William Dauntesey
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William Dauntesey or Dauntsey (died 1543) was a London merchant. He was Master of the Worshipful Company of Mercers, an alderman of the City of London,"A School's Adventure", Geo. W. Oliver, Sylvan Press, 1951 (page 12) and was elected as Sheriff for 1531.{{Cite web |last=Noorthouck |first=John |date=1773 |title=Addenda: The Mayors and Sheriffs of London |url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/new-history-london/pp889-893 |access-date=2024-06-13 |website=British History Online}}
A merchant of the Staple at Calais, he was the youngest of four sons of John Dauntesey of West Lavington in Wiltshire. He married Agnes Tenacres in 1504; she was a step-daughter of William Lambert, a Master of the Worshipful Company of Mercers, to whom William had been apprenticed. They had no children and she died before he made his will in 1542. He was buried near Agnes in the parish church of St. Antholin (near Mercer's Hall, Cheapside, London)."A School's Adventure", Geo. W. Oliver, Sylvan Press, 1951 (pages 11-12)
He died in 1543."A School's Adventure", Geo. W. Oliver, Sylvan Press, 1951 (page 12) By a will dated 10 March 1542, Dauntesey gave land in London to the Mercers' Company so that they could build a schoolhouse for a grammar school at West Lavington, and support seven poor people in an almshouse.Schools Inquiry Commission, Report of the commissioners (1868), [https://books.google.com/books?id=QDQIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA55 p. 55] The school continues today as the private Dauntsey's School. Part of the bequest reads:{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=|title=History of the School|url=https://www.dauntseys.org/about/history-of-the-school|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2020-11-26|website=Dauntsey's School|language=en-US}}
I William Dauntesey Citizen and Alderman of the Cities of London ... will that in West Lavington a house called a church house and a house for a schole be kept ... and that Ambrose Dauntesey shall name and appoint one apt and convenient person to teach gramer in the Schole house...
Charles Ponting, architect of the West Lavington school, researched the arms of William Dauntsey in 1895. He was informed by the College of Arms that they were Per pale or and gules two bars nebuly counter-changed.{{cite journal |last1=Ponting |first1=Charles |title=Dauntsey Arms |journal=Wiltshire Notes and Queries |date=1899 |volume=3 |pages=47–48 |url=https://archive.org/details/wiltshirenotesqu3118unse/page/n107/mode/1up |access-date=13 June 2024 |via=Internet Archive}}
References
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Category:Year of birth missing
Category:Councilmen and Aldermen of the City of London
Category:Sheriffs of the City of London
Category:Founders of English schools and colleges
Category:People from Wiltshire
Category:16th-century English merchants
Category:Merchants of the Staple
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