Cofferer of the Household
Former office in the English and British Royal Household
Henry Pelham-Clinton, 2nd Duke of Newcastle served Cofferer of the Household between 1747 and 1754.
The cofferer of the Household was formerly an office in the English and British Royal Household . Next in rank to the Comptroller , the holder paid the wages of some of the servants above and below stairs, was a member of the Board of Green Cloth , and sat with the Lord Steward in the Court of the Verge .[ 1] [ 2] The cofferer was usually of political rank and always a member of the Privy Council .[ 3]
The office dates from the 13th century, when it was known as Cofferer of the Wardrobe . The Keeper of the Wardrobe was at this time increasingly occupied with matters of state, and so his chief clerk gradually took on additional responsibilities for accounting and bookkeeping, and came to be referred to as the Cofferer.[ 4] As such, he became in effect the working head of the Wardrobe, and acted when required as locum tenens to the Keeper. The Cofferer had his own staff of clerks, who later came to be known as the Clerks of the Green Cloth (after the green cloth covering of the table in the accounting office).[ 4]
By the end of the 14th century the Wardrobe had ceased to be an independent office of influence at Court; its officers were made subsidiary to the Lord Steward and duly re-designated as being 'of the Household' (rather than 'of the Wardrobe').[ 5] The Cofferer retained his role as principal accounting officer under the Lord Steward.[ 6]
The office of Cofferer was abolished by the Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 .[ 7] By the same means 'provision was made for more economical methods of keeping the accounts of Civil List expenditure under the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury ':[ 6] thenceforward the accounts of the Lord Steward's Department were included in the Estimates .
List of incumbents
Name
Entered office
Left office
Notes
Reference
Roger Repington
In office during the reign of Empress Matilda in the 12th century
[ 8]
William Louth
1274
1280
[ 9]
William March
1280
1284
[ 9]
Henry Wheatley
1284
1287
[ 9]
Walter Langton
1287
1290
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1290
[ 9]
John Droxford
1290
1290
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1295
[ 9]
Philip Everdon
1290
1295
[ 9]
Walter Barton
1295
1297
[ 9]
Ralph Manton
1297
1303
[ 9]
Walter Bedwyn
1303
1307
[ 9]
Peter Collingbourn
1307
1308
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1312
[ 9]
John Ockham
1308
1309
[ 9]
Robert Wodehouse
1309
1311
Controller of the Wardrobe, 1314
[ 9]
John Ockham
1311
1314
[ 9]
Nicholas Huggate
1314
1315
Controller of the Wardrobe, 1326
[ 9]
Henry Hale
1316
1316
[ 9]
Robert Wodehouse
1317
1318
[ 9]
Unknown
(1318–1320)
[ 9]
Richard Ferriby
1320
1323
Controller of the Wardrobe, 1331
[ 9]
Unknown
(1323–1327)
[ 9]
Richard Bury
1327
1328
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1328
[ 9]
John Houton
1328
1331
[ 9]
William Norwell
1331
1334
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1335
[ 9]
John Cokham
1334
1335
[ 9]
John Houton
1335
1337
[ 9]
Richard Nateby
1337
1338
Controller of the Wardrobe, 1338
[ 9]
William Dalton
1338
1344
Controller of the Wardrobe, 1344
[ 9]
Richard Eccleshall
1334
1349 or 1350
[ 9]
Unknown
(1350–1359)
[ 9]
Thomas Brantingham
1359
1361
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1368
[ 9]
Unknown
(1361–1369)
[ 9]
Richard Beverley
1369
1376
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1376
[ 9]
John Carp
1376
1390
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1390
[ 9]
John Stacy
1390
1395
[ 9]
Thomas More
1395
1399
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1401
[ 9]
Unknown
John Spencer
1413
1413
Keeper of the Great Wardrobe, 1413
[ 10] [ 11]
William Kinwolmarsh
In office during the reign of Henry V
[ 12]
Unknown
John Kendale
1461
1470
[ 13]
John Elrington
1471
1474
Keeper of the Wardrobe, 1474
[ 13]
Richard Jeny
1479
[ 13]
James Blundell
1479
1481
[ 13]
John Belle
1483
1485
[ 13]
Laurence Warham
In office in 1485
[ 14]
John Payne
1486
1492
[ 14]
William Fisher
1492
1494
[ 14]
William Cope
1494
1505
[ 14]
Edward Cheseman
by 1508
[ 14]
John Shurley
1509
1527
[ 14]
Sir Edmund Peckham
1524 or 1527
1547
[ 14] [ 15]
John Ryther
1547
1552
[ 14] [ 16]
Thomas Weldon
1552
1553
[ 14] [ 17]
Sir Richard Freeston
1553
1557
[ 14]
Michael Wentworth
1558
1558
[ 14] [ 18]
Thomas Weldon and Richard Ward
1558
1559
[ 14] [ 17] [ 19]
Thomas Weldon
1559
1567
[ 14] [ 17]
Richard Ward
1567
1578
[ 14] [ 19]
Anthony Crane
1578
1580
[ 14]
John Abingdon
1580
1582
[ 14]
Gregory Lovell
1582
1597
[ 14]
Sir Henry Cocke
1597
1610
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Robert Vernon
1610
1615
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Arthur Ingram
1615
1615
Suspended
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Marmaduke Dayrell
1615
cont.
