Our Barrington ancestors have died out (in the male line) and there seems to be no-one taking an interest in them now. I have found no more than half a dozen people who claim some descent from the Essex Barringtons, though I have read of a few more. Because their genealogy takes up so much of our ancestry, I have made considerable efforts to find out what I can.
Only in March 2000 I found the best research yet on this family: it was done by a William Clayton and edited and published after Clayton's death by G Alan Lowndes in 1878 in two successive issues of the Transactions of the Essex Archaeology Society (T.E.A.S.). I found these in Colchester Public Library after a hint from Stewart Raymond in his booklet "Essex: The Genealogist's Library Guide".
The strength of these articles is that they were compiled from the vast collection of deeds and other documents of the Barrington family, then in the possession of G Alan Lowndes. The documents certainly went back to the twelfth century, if not slightly earlier. Where the documents are now, I do not know, though Searle in his "Barrington Family Letters" gives some information on pages 21 and 22.
As an aside, I had been wondering how Clayton and Lowndes got involved in Barrington Hall (it is fortunate that they did as they were both scholarly enough to handle the old deeds). At last I realised that Burke's Landed Gentry might provide an answer and so it did. William Clayton was the father of G Alan Lowndes. G A Lowndes had inherited Barrington Hall, under a name and arms clause, from his maternal first cousin once removed, Thomas Lowndes. Burke has nothing to indicate how Thomas Lowndes himself got hold of the property, nor does Burke show any relationship to the Lowndes of Whaddon and Chesham who would indeed have inherited it when the male Barrington line expired in 1832. Perhaps the Whaddon or Chesham Lowndes sold it to Thomas Lowndes?
Related to the Barringtons are other articles in the T.E.A.S. journal and I'm in the slow process of typing these out as well:
| Status | Gedcom 4.0 | Gedcom 5.5 | HTML file | PDF file | Text File | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barrington Family Tree | OK | Click here (33k) | Click here (33k) | na | na | na |
| Barrington History | OK | Click here (188k) | Click here (350k) | |||
| Thomasine Barrington | OK | Click here (12k) | Click here (38k) | |||
| Bourchier History | OK | Click here (12k) | Click here (34k) | |||
| Bourchier Tree | OK | Click here (24k) | Click here (10k) | Click here (7k) | ||
| Barrington Inventory | Not yet available | |||||
| Hatfield Broad Oak village | Not yet available | |||||
| Hatfield Memorials | Not yet available | |||||
| Hatfield Church & Priory | Not yet available |
The sources I have found for the Essex Barringtons are:
I have made the following changes to my files after studying Clayton:
Later note: Earlier in 2002 I got a researcher in the Isle of Wight to dig out the parish records for the last Barrington family there. They found that this has consisted of one boy and six girls, with the boy and one of the girls dying in childhood, leaving the five girls listed in Burke. Clayton or Lowndes had it very wrong.
Later note: CP is clear that Catherine Marney was the daughter of Henry, Lord Marney. See my main database of people.
Later note: CP does not tie this one up as they do not include daughters. See the discussion on Alice in my main database of people.