Richard Pinsent

Richard Pinsent: 1647 – xxxx DRO0111

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0111


Richard Pinsent was one of the two known son of Jonas Pinsent of “Henstreete,” in Bovey Tracey by his wife, Grace (nee Langdon). I have yet to locate Richard’s birth record but, from his age (17) at entry at University College, in Oxford, in 1664, he was probably born around 1647. He had an elder brother, Jonas, and may have had other siblings that I do not know about.

The boys’ grandfather, Richard Langdon, of “Outer Hexdowne” in Bigbury parish, wrote a will in which he appointed John Aishford and Richard Luke to be his executors, and made them responsible for looking after his estate, and the well being and education of his two grandsons while they were still minors. His daughter, Grace Pinsent (nee Langdon) valued the estate at £1,000. Sadly, the will is missing. Jonas Pinsent, Grace’s husband, had died a few years previously (in 1658) and left her in charge of their children and likely given her the usual dower rights to the family home, at Henstreete in Bovey Tracey.

Grace must have voiced doubts about her own father’s executors, so when her sons came “off-age,” around the time she died (in around 1666) – they sued Aishford and Luke in the Ecclesiastical Court for “subtraction of Legacy”. The details of the case are lost; however, notes made by Olive Moger [Dean and Chapter Bundle 193 etc.: Moger Abstracts]. show that Richard Langdon’s will had stated: “I bequeath to said Grace Pinsent, Jonas Pinsent and Richard Pinsent, her sons, all my lands and tenements in Bigberry called Outer Hexdowne from my death ….”. It then stipulated that the executors would have tillage rights until 1660, at which time the rights would pass to Richard. Also, Grace and Jonas would have the household goods and the plough stuff until Jonas became twenty-one. The plough stuff would pass to Richard on Grace’s death. She appears, from construction, to have died around 1666 “about the time Jonas attained the age of 21 years”. In 1670, the executors claimed to be innocent of misdealing and they said that all the money had been spent during the brothers’ minorities.

Bundle 215 provides a list of expenditures incurred by John Aishford and Richard Luke. They included payment of debts, payment for farm repairs, costs for the boys schooling – (including Richard’s University education), – costs incurred attending meetings, etc. but they felt unable to put a value on household goods that Mrs. Grace and Jonas “carried away (to his house in Bovey Tracey) from Hexdowne”. If Grace was still living at “Henstreete” when her father died it is not surprising that she moved items there from her old family home.

What happened to Richard, I am not sure; however, a “Richard Pinson” was Custom’s Officer for Plymouth in 1684 and is referred to as being “Custom’s Boatman at Plymouth – lately deceased” on June 6th, 1685 (Calendar of State Papers, Treasury Books Vol VIII pt. 1 p233). This was an educated man, so they may be one and the same. I have seen no evidence of a marriage or of children. 


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Grandmother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Mother: Grace Langdon: xxxx – 1670

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Amy Pinsent: 1613 – 1615
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1616 – 1693
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648
Johanna Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1649 – xxxx
Richard Pinsent: 1642 – xxxx


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Jonas Pinsent

Jonas Pinsent: 1645 – xxxx DRO0110

1) Mary Whittyer: xxxx – 1689
Married: 1688: Exeter, Devon 

2) Phillipa Weekes: xxxx – 1726
Married: 1690: Exeter, Devon

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0110


Jonas Pinsent is inferred to be one of the (at least) two sons of Jonas Pinsent of Bovey Tracey by his second wife, Grace (née Langdon). I have yet to find his baptismal record and I know very little about his early life, However, he was probably born in around 1645. There was a Jonas baptized in Bovey Tracey in 1650, however, the parish register clearly shows that his father was John. Perhaps this is a mistake. Documentary evidence shows that our Jonas had brother, Richard, who may have been a few year’s younger.

