David Cunningham of Auchenharvie
David Cunningham of Auchenharvie (d. 1659) was the absentee owner of Auchenharvie Castle and a courtier in London. A large number of his letters are preserved in the National Records of Scotland.[1]
Life at court
David Cunningham was a member of the circle of Sir Adam Newton, who lived at Charlton House, Kent. Newton, a fellow Scot, had been the tutor of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales. After Prince Henry's death in 1612, Newton and Cunningham continued to be administrators and collectors for the Welsh and duchy incomes which funded Prince Charles' household. This income passed to Prince Charles, and continued as a separate income stream when he became king.
Cunningham wrote letters to his cousin David Cunningham of Robertland, who was grandson of the royal master of work David Cunningham of Robertland. The letters advise his younger cousin on aspects of their estate business and interests. He also discusses taking Newton's son Sir Henry Newton on an educational trip to France.[2] On the death of Adam Newton in 1629 Cunningham and Peter Newton were charged as his executors to rebuild St Luke's Church at Charlton. The Cunningham arms can still be seen carved on the pulpit.[3]
Cunningham continued to administer revenue from Wales and duchy lands for Charles I as king: in 1633 he paid Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Berkshire £100 for keeping horses for Charles.[4] Some of his accounts of this income survive in the National Archives and at Ayrshire Archives. They include payments for the lodgings of the painter Daniël Mijtens and the armourer Arnold Rotsipen, minor improvements in the park at Ampthill, and old wardrobe debts from the funeral of King James.[5] Several warrants authorizing Sir David to pay accounts for the education of the royal children survive.[6]
Nicholas Stone the master mason who worked with Inigo Jones recorded David Cunningham to be his "great good friend" and "very noble friend" when he paid for the monument of Sir Thomas Puckering, for Adam Newton's brother-in-law, at St. Mary's Warwick and for Adam Newton's own tomb at St. Luke's Charlton.[7]
One of Cunningham's letters describes with enthusiasm the formation of a secret brotherhood of courtiers, comprising the Scottish "cubicular" or bedchamber servants.[8] In June 1629 he hurt himself badly playing football.[9] Around the same time he received a royal command for him to supervise building work at Berkhamsted Place in 1629. His account for this survives, counter-signed by Thomas Trevor, surveyor of works at Windsor Castle. The improvements at Berkhamsted were for the convenience of Jane Murray, the widow of Secretary Murray, and her young family which included Anne, Lady Halkett and Elizabeth Murray who married Adam Newton's heir, Sir Henry Newton.[10]
Cunningham seems to have been involved in the building of a house in Lincoln's Inn Fields now called "Lindsey House", which he sold to Henry Murray (d. 1672), a son of Secretary Murray and a groom of the king's bedchamber, in 1641.[11] The house was completed between 1539 and 1641, and has been associated with Inigo Jones and Nicolas Stone. The building with its pilasters stuccoed to look like stone fits the ideal of 17th-century building regulations in the city.[12]
Cunningham bought clothes in London for his cousin Sir David Cunningham of Robertland to wear in Edinburgh during the coronation visit of King Charles in 1633. The designs followed the colours and styles of clothes made by the king's tailor Patrick Black. On 1 May 1633, Cunningham advised:
"Sir, you needed not in your letter to instruct me to be lavish of your purse for I am apt enough to transgress that way, yet I will put you to as little charge as I can: but your honour and reputation being engaged at such an extraordinary time as this, (the like whereof I hope shall not be seen in my days) we must not stand too much on saving."[13]
Cunningham urged his cousin to marry Elizabeth Heriot, the daughter of the cloth merchant and royal financier Robert Jousie and widow of a goldsmith James Heriot. He wrote in 1635 that "she is yet a widow but not like to continue, being much importuned with sundry suitors of quality".[14]
