Andrew Kerwyn
{{Short description|English administrator, stonemason and paymaster of the royal works}}
Andrew Kerwyn (died 1615) was an English administrator, stonemason, and paymaster of the royal works for James VI and I from 20 August 1604. His allowance was two shillings daily.
Masons in London
He may have been a son of William Kerwyne or Kerwin, a stonemason commemorated by a tomb in St Helen's Church, Bishopsgate. Andrew Kerwyn was probably the mason paid £16 in December 1593 for work on a pinnacle of London Guildhall,Caroline Barron, The medieval Guildhall of London (London, 1974), p. 49 fn.89. and appointed a gun stone maker to the royal ordinance in 1601.Calendar of Patent Rolls, 43 Elizabeth I, p. 136 no. 774. He may have been a relation of Robert Kerwin (died 1615), who worked for Robert Sidney, 1st Earl of Leicester at Penshurst Place.Millicent Hay, Life of Robert Sidney, Earl of Leicester (FSL, 1984), p. 187.
Career
Kerwyn's name is conspicuous in the records of Whitehall Palace and several masque entertainments staged at the Banqueting House. He provided a stage on wheels for The Masque of Blackness, designed by Inigo Jones.Martin Wiggins and Catherine Richardson, British Drama, 1533–1642, vol. 5, 1603–1608, (Oxford, 2012), 173. Stage mechanisms for The Masque of Queens in February 1609 included "sundry seats above for the Queen and ladies to sit on and be turned round about".Oliver Jones, 'Evidence for Indoor Theatre', Andrew Gurr & Farah Karim-Cooper, Moving Shakespeare Indoors: Performance and Repertoire in the Jacobean Playhouse (Cambridge, 2014), 75–76: Herford & Simpson, Ben Jonson, 10 (Oxford, 1965), pp. 494, 548.
File:The Old Palace - geograph.org.uk - 977444.jpg
In 1604, Kerwyn was given money for the building of a barn and stable at the Charing Cross Royal Mews for Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, and for works at the King's House at Royston.Calendar State Papers Domestic, 1603–1610, 153, 156. Kerwyn provided Oxfordshire stone for Knole in 1608 for the Lord Treasurer, Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset.Robert Sackville-West, Inheritance: The Story of Knole & the Sackvilles (Bloomsbury, 2010), 14–15. He also repaired the large tennis court at Whitehall Palace, known as the "Brake" or "Baloune Court", and managed improvements in Hyde Park in 1612, diverting a stream to flow into Rosamund's pond in St James's Park.Frederick Devon, Issues of the Exchequer (London, 1836), 15, 150.
Kerwyn died in 1615 and the records for The Golden Age Restored include payments to his wife Margaret Kerwyn (died 1619), who acted as his administratrix. They owned leases of tenement houses in St Martin's parish which they let to the carpenters William Portington and Matthew Banks. Their household furnishings included tapestry cushions embroidered with the masons' arms. The mason's company arms of a compass were used on William Kerwin's 1594 monument.Martin Wiggins and Catherine Richardson, British Drama, 1533–1642, vol. 6, 1609–1616, (Oxford, 2015), 493: PROB 11/133/653, will of Margaret Kerwyn.