was a prominent lawyer who served as Solicitor-General for Ireland under Elizabeth I and held positions at court under James I. Born in Nantwich, he purchased the Dorfold estate in the adjacent parish of Acton in 1602. In 1613, Sir Roger founded almshouses for six poor men at what was then the end of Welsh Row; they were the town's earliest almshouses. The Hospital of St Lawrence, a medieval house for lepers, is believed to have been situated near the almshouse site. Four of the six almsmen were to be chosen from Nantwich, and two from the parish of Acton. Each almsman originally received four marks annually, as well as a gown every two years. The same year, he also founded a pair of almshouses in the village of Acton. The original Nantwich almshouse was: It might have been more similar to the existing appearance of the Acton almshouses than to the much-altered building surviving on Welsh Row. Webb described each almshouse in 1622 as "an handsome lodging" with "a little garden". The original wall by the street had a stone gateway; this is thought to have been moved to the garden of Townsend House, the Welsh Row mansion of the Wilbraham family, and later to the grounds of Dorfold Hall. replaced Wilbraham's Almshouses in 1870 Before 1661–2, the Nantwich almhouses' endowment was increased by £12 a year by Lady Grace Wilbraham of Woodhey. Wilbraham's Almshouses were maintained by the Wilbraham family until 1692, when responsibility for them passed into the Tollemache family because of the earlier marriage of Grace Wilbraham, the Wilbraham heiress, to Lionel Tollemache, the third Earl of Dysart. By 1774, the almsmen received 40 shillings and a pair of shoes annually, and a grey gown faced with blue and cap every two years. In 1856, the almshouses' endowment was considerably increased by a bequest of £738 13s 7d from Elizabeth and Mary Bennion, sisters of the wife of St Mary's minister. In 1870, the Wilbraham's Almshouses were replaced by the adjacent Tollemache Almshouses, built by John Tollemache, a descendant of Sir Roger Wilbraham, on the gardens of the Wilbraham's Almshouses. The almshouse building was subsequently used as a malthouse, and in the early 20th century was known as The Maltkilns. The original thatched roof was still present in 1907, when the building was divided into four two-storey cottages. By around 1930, the thatch had been replaced by corrugated iron, and the building was derelict in around 1971. The former almshouses have subsequently undergone substantial alterations to form a single house.
Description
112–116 Welsh Row is a timber-framed, black-and-white cottage, set back from the street behind a low wall. It has two low storeys with modern brick infilling under a tiled roof. The existing single house incorporates part of the 16th-century timber frame. Pevsner writes that "he façade seems to heave visibly." The ground floor has modern five mullioned and transomed windows, and a central doorway with a tiled hood above.
Modern usage
The almshouses are now a single private residence, Malthouse Cottage.