Jonas and Richard’s grandfather, Richard Langdon “late of Bigbury” died in around 1660. He was a wealthy man who appointed John Aishford and Richard Luke to be his executors, to manage his estate and act as guardians to his two young grandsons until they came “off age.” The will is missing; however, Olive Moger’s review of Exeter’s Ecclesiastical Court documents shows that the boys reached maturity in the early 1670s and that they then sued their grandfather’s executors, for “subtraction of legacy.” The date is unclear; however it was said to be a few years after their mother died (Moger Abstracts: Dean and Chapter Bundles: Series I & II). 

Richard Langdon had stated that: “I bequeath to said Grace Pinsent, Jonas Pinsent and Richard Pinsent, her sons, all my lands and tenements in Bigbury called outer Hexdowne, from my death …” however, because they were minors there were terms and conditions attached. Grace and Jonas were to have all the household and plough stuff in the first instance, but the executors were to have the tillage rights for ten years. Grace and Jonas were to have the household goods and plough stuff until Jonas reached the age of twenty-one years, which, the documents suggest, occurred around the time that Grace died “four years ago” (1666 – by construction). Richard would then get the land in Bigbury and the tillage rights.

It was a significant case as Grace had valued her father’s estate at L.1,000. It is not clear but Richard’s land probably went to Richard as Jonas would likely have inherited their father’s estate in Bovey Tracey when he came “off age.”.  

The executors for their part claimed that the money had been dispersed over time and that they had no more to give! They provided an inventory, and a list of costs incurred between 1660 and 1666. These include large and small sums paid to maintain Outer Hexdowne and for the education and welfare of the two boys, such as: “To Mr. Waltham for schooling and diet of Mrs. Pinsent’s sons: £25.” Another item reads: “Sent to him at Oxford Midsummer 1664 and other sums to him Mich. 1666.” This almost certainly refers to the Richard, who matriculated at University College in Oxford, aged 17, in 1664 (Alumni Oxonienses: Vol 4). 

There were also the executors own (doubtless reasonable) expenses, and the cost of Grace’s funeral and her heriot (£13s 4d) to be taken into consideration. The executors made begrudging acknowledgement “For money found in Mrs. Grace Pinsent’s trunk after her death, £27” but they felt they could not account for “Goods which Mrs. Grace Pinsent and Mr. Jonas Pinsent carried away from Hexdowne to his house in Bovey Tracey.” The boys would have lived and grown up on Henstreete with their parents and Jonas would, logically, have inherited his father’s estate, including the family home on Henstreete (subject to his mother’s widow’s rights), in 1658. As he was a minor, it would have been held for him “in trust” until he reached maturity.

Jonas was to become a wealthy man and, when testifying in Chancery in 1693, (C5/106/53-24865. Pinsent v Battishill) he admitted to controlling land in Bovey Tracey including “Henstreete” (value £50 per annum); “Hore’s” tenement (£30 per annum); “Hart’s” tenement (£30 per annum) and lesser properties in Bovey Tracey, and also land in Dartmouth (£20 per annum). Interestingly, there is no mention of Will’s tenement. 

The Dartmouth property may have been the one his father had testified about in 1658, shortly before he died (see elsewhere). He had admitted to being present at the signing and sealing of documents concerning a deal made between Walter Diamond, Alexander Colens and two of his relatives, William and Tristam Langdon regarding a tenement and garden in Clifton, Dartmouth (C21/B87/33). He said that his father retained the documents.

Jonas, “being a single man and minding to travel into France and other places beyond the seas” in the early 1670s, was persuaded to ask his uncle (Thomas Pynsent of Woodland) “with whose daughter (viz) Elizabeth …. your executor had designed to marry as soon as he returned” to look after his estate. He signed over his lands to his uncle and agreed that, should he die while abroad, the properties were to pass to Thomas and then to his (Thomas’s) daughter – his cousin, Elizabeth. Jonas then gave his uncle all the relevant documents. Crucially, he seems to have forgot to retain or lost the counterpart of the transfer document, so he was later to have no prove of the terms of the agreement! 

