DOB:
1527
DOD:
13th
February 1608
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Known
for: Rich
gentlewoman from the Tudor era, who fought hard to earn her own money, she
married 4 husbands and had her name smeared in Parliament
|
|
Bess
of Hardwick was a noble lady in the Tudor era who went from being a farmer’s
daughter to being grandmother to a potential Queen. She married 4 times and
built 4 homes, at least two of which still stand and are great examples of
architecture from the time. Bess became the second richest and powerful woman
of the Elizabethan era, behind only Queen Elizabeth herself. Bess lead a life
that would make some envious and others happy it wasn’t theirs.
Bess
was born Elizabeth Hardwick in roughly 1527, the exact date is not known. She was
the one of five children to John Hardwick a moderately prosperous landowner
from a low level gentry family from Derbyshire. Sadly John passed away while
Bess was still small but as Bess’ only brother was also still young majority of
the lands were taken by the crown to administer until her brother came of age. This
meant the Bess grew up with little money and witnessed her own mother do one of
the only things widows could do to secure their own and their children’s
future, she remarried, an important lesson that she used in her own life.
Initially
when still a young girl, Bess worked as a maid for the former maid of honour of
Anne Boleyn, it is believed that here is where she got her Protestant
inclinations that showed later in life despite her family being Catholic. This
would be mirrored later when Bess became a lady-in-waiting for Anne’s daughter,
the future Queen Elizabeth I.
Bess’
first marriage was before she was 16 years old and the details are few and far
between, the groom’s surname isn’t even clear. We know he was the son of a near
by farmer and was called Robert B. It is believed they married just before the
death of Robert’s father and due to him being only 13 at the time of the
marriage, they did not live together as husband and wife. Less than a year
later Robert died leaving Bess a widow before she was an adult. The fact that
they didn’t live together meant that Bess had to fight for the widow’s
inheritance which is about 1/3 of his estate. Bess fought for 8 years to get
what was rightfully hers.
Widowed
Bess used previous contacts to gain a position in the household of Lady Francis
Grey (Henry VIII’s Niece) who was the mother of the first Queen of England,
Lady Jane Grey. She famously was only on the throne for nine days before Mary I
came to power. Bess and Francis’ relationship were very close, which resulted
in Bess being brought into the highest Tudor social circles.
While
attending court Bess met Sir William Cavendish who was a highly regarded
protégé of Thomas Cromwell, famous for being Henry VIII right hand man who
assisted with England’s break from the Catholic Church. William had gained most
of his wealth through the land seized from the Catholic Church. Unlike Bess’
first husband William was twice as old than her, he had been married twice
before and even had 2 daughters that had survived to see their father marry
Bess. Despite this, it is believed that William and Bess were as much of a love
marriage as could be expected at the time. While Bess and William were married they
worked together to expand their political influence, they also had eight
children, two of whom died young. Bess’ last two daughters are believed to be
twins as they were recorded as being born in the same year, sadly one did die
however to carry twins to a point that one could survive would have added a lot
more risk to an already risking event at that time. Bess and William also knew
how to walk the political tightrope that was Tutor Court as two of her children
had Mary I and Elizabeth I as Godmothers despite the animosity between the two
sister Queens. It is believed that Bess had strong influence over William as
before marriage his lands focused in the southern England, but he sold a lot of
this off and brought the Chatsworth estate in Bess’ home county.
Unfortunately,
when William died after 10 years of marriage William had left Bess is extreme
debt to the crown. Though Bess’ shrewdness became apparent after William’s
death. All the properties that William brought during marriage had Bess’ name
attached too which meant that the crown could not claim William’s estates after
his death until their son became of age, allowing her to keep the money earned
by the estates, Bess clearly learnt this during her own childhood. When Queen
Elizabeth I came to the throne, she asked Bess to be her Lady of the
Bedchamber, the highest position in court a female could hold.
While
at court Bess met William St Loe, a man who oversaw Elizabeth’s security.
William had been married before and had two daughters. Bess’ friendship with
the Queen resulted in Elizabeth reducing Bess’s debt and St Loe payed it off
for her. Being the Queen’s professional best friend meant that Bess would have
seen several scandals, one that history has mixed her up with involves the Queen’s
cousin Katherine Grey (Frances Grey’s daughter) becoming pregnant and secretly
eloping. This particularly upset the Queen as Katherine and her new husband
each had a claim to the throne so any child of theirs would be a threat. It is
believed that Katherine turned to Bess, an old friend of her mothers. Katherine
was arrested and thrown into the Tower of London. Some historians suggest that
Bess joined Katherine but there are no clear records confirming this and if the
Queen’s close lady was arrested the gossip would have resulted in many records,
Bess also stayed Lady of the Bedchamber after this scandal. After 5 years, St
Loe died while staying with his brother. This brother had been nervous about
this marriage believing that there could be son and then he would loss his
inheritance. Speculation suggests that St Loe’s death and an illness that Bess
had suffered earlier in their marriage could be due to poisoning by his brother.
