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John Culpeper

Male 1565 - Abt 1635  (70 years)


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  • Name John Culpeper 
    Born 1565  Wigsell, Salehurst, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died Abt 16 Dec 1635  Hollingbourne, Kent, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I3685  MyTree
    Last Modified 15 Aug 2009 

    Father John Culpeper,   b. 1531, Wigsell, Salehurst, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 20 Oct 1612, Salehurst, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 81 years) 
    Mother Elizabeth Sedley,   b. 1534,   d. 1635  (Age 101 years) 
    Married Abt 1560  Salehurst, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F4629  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Ursula Woodcock,   b. 1566,   d. 1612  (Age 46 years) 
    Married 1600  Hollingbourne, Greenway Court, Kent, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Thomas Culpeper
     2. Cicely Culpeper
     3. Frances Culpeper
    +4. John Culpeper,   b. Bef 26 Oct 1606, Harrietsham, Kent, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 1674  (Age > 67 years)
    Last Modified 17 Jul 2017 
    Family ID F4624  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 2 Elinor Norwood 
    Married Abt 1615 
    Last Modified 17 Jul 2017 
    Family ID F4626  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 3 Anne LNU (Culpeper) 
    Married Abt 1625 
    Last Modified 17 Jul 2017 
    Family ID F4627  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Second surviving son of his generation, he makes his first appearance
      on the existing record as 'my brother John Colepipir's son, my godson,
      ' in the 1581 will of his maternal uncle, John Sidley of Southfleet
      (P.C.C. Darcy, 31; Waters' Gleanings, ii, 969). In October, 1587, or
      soon after the death of his brother William, when, according to the
      later testimony of his tombstone, he would be 17 years of age, he was
      entered at the Middle Temple under the description 'late of New Inn,
      gent... second son of John Colepeper of Wigsell, Sussex, esq.'
      (Hopwood, i, 293). Unlike his eldest brother, whose record so far runs
      parallel, he had entered upon a professional career. Duly called to
      the bar, by 1595 he was having his youthful kinsmen 'bound' with him,
      and in 1599 is listed as a Bencher. Frequenting the household of his
      uncle Francis at Greenway Court, he there met and married his first
      wife, and after Francis' death established her at Greenway Court (then
      the property of his younger brother Alexander), as appears from the
      baptism of one of his children in Harrietsham; but later he occupied a
      house in Salehurst, as appears from his elder brother's inq. p.m.
      already cited.

      That his law practice was profitable, despite his reputation, recorded
      on his MI., for composing more litigation that he fomented, appears
      from his ability to subscribe to the Virginia Company under the
      charter of 1609; and a year later, under the third charter, to make
      one of the largest individual subscriptions (£37, 10s. 6d.) to the
      'supply' which saved the colony at Jamestown from death by inanition
      (Brown, Genesis, 218, 407, 546).

      Having been designated, by the will of his uncle Martin, the
      contingent remainderman of Astwood in Feckenham, he removed his family
      to Astwood after the inheritance had become certain by the death
      without issue of his cousin Sir Stephen12; and there buried his first
      wife in June, 1612. This occupancy was by arrangement with Dr. Martin
      Culpeper's widow, who had a life estate but had meanwhile re-married
      and removed her residence elsewhere. In 1616 he bought out that aunt's
      interest, and then gave over his law practice to become a country
      gentleman. Being now 'of Feckenham,' he became a diligent presiding
      magistrate at quarter sessions; being included, a generation ahead of
      Sir Roger de Coverley, of the quorum in the Worcestershire commission
      from 1618-1628; again, like Sir Roger, in 1624 he served the office of
      Sheriff of that county 'with music before me, a feather in my hat and
      my horse well bitted' (Bund, Cal. Quarter Sessions Papers,
      Worcestershire, 1591-1643, 1900; Sheriff Lists in Fuller's Worthies).

      But when he was nearly seventy years of age, for what reason does not
      appear, he sold Astwood to one Thomas Rich, and returned to Greenway
      Court to die. There, on December 14, 1635, he made his will and on
      December 18th following, as the parish register testifies, 'Mr. John
      Culpeper, Armiger,' was buried in the chancel of Hollingbourne church.
      His will was as follows:

      P.C.C. Pile, 4
      Will dated December 14, 1635
      Proved January 23, 1635/6.

      John Culpeper of Greenway Court, co. Kent, esq. To he bur. in the
      Chancel of the Church of Hollingbourne where Sir Thomas Culpepper
      shall think fit. To my wife Ann C. bed in the wainscoat chamber, all
      debts owing to her as Admix. of her former husband, except the debt
      owing by the Lord Lambert and Lady Lambert; which I bequeath to my son
      Thomas C., hereby confirming his actions for compounding sd. debt. To
      my son John C., £30 Rent charge payable by Sir John [afterwards first
      lord] Culpeper during my son John's life. To my daur, Sicely C., £300
      & £20 [annuity]. To James Medlicote my son in law and Frances
      Medlicote my daur, 20s. each. My [eldest] son Thomas C. to be exer.,
      and to him my personal estate. Witnesses: Tho. Culpeper [i. e., Sir
      Thomas of Hollingbourne], Alexander Culpeper [i. e., Sir Alexander of
      Greenway Court], John Culpeper [i. e., Sir John, soon to be first
      Lord], William Cragge [i. e., the vicar of Hollingbourne]. Prov. by
      Thomas C., son & exer.

      His brother Sir Alexander subsequently erected to his memory in the
      Culpeper Chapel of Hollingbourne church the following MI., which, it
      will be observed, contains several misstatements of fact, viz:

      "Joh(ann)es Culpeper de Fakenharn in Com(itatu) Wigorn(ense)
      Ar(miger), filius secundus Johannis de Wigsell, vicesimo Decembris
      Anno D(omi)ni 1635, Aetatis 70. Corpus in cancello adjacente sepultum
      humo animam Creatori reddidit. Optimus vir et Cives, Juris admodum
      peritus, unde tantum, hoc pium sibi lucrum fecerit ut amicis
      jurisconsulti pacifici proximis officiurn praestaret.

      "Uxorem duxit Ursulam Thomae Woodcock, Aldermanni Londinensis et
      Praetoris electi, filiam, per quam liberos quatuor Thomam, Cecil,
      Johannem, et Franciscum, paternae pietatis haeredes reliquit."

      (Source: Fairfax Harrison, "The Proprietors of the Northern Neck" )

      His Will was made December 14, 1635.
      Probate: January 23, 1635 in Kent, England.