Bullock family


The Bullock family traces its roots to the 12th century, living primarily in the southern English counties of Berkshire and Essex from the mid-Norman period to the late Victorian era.

Origins of the name

The name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon "bulluca", meaning a young bull, and is linked to the old Anglian and Norman Christian name Osmund. It represents one of the earliest instances of an English hereditary surname that was a purely personal nickname in origin.

Coat of arms and motto

The first heraldic record in Berkshire, 1532, gives the arms of Thomas Bullock of Aborfield as:
In Harvey’s Visitation to Berkshire of 1565–1566, the crest had been changed to:
The confirmation of arms of Sir Edward Bullock in 1602 changed the chevron from argent to ermine, and the crest became:
The motto reads: nil conscire sibito have nothing on one's conscience.

Notable family members

Notable members of the family include:
The earliest recorded member of the family is Osemundus Bulloc at Arborfield, Berkshire, who is found in the pipe rolls of Berkshire in 1166. The Herald's visitations of the 15th century include the name of his son, Richard. These and later visitations show the descent in an unbroken line to Sir Edward Bullock of Faulkbourne, Essex, who died in 1644.
Richard’s son, Gilbert, made formal declaration in 1250 of his holding of the manor of Sunning from the Bishop of Salisbury.
Robert Bullock of Aborfield was Knight of the Shire for Berkshire and Sheriff for the Counties of Berkshire and Oxfordshire in 1384 and 1392 under Richard II. In 1394 he was Commissioner of the Peace for Berkshire. Hehad no male issue, so the Aborfield estates passed Thomas Bullock, the grandson of his uncle Gilbert.
Another Thomas was Gentleman Usher Extraordinary to Henry VIII in 1516 and one of the Commissioners for Berkshire collecting the subsidy for Henry VIII in 1523. In 1544 he supplied archers, billmen and horses for the war with France, leading to the inclusion of seven bills originally in the family crest. Thomas's uncle, Hugh "with ye Brazen Hand", left Aberfield to found the family branch in Siddenhall,.
Thomas Bullock was High Sheriff of Berkshire in 1581 and in the Commission of the Peace in 1592. He was the last Bullock of Arborfield, being obliged to sell the estates owing to accumulated debts. His uncle, George, refused to hand over the deeds. Thomas was forced by the family to produce a deed of entail and, having received the title deeds, went on to repudiate the deed. His brother and heir, William, litigated through the Court of Chancery and the Star Chamber but the sale was confirmed.
Thomas died in 1595, William, with the support of tenants, entered into possession in serious contempt of court, resulting in him being thrown into Fleet Prison. William continued actions to recover the estate in the Queen’s Bench, then the Court of Common Pleas, and later petitioned the Elizabeth I, the Privy Council and the Lord Keeper, but in vain.
William, released from prison and now of Stratfield Mortimer, married well, his third wife being Elizabeth Bellet of Morton in Essex, restoring the family fortunes.
His son, John, moved the family to the Manor House of Mulsham, at Great Wigborough in Essex, where he purchased estates at Loftes in Great and Little Totham. These estates remained in the family until the death of Edward Bullock of Faulkbourne in 1705.