The last laugh was Bess’s because even though they did not produce children, St
Loe gave Bess everything in his will about £60,000 per year (£18,000,000 in
modern money). Bess was widowed again, still in her 30s and now extremely rich both
in money and lands, she was in a very good position to provide for her 8
children and 4 step daughters.
Bess
waited for a few years to move onto her fourth husband and she spent that time
planning for her finance security and independence as well as thinking about
her children. Bess eventually married George Talbot, 6th Earl of
Shrewsbury, the head of a major aristocratic family of the time. George had 7
children and Bess married two of them to her own children cementing the union.
Bess’ oldest son Henry (aged 18) was married to George’s youngest daughter
Grace (aged 8). Bess’ youngest daughter Mary (aged 12) was married to George’s
eldest surviving son, Gilbert (aged 16). It is believed that like Bess’ own
first marriage they did not live as husband and wife for a few years. This
meant that George’s fortune would be past to Bess’ descendants. In the Tudor
era, a woman who remarried would forfeit her lands and income to her husband,
but Bess learned from her marriage with Cavendish. Before marriage Bess had
convinced George to allow her to keep her estates including Chatsworth (that
Bess and St Loe had built up to be very profitable) and that those lands and
the titles connected to her previous husbands would be passed down to her
children and not absorbed into George’s titles. Bess and George appeared to
have been in love with letters suggesting that George called Bess “None” and
contraction for “my own” that was popular at the time.
The Shrewsbury’s
were brought into one of the biggest event of Queen Elizabeth I, when the Queen
asked them to hold Mary, Queen of Scots under house arrest. This was because all
the estates owned by the Shrewsbury’s were halfway between London and Scotland
and not accessible by sea, so were places that were considered safe and secure
from any escape attempts. This was not an easy task because while Mary had
abdicated her Scottish throne she was still the heir to the English throne and as
such expected to be treated well. At the smallest her staff was 16 and at it’s
biggest it was about 100 people and 30+ cases of items. There was also the
emotional toil as they did not want Elizabeth to think they were treating Mary
too well as they may get accused of being involved in the various plots to put
Mary on the throne while not wanting Mary to feel like she is being treated badly
just encase Mary did eventually become Queen. Bess and Mary got on well to
start with, proven by the number of tapestries that survive that were signed by
Bess and Mary. But neither George nor Bess expected Mary to stay with them for the
15 years that she was with them, she only spent 19 years imprisoned in total.
Unfortunately,
the strain of the royal guest showed on the marriage, it is believed that Mary spread
rumours herself, hoping to discredit the couple to be moved to a household that
would provide more freedom. Mary would play George and Bess against each other
including suggest Bess was stealing from George and may have even hinted that
George was cheating on Bess. The hope appeared to work as after a failed escape
plan she was moved to the control of Sir Ralph Sadler who turned out to be to
light with security so moved in to the care of Amias Paulet who would
eventually sit on the council that ordered Mary’s execution. The rumour of Mary
and George continued possibly emboldened by Bess who was trying to discredit George
by this point.
Bess
tried to use this royal connection to conspire a marriage between her daughter
Elizabeth and Mary’s brother-in-law Lord Charles Stuart. Charles was the Uncle
of King James VI of Scotland and as such had a claim to both the English and
Scottish throne, this arrangement angered the Queen but she did let it continue
however George could never forgive Bess for going around him to get her
daughter such an advantageous marriage. Sadly Charles would die only a couple
years into the marriage having only produced one daughter, Lady Arabella
Stuart. Arabella now sat as a possible heir to the childless Queen much to
Bess’ pleasure.
This,
the strains of Mary, Queen of Scots and the fact that Bess liked to spend money
on renovating Chatsworth house put too much strain on the Shrewsbury marriage
and it became a national scandal, complete with a parliament decree accusing
Bess of stealing lands from George. The Queen even got involved trying to
reconcile the couple this ultimately failed. The lands discussed by Parliament were
the lands that Bess had gained from her previous marriages that were never part
of the marriage deal. While Bess’ family sided with her initially, George
eventually managed to convince Bess’ son Henry that his mother was controlling
land that was his by rights ignoring that Bess’ marriage contact stated that
Henry would get the lands of his father, William Cavendish when Bess died.
George and Henry gained a private army and ran Bess out of Chatsworth House, a
place she had worked so hard on renovating and felt connected to. Bess ran
home.
At
some point Bess had brought the lands of her birth family from her brother and
she returned to the house that she had been born in. Not wanting this betrayal
to stop her, Bess immediately started rebuilding her first home. The marriage
may be broken but Bess was still a Countess and grandmother to an heir of the throne,
and she couldn’t live in the modest farmer’s cottage that was her father’s.
