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John Bluett

John Bluett (1603 – 28 November 1634) of Holcombe Court, lord of the manor of Holcombe Rogus in Devon, was MP for Tiverton from 1628 to 1629 when King Charles I embarked on his Personal Rule without parliament for eleven years.[2]

Sir John Bluett (1603-1634)of Holcombe Court, detail from his effigy in the Bluett Chapel, All Saints Church, Holcombe Rogus, Devon
Arms of Bluett: Or, a chevron between three eagles displayed vert[1]

Origins edit

John Bluett was the son of Arthur Bluett (1573/4-1612) of Holcombe Rogus by his wife Jane Lancaster (1583-1641), daughter and heiress of John Lancaster of Bagborough, Somerset.[3] John was left fatherless aged nine when Arthur Bluett died in 1612, predeceasing his own father Richard Bluett (d.1614), whose monument with effigy exists in the Bluett Chapel of Holcombe Rogus Church. John's mother Joan remarried to Philip Poyntz, a recusant,[4] probably of the ancient Poyntz family of Iron Acton in Gloucestershire, whose grave-slab in the Bluett Chapel records his death on 16 August 1645: "Here lyeth the body of Phillip Pointz, gent., who deceased the 16 day of August Anno Dom(ini) 1645. My flesh shall rest in hope, psal. 16:9". The much worn grave slab of Joan exists also in the floor of the Bluet Chapel, inscribed thus: "In memoriam...Joa...Poyntz olim Arthuri Bluet ar(mi)g(e)ri at nuper Philippi Poyntz, gent...conjugis charissima obiit 19.o[5] die Junii...aetatis 58.o[6] et salutis 1641. Parce...hic mea...sic mea... servari in creda sanguin.." ("In memory of Joan Poyntz once the most beloved wife of Arthur Bluet, Esq., and recently of Philip Poyntz, gent. She died on the 19th day of June...of her age 58 and health 1641...Spare me...this my...to serve in the blood...") Also inscribed on the same slab is the following: "The remains of her younger son Coll. Francis Bluet & Joan his wife lye here interr'd also. He was kill'd before Lyme 1644"

Ancestry & heraldic quarterings edit

 
Escutcheon above monument to Sir John Bluett (d.1634) in Holcombe Rogus Church, showing 8 quarterings with the Bluett crest above, a squirrell eating a nut

The heraldic escutcheon on John Bluett's monument shows 8 quarterings as follows, which demonstrate his ancestry from heraldic heiresses:

  • 1st: Or, a chevron between three eagles displayed vert (Bluett)
  • 2nd: Azure, three bendlets argent each close-cottised in base sable a bordure gules
  • 3rd: Argent, a chevron sable a label of three points gules (Prideaux)
  • 4th: Argent, a chevron between in chief three crosses pattées in base a saltire sable
  • 5th: Argent, three ravens/choughs sable/proper
  •  6th: Or, on a chevron gules three martlets or (Chiselden of Holcombe Rogus)[7] The martlets are shown here argent.
  • 7th: Azure, a chevron argent between three chess-rooks or (Rogus of Holcombe, an heiress of Chesilden);[8] the chevron is shown here or.
  • 8th: Azure, two bars between nine martlets argent, 3,3,2,1 (shown here as Azure, two bars between eight martlets or, 3,2,3) Tantifer (alias Tatifer, Tantifer, Taundifer, Fattifer[9]) of Anke, (modern "Aunk"[10]) Clyst Hydon,[11] an heiress of Chesilden
  • 9th: Barry of six argent and gules, on a canton of the second a lion passant or (Lancaster of Milverton),[12] the family of Bluett's mother)

Career edit

Bluett's father died in 1612, leaving him at the age of nine in the care of his grandfather Richard Bluett (d.1614), who died two years later. He then became heir to the family's 16 manors in Somerset, Devon and Dorset. As a tenant-in-chief he became a ward of the king, who sold his wardship to his great-uncle Arthur Chichester, 1st Baron Chichester (1563-1625), Lord Deputy of Ireland.[13] On 16 April 1619 aged 15, he matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford, founded (posthumously) only nine years before in 1610 by his distant cousin Nicholas Wadham (died 1609) of Merryfield, Somerset and Edge, Branscombe, Devon. Nicholas's ancestor Sir William Wadham (died 1452) had married the other Chiselden co-heiress, Margaret Chiseldon, whose sister Maude Chiseldon had brought Holcombe Rogus to the Bluetts.[14] He presented a gold flagon to Wadham College which was melted down for coin tempore Charles I.[15] In 1628 he was elected Member of Parliament for Tiverton, Devon.