How long he was away for and where he went is unclear; however, he was away too long for Elizabeth, she married John Battishill in Woodland in 1672. Perhaps the family had given him us as dead by then and his uncle rather liked running his estate. When the prodigal nephew did return he found that his uncle Thomas and another trustee, William Dyer were unwilling to surrender the land ownership documents and the deed that gave them control of his estate. They, rather weakly, claimed they Jonas had either given them, or they had purchased the properties. They even agreed to pay his debts – which then amounted to around £300 0s 0d, if he would drop his claim. The issue came to a head after Thomas died 1691. 

It is not clear what Jonas was up to in the late 1670s and 1680s. However, he seems to have settled in Ashburton. Nevertheless, it was Jonas Pinsent “of Woodland” who married a widow, Mary Whittyer, in Exeter, in 1688. Whether this was his first marriage, I do not know. She died the following year, and he appears to have tried again; it was likely this Jonas who married Philippa Weekes in 1690. 

Thomas Pinsent died in 1690 and three years later, Jonas Pinsent “of Ashburton” sued his brother-in-law John Battishill and his wife Elizabeth and others for the return of some of his documents. Why he took so long, I do not know. He had probably recovered the ownership documents by then but he may well have been concerned about the clause in the transfer document that referred to “Elizabeth and her heirs” eventually inheriting his property! Jonas asked the Chancery Court to issue a subpoena and force John Battishill and his wife to explain themselves and return his documents (C5/106/53). 

Jonas Pinsent seems to have recovered his property, as Jonas “of Henstreet, in Bovey Tracey,” took Thomas Hart, gent., his wife, Anne and their son, John, to court in 1691 over their disputed ownership of Hart’s tenement. Jonas claimed that he purchased the property from the Harts in 1675 for £155 0s 0d. The issue was whether Thomas Hart had previously sold the property to John Berryman – or had sold it to him sometime later and backdated the deeds so as to establish his ownership. Once again, Jonas sought clarification through the High Court of Chancery (C2/CHAS/P1/62-26131).

I do not know when Jonas died but it was probably after 1701 as the Woodland Deeds show that a Jonas Pinsent, along with Worthington Brice, John Mawry and Mary and Joan Tothill, signed a deed that year by which William Cullinge bought fifty acres of land in Woodland. William Cullinge was probably a relation by marriage. He had married Jonas’s aunt Elizabeth Pinsent in 1650. However, as noted below, there were other Jonas’s around and one of them could have signed the document. 

A case in Chancery in 1702 (C6/409/22) suggests that Jonas Pinsent “of Ashburton” gent., and Samuel and/or Abraham Lure were sureties for a bond of £50 (penal amount £100) borrowed from Samuel Cabell in 1689. After Samuel Cabell died, his executors focused on the Lures when trying to recover the money as “Jonas Pinsent had been in prison for debt for some time.” Samuel Lure deposed that: “they believe that Jonas Pinsent was in prison but do not believe he is insolvent. They say that Jonas had a considerable estate and could easily have paid the debt before he got into his current predicament. They believe he is in prison to avoid and defraud his creditors and not because he was sued by Samual Cabell”. Is this our Jonas?

There were at least three cousins named Jonas around at that time. One was the son of the Rev. Edward Pinsent of Loddiswell who was born in 1637. His mother moved to Woodland after his father died, and he could, of course, be the Jonas referred to with respect to the Woodland document mentioned above; however, I believe he lived in Exeter. Another Jonas was the son of Ellis Pinsent, an Exeter merchant, who was born in 1657 and served in the army in Ireland before returning to deal with his father’s estate (C6/373/10). He was busy trying to sort out his father’s estate in the 1690s, so perhaps he was the one who got into financial trouble. Life gets complicated and there is still some unraveling to do. Their lives are discussed elsewhere.

Jonas’s widow, Philippa, appears to have died in 1726. There is nothing to suggest that he ever had children. What happened to his land is unclear. Some of it may have passed to the Battishill family!


