Sir Henry PARKER

Born: BEF 1514, Morley Hall and Hingham, Norf., and Furneux Pelham, Herts

Died: 1552

Father: Henry PARKER (1º B. Morley)

Mother: Alice St. JOHN (B. Morley)

Married: Grace NEWPORT (b. 1515 - d. ABT 1549) (dau. of John Newport of Furneux Pelham and Mary Daniel) 18 May 1523

Children:

1. Henry PARKER (2º B. Morley)

2. Charles PARKER (Bishop of Man)

3. Edmund PARKER

4. Mary PARKER

5. Margaret PARKER

6. Amy PARKER

Married 2: Elizabeth CALTHORPE BEF 1549

Children:

7. Phillip PARKER (Sir)


The details in this biography come from the History of Parliament, a biographical dictionary of Members of the House of Commons.

Son of Henry Parker, 8º Lord Morley; by Alice, dau. of Sir John St. John of Bletsoe, Beds. educ. ?L. Inn, adm. 1516. Married first, 18 May 1523, Grace, dau. and heiress of John Newport of Furneux Pelham, by whom he had at least two sons and one dau. Married secondly, by 1549, Elizabeth, dau. and heiress of Sir Phillip Calthrope of Erwarton, Suff., Anne Boleyn's aunt, by whom he had at least one son. d.v.p. KB 31 May 1533. Commr. tenths of spiritualities, Herts. 1535, musters 1539, loan 1544, chantries, Essex and Herts. 1548 relief, Essex, Herts., Norf. and household of Princess Elizabeth 1550; other commissions 1538-51; sheriff, Essex and Herts. 1536-7; j.p. Herts. 1537-d.; custos rot. c.1547.

Newport,Grace(LParker).jpg (110854 bytes)

Grace Newport

by Hans Holbein the Younger

Sir Henry Parker's father was a prominent courtier, an accomplished translator and author, and a close friend of Cromwell. One of his daughters, Jane, married George Boleyn, Viscount Rochford, and the other, Margaret, married Sir John Shelton. Parker himself was to be connected, through his second marriage, with the Boleyn family. The beginnings of Parker's career are obscure. The man of that name who was page of the chamber and gentleman usher from 1514 was probably a namesake, perhaps Henry Parker of Berden, Essex.

By his marriage to Grace Newport (generally accepted to be the subject of the Holbein drawing inscribed “The Lady Parker”), who was only eight in 1523, Parker acquired the manors of Furneux Pelham and Stapleford, and in 1536 he procured a private Act (28 Hen. VIII c.20) settling his two Norfolk manors on himself and his wife, in lieu of the jointure that he had covenanted to make her on marriage. In 1541 the under sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire was sued for abducting a 14 year-old ward, Jane Barenton, who had been contracted in marriage to the younger John Newport, presumably Parker's brother-in-law. Parker was apparently a party to the abduction, for his servants escorted the girl in her flight from her guardian and helped her to elude him in London.

Parker was knighted at Anne Boleyn's coronation and served regularly on Hertfordshire commissions from 1535. It is possible that he sat in the short Parliament of 1536, for which the Hertfordshire returns have not survived; it was that Parliament which passed the Act relating to the settlement on Grace Parker, although such an uncontroversial measure hardly required Parker's presence in the Commons as well as his father's in the Lords. His election for Hertfordshire in 1539 is to be explained by his father's closeness to Cromwell and his own leading position in his county. In two letters to Cromwell (probably of 1536) Parker reported his imprisonment of two parsons who had disobeyed the royal injunctions against superstitious holy days, and begged Cromwell to help his chaplain, whom the Bishop of London's surveyor was suing for no good reason. Parker explained that he knew ‘the love and favour which ... your lordship always hath borne to the word of God and to all them which endeavour to set forth the King's most godly and gracious injunctions’ and interpreted the action against his chaplain as an attack by the conservative Bishop Stokesley on himself. He attended at court on ceremonial occasions, such as the christening of Prince Edward and the reception of Anne of Cleves. He was also called on for military service, his name appearing in lists of Hertfordshire gentlemen to serve against the northern rebels in 1536, and eight years later he was with the rearguard of the army in France. In Apr 1536 he had a grant from the crown of the dissolved priory of Latton, Essex, which he sold, with other land, five years later. He was assessed in Hertfordshire for the subsidy, his lands there being valued at £100 a year in 1546, which made him one of the county's ten or 12 richest men.

Parker retained interests in Norfolk which involved him in several Star Chamber cases. One of these concerned rights of common at Hingham, where he wished to pasture 500 sheep. His alleged enclosure of Hingham common was one of the grievances of the Norfolk peasantry at the time of in his unsuccessful attempt to put down the rebellion in Aug.

Under Edward VI Parker was appointed to most of the important commissions for Hertfordshire. He was not immediately chosen knight of the shire in 1547 but was elected on 24 Oct, less than a fortnight before the Parliament met, to fill the vacancy left by the death of Sir Anthony Denny on the previous 10 Sep. A bill ‘for increase of trees and woods’ was committed to him on 5 Nov 1549, after its first reading. His parliamentary career ended before the following and last session of this Parliament began, for he died on 6 Jan 1552. The Privy Council sent instructions on 19 Jan following for a second by-election in Hertfordshire and recommended Sir Ralph Sadler as the fittest person; it was nevertheless John Cock who was elected. Parker died during the lifetime of his father. The inquisition post mortem taken in Norfolk thus mentioned only the two manors settled on Parker and his first wife to provide her jointure and valued at £50 a year; the larger of these, Hingham, had been re-settled for the benefit of Parker's second wife, Elizabeth, who later married Sir William Woodhouse and Dru Drury. Parker's heir was his eldest son Henry, aged 20 years and 11 months at his father's death; he did not share his father's religious views, but fled to the Continent in Elizabeth's reign and became one of the leading English Catholic exiles there. No will of Parker's has been found.
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