Marriage and children edit

 
 
Elizabeth Portman (1604-1636), wife of Sir John Bluett. Escutcheon showing arms of Bluet impaling Portman: Or, a fleur-de-lis azure, details from monument to Sir John Bluett (d.1634) in Holcombe Rogus Church

Bluett married Elizabeth Portman (1602-1636), whose effigy exists beside that of her husband under their canopied monument in the Bluett Chapel, Holcombe Rogus Church. She was a daughter of Sir John Portman, 1st Baronet (d.1612), of Orchard Portman in Somerset. They had no son and heir but four daughters, none of whom were able to inherit the Manor of Holcombe Rogus due to tail-male, but did inherit shares in the Rectories & Advowsons of Hockworthy, Burlescombe, Sampford Arundel and Holcombe Rogus. As well as the Hundred of Milverton, Manors such as North Petherton, Greenham, Somerset Shippen, Chipstable in Somerset, The Manor of Sturminster Marshall, Dorset and The Manor of Holcombe Buhill with property and land in the Parish of Holcombe Rogus and Sampford Peverell (lands acquired by Sir Roger Bluett following the dissolution of the monasteries). Their kneeling effigies exist along the base of the monument to their parents at Holcombe Rogus. Of the eight daughters depicted, the eldest, 4th, 5th & 6th all carry skulls indicating they were dead by 1636. The four survivors married into the families of Jones, Wallop, Lenthall and Basset:[16][17]

  • Ann Bluett (d. pre-1677) married Cadwallader Jones
  • Mary Bluett married firstly Sir James Stonehouse (d.1654), and secondly Sir John Lenthall, 1st Baronet(d.1681), whose father was Speaker of the House of Commons
  • Dorothy Bluett (d.1704), married Henry Wallop (d.1673), whose grandson was John Wallop, 1st Earl of Portsmouth (1690-1762), who succeeded his elder brother Bluett Wallop (d.1707) in the Wallop estates in Hampshire and elsewhere.
  • Susan Bluett (d.1662) who married John Basset (1630-1660) of Heanton Punchardon, Devon,[18] whose mural monument exists in Heanton Punchardon Church. Their son was John Bassett (1653-1686), five times MP for Barnstaple in Devon.

Death and burial edit

Bluett died at the age of 31 and was buried in the Bluett Chapel in All saints Church, Holcombe Rogus, where there exists an elaborate monument with his effigy and that of his wife.[2]

Succession edit

Bluett was succeeded by his younger brother Col. Francis Bluett (d.1644), an ardent Royalist during the Civil War who was killed in 1644 at the Siege of Lyme Regis.

Monument edit

 
Monument to Sir John Bluett (d.1634) and his wife Elizabeth Portman (d.1636), Bluett Chapel, All Saints Church, Holcombe Rogus. Of the eight daughters kneeling below, the eldest, 4th, 5th & 6th all carry skulls indicating prior decease
 
Squirrel crest of Bluett family serving as footrest to effigy of Sir John Bluett (d.1634) in Holcombe Rogus Church

An elaborate marble monument to Sir John Bluett (d.1634) and his wife Elizabeth Portman (d.1636) exists in the Bluett Chapel, All Saints Church, Holcombe Rogus. Alabaster recumbent effigies of the couple are contained under a classical canopy. Sir John is dressed in full armour of Almain rivets and his head rests on a pillow with lace border in which is worked the Bluett crest of a squirrel eating a nut. The squirrel also appears as his footrest. A tablet above is inscribed thus:
"Memoriae sacrum viri vere nobilis et generosi Johannis Bluet Armigeri et clarissimae ilius conjugis Elizabethae Joh(ann)is Portman, Militis et Baronetti, filiae. Ille quidem fato cessit 29 die Novemb(re) anno aetatis suae 31 & salutis 1634. Haec vero 7.o die Julii anno aetatis 32 et salutis 1636. Quicunq(ue) huc spectator ades, ne durus oceilis parce tuis tibi sit ne pudor a lapide exudat saxis humor tristiq(ue) dolore se vix ferre suum posse patentur onus nobile par condunt claro (ho..?) stemate malus quam meritis inerat magnus utrisq(ue) decor quorum animas conjunxit... pietate coronant has nu.. Dei" ("Sacred to the memory of the truly noble and well-born John Bluet, Esquire, and to the most renowned wife of him, Elizabeth, daughter of John Portman, Knight and Baronet. The former indeed proceeded to his destiny on the 29 day of November in the year of his age 31 and (in the year) of grace 1634. The latter in truth on the 7th day of July in the year of her age 32 and of grace 1636. Whoever, O Spectator you are here, do not... harshly, spare your...for you there should be no shame. From the stone exudes moisture from the rocks and with sad grief. If by chance...........")

