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Clement Higham

Sir Clement Higham MP JP PC (also Heigham; before 1495 – 9 March 1571) of Barrow, Suffolk, was an English lawyer and politician, a Speaker of the House of Commons in 1554,[1] and Chief Baron of the Exchequer in 1558–1559.[2] A loyal Roman Catholic, he held various offices and commissions under Queen Mary, and was knighted in 1555 by King Philip, but withdrew from politics after the succession of Queen Elizabeth I in 1558.[3][4]

Clement Higham
Heigham's coat of arms, at Lincoln's Inn.
Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer
In office
1558–1559
Speaker of the House of Commons
In office
1554–1555
Personal details
Bornca 1495
Died(1571-03-09)9 March 1571
Barrow, Suffolk
Spouse(s)(1) Anne Moonines; (2) Anne Waldegrave (1506–1590)
Parent(s)Clement Heigham; Maud Cooke
Alma materLincoln's Inn

Background and early career edit

Clement Heigham was the son and heir of Clement Heigham of Lavenham, Suffolk, the fourth son of Thomas Heigham of Heigham (died 1492). His mother was Matilda (Maud), daughter of Lawrence Cooke of Lavenham. His exact birth date is not known, but (if we follow Metcalfe's edition) he was the first of five sons, also Thomas, John, William and Edmond.[5] His father died on 29 August 1500, and was buried under a marble slab in the Braunches chapel on the north side of the chancel of Lavenham church, with a brass figure in full armour, a brief Latin inscription, and above it a single shield for Heigham displaying Sable a fess componée or and azure, between 3 horses' heads erased argent. (The brasses are long since lost.)[6]

It is suggested that Clement may have received early education from the monks of Bury St Edmunds. He was admitted at Lincoln's Inn in July 1517,[7] but, being appointed an officer for the Inn's celebration of Christmas in 1519, failed to turn up, and was fined.[8] He was called to the bar in 1525.[9] In around 1520 he married Anne Monnynge, of a mid-Suffolk family, and over the next years she had five daughters, and one son (who died in infancy). In 1521 Clement Heigham, Roger Reve (brother of John Reve, Abbot of Bury St Edmunds 1513–1539) and Thomas Munning were among the feoffees for 2nd Duke of Norfolk and others in lands at Stow Bardolph and Wimbotsham, Norfolk.[10]

By 1528, however, his first wife was dead, and he remarried to the widow Anne Bures, daughter of George Waldegrave of Smallbridge, Suffolk and Anne Drury,[11] with whom he had a further three sons and two daughters. Anne had previously been the wife of Sir Henry Bures (died 1528),[12] of Acton Hall, Suffolk, and by him had four daughters, Joan, Bridget, Anne and another, who were small children at the time of the second marriage. They were therefore the step-sisters of Heigham's elder daughters, and of similar ages to them,[13] and were to become the half-sisters of the Heigham children by the second marriage. Estimates of the birthdate of John Higham, his first son by Anne, range between c. 1530 and c. 1540.[14]

His attainments as a lawyer, and perhaps the example of the Abbot's bailiff Thomas Heigham during the 1470s,[15] had by 1528 recommended Clement Heigham to the office of Bailiff to the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds.[16] In 1529 he first received commission as justice of the peace for Suffolk, and remained in the Suffolk magistracy for the rest of his life.[3] He became Pensioner at Lincoln's Inn in 1531 and was called to the Bench in 1534.[17] On the east side of the county of Suffolk, farm of the site of the manor of Semer was leased to him in 1532 under the Convent seal for 30 years.[18][19] On the west side he developed tenures around the Abbey's manor and park of Chevington, not far from Gazeley and the hamlet of Heigham from which his family took its name.[20] In his chambers at Lincoln's Inn Heigham was presented as Autumn Reader in 1537/38 (when he was also appointed Marshall, but fined £7 for not acting), and Keeper of the Black Book in 1538/39.[21] Through this time the monastic closures occurred, and Bury Abbey was dissolved in 1539.

Dissolution and Edwardian period edit

Following the death in 1539 of Roger Reve,[22] the Court of Augmentations instructed Clement Heigham of Chevington to pay £220 to Abbot John Reve (Roger's executor), and in March 1540, shortly before his death, John Reve made his own testament appointing Heigham his executor and disposing of the sum in many small legacies, not forgetting his sister Elizabeth Munning and her daughter. Reve gave to Heigham his valuable hangings in his great chamber at Horningsheath,[23] and to Anne Heigham his best ring set with turkey stones.[24] The manor and park of Chevington were among those granted to Sir Thomas Kytson in March 1540.[25]

Serving as Treasurer of Lincoln's Inn in 1540–41,[26] in December 1540 Heigham completed the purchase of the manor of Barrow, near Chevington, from Sir Thomas Wentworth (died 1551) of Nettlestead,[27] by deed of Sir William Waldegrave of Smallbridge Hall (Anne Heigham's brother),[28] Sir William Drury of Hawstead (her uncle)[29] and Sir Thomas Jermyn of Rushbrooke Hall[30] (her stepfather).[31] Here he built his residence of Barrow Hall, which remained in the family of his descendants for more than two centuries. An illustration of the Hall, copied in 1779 from a 1597 original, survives.[32] John Gage wrote of it, "Barrow Hall... stood on the south side of the church, and was a large brick building, moated. In the summer of 1775, the ground plan of the building was traceable. It was evident that the front had been broken by a central gatehouse, and several bay windows."[33] The rectory of Barrow was then newly occupied as the benefice of a notable academic in the University of Cambridge, Dr Thomas Bacon, presented by the King in 1539.[34] Heigham purchased the manor of Semer from the King for £426 in 1543.[35]

Queen Katheryn's letter from Hampton Court of 25 July 1544 to the King in Calais, advising His Majesty that Clement Higham had been appointed by the Council and the High Treasurer of the Wars for the wafting of £40,000 unto His Majesty on the following Monday, indicates the high level of trust now reposed in him.[36][37] He was again appointed Autumn Reader at Lincoln's Inn at All Souls 1545, but he was reported to be "sykke and disseased", and Giles Townsend had to read for him. The Solicitor-General (Edward Griffith) called an immediate council which appointed Heigham Lent Reader next coming if willing, or to pay a fine of 20 nobles, and wrote at once for his decision. He read at Lent 1547/48.[38] Following the death of King Henry and the accession of Edward VI in 1547, the Autumn vacation of 1548 was not kept owing to a death from plague in the Inn, but at the Council at All Saints' Day 1548 Clement Heigham first sat as a Governor of Lincoln's Inn, and regularly thereafter through the reigns of Edward and of Mary, where he was often in company with Edward Griffith.[39]

During the 1540s Anne Heigham's daughters were married: three of them were married to three brothers, the sons and coheirs of the royal physician William Butts (1486-1545) and his wife Margaret, heiress of the Cambridgeshire family of Bacon. Joan Bures married (Sir) William Butts the younger, lord of Thornage, Norfolk, who died in 1583;[40][41] Bridget Bures married Thomas Butts, lord of Ryburgh Magna, Norfolk, who took part in the 1536 voyage of Richard Hore to Newfoundland; and Anne married Edmund Butts, of Barrow, Suffolk in 1547, and had a daughter Anne Butts.[42] The fourth daughter, Mary, married Thomas Barrow of Shipdham, Norfolk,[43] and was mother of the separatist, Henry Barrowe.[44]

Abbot John had, until the dissolution of St Edmund's, been responsible for the collecting of the tenths in the diocese of Norwich (which Bishop Reppes had not blushed to spend), and in Edward's reign Heigham was still being held accountable for £972 outstanding so on the abbot's account.[45] However, after an Act was introduced in 1549 to regulate and restore monastic pensions, in September 1552 Heigham was appointed a commissioner, together with Sir William Drury, Sir Thomas Jermyn (deceased), Sir William Waldegrave and others, to investigate abuses. They interviewed the late priors of Woodbridge and Eye, the abbot of Leiston and the prioress of Redlingfield, the Master and three fellows of Wingfield College, and many priests, former monks and lay annuitants. It was found that Ambrose Jermyn (son of Sir Thomas) had accepted the transfer of an annuity as an inducement for the granting of a benefice; Edward Reve had sold his annuity to John Holt, one of the commissioners.[46] Heigham was given two geldings and named an executor in the will of Sir Thomas Jermyn, written September, proved December 1552.[47]

Marian advancement edit

In the succession crisis of the following summer, on 8 July 1553 Queen Mary wrote to Sir George Somerset, Sir William Drury, Sir William Waldegrave and Clement Heigham, informing them of the death of King Edward and commanding them to repair to her at Kenninghall in Norfolk. They, together with the Earl of Bath, Sir John Sulyard, Sir Henry Bedingfield, Henry Jerningham and others were with her on 12 July, in preparation for her journey to London: their swift loyalty to her was afterwards remembered.[48] Bedingfield and Drury had sat in March for the county of Suffolk; but it was in the parliament of October 1553 that Heigham sat first, initially for Rye, and was placed in charge of some important legislation, including an Act to avoid unlawful risings.[3] Wyatt's rebellion intervened in February 1554. In April 1554 Heigham was returned to parliament for Ipswich, Suffolk, and had responsibility for the bill concerning Ordinances for Cathedral churches in late April. This parliament was dissolved in May 1554, and soon afterwards he was admitted to the Privy Council of England.[3]

