Barkham was a city of London merchant belonging to the
Worshipful Company of Leathersellers. He was Master of the Leathersellers Company from 1605 to 1606, and from 1608 to 1609. On 28 February 1611, he was elected an
alderman of the City of London for
Farringdon Within ward. He was
Sheriff of London from 1611 to 1612, a service which paved the way for his future election as lord mayor. Owing to the customary requirement that the lord mayor should be a member of one of the "Great Twelve" livery companies, it became necessary for Barkham to negotiate the transfer of his membership from the Leathersellers to the
Worshipful Company of Drapers. Although it was prestigious for a Company to be represented by the lord mayor, it also incurred notable expenses, and the Drapers were reluctant to make the admission, having very recently admitted two others for the same cause. However Barkham's move was made, late in 1621, and he was duly elected to the mayoralty. On 29 October his inauguration was
celebrated with a pageant devised by
Thomas Middleton. Exercising his mayoral prerogative, Barkham moved as alderman to the
Cheap ward in that year. He was
knighted on 16 June 1622 and became Master of the
Drapers Company for the year 1622 to 1623. This admission was simultaneous with those of
Lord Marquess Hamilton,
Dr Donne, Sir
Edward Conway, Sir
Henry Mildmay and Sir
Thomas Coventry. He was a prime mover in the development of the new parish church of Trinity Christ-church, also called the "Temple of St James" (i.e.
St James Duke's Place), built in the ruins of
Holy Trinity Priory in Aldgate. The church was new-built to accommodate the inhabitants of "The Duke's Place", who had formerly resorted to the old
St Katherine Christchurch nearby. It was (says
Anthony Munday) officially consecrated in a civic ceremony on the morrow of
New Year's Day in the mayoralty of Sir
Peter Probie (1622–1623). Barkham's arms appeared in glass together with those of the City in the east window, and a lengthy verse inscription celebrating his re-edification of the church was attached to the south wall of the chancel. Between 1594 and 1601 Edward Barkham, citizen and Leatherseller, purchased the manor of
Quarmby, in West Yorkshire, from the Blyth family: the manor and its mansion remained in his hands until his death in 1634, when it was sold by the first baronet to Thomas Thornhill of Fixby. Extensive land acquisitions were made by Sir Edward and his successors in
Wainfleet All Saints,
Wainfleet St Mary,
Ingoldmells and
Friskney, Lincolnshire, from the 1590s onwards. These are itemized in an Estate Book which is the subject of a recent research project. Early surveys were conducted in 1609 (Adlard Hubberd) and 1610 (the Landlawer). The second son, Sir Robert Barkham of Wainfleet, obtained a baronetcy in the 1660s. He held a share of interest in the estates at Tottenham acquired by his father. == Death and monument ==