Sources edit

  • Yerby, George & Hunneyball, Paul, Biography of Bluett (Blewett), John (1603-1634), of Holcombe Rogus, Devon, published in History of Parliament: House of Commons 1604-1629, ed. Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris, 2010

References edit

  1. ^ Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.473; Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.92
  2. ^ a b 'Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1714: Bludworth-Brakell', Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 (1891), pp. 142-170. Retrieved 2 June 2012
  3. ^ Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.93, pedigree of Bluett
  4. ^ Yerby & Hunneyball
  5. ^ undevicensimo, "on the nineteenth"
  6. ^ octo et quinquagensimo, "on the 58th"
  7. ^ Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.478
  8. ^ Pole, p.500
  9. ^ Pole, p.504, alternate spellings per Pole, p.178, 189, 243, 229, "Fattifer", per Vivian, p.92
  10. ^ Pevsner, p.271
  11. ^ Pole, p.178
  12. ^ Colby, Frederick Thomas, (ed.), Visitation of the County of Somerset in the year 1623, London, 1876 (given as Argent, two bars gules..., here shown as barry of six [1]
  13. ^ Yerby & Hunneyball; Arthur Chichester was the brother of Mary Chichester, wife of Richard Bluett (d.1614)
  14. ^ Per ancestry of Wadham in Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.141, Wadham of Egge, Branscombe, Devon
  15. ^ Brooke-Webb, Michael, Holcombe Rogus, A Short Parish History from 958 AD, 2006, p.8 (Church booklet)
  16. ^ Daniel and Samuel Lysons, 1822, pages 132-160'General history: Gentry', Magna Britannia: volume 6: Devonshire (1822), pp. CXXXII-CLX. [2]
  17. ^ See Somerset Archives "Deeds concerning the descent of the manor, borough and hundred of North Petherton DD\SL/5 1659-1768" catalogued as follows: "From John Bluet of Holcombe Rogus (died 1634) to his daughters Ann = Cadwallader Jones Mary = (i) Sir James Stonehouse (d.1654); (ii) Sir John Lenthall(d.1681) Dorothy = Henry Wallop Susan = John Basset In four parts; and the subsequent acquisition by Dorothy Wallop (d.1704) of the fourth part of Ann Jones in 1677; The settlement on her son John Wallop (d.1695) of the half part in 1684; The acquisition by John Wallop of the fourth part of Mary from her son William (by Sir John Lenthall) in 1684/5; The settlement of Susan's fourth part on the marriage of her son John Basset to Eliz.Hooper in 1713; And the conveyance by John Basset of the last fourth part to John, Viscount Lymington (son of John Wallop and grandson of Dorothy), in 1742, completing the re-grouping of the four parts in his hands; his (Viscount Lymington, now Earl of Portsmouth) agreement to sell the manor, etc., of North Petherton, to Alexander Seymour Gapper of Maunsel, esq., in 1754, and the re-conveyance to Lord Portsmouth in 1755; and The sale (at his appointment) to John Slade of Hammersmith, esq., in 1768. The deeds begin with Settlement on the marriage of Dame Mary Stonehouse and John Lenthall, affecting also the half part of certain former Blewett (Bluet, etc.) manors [named], etc., in Devon and Somerset, dated 28 March 1659 [copy]; and also include Settlement in consideration of the marriage of John Wallop and his wife Alice (a dau. and heir of Wm.Borlase of Great Marlow, co.Bucks, esq., decd.), affecting also the fourth part of certain former Bluet manors, rectories, advowsons, etc., in Somerset; dated 14 May 1684; and Settlement in the marriage of John Bassett of Heanton Punchardon (co.Devon), esq., and Elizabeth, only dau. of Sir Nich. Hooper of Fullbrooke in Braunton (co.Devon), knt. sjt. at law, affecting also certain Bassett properties in Devon and Wilts., and the fourth part of certain former Bluet manors in Somerset and Devon; dated 20 August 1713; In addition to the various conveyances affecting the North Petherton property alone".
  18. ^ Vivian, 1895, p.47