Family Tree

Grandparents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Mother: Grace Langdon: xxxx – 1670

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Amy Pinsent: 1613 – 1615
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1616 – 1693
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648
Johanna Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1649 – xxxx
Richard Pinsent: 1642 – xxxx


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Johanna Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: N/A
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: Nicholas Burchill
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0141


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother: Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1622
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1648

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0140


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother: Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


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Ellis Pinsent

Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1691 DRO0135 (Merchant in the City of Exeter, Devon)

Joan Felling: xxxx – xxxx
Married: 1651: Exeter, Devon

Children by Joan Felling:

Elizabeth Pinsent: 1652 – xxxx (Married Walter Ingram, St. Petrock, Exeter, Devon, 1683)
Mary Pinsent: 1655 – xxxx (Married John Whitborough, St. Petrock, Exeter, Devon, 1685)
Jonas Pinsent: 1657 – xxxx

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0135


Ellis was the fourth surviving son of Jonas Pinsent, by his wife, Elizabeth. Jonas was a rich lawyer and Ellis grew up on “Henstreet” in Bovey Tracey with four brothers – John, who died unmarried as a young man, Jonas, who stayed on in Bovey Tracey, Thomas who moved to Woodland parish and Edward, who became the vicar of Loddiswell. Their lives are discussed elsewhere. Ellis also had three sisters, Amy who died in infancy, Elizabeth and Johanna. 

Jonas Pinsent (senior) was an attorney who served on the Court of King’s Bench, at Westminster and appeared on the Western Circuit. He seems to have spent much of his own time in court as well! – either as a complainant or a defendant dealing with his own legal matters – many of which were still resolved when he died in 1637. His eldest son and principal heir, Jonas, was left to deal with the fallout! 

Ellis was a younger son and his father had him apprenticed to a merchant in Exeter instead of sending him up to university. Ellis moved to St. Petrock Parish, and was there in time to sign the, then near obligatory, “Protestation Return”. This showed his acceptance of the, then current, format of the Protestant Church in England. He seems to have been apprenticed to a Richard Cullinge in around 1646. Richard may well have been related to the William Cullinge who was to marry Ellis’s sister, Elizabeth, in Woodland in 1650 (The Roll of Freemen in Exeter (1266-1762).

Ellis himself married Joan Felling in St. Mary Arches parish, in Exeter, in 1651. They had three children (Elizabeth, Mary and Jonas) baptized in the nearby parish of St. Petrock. Ellis completed his apprenticeship but he seems to have continued to work with his erstwhile master, Richard “Cullen”, who had interests in Ireland. The Calendar of State Papers relating to Ireland: (Adventurer’s for Land: 1642-1659) refers to an assignment of goods that Ellis Pinsent “of Exeter, Mercer” made to William Hawkins of London of the “share which he has by assignment for Richard Cullen and which has fallen in the Co. Down …” in 1653. What else he did, I am not sure; however, he must have been good at it as Ellis and his wife paid 15s 6d in Pole Tax in 1660, and the Hearth Tax Returns for 1671 show that they had a house with five hearths.

In 1669, Sir Peter Fortsecue, bart. made a claim in Chancery against Ellis on the grounds that a few years previously he had stood as surety for a £300 loan that had now failed (C6/194/49). What that was about, I am not sure. However, around then we also find that “Elizeus Pinsent “of Exeter, merch, where he has lived for 25 years, aged 44” witnessed the inventory of an account of the goods of Bartholomew Pridham (Dean and Chapter Bundle 182: Moger Abstracts: Series II). If the dates are right, the inventory was taken in 1663, and he had been in Exeter since around 1638.