Speaker of the House of Commons It was then in November 1554, following solemnization of the marriage of Philip and Mary, that, being returned for West Looe (Cornwall), Heigham was elected Speaker of the House of Commons.[49] The Bishop of Winchester, Lord Chancellor, opened the proceedings by declaring that the parliament was called for the confirmation of true (i.e. Catholic) religion. Then Heigham, being chosen Speaker, "in an excellent oration, comparing the body politic to the body natural, introduced the three usual petitions, for freedom of speech, etc., and was accepted." He presided over very weighty affairs. Cardinal Pole, his attainder reversed, spoke before both houses. The schemes of Stephen Gardiner were accomplished: the Acts against the Pope were repealed, and those against Heresy revived. Almost forty members of the Commons rose and left the house when they saw that the majority were minded to capitulate: Heigham's colleague Edward Griffith, since May 1552 Attorney-General, was ordered to indict them.[50]

The parliament was dissolved on 16 January 1555, and shortly afterwards, 27 January, Heigham was knighted by King Philip in his chamber, together with the Lord Mayor of 1554-1555 John Lyon,[51] Robert Broke (Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas), Edward Saunders, John Whiddon and William Staunford, Justices.[52] In a legal notice issued in July 1555, in which he legitimizes the heir of a priest of Mildenhall who had married in the time of King Edward, it is expressed that Philip and Mary "per Clementum Heigham militem Senescallum suum concesserunt...",[53] Senescallus or steward presumably referring to his position in the Privy Council.[54] At Lincoln's Inn, at the All Saints' Day Council of 1554, Mr. Hygham's name appeared second in precedence among the six Governors, between Edward Griffith, Attorney-General of the King and Queen, and William Cordell, Solicitor-General: one year later, Clement Hygham, Knight, headed the list.[55] Sir William Waldegrave died during that year, leaving £20 among the children of his sister Anne wife of Clement Higham.[56]

Heretics edit

According to Heigham's own epitaph,

"In punishment unto the pore which ded their cryme lament
He wold with pyty mercyfull from rigour soone relent:
But unto them which wilfully contynude in offence,
A terro[r] unto them he was in Justice true defence."[57]

Advancement to the summit of his career depended, for Heigham, upon the favour of Mary and her Chancellor, which came with expectations. Inevitably he was an instrument of their persecutions, and as a justice and magistrate he must frequently have given the first hearings to cases of religious delinquency. His reputation for severity towards common people as heretics seems borne out by a few stories in John Foxe's Acts and Monuments.

Hooper and Mountain

He was plunged directly into the full political force of Gardiner's intentions within hours of receiving his knighthood. On 28 and 29 January 1554/55 Heigham was in St Mary Overie where Stephen Gardiner with Edmund Bonner presided over a solemn company of the bishops, many lords, knights and others, to witness the public inquisition and excommunication of John Hooper, Bishop of Gloucester. Hooper was condemned, sentenced and handed over to the Sheriffs of London for burning. Many, including Sir Clement Heigham and Sir Richard Dobbs, were required to witness the notarial certificate of the proceedings. John Rogers (Prebendary of St Paul's), Dr. Rowland Taylor and Laurence Saunders (brother of Sir Edward) were condemned in the same session: Hooper was burned on 9 February 1554/55.[58] On 5 March 1555, Queen Mary rewarded Heigham for his loyalty to her at Framlingham, and for his services as Speaker, by the grant in chief of the reversion of the manor and rectory of Nedging, Suffolk, with its lands in Semer, Bildeston, Whatfield and Chelsworth.[59]

Heigham was also on the Cambridge Castle Bench with Sir Robert Broke, Edward Griffith and others when Thomas Mountain, the troubled minister of Whittington College[60] was brought into the August sessions of 1555, after a long imprisonment, and was found to have no accusers. The County Sheriff for November 1554 to 1555, Sir Oliver Leader, spoke up for Mountain, and then said he had forgotten to bring with him the writ against the man. Griffith, in the meantime, was telling Mountain that he was a traitor and a heretic, and likely to be hanged. However without a writ or an accuser Broke and his fellow-justices were obliged in all equity to release Mountain on bail, which was immediately put up by his acquaintances, and he was later able to make an escape.[61]

East Anglian martyrs

In Ipswich in summer 1555 Robert Samuel, a minister of East Bergholt, was imprisoned, and burnt at the stake on 31 August. During his confinement two devout women of reformist views, Agnes Potten and Joan Trunchfield, visited Samuel and gave him encouragement.[62] Immediately after his execution they were arrested and imprisoned, and the accounts of the Chamberlains of Ipswich show that Sergeant Holmes made two journeys to the home of Sir Clement Heigham in that connection before they were burned in a single fire at Ipswich on 19 February 1555/56.[63]

At about this time information had been given against Robert Pygot, a painter from Wisbech, for non-attendance at church. He was called into the sessions, and Heigham said to him, "Ah, are you the holy father the painter? How chance you came not to the church?": to which Pygot answered, "Sir, I am not out of the church; I trust in God." "No, sir", said Heigham, "this is no church: this is a hall." "Yea, sir", said Pygot, "I know very well it is a hall: but he that is in the true faith of Jesus Christ, is never absent, but present in the church of God." "Ah sirrah", said the judge, "you are too high for me to talk with, wherefore I will send you to them that are better learned than I." So he was taken to jail in Ely and interrogated, and was burned there on 16 October 1555.[64]

Heigham was present at the examination of John Fortune alias Cutler, a blacksmith of Hintlesham who had influenced Roger Bernard (a man burned at Bury St Edmunds on 30 June 1556). The Bishop of Norwich interviewed him, and Heigham intervened at a critical point in the dialogue. The bishop told Fortune he should be burned like a heretic, and Fortune asked "who shall give judgement upon me?" The bishop said, "I will judge a hundred such as thou art", and Fortune asked again, "Is there not a law for the spiritualty as well as for the temporalty?" Sir Clement Heigham said, "Yes, what meanest thou by that?" Fortune told the bishop he was a perjured man, because he had taken an oath to resist the Pope, in King Henry's time: and therefore, like a perjured lawyer, he should not be allowed to sit in judgement. 'Then sayde maister Hygham: "it is tyme to weede out suche fellowes as you bee in deede".' (This is from Fortune's own account.) Fortune was condemned.[65]

Foxe also mentions John Cooper of Wattisham, who was arraigned at a Bury Lent Assize in 1557 before Sir Clement Heigham for allegedly having said that he should pray "if God would not take away Queen Mary, that then the devil would take her away." This accusation, for a treasonable saying, was made by one Fenning, who is thought to have borne false witness: Cooper denied it. Heigham told Cooper "he should not escape, for an example to all heretics", and sentenced him to be hanged, drawn and quartered, which was accordingly done.[66]

In July 1558 the outspoken country wife Alice Driver of Grundisburgh, near Woodbridge, who had been pursued for her Protestant views into hiding in the countryside, appeared before Sir Clement at the Bury Assizes. Before him her principal offence was to compare Queen Mary to Jezebel, and to call her by that name, for which Heigham then and there commanded that her ears be cut off, which was done. He then committed her to be interrogated by Dr Spenser, Chancellor of Norwich, at Ipswich, where her spirited defence led to her condemnation and death at the stake in November 1558.[67] It is said that he issued a writ for the burning of three men at Bury St Edmunds about a fortnight before the death of Queen Mary, when it was already known that she was beyond hope of recovery.[68]

Chief Baron of the Exchequer

In the parliament beginning 20 January 1557/58, in which William Cordell was chosen Speaker, Sir Clement Heigham sat for Lancaster. When the session rose on 7 March, Heigham had a few days earlier (2 March) received appointment "during good behaviour" to be Chief Baron of the Exchequer (though he had never held the rank of Serjeant-at-law), in succession to Sir Robert Broke.[69] The great matter then in preparation was the indictment against John Harleston (Captain of Ruysbank Castle), Edward Grymeston (Comptroller of Calais), Sir Ralph Chamberlain (Lieutenant of Calais Castle), Nicholas Alexander (Captain of Newenham Bridge Castle) and Thomas Lord Wentworth (Deputy of Calais), that they had become adherents of the King of the French and had treasonably conspired to deprive Her Majesty of Calais and the other castles and to surrender them to the French during the preceding January. The indictment was found before Thomas Curtis (lord mayor), Sir John Baker (Chancellor of the Exchequer), Sir Clement Heigham and Sir Robert Broke on 2 July 1558.[70] The Queen ordered Heigham and Sir John Sulyard to take inventories of the goods of the accused, and an account of their revenues since the loss of Calais, on 15 July 1558.[71]

Elizabethan years edit

Heigham received a new patent as Chief Baron of the Exchequer upon the accession of Queen Elizabeth, but he resigned it on 22 January 1559, and so served only 10 months in the office in all, making way for Sir Edward Saunders to succeed him. The reversal of Mary's religious policy and the abhorrence of her persecutions was such that he withdrew from public office, and retired to Barrow Hall.[72] He last appeared as Governor at the All Saints' Day 1557 Council of Lincoln's Inn, when his son-in-law Robert Kempe[73] was Keeper of the Black Book.[74] In November 1559 he was granted the arrears of an annuity relating to the wardship of his daughter Elizabeth Kempe's first marriage, to Henry Eden.[75] His son and heir John Heigham, who had matriculated from Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1555, was admitted to Lincoln's Inn on 7 May 1558.[76] Sir Clement however retained his place in the Suffolk magistracy, and is said, in his epitaph, to have been beloved by his neighbours for his effectiveness in settling their disputes peaceably. On 22 June 1559, following the death of Dr Thomas Bacon (Master of Gonville Hall, Cambridge), incumbent, he presented John Crosyer, Cambridge B.A. (1535-1536), M.A. (1538), to the Rectory of Barrow.[77][78]