john, bluett, english, cricketer, cricketer, 1603, november, 1634, holcombe, court, lord, manor, holcombe, rogus, devon, tiverton, from, 1628, 1629, when, king, charles, embarked, personal, rule, without, parliament, eleven, years, 1603, 1634, holcombe, court,. For the English cricketer see John Bluett cricketer John Bluett 1603 28 November 1634 of Holcombe Court lord of the manor of Holcombe Rogus in Devon was MP for Tiverton from 1628 to 1629 when King Charles I embarked on his Personal Rule without parliament for eleven years 2 Sir John Bluett 1603 1634 of Holcombe Court detail from his effigy in the Bluett Chapel All Saints Church Holcombe Rogus DevonArms of Bluett Or a chevron between three eagles displayed vert 1 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Ancestry amp heraldic quarterings 2 Career 3 Marriage and children 4 Death and burial 5 Succession 6 Monument 7 Sources 8 ReferencesOrigins editJohn Bluett was the son of Arthur Bluett 1573 4 1612 of Holcombe Rogus by his wife Jane Lancaster 1583 1641 daughter and heiress of John Lancaster of Bagborough Somerset 3 John was left fatherless aged nine when Arthur Bluett died in 1612 predeceasing his own father Richard Bluett d 1614 whose monument with effigy exists in the Bluett Chapel of Holcombe Rogus Church John s mother Joan remarried to Philip Poyntz a recusant 4 probably of the ancient Poyntz family of Iron Acton in Gloucestershire whose grave slab in the Bluett Chapel records his death on 16 August 1645 Here lyeth the body of Phillip Pointz gent who deceased the 16 day of August Anno Dom ini 1645 My flesh shall rest in hope psal 16 9 The much worn grave slab of Joan exists also in the floor of the Bluet Chapel inscribed thus In memoriam Joa Poyntz olim Arthuri Bluet ar mi g e ri at nuper Philippi Poyntz gent conjugis charissima obiit 19 o 5 die Junii aetatis 58 o 6 et salutis 1641 Parce hic mea sic mea servari in creda sanguin In memory of Joan Poyntz once the most beloved wife of Arthur Bluet Esq and recently of Philip Poyntz gent She died on the 19th day of June of her age 58 and health 1641 Spare me this my to serve in the blood Also inscribed on the same slab is the following The remains of her younger son Coll Francis Bluet amp Joan his wife lye here interr d also He was kill d before Lyme 1644 Ancestry amp heraldic quarterings edit nbsp Escutcheon above monument to Sir John Bluett d 1634 in Holcombe Rogus Church showing 8 quarterings with the Bluett crest above a squirrell eating a nutThe heraldic escutcheon on John Bluett s monument shows 8 quarterings as follows which demonstrate his ancestry from heraldic heiresses 1st Or a chevron between three eagles displayed vert Bluett 2nd Azure three bendlets argent each close cottised in base sable a bordure gules 3rd Argent a chevron sable a label of three points gules Prideaux 4th Argent a chevron between in chief three crosses pattees in base a saltire sable 5th Argent three ravens choughs sable proper nbsp 6th Or on a chevron gules three martlets or Chiselden of Holcombe Rogus 7 The martlets are shown here argent 7th Azure a chevron argent between three chess rooks or Rogus of Holcombe an heiress of Chesilden 8 the chevron is shown here or 8th Azure two bars between nine martlets argent 3 3 2 1 shown here as Azure two bars between eight martlets or 3 2 3 Tantifer alias Tatifer Tantifer Taundifer Fattifer 9 of Anke modern Aunk 10 Clyst Hydon 11 an heiress of Chesilden 9th Barry of six argent and gules on a canton of the second a lion passant or Lancaster of Milverton 12 the family of Bluett s mother Career editBluett s father died in 1612 leaving him at the age of nine in the care of his grandfather Richard Bluett d 1614 who died two years later He then became heir to the family s 16 manors in Somerset Devon and Dorset As a tenant in chief he became a ward of the king who sold his wardship to his great uncle Arthur Chichester 1st Baron Chichester 1563 1625 Lord Deputy of Ireland 13 On 16 April 1619 aged 15 he matriculated at Wadham College Oxford founded posthumously only nine years before in 1610 by his distant cousin Nicholas Wadham died 1609 of Merryfield Somerset and Edge Branscombe Devon Nicholas s ancestor Sir William Wadham died 1452 had married the