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The proportions of the hundred charge allotted to the individual parishes are not the same as those of 1677.
* Actual charges in brackets.
2. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on John Holland gent. (8).
3. Included Hennor and Stratford.
4. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on Edmund Gittoes (13).
5. In 1645 his estates were valued at£ 1,000 a year(Harl.911);a more reliable estimate in 1646 put his Herefordshire estate at £303 a year; Loan 29/15, pf. 2. JP q 1660. DL 1660 (listed): S.P. 29/11, fo. 162.
6. Rector, 1662-7; FP 1661 (£6).
7. HT 1664 (4).
8. JP 1660; DL 1660 et seq. In the niid-1660s he was a major in command of a company of the county militia; Loan 29/49, pf. 4, no. 69/15. MP for Leominster 1661. HT 1664 (7). His income was estimated to be £200 a year in ? circa 1677: Loan 29/182, fo. 313.
9. Will proved 1670 (PCC).
10. Vicar, FP 1661 (40s paid).
11. The largest HT charge in Moreton in 1664 was on John Walter (8).
12. The largest HT charge in Luston in 1664 was on Peter Young (8).
13. Of Kinlet, a Master in Chancery, knighted 12 May 1661: Shaw, p. 234.
14. Probably included Brockmanton and Westwood.
15. JP q 1660. In 1646 his real estate in the county was valued at £72 a year; Loan 29/15, pf. 2. HT 1664 (13). Will proved 1670 (PCC).
16. Of Bilfield; will proved 1668 (Hereford).
17. Yeoman, will proved 1669 (Hereford).
18. Yeoman, will proved 1710 (Hereford); he owned the St Mary House in Staunton on Arrow.
19. Included Hampton Wafer.
20. HT 1664 (6).
21. Sampson Wise of Clerkenwell, Middlesex; will proved 30 Oct. 1663 (PCC); in it he resigned his interests in the estates of his father-in-law, Fitzwilliam Coningsby, and of Humphrey Coningsby to them respectively; he also left a legacy to his servant for his years of service at Hampton Court.
22. Of Winsley; alleged to have suffered plunder during the Interregnum; Add. 36452, fo. 190. FP 1661 (£3).
23. Fitzwilliam Coningsby and his sons compounded at ⅓ of their estates, valued in all at £4,243; these probably included property outside the county as his Hereford shire estates were put at £950 in 1650; CCC, iii, p. 2064Google Scholar. In 1645 his income was by repute £4,000 a year; Harl. 911. Another, more exact, valuation put his real estate in the county at £558 a year and his personal estate at £270 in 1646; Loan 29/15, pf. 2. According to Robinson (p. 146), he had been reduced to absolute want in the Civil War and its aftermath. In his will, proved in 1666 (PCC) he left lands in Bodenham and in Worcestershire, Leicestershire, Salop and Radnorshire. JP q 1660; DL 1660. In 1664 he was charged on 35 hearths in Hampton; probably his estate at Hampton Court is represented here by the charge on Sampson Wise.
24. In the MS this comment is an annotation in the margin opposite the names Rogers to Farrington.
25. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on John Carter (7).
26. Included Risbury and Prittleton.
27. Chief constable of Wolphey, 1663; Loan 29/49, pf. 4, no. 69/15.
28. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on Henry Browne (4).
29. HT 1664 (10).
30. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on Sibili Goode (6). The churchwardens of this parish who appear in this schedule were: 1662, Williarn Bilwyn and Thomas Vernall; 1663, William Coleman, Humphrey Wall and Richard Browne; 1664, Walter Wancklen, Humphrey Smith and William Yeomans; 1665, John Bach; 1665/6, Alexander Jauncey; 1667, William Gittoes; 1668, Edmund Powell; 1669, John Wancklen; 1670, John Carpenter; 1671, John Coleman and Thomas Jay; 1673, William Yeomans and Ethelbert Jay.
31. Often taxed with While, although the implication here is that they were separate; Susana Clarke was charged to hearth tax in 1664 in While, but John Pateshall of Pudleston, also charged to hearth tax in While, does not appear in this schedule.
32. Of Brockmanton; his real estate in the county in 1646 was put at £58 a year and personal estate at £25; Loan 29/15, pf. 2. JP 1660.
33. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on John Cornewall (5).