Heigham retained until his death the office of Chief Bailiff to the town of Bury St Edmunds, as he had held it since the time of Sir Robert Drury. He drew support from his long connection with Sir Nicholas Bacon, appointed Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and Lord Privy Seal to Elizabeth in 1558, who in the 1560s was building his residences at Old Gorhambury, Hertfordshire and Redgrave Hall, Suffolk. During the 1540s Heigham was connected with Bacon in the manors of Ingham, Ampton and Culford.[79][80] In 1562 Bacon was recruited by Heigham, Ambrose Jermyn, John Holt and others, to assist in their attempts to obtain a charter for Bury St Edmunds. He wrote supportively, but expressing doubt as to the prospects of success.[81]

John Heigham, the heir, married in 1562. It was in 1564 that Sir Nicholas Bacon's son and heir, Nicholas Bacon the younger, married Anne Butts, Dame Anne Heigham's granddaughter.[82] Sir Thomas Kytson the younger (1540-1603), of Hengrave Hall, described to the Duke of Norfolk how he accompanied Sir Clement Heigham and other gentlemen of the county to meet the Lord Keeper between Bury and Newmarket, in his progress to Redgrave Hall.[83] In August 1566 Sir Thomas Gresham wrote from Ringshall to William Cecil telling how he had met the Lord Keeper at Sir Clement Heigham's house, where "his Lordshipe sealed the Quene's Maiestie's bonds" before proceeding to St Albans.[84] A letter of 1569 survives in which the Lord Keeper instructs his son to send a brace of bucks from Redgrave to Sir Clement Heigham.[85] When Heigham died in 1571, the office of Bailiff of Bury St Edmunds was granted to Nicholas Bacon "as fully as it was formerly held by Robert Drury, Kt., or Clement Heigham, Kt."[86]

John Crosyer, rector of Barrow, died in December 1569 leaving a charitable request to the poor of the village and to its church, arising from the rents of 13 acres of land in Bury St Edmunds. He was buried in front of the altar at Barrow under a stone with his effigy in brass, and a long English verse inscription referring (in the third person) to his education, his teaching, his example and his benefaction. There were also short inscribed scrolls, and six lines of prayer in Latin verse (in the first person), which have now gone.[87][88] Then on 28 May 1570 Sir Clement presented as rector another University of Cambridge academic, Dr Humphrey Busby, who had been (the second) Regius Professor of Civil Law in Cambridge from c. 1545 to c. 1550. He was apparently deputy as Vice-Chancellor to Walter Haddon (1549–50). Like Crosyer he was originally of Trinity Hall: in 1557-1558 he served at St Stephen Walbrook, but during the 1560s he was, as Dr Bacon had been, a member of Gonville Hall, and he established scholarships at both colleges.[89] In 1573 Gabriel Harvey considered Busby to be senile, disputative, and over-fond of "seavenoclocke dinnars".[90]

Heigham made his will on 10 November 1570.[31] It opens with a lengthy prayer of repentance for his many sins, hoping for and trusting in forgiveness, so that he may have Grace to receive the body and blood in the form of bread, "the whiche after the consecracion thereof I steadfastly belive to be the verie bodie and bludd of our Saviour Jhu Christe, the whiche was crucified for me uppon the Crosse for the redempcon of me and all sinners", etc., thus professing his continued adherence to the mysteries of the Old English Religion. Naturally he could not make arrangements for a chantry, but he made numerous bequests to the poor people dwelling on his estates. The will, making his widow Anne and son John his executors, amply describes the family relationships, settling Barrow with all its appurtenances and other lands upon his widow Anne for life: they are to remain thereafter to his son John, who in his own right is to have the manor of Semer, or in default of issue it is to pass by entail through Sir Clement's heirs, all of whom are in other ways provided for. Sir Clement died on 9 March 1571 and was buried as he requested at Barrow, in the tomb described below. His son John received licence to enter upon his father's lands on 2 June 1571.[91]

Marriage and children edit

 
Memorial to Anne Heigham, Clement's second wife, at Thornage. She also appears on the brass at Barrow. (Photo by Evelyn Simak)

Sir Clement married twice.

His first wife, Anne, is in some sources said to have been Anne Moonines daughter of John de Moonines of Semer Hall, near Bildeston, Suffolk, but in others to have been the daughter of Thomas Monnynge or Munninge of Bury St Edmunds. By her Sir Clement had one son, who died without issue, and five daughters:[92]

  • Vincent Heigham (died in infancy).
  • Elizabeth Heigham, living 1570, married (1) Henry Eden of St Edmundsbury, and (2) Robert Kempe of Finchingfield, Essex.
  • Margaret Heigham, living 1570, married Humphrey Moseley, of Tunstall, Staffordshire; died 1606 aged 78, buried at Wolverhampton.
  • Anne Heigham, living 1570, married Thomas Turner of Wratting, Suffolk.
  • Frances Heigham, living 1570, married ----- Warren.
  • Lucy Heigham, living 1570, married (1) John Bokenham, of Snetterton, Norfolk, and (2) Francis Stonar, of Stapleford, Essex.

His second wife, whom he married after 1528, was Anne Waldegrave (1506–1590), widow of Sir Henry Bures of Acton, Suffolk, and daughter of Sir George Waldegrave (1483–1528) of Smallbridge in the parish of Bures St. Mary, Suffolk and his wife Anne Drury (d. 1572). (Anne Drury was a daughter of Sir Robert Drury, Lord of the Manors of Thurston and Hawstead, both in Suffolk (1455–1536)).[93] (See also the Waldegrave family.) By Anne Waldegrave (who died in 1589 aged 84, and whose ledger stone survives in All Saints Church, Thornage, Norfolk) he had several children, including:[94]

  • Sir John Heigham, eldest son and heir, an M.P. for Ipswich.[95][96] He married (1), 1562, Anne, daughter of Edmund Wright (died 1583), of Sutton Hall, Bradfield Combust, Suffolk, and (2), Anne, daughter of William Poley of Boxted, Suffolk.
  • Thomas Heigham, buried Ampton, Suffolk, 1597.
  • William Heigham, of East Ham, Essex, died 1620 aged 73. He married Anne, daughter of Richard Stoneley, Teller of the Exchequer.
  • Judith Heigham, died 1571, married John Spelman, of Narborough, Norfolk.
  • Dorothy Heigham, married (1561) Sir Charles Framlingham, of Crowes Hall, Debenham, Suffolk.

Monument edit

Sir Clement is buried in the Church of All Saints at Barrow, Suffolk. Against the south wall of the chancel is a tomb-chest surmounted by a low canopy with a flat-arched roof, ornamented within with quatrefoils and Tudor flowers. Externally the canopy has a horizontal frontage carved with quatrefoils (three enclosing shields, two enclosing double roses) between coursed mouldings, crowned above with a frieze of lozenge-formed crinkled foliage between the slender octagonal columnar quoins which rise at the corners as turrets. The front of the tomb-chest has three lozenges enclosing quatrefoil tracery with a heraldic shield at the centre of each.[97]

Beneath the canopy, a brass memorial of composite construction is set into the upright wall at the back.[98] In the lower part are two large brass rectangular plates set adjacent, containing an epitaph to Sir Clement Heigham in 44 lines of English rhymed heptameter couplets,[57] engraved in very controlled gothic lettering. Directly surmounting these are three figural groups separately mounted. Sir Clement, in full plate armour and with sword, appears centrally: he kneels in prayer at a desk with an open book upon it, his helmet beside it and his gauntlets hanging in front of it. He faces sinister (to the right as viewed), towards a separate group facing towards him, representing his second wife (Anne Waldegrave) kneeling at another desk, and behind her their two daughters, Judith and Dorothy.[99]

Sir Clement faces away from a third group on the dexter side (left as viewed), representing his first wife Anne Munnings kneeling at another desk, with their five daughters, Elizabeth, Margaret, Anne, Frances and Lucy, kneeling behind her. Between Sir Clement and this group is a gap with three rivet holes in the wall, representing a missing fourth group directly behind him which should have shown his sons by his second wife, John, Thomas and William Heigham. Vincent, the son of the first marriage who died in infancy, is shown by a kneeling shrouded chrisom child just behind Sir Clement himself.[100]

Above these images are three heraldic shields. The central one, engraved on a square plate of latten, bears the arms of Heigham (quarterly 1st and 4th Heigham; 2nd and 3rd Francys), including the crest of a horse's head erased, argent. The other two escutcheons are shield-shaped plates. The shield to the right as viewed, above the second wife, contains the arms of Waldegrave, 1st and 4th (shown as a quartering with Montchency, Creake, Vauncy and Moyne), quartered with Fray, 2nd and 3rd. The shield to the left as viewed represents the impalement of the Heigham quartering (as before) on the dexter side, with the Waldegrave quartering (as before) on the sinister side: it is the heraldic representation of the second marriage.[101][102][100]

The arms of Heigham (not quartered with Francys) are displayed in a window at Lincoln's Inn.

