| Pooles of English Royalty - http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/4957/roypoole.html Among the Teutonic names that had been infused into the Norman French
was that of Poole. The family is of Norman ancestry and an early form of the name
was De La Pole. These families settled in Devon, England, in the Parish of Tiverton,
the seat of the Poles/Pooles about the time of the Norman conquest. The name was
Anglicized into Poole, following the arrival of the first of the family, who is said to
have entered England with William the Conqueror in 1066.
We have not established any connection between our earliest
known Poole ancestor and the Plantagenets that ruled England during the 14th and 15th
centuries but the possibility exists. A summary of the history of these early Pooles
follows:
Margaret Plantagenet the daughter of George, Duke of Clarence, was married to Sir Richard
Pole ca. 1494. It should be noted here that, though English history uses the name
Pole, we know that the name was spelled Poole as evidenced by the inscriptions left in the
Tower of London by the family. Margaret who became the Countess of Salisbury was
called the "BLESSED PRINCESS MARGARET, THE LAST OF THE PLANTAGENETS". Her
father's brother was Edward IV, King of England 1441-1483. All were descendants of
Edward III, King of England 1312-1377.
After Henry VII's victory on Bosworth Field in 1485 he imprisoned in the Tower Margaret's
brother, Edward Duke of Warwick, who had by birth a better claim to the throne than Henry.
Young Edward was only 10 years old when put in the Tower and then was about 15 when
beheaded in 1499. Margaret and her husband, Sir Richard Poole (Pole) had five
children (four of whom were sons) before he died about 1505. Henry, Lord Montagu,
the eldest son was beheaded at the Tower in 1539. Arthur, the second son had two
daughters. Sir Geoffrey Poole, the third son, had five sons and six daughters, and
it is probable that numerous descendants of his still exist, but the author of "The
Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal" was unable to trace them further than the
beginning of the 18th century. Reginald, the youngest son, was the famous Cardinal
Pole. (From: "The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal" : being a complete
table of all the descendants now living of Edward III, King of England / by the Marquis of
Ruvigny and Raineval.)
In addition to Margaret the Countess of Salisbury being a threat to the new Tudor dynasty;
her son the Cardinal condemned King Henry VIII for his divorces and breaking with the
Church of Rome. Henry was enraged and privately told the French ambassador that he
intended to destroy the whole family. Margaret was imprisoned in the Tower in 1539
and two years later was beheaded on Tower Hill. (Tradition has it that she
stubbornly refused to put her head on the block so the executioner had to chase her around
Tower Hill to hack off her head.)
There are at least six inscriptitions left in the Beauchamp Tower and elsewhere in the
Tower of London that were made by the Poole brothers, sons of Sir Geoffrey and grandsons
of the Countess of Salisbury. In these etchings the name is always spelled Poole and not
Pole. The names Edmonde Poole and Geffrye Poole are there along with the following
inscription by Arthur Poole:
"Deo servire, penitentiam, inire, fato obedire, regnare est. A. Poole 1564" (To
serve God, to endure penance, to obey fate, is to reign).
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CAPTAIN EDWARD POOLE,
first Poole in America
BASILL POOLE, of
Anne Arundel County
THE ABRAHAM LINCOLN
CONNECTION
BASILL POOLE, JUNIOR,
of Anne Arundel County
HENRY POOLE, of
Frederick County by Rick Morgan
BASIL POOLE III of
Mongomery Co.MD & Trumbull Co. OH
MATTHIAS POOLE son
of Basil III, with a list of descendants of Matthias |