The Wheler Baronetcy, of Otterden in the County of Kent, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 29 June 1925 (99 years ago) (1925-06-29) for Granville Charles Hastings Wheler, Member of Parliament for Faversham. The title became extinct on his death two years later (1927 (97 years ago) (1927).[citation needed]
Ancestry and history of the Baronetcy of the City of Westminster
In a manuscript volume in the possession of Hanbury, Esq. of Kilmash, Northamptonshire, entitled, Worcestershire Collected, by Sir William Dethick, Knt. Garter King of Arms, 1569, since enlarged by others.[2]
George Wheler, of Martin, in Worcestershire; Chester, 1585.[2]
Quarterly, first and fourth, or, a cheveron between three leopards faces of the second.
Second, argent, a bend sable, chased with three pears, or.
Third, argent, on a cheveron engrailed, sable, three buckles azure, as many martlets, or.
Old arms of Wheler; for, in the east window of the chancel of Martin Hussingtree, in Worcestershire, these arms are quarterly:[2]
Argent, on a cheveron engrailed, sable, between three buckles, azure, as many martlets, or. Wheler.[a]
Argent, on a bend, sable, three pears, or. Pirie.[a]
As the second.
As the first.
Nash, in his Collections for the history of Worcestershire, says, that William Wheler presented to the living of Martin, jure Johanne uxoris sue sororis Thome Pyrye defuncti. Be that as it may, William Wheler, with Joan, his wife, had two sons:[2]
John, who married Bridget, daughter of —— Walwyn, and died without issue.
Humphrey, the second son, and heir to his brother, married Joan, daughter of William Davies, one daughter, Bridget, who died unmarried and had three sons:[2]
George, (see below).
Edmund, later of Riding-Court, in Buckinghamshire was knighted Knt. and was Sheriff of Buckinghamshire, (1615 (13th yearJames I),[3] and married Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Richard Hanbury, of London, but left no issue.
John, left no issue.
George Wheler, of Martin Hussingtree, in Worcestershire, the eldest son of William Wheler of Crouche (see above), married Elizabeth, daughter of J. Arnold (or Hernold), of Higham, in Gloucestershire, with whom he had two sons:[4]
William, the eldest son, married Elizabeth, daughter and sole heiress of Sir Edward Puleston, of Allington, Knt. second son of Sir Edward Puleston, of Emerhall, in Flintshire, by Margaret his wife, daughter and heiress of John Aimer, of Aimer, Esq. and of Winifrid his wife, only sister of Sir Thomas Trevor, Knt. with whom he had one son: Charles (later the 2nd Baronet), and one daughter Elizabeth, the wife of Richard Binckes, vicar of Leamington Hastings, dean of Lichfield, and prolocutor of the lower house of convocation, and the strenuous assertor of the privileges of that venerable body.[5]
John, who married Martha, daughter of Robert Kerrick, of Leicester, and was father of two sons:[5]
John (born 1607),[6] who married Friselina, daughter of George Warde, of Capeston, in Cheshire; he died, before his brother received a baronetcy leaving one daughter. Friselina afterwards married Lionel Copley, of Wadesworth, in Yorkshire.[5]
William (1610),[b] the first baronet of this family (see below).
one or two daughters:[c] Mary (born 1608),[6] and Eleanor, who married Samuel Randall.[5]
After the Restoration, Charles Wheler was a favourite at court and he obtained the baronetcy, with special remainder to himself,[d] for his elder cousin Sir William Wheler, 1st Baronet,[7] and 1666 on the death of the death of Sir William, Charles Wheler succeeded to the baronetcy. However Sir William and Charles Wheler had fallen out, apparently over Charles urging Sir William to execute a settlement of his estates upon Charles, so instead of doing what Charles wanted, Sir William left the bulk of is estate to others and Charles only received an annual stipend of £120.[7]
^ abIn 1541, William Wheler, son of Gilbert Wheler, of Crouche, married Joan, daughter and heiress of —— di Pirie, of Martin Hussingtree, in Worcestershire (or he married —— Smyth, daughter and heiress of Smyth, who had married —— , heiress of —— di Pirie).[2]
^"The assertion that the 1st Baronet (is the son of parents, who did not marry till 1606) died in his 66th year (in September 1666) must be erroneous, being
probably a mistake for his 56th year".[6]
^Cokayne 1903, p. 106 notes: Apparently this was the second of such special remainders (see Cokayne 1903, p. 21, note "c.": although usual in the baronetcies in Scotland, the first English baronetcy with a special remainder was to Sir Henry Browne, 1st Baronet of Kiddington)