Later on in life, Ellis was sued by two London merchants, Thomas Blackmore and John Bollers. They claimed that he was in a partnership and thus had some responsibility for the debts of another Exeter trader, John Whitborough, who declared bankruptcy, in 1688. They told the court that John Whitborough owed them £3,000. In his Chancery deposition, Mr. Blackmore also claimed that John had transferred his land at Storridge, in Dunsford, and his shop and goods, which were worth £2,000, to Ellis – who just happened to be his father-in-law – to avoid payment. Moreover, he said that Ellis received £500 owing on debts to John Whitborough, and there had probably been several illegal side-deals made between John and his other creditors that were, of course, detrimental to the recovery of their debt. Thomas complained that Ellis had refused to give him any documents regarding the matter, and he asked the court to call for an accounting. Awkwardly, Ellis died while the case was still going on and it was left to his eldest son (yet another Jonas) to prove his father’s will and satisfy their demands. 

The latter Jonas told the court that he had spent the past four years in the Army in Ireland, and had returned when he heard of his father’s death. He said that he found that his sister, Mary, and his brother-in-law, John Whitborough, living in Ellis’s house and said they had taken possession of his father’s assets. Jonas acknowledged that John Whitborough had transferred his land in Storridge to his father. however, he knew nothing of his father’s financial dealings and was having a great deal of difficulty getting his brother-in-law to account for his father’s estate which, he thought, should have been of considerable value (C6/373/10). 

R. Dymock, in his history of St. Petrock Parish (Devon Assoc. Trans. XIV (1882), p482), describes a monument that was visible in the chancel of the church. He refers to a large stone floor slab with several intermingled inscriptions on it, including the following: 

“Here lyeth the body of Mary Whitborough, grandchild to Mr. Ellis Pinsent. Here lyeth ye body of Mr. Ellis Pinsent, mercer, who died ye — day of July 1691. Also, ye body of Thomas Inglett son of Giles Inglett of Chudleigh, gent. Here lyeth the body of Ellis Whitborough, grandson to Mr. Ellis Pinsent, died 30th Jan. 1700. There was, in the middle of this description, a shield bearing the arms of the Pinsent family: “gules, a chevron engrailed between three etoiles of 6 points, argent”

The presence of the coat of arms harks back to Ellis’s great grandfather, John Pinsent of Combe in Bovey Tracey and reflects his somewhat distant link to the “Pynsent” family and the Somerset and Wiltshire baronetcy. Ellis’s will was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury (147 Vere) in September 1691. He left his son, Jonas, two houses, one in Exeter then inhabited by Ezekiel Steed and one at Compson, in the parish of Hole. He also left him his property at Storridge in Dunsford – which was subject to an annual payment of £12 a year to Ellis’s daughter Mary Whitborough. This money was to be for her use only, and not that of her husband, John Whitborough who, having declared bankruptcy in 1688, Ellis must have thought could no longer be trusted with money! The will became a bone of contention between the two families and John Whitborough sued Jonas Pinsent in the Court of Chancery a few years later, in 1694 (C5/285-95). 

I do not know what happened to Ellis’s wife, Joan; however, we know that his daughter Elizabeth married Walter Ingram, of Plymouth, in November 1683. His son, another Jonas, may have died in St. Thomas the Apostle parish, near Exeter, in May 1709. However, there are other possible candidates so that is less clear. There is nothing to suggest that this Jonas ever married or had children. Sadly, he is yet another loose end.  


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother: Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


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Elizabeth Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1616
Marriage: 1650, Woodland, Devon
Spouse: William Collings
Death: 1693

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0134


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother: Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


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Thomas Pinsent

Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690 DRO0130 (Gentleman of Woodland)

1) Thomasine Smerdon: xxxx – xxxx
Married: 1641: Exeter, Devon 

Children by Thomasine Smerdon

Elizabeth Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx (Married John Battishill, Woodland, Devon 1672.)

2) Joanna Berry: xxxx – 1688
Married: 1663: Woodland, Devon

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0130


Thomas was the third son of Jonas Pinsent of Bovey Tracey by his wife Elizabeth. He grew up with four brothers – John, who died while still a young man, Jonas, who stayed on in Bovey Tracey, Edward, who became vicar of Loddiswell and Ellis, who became a merchant in Exeter.  

