Mary Scott

Female 1546 - 1605  (59 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mary Scott was born 1546, Scotts Hall, East Sutton, Kent, England (daughter of Sir Reginald Scott and Mary Tuke); died 1605, Maidstone, Kent, England; was buried , Church of St. Peter and St. Paul East Sutton Maidstone Borough Kent, England.

    Notes:

    Grave location and tombstone:
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=59884499

    Mary married Richard Argall. Richard (son of Thomas Argall and Margaret Tallakarne) was born 1536, London, England; died 1588, East Sutton, Kent, England; was buried , Church of St. Peter and St. Paul East Sutton Maidstone Borough Kent, England. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Argall was born 1575, East Sutton, Kent, England; died 09 Aug 1638, East Sutton, Kent, England; was buried , Church of St. Peter and St. Paul East Sutton Maidstone Borough Kent, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Sir Reginald Scott was born ca 1520, Scotts Hall, Kent, England (son of Sir John Scott and Anne Pympe); died 16 Dec 1554, Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    Find A Grave Bio and portrait
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=51595850

    Born at Scott's Hall to Sir John Scott and his wife Anne (Pympe) Scott. Occupation: Knight. Married Mary TUKE. Father of Sir Wm. Scott b. abt 1540.He was buried in St Mary the Blessed Virgin Churchyard.

    He was Captain of Calais Castle, temp. Henry VIII. High Sheriff of Kent 1541-2.
    ----------------

    From Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scot%27s_Hall

    Scot's Hall (or Scott's Hall) was a country house in Smeeth, between Ashford and Folkestone in southeast England. It was the property of a gentry family, the Scotts. The first known resident was Sir John Scott (born 1436), who married Caroline Carter.

    From the beginning of the fourteenth century to the end of the eighteenth century, the Scotts, who were the descendants of the Baliols, were influential in Kent. Scott's Hall was the center of the dynasty and there was a time when one could ride from Scot's Hall to London without leaving Scott Property, a journey of over fifty miles.

    During the reign of Elizabeth I, it was described as one of the most splendid houses in Kent. Samuel Pepys was a regular visitor in the seventeenth century.

    The house is at OS Grid Ref TR079392.

    Reginald married Mary Tuke. Mary (daughter of Sir Bryan Tuke and Grissell Boughton) was born ca 1522, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; died Aft 1555, Kent, England. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Mary Tuke was born ca 1522, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England (daughter of Sir Bryan Tuke and Grissell Boughton); died Aft 1555, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    Sources: J.J. Scarisbrick: Henry VIII p. 39, 210, 211, 229; Visitations of Essex 1612 Vol. I p. 137, Vol. III p 612; ColonialFamilies of the US by Wurts p. 173.

    Mary was only daughter and heiress who inherited from her mother: manor of Evegate in Smeeth, and inherited from her uncle, John Gower of Clapham in reversal of attainder in 1485.

    Children:
    1. 1. Mary Scott was born 1546, Scotts Hall, East Sutton, Kent, England; died 1605, Maidstone, Kent, England; was buried , Church of St. Peter and St. Paul East Sutton Maidstone Borough Kent, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Sir John Scott was born 1480, Kent, England (son of Sir William Scott and Sibill Lewknor); died 07 Oct 1533, Aldington Ashford Borough Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    He was of Scot's Hall, Brabourne, Kent, England, he was Knight of the Kings body guard in 1515-1518, Knighted by the Prince of Castile 1520, and was High Sheriff of Kent in 1528.

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Scott_(died_1533)

    John Scott, born about 1484, was the eldest son of Sir William Scott of Scot's Hall and Sibyl Lewknor (d. 1529), the daughter of Sir Thomas Lewknor of Trotton, Sussex. Scott's father, Sir William Scott, had been Comptroller of the Household to King Henry VII, and Scott's grandfather, Sir John Scott, had been Comptroller of the Household to King Edward IV. Both Scott's father and grandfather had held the offices of Constable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque Ports, and Scott's father had been Marshal of Calais.

    Scott had a brother, Edward, and three sisters, Anne, who married Sir Edward Boughton; Katherine; and Elizabeth.

    As a young man Scott was knighted by the future Emperor Charles V in 1511 while serving as a senior captain, under his relative Sir Edward Poynings, with the English forces sent by King Henry VIII to aid Margaret of Austria, Regent of the Low Countries, against Charles II, Duke of Guelders.

    In 1512 he was elected Member of Parliament for New Romney. Scott may have participated in the French campaigns of 1512 and 1513; he was among the forces being marshaled at Calais in 1514 when negotiations for peace between England and France brought the war to a temporary halt.

    In 1514 and 1515 he was a commissioner for the subsidy in Sussex. In June 1520 he attended Henry VIII at the Field of Cloth of Gold. In 1522 he was in the service of George Nevill, 5th Baron Bergavenny, Constable of Dover Castle, and was placed in charge of transport when the Emperor Charles V landed at Dover on 28 May 1522. In 1523 Scott was with the English forces which invaded northern France under the Duke of Suffolk.

    In 1523 and 1524 he was a commissioner for the subsidy in Kent. He was Sheriff of Kent in 1527 and 1528, and a Justice of the Peace in that county from 1531 until his death. In May 1533 Scott was summoned to be a servitor at the coronation of Anne Boleyn. He died on 7 October 1533.

    Scott married, before 22 November 1506, Anne Pympe, daughter and heiress of Reynold Pympe, esquire, of Nettlestead, Kent, by Elizabeth Pashley, the daughter of John Pashley, esquire.

