Robert Long (politician)
Robert Long (c. 1391 – 31 March 1447) of South Wraxall[1] and Draycot Cerne in Wiltshire, was a Member of Parliament for Old Sarum in Wiltshire (1414), for Calne, Wiltshire, (1417) and six times for the County of Wiltshire (May 1421, December 1421, 1423–24, 1429–30, 1433, and 1442).[2] He was the founder of the prominent Long family of South Wraxall and Draycott in Wiltshire.
Career[]
He was born in Wiltshire, the son of Thomas Long.[3] In 1414 Long was elected Member of Parliament for Old Sarum, and MP for Wiltshire in 1421, 1423–24, 1429–30, 1433, and again in 1442.[4] On 4 November 1428 he was appointed Escheator of Hampshire and Wiltshire.[5]
Marriage and children[]
Long married twice:
- Firstly at some time before 1417 to a certain Margaret Godfrey,[6] of unrecorded family, by whom he had four sons, three of whom were Members of Parliament, including:
- Secondly, before 1428, to Margaret Popham (born 1 May 1400), widow of John Cowdray and of William Wayte of Draycot, Wiltshire, and daughter and eventual heiress of Sir Philip Popham, MP, of Barton Stacey, Hampshire.[11]
Landholdings[]
Robert Long owned the manors of South Wraxall and Draycot, both of which descended from him in the male line of the Long family for more than 400 years, with Draycot finally bequeathed away by his descendant William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, 5th Earl of Mornington, who shocked his family by leaving it in his will to his cousin Henry Wellesley, 1st Earl Cowley, in 1863.
Further reading[]
Sources[]
- Kightly, Charles, biography of Long, Robert (d.1447), of South Wraxall, Wilts., published in History of Parliament: House of Commons 1386–1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
References[]
- 1390s births
- 1447 deaths
- Long family of Wiltshire
- People from Wiltshire
- English MPs April 1414
- English MPs 1417
- English MPs May 1421
- English MPs December 1421
- English MPs 1423
- English MPs 1429
- English MPs 1433
- English MPs 1442
- Members of the Parliament of England (pre-1707) for Old Sarum
- 15th-century English MP stubs