Cunningham came with the court to Oxford in 1636 and described a masque in another letter to his cousin, the spectacle represented (if his description can be trusted) the reconciliation of Catholic and Protestant interests in the form of baked pies:
an invention of pyes walking, the one half representing English Bishops, with my lord's grace of Canterbury conducting them, th'other half foreign Cardinalls, with the Pope leading them, and both came to the King at table, one on his right hand and t'other on his left and both were received and made friends.[15]
In 1639 Robert Johnstone LLD, a friend of George Heriot who had been Robert Jousie's executor, made Auchenharvie the overseer of his will and bequeathed him an Arabian gold coin. Cunningham and the other supervisor, Lord Johnstone were to employ £3,000 in good works in Scotland.[16]
A survey of rentals in the Cunninghame district of Ayrshire circa 1640 listed him at £1553, among the largest landowners in the county.[17]
In September 1651, after the Royalist defeat at the battle of Worcester, he was a prisoner in Chester Castle, with the Earl of Derby, the Duke of Lauderdale, and Mr Lane.[18]
Cunningham died in 1659, and was buried at Charlton, in the church that he had helped to restore on 7 February.[19] He made his will on 18 January.[20] Records of a later dispute over his estate, state that he had died a debtor in the King's Bench prison.[21] In his will, Cunningham specified debts owing to him that totalled some £30,000, and declared debts he owed of about £6,000. A creditor obtained administration of his estate in 1665, but this award was set aside by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury in 1695, when Sir James Cunningham, administrator of Sir David Cunningham of Robertland and his son, obtained administration.[22]
References
- See National Records of Scotland catalogue on-line NRS OPAC; http://www.nas.gov.uk/onlineCatalogue/ reference GD237/25
- National Records of Scotland on-line catalogue, GD237/25.
- John Burke, A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England (London, 1838), p. 385: Henry Vane, 'Historical Memoir on Charlton', Gentleman's Magazine (May 1865), pp. 576, 580.
- HMC Laing Manuscripts, vol. 1, (London, 1914), p. 192.
- National Archives TNA E101/439/2,1632-5: Ayrshire Archives GB234 ATD5 1630-1: Another book of accounts of that part of Charles I's revenue when he was Prince (dated 1637 and signed by Sir David on each page) is in the collection of the astronomer Clifford Cunningham.
- Calendar of State Papers Domestic, Charles I, 1638, pp. 122, 179, 182, 191, 471, 494.
- W. L. Spiers & AJ Finberg, 'Notebook and Account Book of Nicholas Stone', 7th Volume of the Walpole Society (London, 1919), pp. 5, 65-6, 76: Howard Colvin, Essays on English Architectural History (London, 1999), pp. 180, 181.
- David Stevenson,Origins of Freemasonry (Oxford, 1988), pp. 186-7.
- Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), p. 263.
- NRS GD237/25/1 item 7: Folger Shakespeare Library, 265064.
- Buildings Of England, London 4: North, (1998), pp. 306, 307-8.
- Maurice Howard, The Building of Elizabethan and Jacobean England (Yale, 2007), p. 105.
- Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), pp. 182-3, National Records of Scotland GD237/25/2 no. 11, 1 May 1633.
- National Records of Scotland, NRS GD237/25/1/5 and GD237/25/4/6: The National Archives, 'Adamson v Cuningham', C 8/52/10.
- Erin Griffey, 'Devotional Jewellery', Henrietta Maria (Ashgate, 2008), pp. 179-80: Howard Colvin, The Canterbury Quadrangle(Oxford, 1988), p. 14: NRS GD237/221/4/1/54.
- Archibald Constable, Memoirs of George Heriot (Edinburgh, 1822), pp. 177, 190.
- Dobie ed., Cuninghame topographized by Pont (Glasgow, 1876), p. 396.
- Stanley Papers, vol. 3 (Manchester, 1867), p. cccxxix.
- Henry Vane, 'Historical Memoir on Charlton', Gentleman's Magazine (May 1865), p. 580.
- TNA, PROB 11/294/674.
- TNA, PROB 18/6/77.
- TNA, PROB 11/294/674, including marginal notes of the later administrations.
External links
Baronetage of Nova Scotia | ||
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New creation | Baronet (of Auchinhervie) 1633–1659 |
Succeeded by Robert Cunningham |