Ellen Gethin is one of the women I loved researching for my book, Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses. She lived in Wales in the 1460s, and was married to Thomas Vaughan, a York-supporting soldier. They lived at Hergest Court in Herefordshire, and Ellen was sadly widowed after Thomas' death after the Battle of Edgecote in 1469, when he was rounded up with other Yorkists after the action and executed at 69 years of age. But Ellen also had her own legend, having supposedly killed her cousin with a bow and arrow, after seeking revenge for him, in turn, murdering her brother after a drunken brawl. You can find more about her story in the book, along with other women of the age who have not been fully recognised in the context of the Wars.
On her death, Ellen was buried in a tomb inside her nearby church of Kington, Herefordshire. She was laid alongside her husband Thomas, and she commissioned an elaborate tomb complete with effigies of the pair to represent how they would have looked in life.
| Portrait of Ellen Gethin, Jo Romero, 2024 |
'In a recumbent position... are statues of Mr. Vaughan and his lady, in full length, with their hands clasped in the attitude of prayer. The male figure wears the elegant and splendid armour so prevalent in the reign of Richard III. The coudes, or elbow-pieces, are magnificent; and the breast-plate is so divided, as to show a demiplacate, with a pretty escaloped edge at the waist; four lames buckled together at the left hip, cover the abdomen, &c., and to the lowest are attached four beautiful twilles; and, although the sword and legs have been broken off, a rich transverse sword-belt, and spur-leathers, attest that close attention to detail, which renders these effigies so interesting. The tournament helmet, surrounded by the crest, is underneath his head; and on his hands, are the tasteful gauntlets of the times. The female appears in a long robe girded round the middle, and in folds below, with a splendid head-dress, and necklace: both her arms have been broken off at the elbows. At the feet of the male, is a mutilated figure of a lion; and, on the north side of the tomb, are represented eight angelic beings, in carved work, bearing shields, with the arms of the Vaughans emblazoned before them, and four at the west end.'
Soon after this description was recorded, Ellen and Thomas' tomb and effigy were disassembled and their parts taken to Hereford, to a stoneworker named Mr Benjamin Jennings. The sculptor carefully reconstructed the couple's missing limbs and replaced their faces. The report of 1847 does state though, that a lion was removed from Thomas' feet, 'because it accorded not with the rest of the work', which is a shame. Lions were a popular medieval and Tudor figure on effigies, symbolising loyalty to the crown. Crucially, because the previous damage to the tomb appeared to have been man-made rather than caused by accidental cracks or chips from centuries of wear, a railing was put up around it, 'which previously', stated our 1847 reporter, 'was not the case'.
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| Drawing of the tomb of Ellen Gethin and Thomas Vaughan from 1846, in Archaeologica Cambrensis, archive.org |
An image of the tomb shows the result of Jennings' work. Fine details of the armour Thomas wore have been preserved, along with Ellen's gown and jewellery. I haven't yet been over to Kington to see the tomb for myself, but apparently you can see the joins where the older parts of the figures meet the Victorian restorations, which is useful. For something that Ellen clearly commissioned with such care to preserve the memory of her husband and herself, it is especially fitting that it was one of her descendants that paid for the nineteenth century restorations. Frances Harley, a Vaughan heir and sister of the Earl of Oxford, is said to have spent more than £70 in restoring the effigies and tomb in 1846, a considerable amount in Victorian money.
Have you been to see the effigies? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below.
Liked this? You might also like Medieval Residents of Reading, Thomas and Elizabeth Clerk, The Queens of the Wars of the Roses, and Warrior Women of the Wars of the Roses.
To find out more overlooked women who lived through the Wars of the Roses and what their individual stories tell us about the conflict, Order your copy here at the Pen and Sword website.





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