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Marmaduke Dayrell and Sir Henry Vane
1625
1632
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Henry Vane and Sir Roger Palmer
1632
1632
[ 14] [ 20]
Sir Roger Palmer
1632
1643
[ 14]
William Ashburnham
1642
1646
[ 3] [ 21]
Commonwealth
(1649–1660)
[ 21]
William Ashburnham
1660
1679
[ 7]
Lord Brouncker , from 1684 The Viscount Brouncker
1679
1685
[ 7]
Sir Peter Apsley
1685
1689
[ 7]
The Viscount Newport , from 1694 The Earl of Bradford
1689
1702
[ 7]
Sir Benjamin Bathurst
1702
1704
[ 7]
Francis Godolphin , from 1706 Viscount Rialton
1704
1711
First period in office; succeeded as The Earl of Godolphin in 1712
[ 7]
Samuel Masham , from 1712 The Lord Masham
1711
1714
[ 7]
The Earl of Godolphin
1714
1723
Second period in office
[ 7]
William Pulteney
1723
1725
Created The Earl of Bath in 1742
[ 7]
The 7th Earl of Lincoln
1725
1728
[ 7]
Vacant
(1728–1730)
[ 7]
Horatio Walpole
1730
1741
Created The Lord Walpole in 1756
[ 7]
Thomas Winnington
1741
1744
[ 7]
The Lord Sandys
1744
1744
[ 7]
Edmund Waller
1744
1747
[ 7]
The 9th Earl of Lincoln
1747
1754
Succeeded as The Duke of Newcastle in 1768
[ 7]
Sir George Lyttelton, 5th Baronet
1754
1756
Created The Lord Lyttelton in 1756
[ 7]
The Duke of Leeds
1756
1761
[ 7]
James Grenville
1761
1761
[ 7]
The Earl of Thomond
1761
1765
[ 7]
The Earl of Scarbrough
1765
1766
[ 7]
Hans Stanley
1766
1774
[ 7]
Jeremiah Dyson
1774
1776
[ 7]
Hans Stanley
1776
1780
[ 7]
Viscount Beauchamp
1780
1782
Succeeded as The Marquess of Hertford in 1794
[ 7]
References
^ The Present State of the British Court, or, an Account of the Civil and Military Establishment of England . London: printed for A. Bell. W. Taylor; and J. Osborn. 1720. p. 7.
^ Rogers, R. (2012). Who Goes Home: A Parliamentary Miscellany . Biteback Publishing. p. 33–34. ISBN 978-1-84954-480-1 . Retrieved 30 April 2019 . The Board of Green Cloth audited the accounts of the Royal Household and sat as a court on offences committed on ... for premises controlled by the Royal Palaces, and did not finally disappear until 2004, following the Licensing Act 2004.
^ a b Haydn, Joseph (1851). The Book of Dignities . London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. pp. 213– 214. OL 7005826M .
^ a b Tout, T. F. (1920). Chapters in the administrative history of mediaeval England: the wardrobe, the chamber, and the small seals (Volume II) . Manchester University Press. pp. 39– 41. Retrieved 22 July 2024 .
^ Tout, T. F. (1928). Chapters in the administrative history of mediaeval England: the wardrobe, the chamber, and the small seals (Volume IV) . Manchester University Press. pp. 160– 161. Retrieved 22 July 2024 .
^ a b Guide to the Contents of the Public Record Office (volume II) . London: H. M. Stationery Office. 1963. p. 211.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Bucholz, Robert (1782). "Household Below Stairs: Cofferer of the Household 1660" (PDF) . Database of Court Officers . Department of History, Loyola University of Chicago. pp. 4– 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2009. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Burke, John (1835). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Enjoying Territorial Possessions or High Official Rank: But Uninvested with Heritable Honours, Volume 2 . London: R. Bentley. p. 473.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Tout, T. F. (1933). Chapters in the Administrative History of Medieval England: The Wardrobe, the Chamber, and the Small Seals . Vol. 6. Manchester: University Press . pp. 30– 32. OL 7212073M .
^ Woodger, L. S. "Spencer, John (d.1417), of Banham, Norf. and Burgate, Suff" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Roskell, J. S. "The Composition of the Parliament of May 1413" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Kirby, J. L. (January 2008). "Killamarsh , William (d. 1422)" . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/50138 . Retrieved 24 December 2012 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ a b c d e Myers, Alec Reginald (1959). The Household of Edward IV . Manchester University Press.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "Officers of the Green Cloth: Cofferer" . Institute of Historical Research . Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Dale, M. K. "Peckham, Sir Edmund (by 1495–1564), of the Blackfriars, London and Denham, Bucks" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Coros, D. F. "Ryther (Ryder), John (by 1514–52), of London" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ a b c Baker, T. F. T. "Weldon, Thomas (by 1499–1567), of Cookham, Berks" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ Swales, R. J. W. "Wentworth, Michael (by 1512–58), of Whitley, Yorks., Mendham, Suff. and Cannon Row, Westminster, Mdx" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ a b Baker, T. F. T. "Ward, Richard I (by 1511–78), of Hurst, Berks" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ a b c d e f Thrush, Andrew. "Principal officeholders 1603–29" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .
^ a b Henning, Basil Duke Henning. "Ashburnham, William (c.1604-79), of Ashburnham House, Little Dean's Yard, Westminster" . The History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 24 December 2012 .