other Chiselden co heiress Margaret Chiseldon whose sister Maude Chiseldon had brought Holcombe Rogus to the Bluetts 14 He presented a gold flagon to Wadham College which was melted down for coin tempore Charles I 15 In 1628 he was elected Member of Parliament for Tiverton Devon Marriage and children edit nbsp nbsp Elizabeth Portman 1604 1636 wife of Sir John Bluett Escutcheon showing arms of Bluet impaling Portman Or a fleur de lis azure details from monument to Sir John Bluett d 1634 in Holcombe Rogus Church Bluett married Elizabeth Portman 1602 1636 whose effigy exists beside that of her husband under their canopied monument in the Bluett Chapel Holcombe Rogus Church She was a daughter of Sir John Portman 1st Baronet d 1612 of Orchard Portman in Somerset They had no son and heir but four daughters none of whom were able to inherit the Manor of Holcombe Rogus due to tail male but did inherit shares in the Rectories amp Advowsons of Hockworthy Burlescombe Sampford Arundel and Holcombe Rogus As well as the Hundred of Milverton Manors such as North Petherton Greenham Somerset Shippen Chipstable in Somerset The Manor of Sturminster Marshall Dorset and The Manor of Holcombe Buhill with property and land in the Parish of Holcombe Rogus and Sampford Peverell lands acquired by Sir Roger Bluett following the dissolution of the monasteries Their kneeling effigies exist along the base of the monument to their parents at Holcombe Rogus Of the eight daughters depicted the eldest 4th 5th amp 6th all carry skulls indicating they were dead by 1636 The four survivors married into the families of Jones Wallop Lenthall and Basset 16 17 Ann Bluett d pre 1677 married Cadwallader Jones Mary Bluett married firstly Sir James Stonehouse d 1654 and secondly Sir John Lenthall 1st Baronet d 1681 whose father was Speaker of the House of Commons Dorothy Bluett d 1704 married Henry Wallop d 1673 whose grandson was John Wallop 1st Earl of Portsmouth 1690 1762 who succeeded his elder brother Bluett Wallop d 1707 in the Wallop estates in Hampshire and elsewhere Susan Bluett d 1662 who married John Basset 1630 1660 of Heanton Punchardon Devon 18 whose mural monument exists in Heanton Punchardon Church Their son was John Bassett 1653 1686 five times MP for Barnstaple in Devon Death and burial editBluett died at the age of 31 and was buried in the Bluett Chapel in All saints Church Holcombe Rogus where there exists an elaborate monument with his effigy and that of his wife 2 Succession editBluett was succeeded by his younger brother Col Francis Bluett d 1644 an ardent Royalist during the Civil War who was killed in 1644 at the Siege of Lyme Regis Monument edit nbsp Monument to Sir John Bluett d 1634 and his wife Elizabeth Portman d 1636 Bluett Chapel All Saints Church Holcombe Rogus Of the eight daughters kneeling below the eldest 4th 5th amp 6th all carry skulls indicating prior decease nbsp Squirrel crest of Bluett family serving as footrest to effigy of Sir John Bluett d 1634 in Holcombe Rogus ChurchAn elaborate marble monument to Sir John Bluett d 1634 and his wife Elizabeth Portman d 1636 exists in the Bluett Chapel All Saints Church Holcombe Rogus Alabaster recumbent effigies of the couple are contained under a classical canopy Sir John is dressed in full armour of Almain rivets and his head rests on a pillow with lace border in which is worked the Bluett crest of a squirrel eating a nut The squirrel also appears as his footrest A tablet above is inscribed thus Memoriae sacrum viri vere nobilis et generosi Johannis Bluet Armigeri et clarissimae ilius conjugis Elizabethae Joh ann is Portman Militis et Baronetti filiae Ille quidem fato cessit 29 die Novemb re anno aetatis suae 31 amp salutis 1634 Haec vero 7 o die Julii anno aetatis 32 et salutis 1636 Quicunq ue huc spectator ades ne durus oceilis parce tuis tibi sit ne pudor a lapide exudat saxis humor tristiq ue dolore se vix ferre suum posse patentur onus nobile par condunt claro ho stemate malus quam meritis inerat magnus utrisq ue decor quorum animas conjunxit pietate coronant has nu Dei Sacred to the memory of the truly noble and well born John Bluet Esquire and to the most renowned wife of him Elizabeth daughter of John Portman Knight and Baronet The