Bullocks of Faulkbourne

was the elder son of Edward Bullock of Wigborough and Loftes in Great Totham. He was knighted by King James I and was a Royalist during the English Civil War. He acquired the manor of Faulkbourne in 1637 and made substantial alterations to Faulkbourne Hall, which remained the family seat until 1897. He married Elizabeth Wylde and is buried at the St Germanus' Church, Faulkbourne.
Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, the family thrived through a series of marriages to wealthy heiresses.
Edward Bullock was lord of seven manors and sat as a Member of Parliament for the County of Essex in 1698 and later for the Borough of Colchester in 1703.
He became Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Essex and High Sheriff of Essex in 1696 and 1703. Through his marriage to Elizabeth, elder daughter of Sir Mark Guyon of Coggeshall, large estates at Coggeshall, Maplestead and Finchingfield were inherited by the family. After Elizabeth's death, he married Mary, the daughter of Sir Josiah Child of Wanstead. Sir Josiah thoroughly opposed the marriage and left his daughter a mere £5 in his will "and no more because she hath married not only without my consent but expressly against my command and contrary to her own repeated promises and lette others learne by her example".
Through Sir Mark Guyon's younger daughter, Rachel, who married Edward's younger brother, John Bullock, the Guyon estates at Radwinter and Great Wigborough came into the family and passed by intestacy to Col. John Bullock.
Edward and Mary’s son, Josiah Bullock, attempted to follow his maternal grandfather's example and make his fortune in trade. He spent most of his life in London – in Highgate and the City – as a Royal Exchange Director and Hambro Merchant. Though a local Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant, he neglected his duties at Faulkbourne.
Josiah Bullock married Hannah, daughter of Sir Thomas Cooke, M.P.. Their son, John, had his portrait painted by Thomas Gainsborough. He was a Colonel in the East Essex Militia. Educated at Clare Hall, Cambridge, at the age of 23 he embarked on a parliamentary career that lasted 56 years and culminated in him becoming Father of the House. He took a keen interest in Faulkbourne and undertook many improvements to the Hall and grounds. A patron of the arts, he founded a wide-ranging collection of pictures. Whilst his wife Elizabeth was heiress to large slum estates in Southwark, he exhausted a large part of her fortune on parliamentary life. She died in 1793 and they had no children. He left his estates on his death, in 1809, to Jonathan Josiah Christopher Watson, son of his elder sister, also named Elizabeth, who had married Jonathan Watson of Ringhall in Suffolk.
Jonathan Josiah Christopher Watson succeeded to the Essex estates directly from his uncle in 1809 and, in the following year, took the surname Bullock, rather than Watson, under Royal Sign Manual, subject to some £24,000 of debt. He was a Major in the East Essex Militia.
His eldest son, also Jonathan, served in the 1st Dragoon Guards and as a Justice of the Peace, Deputy Lieutenant and, in 1837, High Sheriff of Essex. He did not marry an heiress but a daughter of the Vicar of Witham. His brother, John, became Rector of Radwinter and Faulkbourne and was the great-grandfather of Guy Bullock.
After Jonathan’s death in 1860, the pressure of social and economic change in the 19th century brought the beginnings of the family's decline at Faulkbourne. Properties began to be sold when the Rev. Walter Trevelyan Bullock inherited the estates, his three elder brothers having predeceased him, leaving only Faulkbourne and Radwinter in the family. He had been Rector of Faulkbourne until 1852 before moving to Devon, yet after only a year he returned to Faulkbourne on the death of his brother. He later lived mainly in London and, on a visit to Faulkbourne, accidentally poisoned himself and died in 1878. His sister, Margaret Emily Bullock, married the Rev. Hon. Llewellyn Charles Robert Irby, the youngest son of George Irby, 3rd Baron Boston.
His eldest son, Walter Henry Bullock, was the last of the Faulkbourne senior male lineage. During his youth, his trustees carried out extensive repairs to the Hall but he was never permanently in residence there. In 1892 most of the tapestries and pictures, such as the fitted Aubusson tapestries and Gainsborough’s portrait of Col. John Bullock, were sold.
Faulkbourne Hall and the surrounding estate were purchased in 1897 by Andrew Motion, who shortly thereafter sold them to Christopher William Oxley Parker.

Twentieth century

Walter Henry Bullock died in 1924. His son, Henry Talbot Bouverie Bullock, had only a daughter. Therefore, the family line passed to Walter's brother, the Rev. Llewellyn Christopher Watson. He married Cecil Augusta Margaret Spearman, whose mother, Lady Maria Louisa Spearman, was the daughter of Thomas FitzMaurice, 5th Earl of Orkney, the great-nephew of the former Prime Minister William Petty-FitzMaurice, 1st Marquess of Landsdowne.
The line passed to their eldest son, Walter Llewellyn Bullock, an academic and promoter of Italian studies at the Universities of Chicago and Manchester, where he was Serena Professor of Italian.
The line then passed to Llewellyn’s second son, Sir Christopher Bullock, K.C.B, C.B.E., who served as Permanent Under-Secretary at the British Air Ministry from 1931 to 1936. Appointed at the age of 38, he remains one of the youngest civil servants to have headed a British government department. In 1917 he married Barbara May Lupton, the second cousin of Olive Middleton, great-grandmother of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge. It was reported in 2016 that "Olive Middleton volunteered as a nurse with her relative Lady Bullock" - a social science graduate - during World War 1.
Sir Christopher was succeeded by his elder son, Richard Henry Watson Bullock C.B., who was Deputy Permanent Secretary at the Department of Trade and Industry and a consultant for Faulkbourn Consultancy Services.
Richard, in turn, was succeeded by his son, the actor and art historian Osmund Bullock, the current head of the family.
Sir Christopher's younger son, Edward Anthony Watson Bullock served in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and married Jenifer, elder daughter of Sir Richmond Palmer.

Senior male lineage