Sunday, 8 May 2016

Wigmore - from Castle to Hall


One Saturday last month, I went on a road trip with my wife, my daughter and her friend Emma. We travelled Westwards from my village of Martley in Worcestershire, over Bringsty Common, through Bromyard and Leominster, and along quiet roads to the village of Wigmore in Northern Herefordshire. Like Martley, Wigmore has a rural high school, a garage, a shop, a pub and a castle. But whereas Martley’s pub is closed, Wigmore has the utterly splendid Castle Inn, with excellent food, good beer and a welcoming host. The castles in the two village also differ. Martley has an iron-age fort -  now just a series of mounds around a burial ground on top of a conical hill which dominates views of the village. Wigmore, by contrast, has a vast ruined castle that was once the power-base of the man who for three years was de facto King of England.  

That man was Roger Mortimer, first Earl of March. In 1322, he led a failed uprising against King Edward II and was imprisoned in the Tower of London, from which he escaped to France. There he met Edward’s Queen Isabella and they became lovers. In 1327, they led an army of invasion and ousted the king, who they later had murdered in Berkeley Castle. Roger and Isabella then ruled England in the name of Isabella’s son, the 14 year old Edward III. But in 1330, the young Edward organised a small group of knights to make a surprise raid on Roger, who was captured and promptly executed. Even mediaeval kings would have baulked at executing their mothers, so Edward had Isabella exiled to Castle Rising castle in Norfolk.

The Mortimer lineage ceased with the death of the 5th Earl in 1425, after which the Castle became ruinous and passed to the Harley Family of nearby Brampton Bryan . In 1643, it was owned by Sir Robert Harley, who was MP for Herefordshire and a supporter of Parliament against King Charles I. Sir Robert feared that the Castle could be used as a stronghold by the King’s forces, and so had it systematically demolished. There are now just great jagged broken walls on a high wooded ridge, with windows that look over the wide valley of the Upper Teme.

Despite the ruination of their property in Herefordshire, the Harley Family prospered. Sir Robert’s grandson was another Robert, who was chief minister under Queen Anne and was rewarded with the title of 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer. When the Queen died, he was impeached by the new Parliament and imprisoned in the Tower of London for two years. His son, the 2nd Earl, engaged in property speculation, buying farms to the North West of London. These were laid out as urban streets, which is why this small area of London now has an Oxford Street, Mortimer Street, Henrietta Street and Cavendish Square (both named after the Earl’s wife Lady Henrietta Cavendish), Margaret Street (named after his wife’s mother), Wimpole Street (after the estate in Cambridgeshire inherited by his wife), and Wigmore Street. Wigmore Street is famous for the Wigmore Hall, a major concert venue for chamber music and lieder. I suspect that very few of those who go to concerts at the Hall know that it is ultimately named after a ruined castle in Herefordshire.