Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 2 Vol 4.djvu/631

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APPENDIX G 613 He was excepted from pardon, for life as well as for estate, 9 July, and attainted 14 Dec. 1660. His lands in Ireland were granted to St. John Brodrick, father of the ist Viscount Midleton. He ;«., istly, ( — ), da. of ( — ) Turner. She d. at Dublin, and was bur. in Christchurch Cathedral, 15 Jan. 1652/3, with "heraldic honours. "(*) He w»., 2ndly, before 8 June 1654, ( — ), da. of ( — ) ( — V() He d. at Amsterdam in 1662.0 HOBART [36] John Hobart,(^) of Blickling, co. Norfolk, only s. and h. ot Miles H., of Intwood, in the same co. (who d. Dec. 1639), by his ist wife, Frances, 6th da. of Sir John Peyton, of Iselham, co. Camb., Bart., by Alice, 1st da. of Sir Edward Osborne, Lord Mayor of London. He was bap. 20 Mar. 1627/8, at Ditchingham, co. Norfolk, and sue. his uncle. Sir John Hobart, K.B., as 3rd Baronet, 20 Apr. 1647. IVl-P- for Norfolk 12 July 1654-57, 17 Feb. 1672/3, 5 May and 25 Aug. 1679, and 7 Feb. 1680/1. He was sum. to the "Other House," 10 Dec. 1657, and took his seat, as "John Lord Hobart," 20 Jan. 1657/8; he did not sit in Richard Cromwell's House of Lords. (') He favoured the Restoration, and entertained Charles II at his house at Blickling in Sep. 1 67 1. He »»., istly, Philippa, da. and h. of his uncle. Sir John Hobart, 2nd Bart., by his 2nd wife, Frances, da. of John (Egerton), 1st Earl of Bridgwater. She was bur.., 19 Jan. 1654/5, at Blick- ling. He w?., 2ndly, in June 1656, at St. Giles's-in-the-Fields, Mary, widow of Col. Robert Hammond, Gov. of the Isle of Wight (who d. 24 Oct. 1654), 6th da. of John Hampden,(') "the Patriot," of Great Bagster, Huson the cobbler, and one or two such considerable rogues. Sir William Davison has applied to the burgomasters for the scout to help to seize them." Fortunately for Hewson, the application was refused. {Cal. -S. P. Dom., 1660-61, p. 420). (f) " M'^ Turner wife to Coll. John Hewson, Governer ot Dublin, was buried in Christ Church y' 15 of January 1652." Arms of Hewson impaling Turner. (Funeral Entry, Ulster's Office). Al", short for Mistress, shows in its infancy the word we now write Miss, and the impalement shows that the lady's maiden namt- was Turner. [Ex inform. G. D. Burtchaell). C") On 8 June 1654 "Col. [Hewson] and his Lady, and many more men ot quality and their families," sailed in the Truelovt from Liverpool for Dublin. {Cal. S. P. Dom., 1654, p. 504). ("=) Masson's Life of Mi/ton, vol. vi, p. 115. C^) He bore for arms: Sable a star of eight points Gold between two flaunches Ermine. {') " Knight baronet of the old stamp, a gentleman of Norfolk, of a considerable estate; he was of these latter parliaments, but not of the former; had meddled very little, if at all, in throwing down kingship, but hath stickled very much in helping to re-establish and build it up again. ... He is in great favour at court, and, no question, deserves to be a lord." [Second Narrative of the late Parliament). (^ It was in consequence of this match that the estates of the Hampden family were inherited, in 1824, by their descendant, in the fifth generation, George Robert (Hobart), 5th Earl of Buckinghamshire, who consequently took the name of H.Tmpden.