Westminster Gazette: Friday 13th March 1908

… Privately business has been a little better, but not much. The Wergs Hall estate of 700 acres, near Wolverhampton, which failed to change hands last autumn, has now been sold to Sir Alfred Hickman, Bart., by Messrs. Barnett and Son, and the old house, Burton Pynsent, near Landport, Somerset, with 250 acres, has been placed by Messrs. Nicholas Denver and Co. Once Lord Chatham lived on and owned this latter estate. In a corner of its grounds still stands a monument erected by him and commemorating a former owner, Sir William Pynsent, from whom he derived the property. …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

DRO0076 Combe

Devizes and Wilts Advertiser: Thursday 25th April 1907

The Annals of Devizes: … … 1689: (William III) – Walter Grubbe, Tory, and Sir Wm. Pynsent, Whig, elec. Members. [Members of Parliament]


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

DRO0076 Combe

Yorkshire Factory Times: Friday 21st April 1905

In 1765 Sir William Pynsent died, leaving his estate at Burton Pynsent, in Somerset and nearly £3,000 a year to Chatham, who he had never met. This was after Chatham’s fall from power. A cousin of Pynsent disputing the will, was unsuccessful. …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

DRO0076 Combe

Evening Despatch: Saturday 16th August 1902

Mr. Balfour’s Fortune: If Mr. Balfour shares with Mr. Pitt the peculiarity as a Prime Minister of celibacy, he certainly had not remained a bachelor for the reason with it is believe weighed strongly with his great predecessor – inadequate means. … continued discussion … Pitt’s private fortune was but a few thousand pounds, and his eldest brother was obliged at his mother’s death to part with Burton Pynsent, the estate which Lord Chatham owned to the freak of an eccentric baronet, and which, except his pension, was about all he had. … continues …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


DRO0076 Combe

Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser: Wednesday 2nd May 1900

Correspondents’ Replies to Queries: 677: Burton Pynsent Monument is situated on a  hill three miles west of Langport, and 11 east of Taunton, on the turnpike road between these places and in the  in the parish of Curry Rivel. In Morris’s Directory and Gazetteer of Somerset, 1872, appears the “Burton Pynsent is a hamlet and tything of Curry Rivel, which was given to the first Earl of Chatham when Prime Minister, by Sir William Pynsent to whose memory the Earl erected a column here.” Only a portion of the original house remains, but its situation commands extensive and magnificent views of the surrounding country.

The column is well worth a visit; it is about 120 feet high, and from the top it is said three different counties may be seen. — AGRICOLA. 677. — Burton Pynsent Monument is between two and three miles from Langport, on the Taunton Road, in the parish of Curry Rivel. It is a stone column 140 feet high, and was erected by William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, to the memory of Sir William Pynsent. For many years the property belonged to the Jennings family, and passed to Sir W. Pynsent on his marriage with Mary, daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Jennings, Esq. She died without children, and on the death of her husband in 1754, he left the estate to Pitt, to whom he was an entire stranger, “in veneration of a great character of exemplary virtue and unrivalled ability,” and also, it is said, on account of Pitt’s opposition to the cider tax.

When Earl of Chatham, Pitt occasionally resided at the large mansion on the property, of which but little now remains. Countess of Chatham made it her permanent home after the death of her husband, and died there in 1803. Subsequently, the estate passed into the Pinney family, who are still the owners. Permission to visit the monument can be obtained on application. It occupies a grand position overlooking Sedgmoor, and the views are exceedingly fine.

A visit to the spot on a fine day is not likely soon to be forgotten, especially by one who knows something of the history of the district over which the eye can roam from the vicinity of the monument: — Sedgmoor, the scene of the last battle fought on English soil; Athelney, and its famous neighbourhood, so closely associated with the name and fame of glorious King Alfred; Glastonbury, the site of the first English church, and one of the most renowned of British Abbeys etc. … LANGPORTIAN


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

DRO0076 Combe
DRO0077 Combe

Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser: Wednesday 21st February 1900

Taunton M.P.’s: In Savage’s “History of (missing)” the first mention made of members of Parliament elected for the borough Taunton is after the Restoration, when Thomas Goyes and William Wyndham were returned, and owed their seats to the management and cause of the Crown. In the General Election of 1714, the dissolution of Parliament after the death of Queen Anne, resulted in the election of Sir Francis Warre, Bart., and Henry Portman Esq. These gentlemen were afterwards unseated, and William Pynsent, Esq., and James Smith, Esq., were elected in their place. The General Election 1722 resulted in the return of Mr. Trenchard and Mr. Smith. In 1774, the next date mentioned, Nathaniel Webb and Edward Stratford were returned as members for the borough. The Somerset County Herald Almanac for this year gives a complete list of Taunton Election Polls and their results from 1784 to the present time.


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive


Referenced

DRO0076 Combe