After the
Restoration, Sheldon ordered copies to be woven of two of the tapestry maps, those of Worcestershire and Oxfordshire, first commissioned around 1590 by his great-grandfather, also named Ralph Sheldon (1537–1613). Each of the four originals centred on a county in which members of the family lived, held land and had friends: Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Warwickshire and Oxfordshire. The copies of each map itself were almost exact, while the decorative borders were updated in style. The two later maps and the earlier one of Warwickshire were sold at auction with the contents of Weston in 1781, to
Horace Walpole. They were presented to
Lord Harcourt, who built a room for them at
Nuneham Courtenay. They later passed to the
Yorkshire Philosophical Society. The Oxfordshire map is now displayed at the
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford and that of Warwickshire is in the
Market Hall Museum, Warwick. That of Worcestershire is in store in the
Victoria and Albert Museum, London. ==Death==