References edit

  1. ^ 'Sir Clement Heigham, Kt.', in J.A. Manning, The Lives of the Speakers of the House of Commons (G. Willis, London 1851), pp. 208-14 (Google).
  2. ^ 'Heigham, Clement', in E. Foss, The Judges of England, Vol. V: 1485-1603 (Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, & Roberts, London 1857), pp. 511-13 (Internet Archive).
  3. ^ a b c d M.K. Dale, 'Heigham, Clement (by 1495-1571), of Barrow, Suff.', in S.T. Bindoff (ed.), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509-1558 (from Boydell and Brewer 1982), History of Parliament Online.
  4. ^ J.H. Baker, 'Heigham, Sir Clement (b. in or before 1500, d. 1571)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (OUP 2004); replacing J.A. Hamilton, 'Heigham, Sir Clement (died 1570)', Dictionary of National Biography (1885-1900), Vol. 25.
  5. ^ 'The Visitation of Suffolk, 1561: Higham of Barrow', in W.C. Metcalfe (ed.), The Visitations of Suffolk, made in 1561, 1577 and 1612 (Metcalfe, Exeter 1882), pp. 40-41 (Internet Archive). They are not to be confused with the Heighams of Giffords Hall at Wickhambrook in Suffolk.
  6. ^ Described in Richard Reyce's Breviary of Suffolk (Harleian MSS), recited in J.J. Howard (ed), The Visitation of the County of Suffolke, 2 vols (Whittaker & Co., London/Samuel Tymms, Lowestoft 1868), II, p. 228 (Internet Archive).
  7. ^ Register of Admissions, Lincoln's Inn, Vol. I: From A.D. 1420 to A.D. 1799 (Lincoln's Inn, 1896), p. 38 (Internet Archive).
  8. ^ The Records of the Honorable Society of Lincoln's Inn: The Black Books, Vol. I: A.D. 1422 to A.D. 1586 (Lincoln's Inn, 1897), p. 189 (Internet Archive).
  9. ^ The Black Books, I, p. 212 (Internet Archive).
  10. ^ Norfolk Record Office, Hare MSS: Charter - feoffment, ref Hare 4710/5 214x6 (Discovery catalogue).
  11. ^ Howard (ed.), The Visitation of the County of Suffolke, II, p. 216 (Internet Archive).
  12. ^ Will of Henry Bures of Acton, Suffolk (P.C.C. 1528, Porche quire).
  13. ^ Howard, Visitation of Suffolk, II, at p. 250, note (Internet Archive).
  14. ^ In his will of 1626 John Higham gave his age as 96 (sc. birth 1530); if so, his admission to Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1555 was extremely late. See J.P. Ferris, Heigham (Higham), Sir John (c.1540-1626), of Barrow and Bury St. Edmunds, Suff.', in A. Thrush and J.P. Ferris (eds), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629 (from Cambridge University Press 2010), History of Parliament Online.
  15. ^ 'The corporation of Bury St. Edmunds: Miscellaneous records - II: 1477. Ordinances for the reformation of abuses in the craft of the weavers', in The Manuscripts of Lincoln, Bury St. Edmunds Etc, Fourteenth Report of the Historical Manuscripts Commission, Appendix; Part VIII (London 1895), pp, 123-44 (British History Online).
  16. ^ Hamilton, 'Heigham, Clement', Dictionary of National Biography, citing Arundel MS Brit. Mus. i. fol 54.
  17. ^ The Black Books, I, p. 232-33, 237 (Internet Archive).
  18. ^ L.J. Redstone, '"First Ministers' Account" of the possessions of the Abbey of St Edmund', Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology, XIII Part 3 (1909), pp. 311-66, at p. 343 (Society's pdf).
  19. ^ W.A. Copinger, The Manors of Suffolk. Notes on their History and Devolution, Vol. III: Hundreds of Carlford and Colneis, Cosford and Hartismere (Taylor, Garnett, Evans, & Co., Ltd., Manchester 1909), p. 198, and p. 202 (Internet Archive).
  20. ^ S.H.A. Hervey, Denham Parish Registers, 1539-1850. With Historical Notes and Notices (Paul & Mathew, Bury St. Edmund's, 1904), pp. 187-91 (Internet Archive).
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  22. ^ Will of Roger Reve, Clothmaker of Bury St Edmunds (P.C.C. 1539, Dyngeley quire).
  23. ^ Horningsheath was granted to John Reve in January 1540: 'Augmentation Book 212, fol. 61 b', in J. Gairdner and R.H. Brodie (eds), Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Vol. XV: 1540 (London 1896), p. 562, no. 1032 (British History Online).
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  32. ^ It is re-drawn in E. Martin, 'Two exceptional Tudor houses in Hitcham', Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History, XXXVII Part 3 (1991), pp. 186-207, at pp. 203-04, citing Suffolk Record Office (Bury), ref. 862/2.
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  38. ^ The Black Books, I, pp. 270-71, and p. 285 (Internet Archive).
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  48. ^ J.G. Nichols (ed.), The Chronicle of Queen Jane, and of Two Years of Queen Mary, Camden Society XLVIII (1850), pp. 3-7, and p. 175 (Internet Archive); citing Lansdowne MS 1236, fol 29.
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  53. ^ i.e. "Philip and Mary have granted, by Sir Clement Heigham their Steward..."
  54. ^ 'Another note for legitimation of Priestes children', in John Foxe, The Acts and Monuments (1583 edition), Book 8, p. 1200 (1176) (The Acts and Monuments Online).
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  56. ^ Will of Sir Wyllyam Waldgrave of Buryes (Bures) St Mary, Suffolk (P.C.C. 1555, More quire).
  57. ^ a b A Concise Description of Bury St. Edmund's and Its Environs (Longman and Co., London 1827), pp. 19-20 (Google).
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  61. ^ Strype, Ecclesiastical Memorials, Vol. III Part 1, p. 306 (Internet Archive).
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  63. ^ 'Audited Accounts 1554-1813: Robert Sparrowe, Jafferye Carre, Chamberlains, 1555-1556', in D. Allen, Ipswich Borough Archives, 1255-1835: A Catalogue, Suffolk Records Society XLIII (Boydell Press/Sponsors, Woodbridge 2000), p. 210 (Google).
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  65. ^ 'The examination of John Fortune', in John Foxe, The Acts and Monuments (1563 edition), Book 5, pp. 1717-19 (1636-38) (The Acts and Monuments Online).
  66. ^ John Foxe, The Acts and Monuments (1563 edition), Book 5, p. 1785 (The Acts and Monuments Online).
  67. ^ 'The death and martirdom of ii which suffred at Ipswich', in John Foxe, The Acts and Monuments (1563 edition), Book 5, p. 1751 (The Acts and Monuments Online).
  68. ^ 'The Martyrdome of three that were burned at Burye', in John Foxe, The Acts and Monuments (1583 edition), Book 12, p. 2073 (The Acts and Monuments Online).
  69. ^ Calendar of the Patent Rolls, Philip and Mary, Vol. V: A.D. 1557-1558 (HMSO, London 1939), p. 60 (Hathi Trust).
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  75. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, Elizabeth I, Vol. I: A.D. 1558-1560 (HMSO, London 1939), p. 19 (Internet Archive).
  76. ^ Register of Admissions, Lincoln's Inn, I, p. 64 (Internet Archive).
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Parliament of England
Preceded by
Thomas Carus
Thomas Hungate
Member of Parliament for Lancaster
1558 to 1559
With: William Rice
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Benger
William Fleetwood
Preceded by
William Bendlowes
Robert Monson
West Looe
1554 (November) to 1555
With: Ambrose Gilberd
Succeeded by
William St Aubyn
John Carnsew
Preceded by
John Gosnold
John Sulyard
Ipswich
April to November 1554
With: Thomas Poley
Succeeded by
Ralph Goodwin
John Smith
Preceded by
Richard Fletcher
John Holmes
Rye
October 1553 to April 1554
With: John Holmes
Succeeded by
John Holmes
Richard Fletcher
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the House of Commons
1554–1555
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer
1558–1559
Succeeded by

