Geoffrey Boleyn


Sir Geoffrey Boleyn was an English merchant and politician who served as Lord Mayor of London from 1457 to 1458. He purchased the manor of Blickling Hall, near Aylsham, in Norfolk from Sir John Fastolf in 1452, and Hever Castle in Kent in 1462. He was the great-grandfather of Queen Anne Boleyn, the mother of Queen Elizabeth I. Sir Geoffrey built the domestic, mercantile and civic fortunes of the Boleyn family, and raised its status from the provincial gentry, as his brother Thomas Boleyn made a career of distinction in church and university, together building the family's wealth, influence and reputation.

Family

Geoffrey Boleyn's father was an elder Geoffrey Boleyn, yeoman of Salle in Norfolk, son of Thomas Boleyn of Salle and his wife Agnes. His mother Alice, née Bracton, whose arms he quartered with those of Boleyn, was daughter and heiress of Sir John Bracton of Norfolk. Geoffrey and Alice Boleyn of Salle are commemorated by a monumental brass in Salle Church, which shows the two figures frontally, standing, set side by side, with a memorial inscription beneath and a scroll flying between them with a Latin prayer, "God be merciful to us sinners". Around 1730, Thomas Martin of Palgrave saw two subsidiary brass groups in the slab showing their five sons and their four daughters: these have long been missing.
Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, the son of Geoffrey and Alice, therefore had four brothers and four sisters, some of whom may not have reached majority. The following, at least some of whom were buried elsewhere, are known from other sources:

Career

Boleyn went to the City of London where he was apprenticed as a hatter and gained the freedom of the City through the Company of Hatters in 1428. However, he devoted his efforts to the art of Mercery rather than that of the Hatter, and transferred to the senior livery company: in 1435/36, he appeared before the Court of Aldermen and prayed to be admitted as a Mercer, a petition which was granted. Having served as a Sheriff of London in 1446–47, as a Member of Parliament for the City of London in February 1449, and as an alderman from 1452, the year of Feilding's mayoralty, he became Master of the Mercers' Company for the year 1454.
In the meantime, he purchased the manor of Blickling in Norfolk from Sir John Fastolf in 1452, over which there followed a Chancery suit concerning the terms of sale. This was before the present mansion built by Hobart arose: John Leland noted, "Syr Geffrey buildid a fair house of brike at... in Northfolke."
Transferring to the Bassishaw Ward, he became Lord Mayor of London in 1457–58 and was knighted by King Henry VI. During a gathering in the City of the leaders of the Yorkist and Lancastrian factions at a Great Council in November 1457, Sir Geoffrey Boleyn raised a strong force of citizens to ensure that there was no breach of the peace. In the first year of Edward IV the manor of Abbotsley, Huntingdon, was confirmed to him by patent, and in 1461 he and "Geffray Feldyng" headed the list of contributors towards a prest of 500 marks granted to the king by the fellowship of the Mercers for the Earl of Warwick to go into the North.
In 1462, Geoffrey Boleyn purchased the Kentish manors of Hever Cobham and Hever Brocas from Sir Thomas Cobham, as the final step in his path of social aggrandisement, shortly before his death: the work of starting to open the castle up is perhaps attributable to his son Sir William Boleyn. Of Blickling, Blomefield remarks, "He built the chapel of St Thomas, at the east end of the north aisle of Blickling church, and adorned the windows with beautiful painted glass, and there still remain his own arms impaling his wife's in a window there, and this inscription: That was in Blomefield's time, but the church was almost entirely rebuilt in the 19th century.

Death & burial

Geoffrey died on June 17, 1463 in his home on Milk Street, City of London. He was buried in the Church of St Lawrence Jewry in the City of London: his will was proved in July 1463. He left £100 to make a new rood-loft for St Lawrence church, and 1000 marks to each of his three unmarried daughters. By his inquisition post mortem, held in that year, it was shown that in Kent he held the manors of Kemsing, Seal, Hever Cobham and Hever Brocays, and Chiddyngton; in Sussex, Pashley Manor in Ticehurst ; in London, various properties in the area of St Mary Aldermary church, Wood Street, Milk Street and Westcheap; and in Norfolk, Blickling, Mulbarton, Horsford, Holkham, Stiffkey, Filby, Postwick, Carbrooke and West Lexham. Of these his widow Anna Boleyn was holding only Mulbarton manor and advowson in her own right, at her death and inquisition in 2 Richard III.
The church of St Lawrence Jewry was destroyed in the Great Fire of London, but the memorial inscription was recorded by John Weever:

Marriage and issue

Geoffrey Boleyn married twice. His first wife, mentioned in his will, was named Dionisia. His second wife was Anne Hoo, the only child and heiress of Thomas Hoo, Baron Hoo and Hastings, a Knight of the Garter, by his first wife Elizabeth Wychingham, a daughter of Sir Nicholas Wychingham.. By Anne Hoo he had issue two sons and three daughters, as given by most sources :

Minor relatives

  • Simon Boleyn, parochial chaplain of Salle, Norfolk died 3 August 1482.
  • James Boleyn of Gunthorpe, Norfolk, died 1493.
  • Thomas Boleyn of Gunthorpe, Norfolk.
  • Joan, named in her brother Simon's will. She married Alan Roos of Salle : he was receiver of rents for the Salle properties of Margaret Paston. Alan was son of Thomas Roos, a prosperous merchant who built the north transept chapel and who, like the Boleyns of Salle, was a member of the Guild of the Holy Trinity of Coventry. She married Robert Aldrych, who died in 1474.
Historian Elizabeth Norton describes the Geoffrey Boleyn who died in 1440 as their great-uncle.

Arms

The original arms of the Boleyn family are blazoned Argent, a chevron gules between three bull's heads afrontée sable. Sir Geoffrey Boleyn quartered the arms of Bracton