Wychnor Hall - History - The Levett Family

The Levett Family

The house was for many years the home of the Levett family (relations of Levett of Milford Hall). The family came from Sussex, arriving in Staffordshire from Cheshire in the early eighteenth century. Through intermarriage with the Floyer family of Hints, Staffordshire, the Levetts of Wychnor claim descent from King Edward III of England through his son Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence."Thomas Levett Prinsey Esq.". maximiliangenealogy.co.uk. Retrieved 7 December 2010.


The family's wealth largely derived from ownership of coal mines in Staffordshire and Derbyshire, as well as large landholdings and investments in the early Industrial Revolution enterprises associated with inventor Matthew Boulton.

The Levetts also held land at Edial and Curborough (inherited from their Babington ancestors) and elsewhere in Staffordshire.


Theophilus Levett was Steward (Town Clerk) of the City of Lichfield 1721–46, and his grandson and namesake was Recorder of Lichfield and High Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1809. Theophilus was named for Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Huntingdon, whose wife the Countess of Huntingdon was Levett's godmother. Theophilus Levett died in 1839. His friend General William Dyott, Aide-de-camp to King George III, attended Levett's simple funeral at Wychnor and noted that Levett "has left great riches to his younger children with the exception of his son Arthur, to whom he has bequeathed £4,000."

Theophilus Levett's son John Levett (landowner, investor and sometime member of the Lunar Society), was Member of Parliament for Lichfield. John Levett was also a friend of long standing to Matthew Boulton, the early inventor, as well as an early investor in Boulton's Soho Manufactory.

Another John Levett was High Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1846.

Theophilus John Levett, grandson of the first Theophilus, was M.P. for Lichfield from 1880 to 1885.

The family had a long association with Samuel Johnson, whom the first Theophilus Levett counted among his friends, and to whom he loaned money, including assuming the mortgage on Johnson's mother's Lichfield home on 31 January 1739, for £80. Johnson frequently wrote to Levett, and later to Levett's son John, pleading for extensions for his late payments. Levett later carried the mortgage as well as other loans to Johnson, who eventually paid them off in 1757.

Theophilus Levett also had a long friendship with David Garrick, an English actor, playwright and friend of Samuel Johnson's, who was also raised in Lichfield.

Many members of the Levett family of Wychnor Hall were Oxford graduates.

Members of the Levett family of Wychnor have intermarried into other county families over the centuries, carrying the name into other family lines. The Levett-Prinseps, for instance, descendants of the Levetts of Wychnor, formerly owned Croxall Hall in Derbyshire. The Latin motto on the coat of arms of the Levett-Prinsep family was Non Prodigus Neque Avarus: Neither prodigal nor mean.


The Levetts also had homes in Lichfield as well and several streets in the city are named for them today.


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