clement, higham, also, heigham, before, 1495, march, 1571, barrow, suffolk, english, lawyer, politician, speaker, house, commons, 1554, chief, baron, exchequer, 1558, 1559, loyal, roman, catholic, held, various, offices, commissions, under, queen, mary, knight. Sir Clement Higham MP JP PC also Heigham before 1495 9 March 1571 of Barrow Suffolk was an English lawyer and politician a Speaker of the House of Commons in 1554 1 and Chief Baron of the Exchequer in 1558 1559 2 A loyal Roman Catholic he held various offices and commissions under Queen Mary and was knighted in 1555 by King Philip but withdrew from politics after the succession of Queen Elizabeth I in 1558 3 4 The Right Honourable SirClement HighamMP JP PCHeigham s coat of arms at Lincoln s Inn Lord Chief Baron of the ExchequerIn office 1558 1559Speaker of the House of CommonsIn office 1554 1555Personal detailsBornca 1495Died 1571 03 09 9 March 1571Barrow SuffolkSpouse s 1 Anne Moonines 2 Anne Waldegrave 1506 1590 Parent s Clement Heigham Maud CookeAlma materLincoln s Inn Contents 1 Background and early career 2 Dissolution and Edwardian period 3 Marian advancement 4 Heretics 5 Elizabethan years 6 Marriage and children 7 Monument 8 ReferencesBackground and early career editClement Heigham was the son and heir of Clement Heigham of Lavenham Suffolk the fourth son of Thomas Heigham of Heigham died 1492 His mother was Matilda Maud daughter of Lawrence Cooke of Lavenham His exact birth date is not known but if we follow Metcalfe s edition he was the first of five sons also Thomas John William and Edmond 5 His father died on 29 August 1500 and was buried under a marble slab in the Braunches chapel on the north side of the chancel of Lavenham church with a brass figure in full armour a brief Latin inscription and above it a single shield for Heigham displaying Sable a fess componee or and azure between 3 horses heads erased argent The brasses are long since lost 6 It is suggested that Clement may have received early education from the monks of Bury St Edmunds He was admitted at Lincoln s Inn in July 1517 7 but being appointed an officer for the Inn s celebration of Christmas in 1519 failed to turn up and was fined 8 He was called to the bar in 1525 9 In around 1520 he married Anne Monnynge of a mid Suffolk family and over the next years she had five daughters and one son who died in infancy In 1521 Clement Heigham Roger Reve brother of John Reve Abbot of Bury St Edmunds 1513 1539 and Thomas Munning were among the feoffees for 2nd Duke of Norfolk and others in lands at Stow Bardolph and Wimbotsham Norfolk 10 By 1528 however his first wife was dead and he remarried to the widow Anne Bures daughter of George Waldegrave of Smallbridge Suffolk and Anne Drury 11 with whom he had a further three sons and two daughters Anne had previously been the wife of Sir Henry Bures died 1528 12 of Acton Hall Suffolk and by him had four daughters Joan Bridget Anne and another who were small children at the time of the second marriage They were therefore the step sisters of Heigham s elder daughters and of similar ages to them 13 and were to become the half sisters of the Heigham children by the second marriage Estimates of the birthdate of John Higham his first son by Anne range between c 1530 and c 1540 14 His attainments as a lawyer and perhaps the example of the Abbot s bailiff Thomas Heigham during the 1470s 15 had by 1528 recommended Clement Heigham to the office of Bailiff to the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds 16 In 1529 he first received commission as justice of the peace for Suffolk and remained in the Suffolk magistracy for the rest of his life 3 He became Pensioner at Lincoln s Inn in 1531 and was called to the Bench in 1534 17 On the east side of the county of Suffolk farm of the site of the manor of Semer was leased to him in 1532 under the Convent seal for 30 years 18 19 On the west side he developed tenures around the Abbey s manor and park of Chevington not far from Gazeley and the hamlet of Heigham from which his family took its name 20 In his chambers at Lincoln s Inn Heigham was presented as Autumn Reader in 1537 38 when he was also appointed Marshall but fined 7 for not acting and Keeper of the Black Book in 1538 39 21 Through this time the monastic closures occurred and Bury Abbey was dissolved in 1539 Dissolution and Edwardian period editFollowing the death in 1539 of Roger Reve 22 the Court of Augmentations instructed Clement Heigham of Chevington to pay 220 to Abbot John Reve Roger s executor and in March 1540 shortly before his death John Reve made his own testament appointing Heigham his executor and disposing of the sum in many small legacies not forgetting his sister Elizabeth Munning and her daughter Reve gave to Heigham his valuable hangings in his great chamber at Horningsheath 23 and to Anne Heigham his best ring set with turkey stones 24 The manor and park of Chevington were among those granted to Sir Thomas Kytson in March 1540 25 Serving as Treasurer of Lincoln s Inn in 1540 41 26 in December 1540 Heigham completed the purchase of the manor of Barrow near Chevington from Sir Thomas Wentworth died 1551 of Nettlestead 27 by deed of Sir William Waldegrave of Smallbridge Hall Anne Heigham s brother 28 Sir William Drury of Hawstead her uncle 29 and Sir Thomas Jermyn of Rushbrooke Hall 30 her stepfather 31 Here he built his residence of Barrow Hall which remained in the family of his descendants for more than two centuries An illustration of the Hall copied in 1779 from a 1597 original survives 32 John Gage wrote of it Barrow Hall stood on the south side of the church and was a large brick building moated In the summer of 1775 the ground plan of the building was traceable It was evident that the front had been broken by a central gatehouse and several bay windows 33 The rectory of Barrow was then newly occupied as the benefice of a notable academic in the University of Cambridge Dr Thomas Bacon presented by the King in 1539 34 Heigham purchased the manor of Semer from the King for 426 in 1543 35 Queen Katheryn s letter from Hampton Court of 25 July 1544 to the King in Calais advising His Majesty that Clement Higham had been appointed by the Council and the High Treasurer of the Wars for the wafting of 40 000 unto His Majesty on the following Monday indicates the high level of trust now reposed in him 36 37 He was again appointed Autumn Reader at Lincoln s Inn at All Souls 1545 but he was reported to be sykke and disseased and Giles Townsend had to read for him The Solicitor General Edward Griffith called an immediate council which appointed Heigham Lent Reader next coming if willing or to pay a fine of 20 nobles and wrote at once for his decision He read at Lent 1547 48 38 Following the death of King Henry and the accession of Edward VI in 1547 the Autumn vacation of 1548 was not kept owing to a death from plague in the Inn but at the Council at All Saints Day 1548 Clement Heigham first sat as a Governor of Lincoln s Inn and regularly thereafter through the reigns of Edward and of Mary where he was often in company with Edward Griffith 39 During the 1540s Anne Heigham s daughters were married three of them were married to three brothers the sons and coheirs of the royal physician William Butts 1486 1545 and his wife Margaret heiress of the Cambridgeshire family of Bacon Joan Bures married Sir William Butts the younger lord of Thornage Norfolk who died in 1583 40 41 Bridget Bures married Thomas Butts lord of Ryburgh Magna Norfolk who took part in the 1536 voyage of Richard Hore to Newfoundland and Anne married Edmund Butts of Barrow Suffolk in 1547 and had a daughter Anne Butts 42 The fourth daughter Mary married Thomas Barrow of Shipdham Norfolk 43 and was mother of the separatist Henry Barrowe 44 Abbot John had until the dissolution of St Edmund s been responsible for the collecting of the tenths in the diocese of Norwich which Bishop Reppes had not blushed to spend and in Edward s reign Heigham was still being held accountable for 972 outstanding so on the abbot s account 45 However after an Act was introduced in 1549 to regulate and restore monastic pensions in September 1552 Heigham was appointed a commissioner together with Sir William Drury Sir Thomas Jermyn deceased Sir William Waldegrave and others to investigate abuses They interviewed the late priors of Woodbridge and Eye the abbot of Leiston and the prioress of Redlingfield the Master and three fellows of Wingfield College and many priests former monks and lay annuitants It was found that Ambrose Jermyn son of Sir Thomas had accepted the transfer of an annuity as an inducement for the granting of a benefice Edward Reve had sold his annuity to John Holt one of the commissioners 46 Heigham was given two geldings and named an executor in the will of Sir Thomas Jermyn written September proved December 1552 47 Marian advancement editIn the succession crisis of the following summer on 8 July 1553 Queen Mary wrote to Sir George Somerset Sir William Drury Sir William Waldegrave and Clement Heigham informing them of the death of King Edward and commanding them to repair to her at Kenninghall in Norfolk They together with the Earl of Bath Sir John Sulyard Sir Henry Bedingfield Henry Jerningham and others were with her on 12 July in preparation for her journey to London their swift loyalty to her was afterwards remembered 48 Bedingfield and Drury had sat in March for the county of Suffolk but it was in the parliament of October 1553 that Heigham sat first initially for Rye and was placed in charge of some important legislation including an Act to avoid unlawful risings 3 Wyatt s rebellion intervened in February 1554 In April 1554 Heigham was returned to parliament for Ipswich Suffolk and had responsibility for the bill concerning Ordinances for Cathedral churches in late April This parliament was dissolved in May 1554 and soon afterwards he was admitted to the Privy Council of England 3 Speaker of the House of Commons It was then in November 1554 following solemnization of the marriage of Philip and Mary that being returned for West Looe Cornwall Heigham was elected Speaker of the House of Commons 49 The Bishop of Winchester Lord Chancellor opened the proceedings by declaring that the parliament was called for the confirmation of true i e Catholic religion Then Heigham being chosen Speaker in an excellent oration comparing the body politic to the body natural introduced the three usual petitions for freedom of speech etc and was accepted He presided over very weighty affairs Cardinal Pole his attainder reversed spoke before both houses The schemes of Stephen Gardiner were accomplished the Acts against the Pope were repealed and those against Heresy revived Almost forty members of the Commons rose and left the house when they saw that the majority were minded to capitulate Heigham s colleague Edward Griffith since May 1552 Attorney General was ordered to indict them 50 The parliament was dissolved on 16 January 1555 and shortly afterwards 27 January Heigham was knighted by King Philip in his chamber together