Middridge Grange, between Shildon and Newton Aycliffe, began
life as an Elizabethan manor house. It has changed a good deal since those 16th
century days, and, after an extended period of dereliction, has recently been
returned to a habitable state. It has enjoyed a colourful history, of which two
notable periods stand out.
During the English Civil War it was the home of Colonel
Anthony Byerley, a Royalist who commanded a regiment which was garrisoned in
the house with him and his family. This body of men built up a fine reputation
for their indomitable spirit, earning the label of Byerley’s Bulldogs. They served under the Marquess of Newcastle
during hostilities, and are known to have fought in the Siege of York and the
Battle of Marston Moor in 1644. Following the Restoration in 1660, Col. Byerley
was awarded the Order of the Royal Oak for his feisty efforts. It is said that
a great underground tunnel exists in the grounds of the estate, which could well
date to this troubled time – indeed, King Charles I himself was supposed to
have taken refuge for a time at the Grange during the war.
Anthony Byerley’s fourth son, Robert, was born in 1660. At
the age of 14 he found himself in charge of the Middridge Grange estate after
the death of his father and his three older brothers. Then, in 1685, he became
an MP; and a year later found himself embroiled in the Battle of Buda as part
of the Holy League’s campaign against the Turks. It was during this time that
he gained possession of his famous Arabian horse, which came to be known as the
‘Byerley Turk’. He took it home with him and it lived with the family at
Middridge Grange, before following Robert to his new home at Goldsborough, near
Knaresborough, in the mid 1690s. During its stay at Middridge, the horse served
as Robert Byerley’s charger during his military forays – including the Battle
of the Boyne in 1690.
But what was so special about the Byerley Turk was that it
was the earliest of the three founding stallions of the entire
modern thoroughbred horse racing stock (the other two being
the Godolphin Arabian and the Darley Arabian)…
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