Charles Dallison
Sir Charles Dallison (fl. 1648) was a gentleman from Lincolnshire who served as an officer in the Royalist army during the English Civil War. He was also a serjeant-at-law,[1] and in 1648 he published an often cited pamphlet justifying his reasons for supporting the Royalist cause.
Biography
Charles Dallison was the third son of Sir Thomas Dallison (d. 1626) of Greetwell, Lincolnshire, and Anne, daughter of Humfrey Littlebury, of Stainsby, in the same county.[2][3][4] He was admitted to Grays Inn in February 1620. He returned to Lincolnshire where by 1637 was the city of Lincoln's counsel, and became recorder of Lincoln in 1637.[5]
In June 1642 it appeared that Lincolnshire would support the Parliamentary cause when at the instigation of Francis, Lord Willoughby they agreed to implement the Militia Ordinance. In July Charles I visited Lincoln in the hope of persuading the local gentry to support his cause, when he arrived at Lincoln on 14 July 1642, Dallison made the speech of loyalty on behalf of the city and was knighted by Charles.[6] Sir Charles, was appointed by the King to the Commission of Array for Lincolnshire (to organise the recruitment for the nascent Royalist army). Towards the end of the year, when the battle lines were drawn he was commissioned into the Royalist army as a colonel of a regiment horse (cavalry).[2][7] In retaliation for his active support for the royalist cause, Parliament to impeach him on 14 September 1642 and in December he was deprived of his Receivership.[5]
On 9 March 1643 Sir Charles attacked parliamentary forces on Coddington Heath.[8] On the 1 June while Parliamentary cavalry was absent from Lincolnshire supporting the siege of Nottingham, Royalist cavalry and dragoons sallied out from Gainsborough under the joint command of Sir John Brook, Sir Charles, and Captain Whichcote and attacked Market Rasen on 1 June 1643. On the following day they entered and occupied Louth. The next day, 3 June, they were driven out by a relief force from the Parliamentary garrison at Lincoln. About 100 Royalists were taken prisoner when the Parliamentarians retook Louth.[9]
On 6 May 1644 Sir Charles was taken prisoner by the Eastern Association when they assaulted captured Lincoln,[10] but after a short imprisonment was exchanged and at the end of the First Civil War was governor of Newark. He went to France in 1646 and was absent for the Second Civil War.[2]
Sir Charles is notable as one of only seven Royalist delinquents exempted from the Parliamentary pardon passed by the commons on the 21 October 1648,[11] and by the Lords on 24 October: Francis, Lord Cottington, George, Lord Digby, Sir Robert Heath, Sir Francis Doddington, Sir George Radcliffe and Sir Richard Grenville.[12] However on 11 November the House of Lords overturned their exemption on three of the men Lord Cottington, Sir Robert Heath and Sir Charles Dallison.[13] He returned to England after the war and was find £465, which was reduced to £351 in 1651.[2]
During the interregnum Dallison was thought by the authorities to be in favour of a Roman Catholic alliance to restore Charles II to the throne, however P. R. Newman states although "he came from a partially recusant background, he writings imply impatience with religion in whatever form".[14]
On 20 December 1661 The Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer approve the grant of certain lands in Lincolnshire to Sir Charles Dallison:
[The] Case of Sir Chas. Dallison justly stated: being a grandson of Judge Dallison, of the King's Bench, a younger brother and lawyer, he sacrificed the benefit of his profession for 18 years, spent much money, and became surety in large sums for the late King, for whom he raised forces in the wars; he was often imprisoned; was one of the 39 excepted from pardon; lost £1,000 in money, and £400 a year land, and compounded for his estate at half its value.[15]
Bibliography
In 1648, while exiled in France, Sir Charles Dallison published The Royalist defence; Vindicating the King's Proceedings in the late Warre made against him. P. R. Newman considers this to be "The most expansive and cogently argued of all Royalist self-vindications".[2] In it he explains that he initially took up arms because of the Militia Ordinance which he considered an illegal act because the king did not give his royal assent to it. In the opinion of Dallison no new law can be passed without the assent of the king, so those who marched under the authority of the Militia Ordinance were committing high treason, and it was the duty of all loyal subjects to defend the king against those who break the law and commit high treason.[16]
Family
Most of Sir Charles's close family supported the Royalist cause. His uncle William Dallison and his son Robert Dallison fought for King Charles. In 1644 Robert was granted a baronetcy (see Dallison baronets), and along with his father were found by Parliament to be Royalist delinquents they their estates sequestrated and compounded for the sum of £1,300.[16] This did not deter Sir Robert who in 1658 was known to be actively sympathetic to the Royalist cause.[16] Thomas Dallison another Lincolnshire man from another branch of the family, was a Roylist colonel of horse who was slain at the Battle of Naseby in 1645.[16] [17]
Sir Charles had a number of children, and was probably a Roman Catholic,[18] as one son became a Roman Catholic priest and two daughters became nuns.(Viola da Gamba Society (Great Britain) 1992, p. 18) He also had a number of other children including:
- Charles, who inherited property from him.[19]
- Robert.[20]
- Anne who married Sir William Thorold (d. 1666) of Hough.[21]
Notes
- ↑ Viola da Gamba Society (Great Britain) 1992, p. 18.