with the Lord Mayor of 1554 1555 John Lyon 51 Robert Broke Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Edward Saunders John Whiddon and William Staunford Justices 52 In a legal notice issued in July 1555 in which he legitimizes the heir of a priest of Mildenhall who had married in the time of King Edward it is expressed that Philip and Mary per Clementum Heigham militem Senescallum suum concesserunt 53 Senescallus or steward presumably referring to his position in the Privy Council 54 At Lincoln s Inn at the All Saints Day Council of 1554 Mr Hygham s name appeared second in precedence among the six Governors between Edward Griffith Attorney General of the King and Queen and William Cordell Solicitor General one year later Clement Hygham Knight headed the list 55 Sir William Waldegrave died during that year leaving 20 among the children of his sister Anne wife of Clement Higham 56 Heretics editAccording to Heigham s own epitaph In punishment unto the pore which ded their cryme lamentHe wold with pyty mercyfull from rigour soone relent But unto them which wilfully contynude in offence A terro r unto them he was in Justice true defence 57 Advancement to the summit of his career depended for Heigham upon the favour of Mary and her Chancellor which came with expectations Inevitably he was an instrument of their persecutions and as a justice and magistrate he must frequently have given the first hearings to cases of religious delinquency His reputation for severity towards common people as heretics seems borne out by a few stories in John Foxe s Acts and Monuments Hooper and MountainHe was plunged directly into the full political force of Gardiner s intentions within hours of receiving his knighthood On 28 and 29 January 1554 55 Heigham was in St Mary Overie where Stephen Gardiner with Edmund Bonner presided over a solemn company of the bishops many lords knights and others to witness the public inquisition and excommunication of John Hooper Bishop of Gloucester Hooper was condemned sentenced and handed over to the Sheriffs of London for burning Many including Sir Clement Heigham and Sir Richard Dobbs were required to witness the notarial certificate of the proceedings John Rogers Prebendary of St Paul s Dr Rowland Taylor and Laurence Saunders brother of Sir Edward were condemned in the same session Hooper was burned on 9 February 1554 55 58 On 5 March 1555 Queen Mary rewarded Heigham for his loyalty to her at Framlingham and for his services as Speaker by the grant in chief of the reversion of the manor and rectory of Nedging Suffolk with its lands in Semer Bildeston Whatfield and Chelsworth 59 Heigham was also on the Cambridge Castle Bench with Sir Robert Broke Edward Griffith and others when Thomas Mountain the troubled minister of Whittington College 60 was brought into the August sessions of 1555 after a long imprisonment and was found to have no accusers The County Sheriff for November 1554 to 1555 Sir Oliver Leader spoke up for Mountain and then said he had forgotten to bring with him the writ against the man Griffith in the meantime was telling Mountain that he was a traitor and a heretic and likely to be hanged However without a writ or an accuser Broke and his fellow justices were obliged in all equity to release Mountain on bail which was immediately put up by his acquaintances and he was later able to make an escape 61 East Anglian martyrsIn Ipswich in summer 1555 Robert Samuel a minister of East Bergholt was imprisoned and burnt at the stake on 31 August During his confinement two devout women of reformist views Agnes Potten and Joan Trunchfield visited Samuel and gave him encouragement 62 Immediately after his execution they were arrested and imprisoned and the accounts of the Chamberlains of Ipswich show that Sergeant Holmes made two journeys to the home of Sir Clement Heigham in that connection before they were burned in a single fire at Ipswich on 19 February 1555 56 63 At about this time information had been given against Robert Pygot a painter from Wisbech for non attendance at church He was called into the sessions and Heigham said to him Ah are you the holy father the painter How chance you came not to the church to which Pygot answered Sir I am not out of the church I trust in God No sir said Heigham this is no church this is a hall Yea sir said Pygot I know very well it is a hall but he that is in the true faith of Jesus Christ is never absent but present in the church of God Ah sirrah said the judge you are too high for me to talk with wherefore I will send you to them that are better learned than I So he was taken to jail in Ely and interrogated and was burned there on 16 October 1555 64 Heigham was present at the examination of John Fortune alias Cutler a blacksmith of Hintlesham who had influenced Roger Bernard a man burned at Bury St Edmunds on 30 June 1556 The Bishop of Norwich interviewed him and Heigham intervened at a critical point in the dialogue The bishop told Fortune he should be burned like a heretic and Fortune asked who shall give judgement upon me The bishop said I will judge a hundred such as thou art and Fortune asked again Is there not a law for the spiritualty as well as for the temporalty Sir Clement Heigham said Yes what meanest thou by that Fortune told the bishop he was a perjured man because he had taken an oath to resist the Pope in King Henry s time and therefore like a perjured lawyer he should not be allowed to sit in judgement Then sayde maister Hygham it is tyme to weede out suche fellowes as you bee in deede This is from Fortune s own account Fortune was condemned 65 Foxe also mentions John Cooper of Wattisham who was arraigned at a Bury Lent Assize in 1557 before Sir Clement Heigham for allegedly having said that he should pray if God would not take away Queen Mary that then the devil would take her away This accusation for a treasonable saying was made by one Fenning who is thought to have borne false witness Cooper denied it Heigham told Cooper he should not escape for an example to all heretics and sentenced him to be hanged drawn and quartered which was accordingly done 66 In July 1558 the outspoken country wife Alice Driver of Grundisburgh near Woodbridge who had been pursued for her Protestant views into hiding in the countryside appeared before Sir Clement at the Bury Assizes Before him her principal offence was to compare Queen Mary to Jezebel and to call her by that name for which Heigham then and there commanded that her ears be cut off which was done He then committed her to be interrogated by Dr Spenser Chancellor of Norwich at Ipswich where her spirited defence led to her condemnation and death at the stake in November 1558 67 It is said that he issued a writ for the burning of three men at Bury St Edmunds about a fortnight before the death of Queen Mary when it was already known that she was beyond hope of recovery 68 Chief Baron of the ExchequerIn the parliament beginning 20 January 1557 58 in which William Cordell was chosen Speaker Sir Clement Heigham sat for Lancaster When the session rose on 7 March Heigham had a few days earlier 2 March received appointment during good behaviour to be Chief Baron of the Exchequer though he had never held the rank of Serjeant at law in succession to Sir Robert Broke 69 The great matter then in preparation was the indictment against John Harleston Captain of Ruysbank Castle Edward Grymeston Comptroller of Calais Sir Ralph Chamberlain Lieutenant of Calais Castle Nicholas Alexander Captain of Newenham Bridge Castle and Thomas Lord Wentworth Deputy of Calais that they had become adherents of the King of the French and had treasonably conspired to deprive Her Majesty of Calais and the other castles and to surrender them to the French during the preceding January The indictment was found before Thomas Curtis lord mayor Sir John Baker Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Clement Heigham and Sir Robert Broke on 2 July 1558 70 The Queen ordered Heigham and Sir John Sulyard to take inventories of the goods of the accused and an account of their revenues since the loss of Calais on 15 July 1558 71 Elizabethan years editHeigham received a new patent as Chief Baron of the Exchequer upon the accession of Queen Elizabeth but he resigned it on 22 January 1559 and so served only 10 months in the office in all making way for Sir Edward Saunders to succeed him The reversal of Mary s religious policy and the abhorrence of her persecutions was such that he withdrew from public office and retired to Barrow Hall 72 He last appeared as Governor at the All Saints Day 1557 Council of Lincoln s Inn when his son in law Robert Kempe 73 was Keeper of the Black Book 74 In November 1559 he was granted the arrears of an annuity relating to the wardship of his daughter Elizabeth Kempe s first marriage to Henry Eden 75 His son and heir John Heigham who had matriculated from Trinity Hall Cambridge in 1555 was admitted to Lincoln s Inn on 7 May 1558 76 Sir Clement however retained his place in the Suffolk magistracy and is said in his epitaph to have been beloved by his neighbours for his effectiveness in settling their disputes peaceably On 22 June 1559 following the death of Dr Thomas Bacon Master of Gonville Hall Cambridge incumbent he presented John Crosyer Cambridge B A 1535 1536 M A 1538 to the Rectory of Barrow 77 78 Heigham retained until his death the office of Chief Bailiff to the town of Bury St Edmunds as he had held it since the time of Sir Robert Drury He drew support from his long connection with Sir Nicholas Bacon appointed Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and Lord Privy Seal to Elizabeth in 1558 who in the 1560s was building his residences at Old Gorhambury Hertfordshire and Redgrave Hall Suffolk During the 1540s Heigham was connected with Bacon in the manors of Ingham Ampton and Culford 79 80 In 1562 Bacon was recruited by Heigham Ambrose Jermyn John Holt and others to assist in their attempts to obtain a charter for Bury St Edmunds He wrote supportively but expressing doubt as to the prospects of success 81 John Heigham the heir married in 1562 It was in 1564 that Sir Nicholas Bacon s son and heir Nicholas Bacon the younger married Anne Butts Dame Anne Heigham s granddaughter 82 Sir Thomas Kytson the younger 1540 1603 of Hengrave Hall described to the Duke of Norfolk how he accompanied Sir Clement Heigham and other gentlemen of the county to meet the Lord Keeper between Bury and Newmarket in his progress to Redgrave Hall 83 In August 1566 Sir Thomas Gresham wrote from Ringshall to William Cecil telling how he had met the Lord Keeper at Sir Clement Heigham s house where his Lordshipe sealed the Quene s Maiestie s bonds before proceeding to St Albans 84 A letter of 1569 survives in which the Lord Keeper instructs his son to send a brace of bucks from Redgrave to Sir Clement Heigham 85 When Heigham died in 1571 the office of Bailiff of Bury St Edmunds was granted to Nicholas Bacon as fully as it was formerly held by Robert Drury Kt or Clement Heigham Kt 86 John Crosyer rector of Barrow died in December 1569 leaving