Bess started to build what is now called Hardwick Old Hall until 1590 when the
Earl died resulting in Bess being widowed for the fourth time and in her mid
60s she officially became the richest widow and 2nd richest woman in
the Elizabethan era (2nd only to the Queen herself). Bess was said
to have the energy of a much younger woman who had not weathered the storms
that Bess had. Just after the death of her husband before the Old Hall had even
finished, Bess started work on a completely new house over the road known as
Hardwick Hall.
While
building the Hall, Bess threw herself into raising her granddaughter Arabella,
especially after Arabella’s mother died. Bess raised Arabella to believe that
she was the heir to the throne, Queen Elizabeth would even imply that herself
but would never name Arabella as her heir. Unfortunately, Arabella grew up
under her grandmother’s suffocating control and began to resent the domineering
nature of Bess causing strife between the two generations resulting in Bess even
asking the Queen to take Arabella off her hands. Eventually Arabella rebelled
against Bess by running off with William Seymour, 2nd Duke of
Somerset, this caused trouble as William also had a claim to the throne and
Queen Elizabeth who was already quite protective of her throne felt that this
was part of a large scheme to remove her from power. For once Elizabeth did not
blame Bess quoted as saying “There is no lady in this land that I better love
and like”. Arabella was assisted in her escape by Bess’ son Henry, and this
action destroyed any relationship Bess had with her son and granddaughter,
ultimately resulting in both being removed from Bess’ will. Ironically Bess and
Arabella’s relationship was destroyed partly because Bess wanted her to be
Queen and even though she didn’t take the throne one of Bess’ other children’s descendants
is our current Queen Elizabeth II.
Hardwick
Hall was designed by architect Robert Smythson, it took 7 years to build, and
is one of the first examples of a house that was built symmetrically on an
axis. The hall has a couple of unique features, its most famous one is the
windows. Glass was the most expensive material in the Tudor era and most houses
built at that time have small windows except Hardwick. Hardwick Hall has some
of the largest windows and a contemporary poem even says “Hardwick Hall, more
glass than wall”. A feature that is not as well known is that the ceilings get
higher with each floor, meaning that the shortest rooms are on the ground floor
while the top floor walls stretch high, this was to demonstrate the importance
of those rooms. The towers have the initials ES at the top, standing for
Elizabeth of Shrewsbury, stamping a mark of ownership is a common practice for
those who pay for houses but they are nearly always male proprietors, this
marks the only surviving (possibly only) example where a woman marks her house.
Bess wanted everyone in the local area to know that she still had the wealth
and power even if she didn’t have Chatsworth estate anymore.
Bess
died on 13th February 1608, about the age of 81. She survived Queen
Elizabeth I by 5 years and sadly saw her granddaughter get looked over for the
throne in favour of the son of her former prisoner, James I of England. Bess
saw six people claim the English throne and the religion of the country change
multiple times. Bess knew that land equaled power, and power meant everything.
Bess’ elaborate vault now resides in Derby Cathedral the effigy was designed by
Bess herself. She was survived by five children who all shared in Bess’ wealth,
the lion share did start with Henry but due to sizable debt he sold it to his
brother William (Bess’ favourite son) who became the 1st Earl of
Devonshire, his descendants became and still are the Duke of Devonshire. The
Devonshire’s primary seat is still Chatsworth however this has vastly changed
since Bess’ time, Hardwick became a secondary home and even a dowager’s house
when the family required it until it was given to National Trust who own and
operate it now.
Why
is Bess inspiring?
Bess
is a woman who was ahead of her time, particularly in being able to earn money
and gain power that was not accessible to half the population. You could call
her the original feminist. She would see her fourth husband smear her name in
the highest places of the country but held her head high to continue a lifelong
friendship with the highest people in country including the Queen. Bess’ life
and legacy has been affected by men who were intimidated by her. She never gave
up on her dream and became an example of a rags to riches tale through her own
hard-work and shrewdness, she knew what she could do and did it to an amazing
level that resulted in a dynasty that that include the Dukes of Devonshire, and
Norfolk and the Earls of Lincolns as well as the Bowes-Lions family which is
the birth family of Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mother so the current and future
monarchs.
Learn
more about Bess in/at
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Hardwick
Hall
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Bess
of Hardwick: First Lady of Chatsworth by Mary S. Lovell
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The actual Hall that Bess
built in her later life is open for anymore to visit thanks to the National
Trust. You can walk the same corridor as Bess and learn more about her thanks
to various talks/tours/guides that are there.
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The only full biography of
Bess, detailing her long life, time with Mary, Queen of Scots as well as the
building of Chatsworth, Hardwick and Oldcotes.
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