POMEROY's as Sheriffs

Pomeroys as Sheriffs


The Office of High Sheriff is the oldest secular Office in the United Kingdom after the Crown and dates from Saxon times. The exact date of origin is unknown but the Office has certainly existed for over 1,000 years since the Shires were formed.

The word ‘Sheriff’ derives from ‘Shire Reeve’ or the Anglo Saxon ‘Scir-gerefa’. The King’s Reeve was also known as the ‘High’ Reeve. Some Sheriffs led contingents at the Battle of Hastings. The Normans continued the Office and added to its powers. During the 11th and 12th centuries a High Sheriff’s powers were very extensive. For example, they judged cases in the monthly court of the hundred (a sub-unit of the Shire); they had law enforcement powers and could raise the ‘hue and cry’ in pursuit of felons within their Shire; they could summon and command the ‘posse comitatus’ – the full power of the Shire in the service of the Sovereign; they collected taxes and levies and all dues on Crown lands on behalf of the Crown and were in charge of Crown property in the Shire. In short, High Sheriffs were the principal representatives and agents for the Crown and were thus very powerful within the Shire.

Of the 63 clauses in the Magna Carta of 1215, no less than 27 relate to the role of the Sheriff and from 1254 the High Sheriff supervised the election to Parliament of two Knights of the Shire.

The Sheriffs’ powers were gradually restricted over succeeding centuries. Under Henry I their tax collection powers went to the Exchequer, which also took on the function of auditing the Sheriffs’ accounts. Henry II introduced the system of Itinerant Justices from which evolved the Assizes and the present day system of High Court Judges going out on Circuit. 


The Sheriff remained responsible for issuing Writs, for having ready the Court, prisoners and juries, and then executing the sentences once they were pronounced. It was also the Sheriff’s responsibility to ensure the safety and comfort of the Judges. This is the origin of the High Sheriff’s modern day duty of care for the well-being of High Court judges.

In the middle of the 13th century, more powers went to the newly created offices of Coroners and Justices of the Peace. Under the Tudors, Lord- Lieutenants were created as personal representatives of the Sovereign.

Queen Elizabeth I is generally believed to have originated the practice that continues to this day of the Sovereign choosing the High Sheriff by pricking a name on the Sheriffs’ Roll with a bodkin. It is said that she did this whilst engaged in embroidery in the garden. Sadly, this is a myth since there is a Sheriffs’ Roll dating from the reign of her grandfather Henry VII (1485-1508) on which the names were pricked through vellum.

The real reason for pricking through vellum was that the choice was not always a welcome honour due to the costs the incumbent was likely to have to shoulder and also the challenges faced in assessing and collecting taxes, particularly unpopular taxes such as Charles I’s demands for ship money in 1635. A mark with a pen on vellum could easily be erased with a knife, but a hole in the vellum (which is made from calf skin) could not be removed or repaired invisibly.

The potential expense to the incumbent of becoming High Sheriff was one of the reasons the role was for a single year only.


High Sheriffs of Devon


1400–1499 

24 November 1400: Sir Thomas Pomeroy[8]

.......

29 November 1042: John Wyke, of Neanyde[8]

5 November 1403: Thomas Gorges[8]

22 April 1404: John Beville[8]

.......

29 November 1410: Sir Thomas Pomeroy[8]

6 November 1413: Sir Thomas Pomeroy[8]

 &

26 November 1431: Edward Pomeroy[8]


Sheriff of Devon


1374: Sir John Daumarle  

1376: Nicholas de la Pomeroy  4th of  the 5 sons of Sir Henry Pomeroy & his wife Joan Moels

1400: John Keynes

1401: Sir Thomas Pomeray   brother of Nicholas  father of William grandfather of Sir Edward Baron Pomeroy after 1426

1402: John Herle and then John Wyke of Nynehead, Somerset

1403–1404: Thomas Gorges

1405: John Cole

1404: John Bevyll

1406: John Chusilden

1406: Sir Johm Herle

1407: Edmund Pyne

1408: Sir William Cheney

1409: Sir Thomas Pomeray

1410: Sir Robert Chalons

1411: Thomas Beaumont

1412: Sir Thomas Pomeray

1414: Sir John Arundell

1415: John Beywyle

1416: Sir William Talbot

1417: Stephen Derneford

1418: Sir Hugh Courtenay of Haccombe and Bampton

1419: Thomas Beaumont

1420–1421: Sir Robert Chalons

1422: Thomas Beaumont

1423: William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville of Chewton

1424: Richard Hankeford

1425: Sir Thomas Brooke

1426: Sir Walter Palton

1427: Sir Thomas Beaumont

1428: Robert Hill

1429: James Chuddelegh

1430: John Bozon

1431: Edward Pomeray and James Chidley  (Chuddeleigh)

1432: Edmund Pyne

1474: Richard Pomeray
1492 Richard Pomeray

 



https://sites.google.com/site/pomeroytwigs2/home