a charitable request to the poor of the village and to its church arising from the rents of 13 acres of land in Bury St Edmunds He was buried in front of the altar at Barrow under a stone with his effigy in brass and a long English verse inscription referring in the third person to his education his teaching his example and his benefaction There were also short inscribed scrolls and six lines of prayer in Latin verse in the first person which have now gone 87 88 Then on 28 May 1570 Sir Clement presented as rector another University of Cambridge academic Dr Humphrey Busby who had been the second Regius Professor of Civil Law in Cambridge from c 1545 to c 1550 He was apparently deputy as Vice Chancellor to Walter Haddon 1549 50 Like Crosyer he was originally of Trinity Hall in 1557 1558 he served at St Stephen Walbrook but during the 1560s he was as Dr Bacon had been a member of Gonville Hall and he established scholarships at both colleges 89 In 1573 Gabriel Harvey considered Busby to be senile disputative and over fond of seavenoclocke dinnars 90 Heigham made his will on 10 November 1570 31 It opens with a lengthy prayer of repentance for his many sins hoping for and trusting in forgiveness so that he may have Grace to receive the body and blood in the form of bread the whiche after the consecracion thereof I steadfastly belive to be the verie bodie and bludd of our Saviour Jhu Christe the whiche was crucified for me uppon the Crosse for the redempcon of me and all sinners etc thus professing his continued adherence to the mysteries of the Old English Religion Naturally he could not make arrangements for a chantry but he made numerous bequests to the poor people dwelling on his estates The will making his widow Anne and son John his executors amply describes the family relationships settling Barrow with all its appurtenances and other lands upon his widow Anne for life they are to remain thereafter to his son John who in his own right is to have the manor of Semer or in default of issue it is to pass by entail through Sir Clement s heirs all of whom are in other ways provided for Sir Clement died on 9 March 1571 and was buried as he requested at Barrow in the tomb described below His son John received licence to enter upon his father s lands on 2 June 1571 91 Marriage and children edit nbsp Memorial to Anne Heigham Clement s second wife at Thornage She also appears on the brass at Barrow Photo by Evelyn Simak Sir Clement married twice His first wife Anne is in some sources said to have been Anne Moonines daughter of John de Moonines of Semer Hall near Bildeston Suffolk but in others to have been the daughter of Thomas Monnynge or Munninge of Bury St Edmunds By her Sir Clement had one son who died without issue and five daughters 92 Vincent Heigham died in infancy Elizabeth Heigham living 1570 married 1 Henry Eden of St Edmundsbury and 2 Robert Kempe of Finchingfield Essex Margaret Heigham living 1570 married Humphrey Moseley of Tunstall Staffordshire died 1606 aged 78 buried at Wolverhampton Anne Heigham living 1570 married Thomas Turner of Wratting Suffolk Frances Heigham living 1570 married Warren Lucy Heigham living 1570 married 1 John Bokenham of Snetterton Norfolk and 2 Francis Stonar of Stapleford Essex His second wife whom he married after 1528 was Anne Waldegrave 1506 1590 widow of Sir Henry Bures of Acton Suffolk and daughter of Sir George Waldegrave 1483 1528 of Smallbridge in the parish of Bures St Mary Suffolk and his wife Anne Drury d 1572 Anne Drury was a daughter of Sir Robert Drury Lord of the Manors of Thurston and Hawstead both in Suffolk 1455 1536 93 See also the Waldegrave family By Anne Waldegrave who died in 1589 aged 84 and whose ledger stone survives in All Saints Church Thornage Norfolk he had several children including 94 Sir John Heigham eldest son and heir an M P for Ipswich 95 96 He married 1 1562 Anne daughter of Edmund Wright died 1583 of Sutton Hall Bradfield Combust Suffolk and 2 Anne daughter of William Poley of Boxted Suffolk Thomas Heigham buried Ampton Suffolk 1597 William Heigham of East Ham Essex died 1620 aged 73 He married Anne daughter of Richard Stoneley Teller of the Exchequer Judith Heigham died 1571 married John Spelman of Narborough Norfolk Dorothy Heigham married 1561 Sir Charles Framlingham of Crowes Hall Debenham Suffolk Monument editSir Clement is buried in the Church of All Saints at Barrow Suffolk Against the south wall of the chancel is a tomb chest surmounted by a low canopy with a flat arched roof ornamented within with quatrefoils and Tudor flowers Externally the canopy has a horizontal frontage carved with quatrefoils three enclosing shields two enclosing double roses between coursed mouldings crowned above with a frieze of lozenge formed crinkled foliage between the slender octagonal columnar quoins which rise at the corners as turrets The front of the tomb chest has three lozenges enclosing quatrefoil tracery with a heraldic shield at the centre of each 97 Beneath the canopy a brass memorial of composite construction is set into the upright wall at the back 98 In the lower part are two large brass rectangular plates set adjacent containing an epitaph to Sir Clement Heigham in 44 lines of English rhymed heptameter couplets 57 engraved in very controlled gothic lettering Directly surmounting these are three figural groups separately mounted Sir Clement in full plate armour and with sword appears centrally he kneels in prayer at a desk with an open book upon it his helmet beside it and his gauntlets hanging in front of it He faces sinister to the right as viewed towards a separate group facing towards him representing his second wife Anne Waldegrave kneeling at another desk and behind her their two daughters Judith and Dorothy 99 Sir Clement faces away from a third group on the dexter side left as viewed representing his first wife Anne Munnings kneeling at another desk with their five daughters Elizabeth Margaret Anne Frances and Lucy kneeling behind her Between Sir Clement and this group is a gap with three rivet holes in the wall representing a missing fourth group directly behind him which should have shown his sons by his second wife John Thomas and William Heigham Vincent the son of the first marriage who died in infancy is shown by a kneeling shrouded chrisom child just behind Sir Clement himself 100 Above these images are three heraldic shields The central one engraved on a square plate of latten bears the arms of Heigham quarterly 1st and 4th Heigham 2nd and 3rd Francys including the crest of a horse s head erased argent The other two escutcheons are shield shaped plates The shield to the right as viewed above the second wife contains the arms of Waldegrave 1st and 4th shown as a quartering with Montchency Creake Vauncy and Moyne quartered with Fray 2nd and 3rd The shield to the left as viewed represents the impalement of the Heigham quartering as before on the dexter side with the Waldegrave quartering as before on the sinister side it is the heraldic representation of the second marriage 101 102 100 The arms of Heigham not quartered with Francys are displayed in a window at Lincoln s Inn References edit Sir Clement Heigham Kt in J A Manning The Lives of the Speakers of the House of Commons G Willis London 1851 pp 208 14 Google Heigham Clement in E Foss The Judges of England Vol V 1485 1603 Longman Brown Green Longmans amp Roberts London 1857 pp 511 13 Internet Archive a b c d M K Dale Heigham Clement by 1495 1571 of Barrow Suff in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 from Boydell and Brewer 1982 History of Parliament Online J H Baker Heigham Sir Clement b in or before 1500 d 1571 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography OUP 2004 replacing J A Hamilton Heigham Sir Clement died 1570 Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol 25 The Visitation of Suffolk 1561 Higham of Barrow in W C Metcalfe ed The Visitations of Suffolk made in 1561 1577 and 1612 Metcalfe Exeter 1882 pp 40 41 Internet Archive They are not to be confused with the Heighams of Giffords Hall at Wickhambrook in Suffolk Described in Richard Reyce s Breviary of Suffolk Harleian MSS recited in J J Howard ed The Visitation of the County of Suffolke 2 vols Whittaker amp Co London Samuel Tymms Lowestoft 1868 II p 228 Internet Archive Register of Admissions Lincoln s Inn Vol I From A D 1420 to A D 1799 Lincoln s Inn 1896 p 38 Internet Archive The Records of the Honorable Society of Lincoln s Inn The Black Books Vol I A D 1422 to A D 1586 Lincoln s Inn 1897 p 189 Internet Archive The Black Books I p 212 Internet Archive Norfolk Record Office Hare MSS Charter feoffment ref Hare 4710 5 214x6 Discovery catalogue Howard ed The Visitation of the County of Suffolke II p 216 Internet Archive Will of Henry Bures of Acton Suffolk P C C 1528 Porche quire Howard Visitation of Suffolk II at p 250 note Internet Archive In his will of 1626 John Higham gave his age as 96 sc birth 1530 if so his admission to Trinity Hall Cambridge in 1555 was extremely late See J P Ferris Heigham Higham Sir John c 1540 1626 of Barrow and Bury St Edmunds Suff in A Thrush and J P Ferris eds The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 from Cambridge University Press 2010 History of Parliament Online The corporation of Bury St Edmunds Miscellaneous records II 1477 Ordinances for the reformation of abuses in the craft of the weavers in The Manuscripts of Lincoln Bury St Edmunds Etc Fourteenth Report of the Historical Manuscripts Commission Appendix Part VIII London 1895 pp 123 44 British History Online Hamilton Heigham Clement Dictionary of National Biography citing Arundel MS Brit Mus i fol 54 The Black Books I p 232 33 237 Internet Archive L J Redstone First Ministers Account of the possessions of the Abbey of St Edmund Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology XIII Part 3 1909 pp 311 66 at p 343 Society s pdf W A Copinger The Manors of Suffolk Notes on their History and Devolution Vol III Hundreds of Carlford and Colneis Cosford and Hartismere Taylor Garnett Evans amp Co Ltd Manchester 1909 p 198 and p 202 Internet Archive S H A Hervey Denham Parish Registers 1539 1850 With Historical Notes and Notices Paul amp Mathew Bury St Edmund s 1904 pp 187 91 Internet Archive The Black Books I pp 250 52 and p 253 Internet Archive Will of Roger Reve Clothmaker of Bury St Edmunds P C C 1539 Dyngeley quire Horningsheath was granted to John Reve in January 1540 Augmentation Book 212 fol 61 b in J Gairdner and R H Brodie eds Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Vol XV 1540 London 1896 p 562 no 1032 British History Online Will of John Reve clerk P C C 1540 Cromwell Register 436 Grants in March 1540 no 74 in J Gairdner and R H Brodie eds Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Vol XV 1540 London 1896 p 177 British History Online The Black Books I pp 256 258 Internet Archive W A Copinger The Manors of Suffolk Notes on their History and Devolution Vol VII Hundreds of Thingoe Thredling Wangford and Wilford Taylor Garnett Evans amp Co Ltd Manchester 1911 at pp 5 8 Internet