WYATT, Sir Thomas the younger (1521?-1554), conspirator, was the
eldest and only surviving son of Sir Thomas Wyatt the elder [q.v.], by
his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Brooke, third lord Cobham.
He was brought up as a catholic. He is described as 'twenty-one years
and upwards' in the 'inquisition post mortem' of his father, which was
dated 8 Jan. 1542-43. The Duke of Norfolk was one of his godfathers.
In boyhood he is said to have accompanied his father on an embassy to Spain,
where the elder Sir Thomas Wyatt was threatened by the Inquisition.
To this episode has been traced an irremovable detestation of the Spanish
government, but the anecdote is probably apocryphal. All that is
positively known of his relations with his father while the latter was
in Spain is found in two letters which the elder Wyatt addressed from Spain
to the younger, then fifteen years old. The letters give much sound
moral advice. In 1537 young Wyatt married when barely sixteen.
He succeeded on his father's death in 1542 to Allington Castle and Boxley
Abbey in Kent, with much other property. But the estate was embarrassed,
and he parted with some outlying lands on 30 Nov. 1543 to the king, receiving
for them 3,669l. 8s. 2d. In 1542 he alienated, too, the estate of Tarrant
in Dorset in favour of a natural son, Francis Wyatt, whose mother was Elizabeth,
daughter of Sir Edward Darrel of Littlecote. Wyatt was of somewhat
wild and impulsive temperament. At an early age he had made the acquaintance
of his father's disciple, Henry Howard, earl of Surrey [q.v.], and during
Lent 1543 he joined Surrey and other young men in breaking at night the
windows of citizens houses and of London churches. They were arrested
and brought before the privy council on 1 April, and they were charged
not merely with acts of violence, but with having eaten meat during Lent.
Surrey explained tht his efforts were directed to awakening the citizens
of London to a sense of sin. Wyatt was inclined to deny the charges.
He remained in the Tower till 3 May. In the autumn of 1543 Wyatt
joined a regiment of volunteers which Surrey raised at his own expense
to take part in the siege of Landrecies. Wyatt
distinguished himself in the military operations, and was highly commended
by Thomas
Churchyard, who was present. (cf. CHURCHYARD, Pleasant Discourse
of Court and of
Wars, 1596). In 1544 Wyatt took part in the siege of Boulogne
and was given responsible
command next year. When Surrey became governor he joined the
English council there (14 June 1545). Surrey, writing to Henry VIII,
highly praised Wyatt's 'hardiness, painfulness, circumspection, and natural
disposition to the war.) He seems to have remained abroad until the
surrender of Boulogne in 1550. In November 1550 he was named a commissioner
to delimit the English frontier in France, but owing to ill-health was
unable to act. Subsequently he claimed to have served Queen Mary
against the Duke of Northumberland when the duke attempted to secure the
throne for his daughter-in-law, Lady Jane Grey. But he took no well
defined part in public affairs at home until he learned of Queen Mary's
resolve to marry Phillip of Spain. He regarded the step as an outrage
on the nation's honour, but, according to his own account, never thought
of publicly protesting against it until he received an invitation from
Edward Courtenay [q.v.], earl of Devonshire, to join in a general insurrection
throughout the country for the purpose of preventing the accomplishment
of the queen's plan. He cheerfully undertook to raise Kent.
Help was vaguely promised him by the French ambassador.
The official announcement of the marriage was published
on 15 Jan. 1553-4. Seven days later Wyatt summoned his friends and neighbours
to meet at Allington Castle to discuss means of resistance. He offered,
if they would attmept an armed rebellion, to lead the insurgent force.
Like endeavours made by Courtenay, the Earl of Suffolk, Sir James Crofts,
and Sir Peter Carew, to excite rebellion in other counties failed [see
CAREW, SIR PETER]. The instigators elsewhere were all arrested before
they had time to mature their designs. Wyatt was thus forced into
the position of chief actor in the attack on the government of the queen.
He straightway published a proclamation at Maidstone which was addressed
'unto the commons' of Kent. He stated that his course had been approved
by 'dyvers of the best of the shire.' Neighbours and friends were
urged to secure the advancement of 'liberty and commonwealth,' which were
imperilled by 'the queen's determinate pleasure to marry with a stranger.'
Wyatt showed himself worthy of his responsibilities
and laid his plans with boldness. Noailles, the French ambassador,
wrote that he was 'estime par depa homme vaillant et de bonne conduicte;'
and M. d'Oysel, the French ambassador in Scotland, who was at the time
in London, informed the French king, his master, that Wyatt was 'ung gentil
chevallier et fort estime parmy cest nation' (Ambassades de Noailles, iii,
15, 46). Fifteen hundred men were soon in arms under his command, while
five thousand promised adherence later. He fixed his headquarters
at the castle of Rochester. Some cannon and ammunition were secretely
sent him up the Medway by agents in London; batteries were erected to command
the passage of the bridge at Rochester and the opposite bank of the river.