former indeed proceeded to his destiny on the 29 day of November in the year of his age 31 and in the year of grace 1634 The latter in truth on the 7th day of July in the year of her age 32 and of grace 1636 Whoever O Spectator you are here do not harshly spare your for you there should be no shame From the stone exudes moisture from the rocks and with sad grief If by chance Sources editYerby George amp Hunneyball Paul Biography of Bluett Blewett John 1603 1634 of Holcombe Rogus Devon published in History of Parliament House of Commons 1604 1629 ed Andrew Thrush and John P Ferris 2010References edit Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 473 Vivian Lt Col J L Ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 p 92 a b Alumni Oxonienses 1500 1714 Bludworth Brakell Alumni Oxonienses 1500 1714 1891 pp 142 170 Retrieved 2 June 2012 Vivian Lt Col J L Ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 p 93 pedigree of Bluett Yerby amp Hunneyball undevicensimo on the nineteenth octo et quinquagensimo on the 58th Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 478 Pole p 500 Pole p 504 alternate spellings per Pole p 178 189 243 229 Fattifer per Vivian p 92 Pevsner p 271 Pole p 178 Colby Frederick Thomas ed Visitation of the County of Somerset in the year 1623 London 1876 given as Argent two bars gules here shown as barry of six 1 Yerby amp Hunneyball Arthur Chichester was the brother of Mary Chichester wife of Richard Bluett d 1614 Per ancestry of Wadham in Pole Sir William d 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 141 Wadham of Egge Branscombe Devon Brooke Webb Michael Holcombe Rogus A Short Parish History from 958 AD 2006 p 8 Church booklet Daniel and Samuel Lysons 1822 pages 132 160 General history Gentry Magna Britannia volume 6 Devonshire 1822 pp CXXXII CLX 2 See Somerset Archives Deeds concerning the descent of the manor borough and hundred of North Petherton DD SL 5 1659 1768 catalogued as follows From John Bluet of Holcombe Rogus died 1634 to his daughters Ann Cadwallader Jones Mary i Sir James Stonehouse d 1654 ii Sir John Lenthall d 1681 Dorothy Henry Wallop Susan John Basset In four parts and the subsequent acquisition by Dorothy Wallop d 1704 of the fourth part of Ann Jones in 1677 The settlement on her son John Wallop d 1695 of the half part in 1684 The acquisition by John Wallop of the fourth part of Mary from her son William by Sir John Lenthall in 1684 5 The settlement of Susan s fourth part on the marriage of her son John Basset to Eliz Hooper in 1713 And the conveyance by John Basset of the last fourth part to John Viscount Lymington son of John Wallop and grandson of Dorothy in 1742 completing the re grouping of the four parts in his hands his Viscount Lymington now Earl of Portsmouth agreement to sell the manor etc of North Petherton to Alexander Seymour Gapper of Maunsel esq in 1754 and the re conveyance to Lord Portsmouth in 1755 and The sale at his appointment to John Slade of Hammersmith esq in 1768 The deeds begin with Settlement on the marriage of Dame Mary Stonehouse and John Lenthall affecting also the half part of certain former Blewett Bluet etc manors named etc in Devon and Somerset dated 28 March 1659 copy and also include Settlement in consideration of the marriage of John Wallop and his wife Alice a dau and heir of Wm Borlase of Great Marlow co Bucks esq decd affecting also the fourth part of certain former Bluet manors rectories advowsons etc in Somerset dated 14 May 1684 and Settlement in the marriage of John Bassett of Heanton Punchardon co Devon esq and Elizabeth only dau of Sir Nich Hooper of Fullbrooke in Braunton co Devon knt sjt at law affecting also certain Bassett properties in Devon and Wilts and the fourth part of certain former Bluet manors in Somerset and Devon dated 20 August 1713 In addition to the various conveyances affecting the North Petherton property alone Vivian 1895 p 47 Parliament of EnglandPreceded byJohn DrakePeter Ball Member of Parliament for Tiverton1628 With Peter Ball Parliament suspended until 1640 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Bluett amp oldid 1172079137, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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