the Irish Binghams and has been fairly well chronicled by Rose McCalmont in Memoirs of the Binghams. London: Spottiswoode & CO. LTD., 1915. The ancient manor house of Melcombe Bingham still stands in Dorset. although only a small portion of it remains from Tudor days.
Left: Dorset County, visionofbritain.org.uk
By the late 1550s, three de Bingham brothers of the Melcombe Bingham line served governorships in Ireland under Elizabeth I. The notorious and bloodthirsty Sir Richard, one of the extraordinary men of his time, was the third son and eldest of the three in military service. He became Governor of Connaught. Sir Richard was born in 1528 and died in Athlone, Ireland on the 19 January 1598/9 and was buried in Westminster Abby. Inscribed on a monument in the Abby are the various campaigns in which he took part. Sir Richard’s will is dated the 7 January 1598/9 and was probated in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury in 1599 (49 Kidd).
Sir George, the fourth son, was Governor of Sligo in 1593, Sir George's son Henry Bingham was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia in 1634 and the Earls of Lucan descend from him.
Sir John, the sixth son, was Governor of Castlebar, County Mayo. John’s son John was an M.P. for Castlebar 1692-95 and for Co. Mayo 1695-96 and the Barons Clanmorris descend from him.
Robert's eldest son was also Robert. Robert (Junior) married Anne, daughter and heiress of William Chaldecott of Quarleston, co. Dorset. Robert (Junior) died at Quarleston in 1587 and his death seems to have happened early in life as it occurred six years before his father and sixty-nine years (or forty-nine years) before that of his eldest son who died in 1656 (Stirnet: 1636). His widow remarried eight years later in 1595. His will was probated in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury in 1588 (11 Leicester).
The manor of Melcombe Bingham remained in this Bingham family until approximately 1900 when the owner Lt. Col. Richard Charles William Bingham (1845-1902) sold the estate.
PLEASE NOTE:
The entries for Binghams in Melcombe, County Dorset in the International Genealogical Index
should be ignored as they contain a great deal of incorrect or unsubstantiated material.
BELOW IS A PARTIAL FAMILY TREE
for more detail see Rose McCalmont’s book and Stirnet.com
THE MELCOMBE FAMILY
Robert de BINGHAM = Lucy Turberville
(abt 1246; mentioned in
Hundred Rolls 1273)
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nine generations
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Robert BINGHAM= Joan Williams Sir Richard, Kt. Sir George
d. 1593 dau. Robert of (Earls of Lucan)
Winterbourne Heringston (Barons Clanmorris)
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Robert BINGHAM = Anne John Thomas Francis Mary Joan Cicely Anne
1587 ? Chaldecott
dau. William of Quarrelston
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Richard BINGHAM, Esq. = Jane Hopton
Sheriff 1627 dau. Sir Arthur Hopton, Kt
d. 1636 or 1656 of Witham Friary
the same place. Today Melcombe Bingham is known as Melcombe Horsey
and Melcombe’s Bingham is just the manor house next to the church.
Below: Two Postcard Views of Bingham’s Melcombe Manor House
Donna Bingham Munger asserts her right to be identified as the author of this website.