Thomas moved to Woodland parish near Ashburton, approximately five miles to the southwest of Bovey Tracey, while still a young man. According to the Rev. H. R. Evans who wrote an article on Woodland for the “Transactions of the Devonshire Association (Vol XCII)” in 1960, “for over fifty years in the 17th Century the Pinsents lived at Higher Lake and took a leading part in parochial affairs.” He was right about that, although some of his other observations have not withstood the test of time. Rev. H. R. Evans was probably right in saying that Thomas Pinsent arrived in Woodland “soon after 1631” and that he married Thomasine Smerdon, of Bickington, in Exeter, in 1641. They had a daughter, Elizabeth, but I do not know where or when.

Thomasine must have died as her husband remarried. He married Joanna Berry of Halwell in Woodland Parish Church in 1663. Joanna was said to be an heiress in her own right. He was 48 years old. I do not know her age and I am not aware of them having had children. Elizabeth seems to have been Thomas’s only child. 

A survey taken in Woodland in 1653 (Woodland Deeds) shows that Thomas’ land was valued (for taxable purposes?) at £10 and his personal goods at 10s. Interesting, the survey also found that his brother-in-law, William Cullinge’s properties were valued at £9 and £15 respectively. William Cullinge had married Thomas’s sister Elizabeth (not his daughter – as the Rev. Evans had surmised) – in 1650. The same survey shows that there was a widow, Amy Pinsent, with property in the parish valued at £1 10s 0d. She was the Reverend Edward Pinsent’s widow – and thus Thomas’s sister-in-law. Her husband had died in Loddiswell in 1652. The Rev. Evans was correct in saying that the family was well represented in the parish! 

In 1661, Thomas Pinsent witnessed the signing of a deed by force of which William Venning resigned the trusteeship granted to him by an earlier deed, dated April 1658, by which William Cullinge bought the freehold and manorial rights of his dwelling, in Woodland, from Sir Richard Chivaton, Lord Mayor of London, and John Potless, Esquire, of Sherdon Hall, Suffolk. Thomas’s sister Elizabeth had clearly married a rich man.  

Sometime the late 1690s or early 1670s, Thomas’s nephew Jonas – the son of his brother Jonas “being a single man and minding to travel into France and other places beyond the seas” was persuaded to ask his uncle “with whose daughter (viz) Elizabeth …. your executor had designed to marry as soon as he returned,” to look after his estate (C5/106/53). He handed him the documents that establishing his right to Henstreete (valued at £50 per annum), Hore’s (£30 per annum) and Hart’s (£30 per annum) and other smaller properties in Bovey Tracey and Dartmouth and took off for the Continent. However, before he did so, he signed a document that stated that, should he die while abroad, the properties were to pass to Thomas and then to his cousin (Thomas’s) daughter, Elizabeth and her heirs. Unfortunately, he seems to have failed to keep or he lost his counterpart copy. What could possibly go wrong!

It is not clear how committed Jonas was to marrying Elizabeth, or she him; however, she married John Battishill in Woodland in 1672. I do not know when Jonas returned but many years later, in 1693, he felt it necessary to sue John and Elizabeth in the Court of Chancery (C5/106/53) for the return of some of his documents. Jonas said that when he got back from his travels his uncle Thomas refused to return them! The issue was, presumably, thrashed out in the lower courts. Nevertheless, after Thomas’s death in 1690, Jonas may have done so to prevent “Elizabeth and her heirs” inheriting his lands as laid out in his original transfer document. Jonas’s life is discussed elsewhere.