Archive M K Dale Waldegrave Sir William 1507 54 of Smallbridge Suff in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 from Boydell and Brewer 1982 History of Parliament Online M K Dale Drury Sir William by 1499 1558 of Hawstead Suff in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 from Boydell and Brewer 1982 History of Parliament Online S H A Hervey Rushbrook Parish Registers 1567 1850 George Booth Woodbridge 1903 pp 185 98 Internet Archive a b Will of Sir Clement Heigham of Barrow Suffolk P C C 1571 Holney quire Full transcript in J J Howard ed the Visitation of the County of Suffolke 2 vols Whittaker amp Co London Samuel Tymms Lowestoft 1868 II pp 248 51 Internet Archive It is re drawn in E Martin Two exceptional Tudor houses in Hitcham Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History XXXVII Part 3 1991 pp 186 207 at pp 203 04 citing Suffolk Record Office Bury ref 862 2 J Gage The History and Antiquities of Suffolk Thingoe Hundred Samuel Bentley London John Deck Bury St Edmunds 1838 p 16 Google citing Ashby s notes Cole s MSS vol xlvi No 5847 Brit Mus The full chart of 1597 is represented in the Plate facing p 16 C H Cooper and T Cooper Athenae Cantabrigienses I 1500 1585 Deighton Bell amp Co Cambridge 1858 p 191 Google Grants in August 1543 34 Clement Heigham in J Gairdner and R H Brodie eds Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Vol XVIII Part 2 August December 1543 London 1902 p 56 British History Online XXXIV Queen Katheryn to Henry VIII in H James Facsimiles of National Manuscripts from William the Conqueror to Queen Anne By Order Ordnance Survey Office Southampton 1865 Vol II item XXXIV Facsimile and transcript Hathi Trust 979 981 Queen Katheryn to Henry VIII in J Gairdner and R H Brodie eds Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Vol 19 Part 1 January July 1544 London 1903 p 593 British History Online The Black Books I pp 270 71 and p 285 Internet Archive The Black Books I pp 287 88 Internet Archive The names Griffith and Griffin appear to have been interchangeable N M Fuidge Butts Sir William 1513 83 of Thornage Norf in P W Hasler ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 from Boydell and Brewer 1981 History of Parliament Online R Dallington A Booke of Epitaphes Made Upon the Death of the Right Worshipfull Sir William Buttes Knight Who Deceased the Third Day of September Anno 1583 Henrie Midleton London Full text at eebo tcp1 Ryburgh Magna in F Blomefield ed C Parkin An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk Volume VII Gallow and Brothercross Hundreds William Miller London 1807 pp 162 67 at pp 164 65 Google William Butts jnr did not die in 1547 Howard Visitation of Suffolk 1561 II p 299 note d Internet Archive offers Barrow of Westhorpe P Collinson Barrow Henry c 1550 1593 religious separatist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography OUP 2004 states Barrow of Shipdham S M Jack English bishops as tax collectors in the sixteenth century in S M Jack and B A Masters Protestants Property Puritans Godly People Revisited A Festschrift in Honour of Patrick Collinson on the Occasion of his Retirement Parergon New Series XIV no 1 July 1996 pp 129 63 at p 153 J C Cox Ecclesiastical History in W Page ed Victoria History of the County of Suffolk Volume II Archibald Constable and Company Limited London 1907 pp 1 53 at pp 31 32 Internet Archive Will of Sir Thomas Jermyn of Roshebroke P C C 1552 Powell quire J G Nichols ed The Chronicle of Queen Jane and of Two Years of Queen Mary Camden Society XLVIII 1850 pp 3 7 and p 175 Internet Archive citing Lansdowne MS 1236 fol 29 Foss The Judges of England V pp 511 13 Internet Archive The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803 Vol I A D 1066 1625 Hansard London 1806 pp 616 25 Google A B Beavan The Aldermen of the City of London Temp Henry III to 1912 Corporation of the City of London 1913 II p 32 Internet Archive W A Shaw Knights of England 2 vols Sherratt and Hughes London 1906 II p 69 citing Harleian MS 6164 fol 80 b i e Philip and Mary have granted by Sir Clement Heigham their Steward Another note for legitimation of Priestes children in John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1583 edition Book 8 p 1200 1176 The Acts and Monuments Online The Black Books I p 311 and p 314 Internet Archive Will of Sir Wyllyam Waldgrave of Buryes Bures St Mary Suffolk P C C 1555 More quire a b A Concise Description of Bury St Edmund s and Its Environs Longman and Co London 1827 pp 19 20 Google J Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Relating Chiefly to Religion and the Reformation of it Vol III Part 1 Clarendon Press Oxford 1822 pp 282 91 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Philip and Mary Vol II A D 1554 1555 HMSO London 1936 p 50 Hathi Trust A F Pollard Mountain Thomas died 1561 Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol 39 Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Vol III Part 1 p 306 Internet Archive The Martyrdome of Rob Samuell Preacher and John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1583 edition Book 11 pp 1727 1731 1703 1707 and p 1917 1893 The Acts and Monuments Online Audited Accounts 1554 1813 Robert Sparrowe Jafferye Carre Chamberlains 1555 1556 in D Allen Ipswich Borough Archives 1255 1835 A Catalogue Suffolk Records Society XLIII Boydell Press Sponsors Woodbridge 2000 p 210 Google The Martyrdom and Burning of William Wolsey and Roberte Pygot paynter in John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1583 edition Book 11 p 1739 1715 The Acts and Monuments Online The examination of John Fortune in John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1563 edition Book 5 pp 1717 19 1636 38 The Acts and Monuments Online John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1563 edition Book 5 p 1785 The Acts and Monuments Online The death and martirdom of ii which suffred at Ipswich in John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1563 edition Book 5 p 1751 The Acts and Monuments Online The Martyrdome of three that were burned at Burye in John Foxe The Acts and Monuments 1583 edition Book 12 p 2073 The Acts and Monuments Online Calendar of the Patent Rolls Philip and Mary Vol V A D 1557 1558 HMSO London 1939 p 60 Hathi Trust Pouch XXXVIII Trial and Acquittal of Thomas Lord Wentworthe in Fourth Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records By Command London 1843 Appendix II Calendar of the Contents of the Baga de Secretis at pp 259 61 Google R Lemon ed Calendar of State Papers Preserved in the State Paper Department Domestic Series Edward VI Mary Elizabeth A D 1547 1580 Longman Green Brown Longmans amp Roberts London 1856 p 104 Google Foss Judges of England V pp 511 13 Internet Archive A Davidson Kempe Robert by 1526 71 or later of Lincoln s Inn London and Spains Hall Finchingfield Essex in S T Bindoff ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 from Boydell and Brewer 1982 History of Parliament Online The Black Books I p 322 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth I Vol I A D 1558 1560 HMSO London 1939 p 19 Internet Archive Register of Admissions Lincoln s Inn I p 64 Internet Archive J Gage The History and Antiquities of Suffolk Thingoe Hundred p 19 and pp 25 26 Google C H Cooper and T Cooper Athenae Cantabrigienses I 1500 1585 Deighton Bell amp Co Cambridge 1858 p 191 and p 282 Google Ingham in W A Copinger The Manors of Suffolk Vol I The Hundreds of Babergh and Blackbourn T Fisher Unwin London 1905 pp 328 29 Internet Archive Sir Nicholas Bacon Collection of English Court and Manorial Documents 1200 1785 MSS 3211 1543 and 3271 1547 University of Chicago Library J Craig Reformation Politics and Polemics The Growth of Protestantism in East Anglian Market Towns 1500 1610 St Andrews Studies in Reformation History Ashgate 2001 Routledge London and New York 2016 p 86 note 81 Google Blomefield ed Parkin History of the County of Norfolk VII at pp 164 65 Google J Gage The History and Antiquities of Hengrave in Suffolk James Carpenter London 1822 pp 176 78 Google J W Burgon The Life and Times of Sir Thomas Gresham 2 volumes Robert Jennings London 1839 II pp 107 11 Google University of Chicago Library Bacon Manuscripts ref 4097 Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth I Vol V A D 1569 1572 HMSO 1966 p 207 no 1782 Internet Archive Also in Historical MSS Commission Fourteenth Report Appendix Part VIII 1895 p 139 Cooper Athenae Cantabrigienses I 1500 1585 p 282 Google H K Cameron and J C Page Phillips The Brass of John Crosyer at Barrow Suffolk Transactions of the Monumental Brass Society XIII pt 3 1982 pp 224 31 Cooper Athenae Cantabrigienses I 1500 1585 pp 424 25 Google G C Moore Smith ed Gabriel Harvey s Marginalia Shakespeare Head Press Stratford upon Avon 1913 p 258 note to p 122 Internet Archive Calendar of Patent Rolls Elizabeth I Vol V A D 1569 1572 HMSO 1966 p 245 no 2003 Internet Archive Heigham of Barrow in J Gage The History and Antiquities of Suffolk Thingoe Hundred pp 8 16 and Plan Google J Corder ed and transcr The Visitation of Suffolk 1561 by William Hervey Clarenceux King of Arms London 1984 vol 2 pp 396 7 Gage History and Antiquities of Suffolk pp 8 16 and Plan Google J H Heigham John d 1626 of Barrow Suff in P W Hasler ed The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 from Boydell amp Brewer 1981 History of Parliament Online J P Ferris Heigham Higham Sir John c 1540 1626 of Barrow and Bury St Edmunds Suff in A Thrush and J P Ferris eds The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 from Cambridge University Press 2010 History of Parliament Online Gage History and Antiquities of Suffolk pp 19 23 Google with Plate facing p 22 Howard Visitation of Suffolke II pp 235 37 Internet Archive and Plate following p 244 not displayed in available scans Copinger Manors of Suffolk VII Thingoe pp 5 8 Internet Archive a b Howard Visitation of Suffolke II pp 235 37 Copinger Manors of Suffolk VII Thingoe pp 5 8 Image by Simon Knott at flickr com Historic England Church of All Saints 1376863 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 March 2020 Parliament of EnglandPreceded byThomas CarusThomas Hungate Member of Parliament for Lancaster1558 to 1559 With William Rice Succeeded bySir Thomas BengerWilliam FleetwoodPreceded byWilliam BendlowesRobert Monson West Looe1554 November to 1555 With Ambrose Gilberd Succeeded byWilliam St AubynJohn CarnsewPreceded byJohn GosnoldJohn Sulyard IpswichApril to November 1554 With Thomas Poley Succeeded byRalph GoodwinJohn SmithPreceded byRichard FletcherJohn Holmes RyeOctober 1553 to April 1554 With John Holmes Succeeded byJohn HolmesRichard FletcherPolitical officesPreceded bySir Robert Broke Speaker of the House of Commons1554 1555 Succeeded bySir John PollardLegal officesPreceded byDavid Brooke Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer1558 1559 Succeeded bySir Edward Saunders Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clement Higham amp oldid 1184373778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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