The Wolrich family originated in Shrewsbury: Roger Wolrich was twice coroner there in the late fourteenth century. He was responsible for extending the family’s interests beyond the borough through his marriage to a sister of Philip Willey, who, in about 1402, inherited her brother’s modest estate at Presthope in Much Wenlock.
Andrew Wolrich may already have been of age when the settlement of Dudmaston was made, but he does not appear again in the records until the summer of 1430 when he confirmed his father’s lease of a tenement in Doglane, Shrewsbury, to a local butcher at an annual rent of 6s. 8d. His father was still alive in the following January, when he gave all his goods to Andrew, but he probably died very soon afterwards.
Wolrich’s descendants went on to enjoy a far greater prominence than their medieval ancestors. According to John Leland, who visited Shropshire in the 1530s, the family then had a handsome annual income of 100 marks. Its most notable later member was (Sir) Thomas Wolrich† (d.1668), MP for Much Wenlock in 1620, who was created a baronet in 1641 and fought for the Crown during the Civil War. The family is commemorated by some fine seventeenth-century tomb chests in the church of Quatt.
