Military Wiki
John Birch
John Birch's monument, St Peter & St Paul's, Weobley [lower-alpha 1]
MP for Weobley

In office
1679–1691
MP for Penryn

In office
1661–1679
High Steward of Leominster

In office
1648–1660
MP for Leominster

In office
1646–1660
Personal details
Born 7 September 1615
Ardwick Manor, near Manchester
Died 10 May 1691(1691-05-10) (aged 75)
Garnstone Manor, Weobly
Resting place St Peter and St Paul's, Weobley
Nationality English
Spouse(s) Alice Deane (died 1671)
Winifred Norris (died 1717)
Relations Thomas Birch (1608-1678)
Children Two sons, three daughters
Parents Samuel and Mary Birch
Occupation Wine merchant, soldier, politician
Military service
Allegiance  Kingdom of England 1642–1646
Years of service 1642 to 1646
Rank Colonel
Commands Governor of Hereford 1645-1646
Battles/wars First English Civil War
Storming of Bristol; Basing House; Alton; Arundel; Cheriton; Cropredy Bridge; Plymouth; Bridgwater; Siege of Bristol (1645); Hereford; Stow-on-the-Wold; Siege of Goodrich Castle

Colonel John Birch (7 September 1615 – 10 May 1691) was an English soldier and politician, who fought for the Parliamentarian cause in the First English Civil War, and sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1646 and 1691.

Excluded from Parliament in Pride's Purge of December 1648, he was also prevented from taking his seat for Leominster under the Protectorate. After the 1660 Restoration, he sat on over 122 Parliamentary Committees, particularly those connected with finance.

Although Presbyterian by upbringing, he voted in favour of the 1673 and 1678 Test Acts, requiring holders of public office to be members of the Church of England. He himself conformed, supported the exclusion of the Catholic James II in 1679, and backed the 1689 Glorious Revolution.

Considered a "great Parliamentarian", his contemporary Gilbert Burnet summarised him as follows; "He was the roughest and boldest speaker in the House, and talked in the language and phrases of a carrier, but with a beauty and eloquence that was always acceptable. He spoke always with much life and heat, but judgment was not his talent."[1]

Personal details[]

John Birch was born 7 September 1615, second but eldest surviving son of Samuel and Mary Birch. His father was a wealthy Presbyterian merchant, who owned Ardwick Manor, outside Manchester. He had two brothers, Samuel (1621-1683), and Thomas (1633-1700).[2] He moved to Bristol in 1633, where he set up as a wine merchant.[3]

Birch married Alice Deane (died 1671), daughter of a Bristol merchant. They had five children who lived to adulthood; John (c. 1647 – after 1683), Samuel (died 1704), Mary (ca. 1645–1728), Elizabeth and Sarah (died 1702). There were no children from his second marriage to Winifred Norris, who died in 1717.[3]

Wars of the Three Kingdoms[]

Goodrich Castle, Goodrich

Goodrich Castle, captured by Birch in June 1646

At the start of the First English Civil War in August 1642, Birch was a captain in the Bristol militia and served with the Parliamentarian garrison. He later recorded that some of his men viewed the war as a break from routine, with better pay and rations than in civilian life and were concerned it might end too soon.[4] After the Royalists captured the town in June 1643, the garrison was given a pass to London. With the help of Sir Arthur Haselrig, Birch was commissioned in the army commanded by William Waller, and quickly proved an energetic and courageous officer. In November 1643, he served in the first Siege of Basing House, and was slightly wounded in the Battle of Alton on 13 December. Less than a week later, he was shot in the stomach in an assault on Arundel Castle, allegedly surviving only because the cold weather stemmed the flow of blood.[5]

Birch recovered in time to fight at Cheriton in March 1644, a lesser known Parliamentarian success that forced Charles I onto the defensive in South East England.[6] At Cropredy Bridge in June, he commanded the rearguard that held the bridge long enough to allow Waller's main force to retreat. Shortly after this, Birch raised a regiment of infantry which was shipped to Plymouth to reinforce the garrison and spent the rest of the war in South West England and the Welsh Marches.[7]

Although not part of the New Model Army, his unit took part in its 1645 Western Campaign including the capture of Bridgwater and Bristol. On 17 December 1645, Birch led a surprise night-time attack on the Royalist garrison of Hereford, which had recently repulsed a month-long siege by Scots Covenanters,[8] and the Royalist commander Barnabas Scudamore was later accused of betrayal.[9] Birch fought at Stow-on-the-Wold in March 1646, the last major battle of the war, and captured Goodrich Castle in June, just before the war ended.[10]