Thomas not only controlled Jonas’s properties while he was away, but he acquired Higher Lake farm in Woodland in 1671 (Moulton’s Catalogue of Deeds) and it was his principal residence until he died in 1690. He may have previously held a lease on the property. Thomas also leased other land. The Somerset Archives hold several documents relating to property controlled by Nicholas Wadham between 1654 and 1697. These refer to Thomas’s leasehold interest in a property called Howton “otherwise Houghton,” in Highweek (Somerset-cat.swheritage.org.uk/records/). The property also features in a case in Chancery that Thomas launched against Samuel Segar “gent.” the same year (C5/69/69).

Between them, the documents show that Thomas acquired a 99-year lease of one twelfth part of Howton based on three lives – his own, that of his daughter Elizabeth and of one John Prowse, in 1659. A few years later – in 1664, he obtained an additional third part of Howton from Sir John Strangeways on his own life and those of Joane Berry and his daughter Elizabeth. Not content with that, he went on to acquire another third from Sir William Wyndham on the lives of himself, his daughter Elizabeth and Ellis Pinsent (the son of his sister-in-law, Amy) in 1670. (swheritage.org.uk/records/DD/WY/5/13/83).

The Chancery dispute came about because Thomas, who leased 9/12th of the property in 1671, felt that Samuel Segar – who held the rest “floods the area with horses, cattle, oxen and takes more that he should.” He wanted to subdivide the property but Samuel refused to consider it, because Thomas was only a partial leaseholder (C6/69/69) and had no authority to do so. Thomas was later to write to John Wyndham at Salisbury, concerning the heriots required (a one-off payment to the lord of the manor) when of one of the tenants of the manor of Howton died in 1686. Thomas’s partial lease of Howton stayed in the family and passed to his daughter Elizabeth and her family after his death. Her son, Mr. Pinsent Battishill, still held a third of it in 1705. 

Thomas Pynsent of Woodland, “gent.” held other properties as well. In 1683, he and his wife Johan, (daughter and co-heir of Edward Berry, deceased and co-heir of John Berry, deceased, both late of Harberton), and John Battishill of Engsdon, Ilsington, and his wife Elizabeth (daughter of Thomas Pynsent) were party to a “release in fee” of several properties in Hallwell and Harberton valued at £400 (DRO: 48/14/80/3).

A note taken from the parish deeds describes how, in 1687, a lady named Margaret accused Thomas of wanting to place his daughter in her pew – this would have been a sensitive issue at the time as life in Woodland would have been centred around the church and seating denoted status. The note seems to suggest that Thomas’s daughter Elizabeth had returned home to live with her father, who was one of the “four men” of the parish (elected or appointed to deal with issues arising in the village). He was a church warden in 1672 and also in 1690, the year he died. 

There is a large stone slab on the wall of the church at Woodland that reads “In Memoriam Thomae Pynsent de Lake Gen Qvi obit Decimo Tertio die Maii Anno Domini 1690: Aetalis Suae 75.” It also shows his coat of arms in black and white. Interestingly, the etoiles, or mullets, have six points. The prothonotary has five – see elsewhere].


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother:Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


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Amy Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1613
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1615

Family Branch: Combe
PinsentID: DRO0129


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Hugh Pinsent: 1540 – 1626
Grandmother: Johanna Woodley: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jonas Pinsent: 1575 – 1637
Peter Pinsent: 1576 – 1597
Rechord Pinsent: 1578 – xxxx
John Pinsent: xxxx – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1580 – xxxx
Margaret Pinsent: 1582 – xxxx
Mary Pinsent: xxxx – 1584
Thomas Pinsent: 1586 – xxxx
Agnes Pinsent: 1589 – xxxx
Hugh Pinsent: 1591 – xxxx
George Pinsent: 1593 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1594 – xxxx
Matthew Pinsent: 1596 – 1616

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Jonas Pinsent: 1609 – 1658
Edward Pinsent: 1611 – 1652
Thomas Pinsent: 1615 – 1690
Ellis Pinsent: 1619 – 1681
John Pinsent: 1622 – 1648


Please use the above links to explore this branch of the family tree. The default “Next” and “Previous” links below may lead to other unrelated branches.