When the news of Wyatt's action reached the queen and government in London,
a proclamation was issued offering pardon to such of his followers as should
within twenty-four hours depart peaceably to their homes. Royal officers
with their retainers were despatched to disperse small parties of Wyatt's
associates while on their way to Rochester; Sir Robert Southwell broke
up one band under an insurgent named Knevet; Lord
Abergavenny defeated another reinforcement led by a friend of Wyatt
named Isley; the citizens of Canterbury rejected Wyatt's entreaties to
join him, and derided his threats. Wyatt maintained the spirit of his followers
by announcing that he daily expected succour from France, and circulated
false reports of successful risings in other parts of the country. Some
of his followers sent to the council offers to return to their duty, and
at the end of January Wyatt's fortunes looked desperate. But the
tide turned for a season in his favour when the government ordered the
Duke of Norfolk to march from London upon Wyatt's main body, with a detachment
of white-coated guards under the command of Sir Henry Jerningham.
The manoeuvre gave Wyatt an unexpected advantage. The duke was followed
immediately by five hundred Londoners, hastily collected by one Captain
Bret, and was afterwards joined by the sheriff of Kent, who had called
out the trained bands of
the county. The force thus embodied by the government was inferior
in number to Wyatt's, and it included many who were in sympathy with the
rebels. As soon as they came within touch of Wyatt's forces at Rochester,
the majority of them joined him, and the duke with his principal officers
fled toward Gravesend.
Wyatt set out for London at the head of four thousand
men. He found the road open. Through Dartford and Gravesend
he marched to Blackheath, where he encamped on 29 Jan. 1553-4. The
government acknowledged the seriousness of the situation, and sent Wyatt
a message inviting him to formulate his demands, but this was only a means
of gaining time. On 1 Feb. 1554 Mary proceeded to the Guildhall and
addressed the citizens of London on the need of meeting the danger summarily.
Wyatt was proclaimed a traitor. Next morning more than twenty thousand
men enrolled their names for the protection of the city. Special
precautions were taken for the security of the court and the Tower; many
bridges over the Thames within a distance of fifteen miles were broken
down; all peers in the neighbourhood of London received orders to raise
their tenantry; and on 3 Feb. a reward of land of the annual value of one
hundred pounds was offered the captor of Wyatt's person.
The same day Wyatt entered Southwark, but his followers
were alarmed by the reports of the government's activity. Many deserted,
and Wyatt found himself compelled by the batteries on the Tower to evacuate
Southwark. Turning to the south he directed his steps toward Kingston,
where he arrived on 6 Feb. (Shrove Tuesday). The river was crossed
without difficulty, and a plan was formed to surprise Ludgate. On
the way Wyatt hoped to capture St. Jame's Palace, where Queen Mary had
taken refuge. But his schemes were quickly betrayed to the government.
A council of war decided to allow him to advance upon the city and then
to press on him from every quarter. He proceeded on 7 Feb. through
Kensington to Hyde Park, and had a sharp skirmish at Hyde Park Corner with
a troop of infantry. Escaping with a diminished following, he made
his way past St. Jame's Palace. Proceeding by Charing Cross along
the Strand and Fleet Street he reached Ludgate at two o'clock in the morning
of 8 Feb. The gate was shut against him, and he was without the means
or the spirit to carry it by assault. His numbers dwindled in the
passage through London, and he retreated with very few followers to
Temple Bar. There he was met by the Norroy herald, and recognising
that his cause was lost, he made a voluntary submission. After being
taken to Whitehall, he was committed to the Tower, where the lieutenant,
Sir John Brydges (afterwards first Lord Chandos), received him with opprobrious
reproaches. On his arrest the French ambassador, De Noailles, paid
a tribute to his valour and confidence. He wrote of him as 'le plus
vaillant et asseure de quoye jaye jamais ouy parler, qui a mis ladicte
dame et seigneurs de son conseil en telle et si grande peur, qu'elle s'est
veue par l'espace de huict jours en branale de sa couronne' (Ambassades
de Noailles, iii, 59). On 15 March he was arraigned at Westminster
of high treason, was condemned, and sentenced to death (Fourth Rep. Deputy
Keeper of Records, App, ii, pp. 244-5).
On the day appointed for his execution (11 April)
Wyatt requested Lord Chandos, the lieutenant of the Tower to permit him
to speak to a fellow-prisoner, Edward Courtenay,
earl of Devonshire. According to Chando's report Wyatt on his
knees begged Courtenay 'to confess the truth of himself.' The interview
lasted half an hour. It does not appear that he said anything to
implicate Princess Elizabeth, but he seems to have reproached Courtenay
with being the instigator of his crime (cf. FOXE, Acts and Monuments, iii,
41, and TYTLER, Hist of Edward VI and Mary, ii, 320). Nevertheless,
at the scaffold on Tower Hill he made a speech accepting full responsibility
for his acts and exculpating alike Elizabeth and Courtenay (Chronicles
of Queen Jane and Queen Mary, p 73; BATLEY, Hist. of the Tower, p. xlix).
After he was beheaded, his body was subjected to all the barbarities that
formed part of punishment for treason. Next day his head was hung
to a gallows on 'Hay Hill beside Hyde Park,' and subsequently his limbs
were distributed among gibbets in various quarters of the town (MACHIN,
Diary, p 60). His head was stolen on 17 April.
Wyatt married in 1537 Jane, daughter of Sir William
Hawte of Bishosbourne, Kent. Through her he acquired the manor of
Wavering. She bore him ten children of whom three married and left
issue. Of these a daughter Anna married Roger Twysden, grandfather
of Sir Roger Twysden [q.v.] , and another Charles Scott of Egerton, Kent,
of the family of Scott of Scotshall. The son George was restored
to his estate of Boxley, Kent by Queen Mary, and to that of Wavering by
Queen Elizabeth in 1570.