In September 1646, Birch was elected MP for Leominster; under the Self-denying Ordinance, this required him to give up his military commission. Appointed High steward of Leominster in 1648, he also invested heavily in purchasing church lands, which made him extremely wealthy.[11] Disputes over a peace settlement with Charles I and religious policy split Parliament between moderates like Birch, and more radical religious Independents such as Oliver Cromwell, including his cousin Thomas Birch. After the Second English Civil War he was excluded from Parliament in Pride's Purge of 6 December 1648.[12]

1660 Restoration and after[]

Birch met with Charles II prior to the Battle of Worcester in September 1651 but avoided direct participation, possibly due to the influence of his cousin Thomas, who remained loyal to the Protectorate. He retained his Leominster seat throughout the Commonwealth, although he was not allowed to take his seat, and later claimed to have been arrested 21 times. After the Stuart Restoration in 1660, he was removed as High Steward of Leominster, and forced to sell his lands back to the church, ending his influence in the area. However, in 1661 he was returned as MP for Penryn, in the Cavalier Parliament.[11]

Samuel Pepys

Samuel Pepys, who worked closely with Birch on funding the Royal Navy

Although he never held high political office, Birch sat on numerous committees, especially those connected to public spending and taxes, where he proved a relentless and astute auditor. His presence on the committee to review naval expenditure after the Second Anglo-Dutch War brought him into contact with Pepys, who noted he "do take it upon him to defend us, and do mightily do me right in all his discourse".[13] According to one commentator, he was "the roughest and boldest speaker in the House, who talked in the language and phrases of a carrier, but with a beauty and eloquence that was always acceptable".[14] The 1662 Act of Uniformity expelled Presbyterians from the Church of England, who thus became Protestant Nonconformists. They included John, and his brother Samuel (1621-1680), who was evicted from his parish of Bampton, Oxfordshire as a result.[15] However, Birch voted for the 1673 Test Act, which required holders of public office holders to be Anglicans, and became a member of the church. This was largely due to his opposition to Catholicism, and in the Exclusion Crisis, he supported barring Charles' Catholic brother James from the throne.[11] Birch purchased Garnstone Manor, Weobly, in 1661, giving him control of its Parliamentary seat. First elected in 1679, he held it until his death in 1691, with the exception of 1685, when he stood down following the accession of James II. He regained it after the November 1688 Glorious Revolution, and was prominent in debates over the Bill of Rights and the Revolutionary settlement.[15]

His last recorded Parliamentary appearance was in April 1690; he died at home on 10 May 1691, and was buried at St Peter and St Paul's, Weobley. The railings around his monument extended into the altar space, and were removed in 1694 by Gilbert Ironside, Bishop of Hereford; the holes are still visible.[15] His youngest daughter, Sarah, inherited Garnstone, on condition she marry her cousin, another John Birch; he held the Weobley seat almost continuously from 1701, until his death in 1735.[16]

Notes[]

  1. Repaired after being damaged in 1694, this incorrectly gives his date of birth as 1626

References[]

Sources[]

Bibliography[]

External links[]

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Parliament of England
Preceded by
Sampson Eure
Walter Kyrle
Member of Parliament for Leominster
1645–1648
With: Walter Kyrle
Succeeded by
Leominster not represented
Preceded by
Leominster not represented
Member of Parliament for Leominster
1653–1661
With: Edward Freeman 1659–60
Edward Pytts 1660–61
Succeeded by
Ranald Grahme
Humphrey Cornewall
Preceded by
Samuel Enys
James Robyns
Member of Parliament for Penryn
1661 – 1679
With: William Pendarves 1661–73
Sir Robert Southwell from 1673
Succeeded by
Francis Trefusis
Sir Robert Southwell
Preceded by
John Barneby
William Gregory
Weobley
1679–1685
With: William Gregory 1679
John Booth 1679–1685
Succeeded by
Robert Price
Henry Cornewall
Preceded by
Robert Price
Henry Cornewall
Weobley
1689–1691
With: James Morgan 1689–1690
Robert Price 1690–1691
Succeeded by
Thomas Foley
Robert Price
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