34. The 1678 assessment (E. 179/237/46) for which the half year's charge under the ‘half quota was £24 16s 11d, the same as the 1677 charge, suggests that the town's proportionate quota within the hundred was unchanged after 1664. In 1678 the charge respectively laid on the wards was very different from that in this schedule, High Street ward being much higher and Cross and Pinsley much lower in 1678. In the latter year the number of individuals charged was, at 302, almost double the number in 1663, 78 of them being charged 6½d or less, the equivalent of a £1 valuation.
35. HT 1664 (14).
36. Gent.; month's tax collector for Stretford, 1664; Loan 29/49, pf. 4, no. 69/16.
37. Bailiff 1663, town clerk 1660–88; Townsend, G. F., The Town and Borough of Leominster (Leominster, circa 1861), pp. 293, 295.Google Scholar
38. Collector of the month's tax for Wolphey, Wigmore and Stretford.
39. Month's tax collector for Wigmore, 1664.
40. HT 1664 (13).
41. See Dilwyn (p. 108) for constituent townships.
42. HT 1664 (13).
43. In 1659 the manor had belonged to Mr Dansey and Mr Archer; Harl. 6726.
44. HT 1664 (5).
45. HT 1664 (5).
46. HT 1664 (5).
47. John Comby, FP 1661 (clerical) (5s).
48. Lucton manor belonged to the Wigmores; Harl. 6726. In 1646 Wigmore's real estate in the county was put at £62 a year and his personal estate at £15; Loan 29/15, pf. 2. HT 1664 (12).
49. Of Stoke, Suffolk; created baronet 22 June 1660; died 1705; Baronetage, iii, p. 51.Google Scholar
50. JP q 1660. He owned the manor: Harl. 6726. FP 1661 (£50); HT 1664 (17). His income was put at £1,000 a year in ? circa 1677; Loan 29/182, fo. 313.
51. Major in command of a militia company in the mid-1660s; Loan 29/49, pf. 4, no. 69/15.
52. Buried 8 Mar. 1664.
53. HT 1664(5).
54. Buried 14 Mar. 1667.
55. Buried 21 Sept. 1666.
56. Buried 7 Aug. 1669.
57. HT 1664 (7).
58. Died 27 Nov. 1663; Robinson, , p. 223Google Scholar. Will proved 18 Aug. 1664 (PCC). He had a 99-year lease, from 1640, of lands in Orleton, Yarpole, Bircher and Eye, and also held land in Warwickshire. In 1660 he rented from the Exchequer his lands in Orleton and Eye for £19; PRO, Various Accounts, E.101/630/30. In the HT 1664 his widow was charged for 7 hearths.
59. The Salways owned the manor; Harl. 6726. FP 1661 (£20 paid); HT 1664 (10).
60. Chief constable of Wolphey, 1663: Loan 29/49, pf. 4, no. 69/15.
61. HT 1664 (4).
62. The manor belonged circa 1659 to Sir Gilbert Cornewall and Mr Morris; Harl. 6726.
63. In 1646 her real estate was valued at £102 and her personal estate at £130: Loan 29/15, pf. 2. In 1660 ⅔ of her estate in Sarnsfield and Almeley was valued at £135; PRO, Various Accounts, E.101/630/30. HT 1664 (11).
64. The largest HT charge in 1664 was on John Ballard (3).
65. The duke of Buckingham's estates in Ivington and Stagbach were let in 1648 to John Wanklen, ironmonger, of Leominster, at a rent of £32 a year; Add. 19678.
66. HT 1664 (3).
67. Gent., HT 1664 (3).
68. HT 1664 (3).
69. Normally included Risbury.
70. The largest HT charges in 1664 in Stoke Prior were on John Higgason and Richard Pennell (8 each).
71. HT 1664 (6); gent.
72. Sheriff 1654; JP 1655; JP q 1660. HT 1664 (9).
73. JP q 1660; DL 1660; MP for the county 1661. His income was put at £400 a year in? circa 1677; Loan 29/182, fo. 313.
74. HT 1664 (12).
75. Rector of Croft and treasurer of Hereford cathedral; will proved 1669 (PCC).
76. HT 1664 (12).
77. The symbol Wp28 has been allocated to While rather than Wp27 in order that the symbols shall parallel the original numbering of the schedules in the MS. It will be noted that the latter has at this point become a little disordered.
78. Included Bircher.
79. HT 1664 (4).
80. HT 1664 (4).
81. Curate of Yarpole, FP 1661 (2s 6d paid).
82. The chief property owner appears to have been Bishop Croft on whom the entire HT 1664 charge (18) fell.