‘Conquiesco’ – I Conquer

Saint Patrick – even though the patron saint of Ireland – is still a native of Roman Britain, and so I will claim him as one of my own. I present my British family history in honor of St. Patrick’s Day
When my grandfather was forced to quit work because of his health, he needed something to keep himself occupied so he wouldn’t drive my Grandma Momo nuts. Being a history buff, he immersed himself in genealogy.
Not sure why he chose to trace Momo’s family instead of his own, but her history was incredible. With the help of Lucy, a distant cousin Grandpa discovered in England, the two of them were able to trace the family to 990 AD, and eventually to northern Yorkshire County, England.
Arkefrith, our family progenitor, was a Danish Viking who arrived in England with King Canute during the Invasion of 1016. In recognition of his military service, he was presented an estate and given the title of Lord of Dent, Sedburg and Askrigg. I’m sure somewhere there is a castle in England that I should be living in, but I hear they are terribly drafty.
The estate included land situation on the middle of three hills called the Three Calves. When the King of England required his subjects to take a surname, my great-grandfather (27-times removed) chose Adam De Midd Calf (died 1252), in reference to that original property. Over the generations, the name was anglicized to Metcalf – Momo’s maiden name.
My children represent the 36th generation of this family. The fact that I even know this is a source of great pride.
Before he died, Grandpa took all that he had learned in his research and wrote each of us a family history. As new generations are added to our family I continue to add chapters to the story.
In this history, a family tree that spans more than 1,000 years, there are Lords and Ladies, High Sheriffs, explorers and riverboat pirates. From one branch of the family we discovered that a direct descendent, Richard Warren, was a passenger on the Mayflower.
In one entry Grandpa wrote:
“Sir James Metcalf, of Askrigg and Nappa, born 1469, died 20 September 1539, knighted 1528, High Sheriff in 1525, married 1512 to Margaret, daughter and coheir to Thomas Pigot (Bigot) of Cotherane. In the year 1513 he led three hundred men in the ‘Battle of Flodden Field,’ every one of them was named Metcalf and each a son, brother, cousin or an uncle, all of them mounted on white horses.”
That would have been a sight to see. During this Battle, the English army, under the command of Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey, defeated the invading Scots led by King James IV. The Metcalf family motto was in play that day – ‘Conquiesco – I conquer.’
Happy St. Patrick’s Day!













hi tara,
you go girl. really cool to hear you speak with such passion about certain things. great day girl. happy green day my littermate, beany
he he, i was first to comment!! i feel so self-actualized! i am giggling. hope you have lots of good memories of your visit with ~J this week. i bet ya do. hugs!
Wow, that’s amazing! My family has been traced back (on my mother’s side) to the 13 century in Poland. Apparently we have a royal prince in the family, which means I just have to be a princess LOL.
P.S. I have an award waiting for you on my blog!
Loved your line about the castles being drafty.
It may not be proper historically, but really, us Irish are just looking for yet another excuse to drink!
That’s really cool!
Still don’t like the forced green wearing, though.
How cool that you’re able to trace your family history back as fara s you do. It is such a rare thing.
Incredible. Makes me want to start tracing my family history.
Hmmm…I smell a project brewing!
That is absolutely amazing and so very cool!!
Maybe Grandma Momo and I were related? No?
That is HUGE! It’s amazing that you are able to pass that alone to your kids and grandkids and them to theirs! You should be so proud
one of my uncles did something similar but i’ve gotta say, your family history is way cooler than mine. as soon as i readd the word nazi in our book, i stopped reading.
That is wonderful and so special! That is so neat you’re continuing it all. I wish I were able to trace back my ancestors. Thankfully my daughter will have some of my husbands family geneology.
What an awesome history. My mom is also really into genealogy. She has traced our French ancestors back to the 15th century. She has also managed to trace our Native American ancestors back pretty far – which is pretty amazing given that there are very very few written records…and those that do exist are not exactly accurate.
I love that you know all this. I love studying my family roots. We immigrated over to America from County WestMeath during the potato famine. My grandad loves to tell the stories of his ancestors first settling into Manhattan, and how they were treated lower than dogs. He said we are a family that rose from dirt and that is why we have true grit. It always makes me laugh, as he became a wealthy executive that never got his hands dirty a day in his life.
So cool! A family crest and motto?!! Way, way cool. I’d have too go visit and at least see the drafty castle!
Thanks for sharing!
That’s so cool! Man…i want a family crest…*sigh* lol
We have one side (dad’s) researched quite a bit back. But, not as far as yours! Dang!
I think it’s wonderful that you know your family heritage! My dad is working on our history and hopefully he will be as successful as your grandfather! Neat!
Dak-tari,
guess who?
I wonder if we’ve any relation? Same last name. It could be possible. I’ve tryed to do research on the name but havent been one to pay out alot of money for online sites. Very interesting back story. Its one I’ve actually heard quite a few times.
My name is Justin Metcalf and I’ve been working on our family history these past few years in my spare time; a handed down passion from my grandfather. I’d be interested to see your history if you want to swap notes… cheers!
Hmm. Ive heard of this story before about the middle of 3 hills (3 calfs) From a officer with my last name. Funny we could be related…