- 1 2 3 4 5 NewMan 1993, p. 38.
- ↑ Anderson 1880, p. 182.
- ↑ "He was third son of Sir Thomas Dallison, of Greetwell, co. Lincoln, Knt. by Anne, dau. of Humfrey Littlebury, of Stainsby, in the same county" (Society of Antiquaries of London 1880, p. 51) .
- 1 2 Smith 2002, p. 238.
- ↑ Urquhart 1987, p. 20.
- ↑ "House of Commons Journal Volume 2: 18 October 1642". Journal of the House of Commons volume 2: 1640-1643. www.british-history.ac.uk. 1802. pp. 812–813.
- ↑ Coddington History Group (6 June 2010). "Heritage Trail - Word". issuu.
- ↑ Beckwith 1969, p. 9.
- ↑ Hill 1955, p. 157.
- ↑ Plant, David. "Time line 1648". The British Civil Wars & Commonwealth website. Retrieved 18 March 2011. cites House of Lords Journal www.british-history.ac.uk
- ↑ "House of Lords Journal Volume 10: 24 October 1648". Journal of the House of Lords: volume 10: 1648-1649 (1767-1830). www.british-history.ac.uk. pp. 559–563.
- ↑ "House of Lords Journal Volume 10: 11 November 1648". Journal of the House of Lords: volume 10: 1648-1649 (1767-1830). british-history.ac.uk. pp. 585–586.
- ↑ NewMan 1993, pp. 38,39.
- ↑ Blackburne 1861, p. 185.
- 1 2 3 4 NewMan 1993, p. 39.
- ↑
17. (a) Sir Tho. Dallison, a Lancashire Gentleman, of great service in Prince Ruperts Brigade, whose Loyalty cost him his life at Nazeby, and £12000 in his Estate, being one of those noble persons, whose too much courage (as Buchanan' saith in all defeats of the Scots) was the reason they were conquered; and their pursuing their Enemies too far, the cause of their being beaten by them.
(a) There were in the Kings Army 3 Collonels more of the name, viz. Sir Charles Dallison, Sir Robert Dallison, and Sir William Dallison, who spent £130000 therein: men of great command in their Country, bringing the strength thereof to the reasonable assistance of his Majesty.(Lloyd 1668, p. 667)
- ↑ Magee 1938, p. 155.
- ↑ "Turnor". Lincolnshire Archive. The National Archives. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
- ↑ Howard 1892, p. 277.
- ↑ Burk & Burk 1838, p. 524.
References
- Anderson, Sir Charles Henry J. (1880). The Lincoln pocket guide. Edward Stanford.
- Beckwith, Ian Stanley (1969). Gainsbourough during the great civil war ... of Making of modern Gainsborough. 5. Gainsborough Urban District Council. p. 9.
- Daniell, F. H. Blackburne (1861). Green, Mary Anne Everett, ed. Calendar of state papers / Domestic series / Reign of Charles II.: preserved in the State Paper Department of Her Majesty's Public Record Office. 1661 - 1662. 2. Longman, Green, Longman, & Roberts. p. 185.
- Burke, John; Burke, Sir John Bernard (1838). A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England. Scott, Webster, and Geary. p. 524.
- Hill, J.W.F. (1955). Tudor & Stuart Lincoln. CUP Archive. p. 157. ISBN 1-00-140586-2.
- Howard, Joseph Jackson, ed. (1892). Miscellanea genealogica et heraldica. Hamilton, Adams, and Co. p. 277.
- Lloyd, David (1668). Memoires of the Lives, Actions, Sufferings and Deaths of those Personages, that suffered by Death, Sequestration, Decimation: or otherwise for the Protestant Religion and the great Principle thereof, Allegiance to their Soveraigne, in our late intestine Wars from the Year 1637 to 1660 : With the Life and Martyrdom of King Charles I. Samuel Speed. p. 667.
- Magee, Brian (1938). The English recusants: a study of the post-reformation Catholic survival and the operation of the recusancy laws. p. 155.
- Newman, P. R. (1993). The old service: Royalist regimental colonels and the Civil War, 1642-46. Manchester University Press ND. pp. 38,39. ISBN 978-0-7190-3752-8.
- Smith, David L. (2002). Constitutional Royalism and the Search for Settlement, C.1640-1649 (reprint, illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 238. ISBN 978-0-521-89339-8.
- Society of Antiquaries of London (1880). Archaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity. The Society of Archaeologia. 46 (1): 51. Missing or empty
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ignored (help) - Viola da Gamba Society (Great Britain) (1992). Chelys. 21. Viola da Gamba Society. p. 18.