    Sir John Scott and Anne Pympe had five sons and seven daughters:

    William Scott, who died in 1536 without issue.

    Sir Reginald (or Reynold) Scott (1512-15 December 1554), Sheriff of Kent in 1541-42 and Captain of Calais and Sandgate, who married firstly Emeline Kempe, the daughter of Sir William Kempe of Olantigh, Kent, by Eleanor Browne, the daughter of Sir Robert Browne, by whom he was the father of Sir Thomas Scott (1535-30 December 1594) and two daughters, Katherine Scott, who married John Baker (c.1531?1604/6), by whom she was the mother of Richard Baker, and Anne Scott, who married Walter Mayney. Sir Reginald Scott married secondly Mary Tuke, the daughter of Sir Brian Tuke.

    Sir John Scott

    Richard Scott, esquire, the father of Reginald Scott (d. 1599), author of The Discoverie of Witchcraft,

    George Scott.

    Mildred Scott, who married firstly, John Digges, esquire, the son of James Digges and half brother of Leonard Digges, and secondly, Richard Keyes, gentleman, by whom she was the mother of Thomas Keyes, who married Lady Mary Grey.

    Katherine Scott, who married Sir Henry Crispe.

    Isabel Scott, who married Richard Adams, esquire.

    Alice Scott.

    Mary Scott, who married Nicholas Ballard, gentleman.

    Elizabeth Scott.

    Sibyl Scott, who married Richard Hynde, esquire.




    Buried:
    Grave location and effigies:
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=51530710

    John married Anne Pympe. Anne (daughter of Reynold/Reginald Pympe and Elizabeth Pashley) was born 1485, Pympe's Court, Nettlestead, Kent, England ; died 1535, Kent, England; was buried , St Mary the Blessed Virgin Churchyard, Brabourne, Ashford Borough, Kent, England . [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Anne Pympe was born 1485, Pympe's Court, Nettlestead, Kent, England (daughter of Reynold/Reginald Pympe and Elizabeth Pashley); died 1535, Kent, England; was buried , St Mary the Blessed Virgin Churchyard, Brabourne, Ashford Borough, Kent, England .

    Notes:

    She was the only child and heiress of Reginald Pympe, Sheriff of Kent and Elizabeth Pashley. She was heir to her mother in respect of the manor of Evegate in Smeeth,etc, and on the reversal of the attainder in 1485 of John Gower of Clapham, her great uncle, she became his heir.
    ----------------

    The Retrospective Review, and Historical and Antiquarian Magazine, by Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas, pp113-115

    "The petition of Ann Pympe in the I of Henry VII for the reversal of said John Gower's attainder contains much information on the pedigree of that family. She describes her self as 'Ann Pympe daughter of Reginald Pympe and of Elizabeth, his late wife, cousin and heir of John Gower, late of Clapham in Surrey, Esquire, now dead. That is to say the daughter of said Elizabeth, daughter of Lowys, sister of the same John' who she states lost all of his lands and good supporting Henry VI, at Palm Sunday Field, and afterward attending the late Prince of Wales at Tewkesbury Field was taken and slain. [Note: this was during the War of the Roses between the houses of Lancaster and York.] From her petition, which was successful, and the will of Thomas Gower in 1458, in is manifest that the said John and Thomas Gower, and William and Isabel Paselse all died without issues before 1485, and the petitioner Ann Pympe, became the heiress of Passele and Gower families of Clapham."



    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Scott_(died_1533)

    Scott married, before 22 November 1506, Anne Pympe, daughter and heiress of Reynold Pympe, esquire, of Nettlestead, Kent, by Elizabeth Pashley, the daughter of John Pashley, esquire.

    Sir John Scott and Anne Pympe had five sons and seven daughters:

    William Scott, who died in 1536 without issue.

    Sir Reginald (or Reynold) Scott (1512-15 December 1554), Sheriff of Kent in 1541-42 and Captain of Calais and Sandgate, who married firstly Emeline Kempe, the daughter of Sir William Kempe of Olantigh, Kent, by Eleanor Browne, the daughter of Sir Robert Browne, by whom he was the father of Sir Thomas Scott (1535-30 December 1594) and two daughters, Katherine Scott, who married John Baker (c.1531-1604/6), by whom she was the mother of Richard Baker, and Anne Scott, who married Walter Mayney. Sir Reginald Scott married secondly Mary Tuke, the daughter of Sir Brian Tuke.

    Sir John Scott

    Richard Scott, esquire, the father of Reginald Scott (d. 1599), author of The Discoverie of Witchcraft,

    George Scott.

    Mildred Scott, who married firstly, John Digges, esquire, the son of James Digges and half brother of Leonard Digges, and secondly, Richard Keyes, gentleman, by whom she was the mother of Thomas Keyes, who married Lady Mary Grey.

    Katherine Scott, who married Sir Henry Crispe.

    Isabel Scott, who married Richard Adams, esquire.

    Alice Scott.

    Mary Scott, who married Nicholas Ballard, gentleman.

    Elizabeth Scott.

    Sibyl Scott, who married Richard Hynde, esquire.




    Buried:
    Grave location:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/51531900/anne-scott

    Children:
    1. 2. Sir Reginald Scott was born ca 1520, Scotts Hall, Kent, England; died 16 Dec 1554, Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

  3. 6.  Sir Bryan Tuke was born ca 1471, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England (son of Richard Tuke and Agnes Bland); died 26 Oct 1545, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; was buried , Saint Margaret Lothbury, City of London, England.

    Notes:

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Tuke#Family

    He may have been the son of Richard Tuke (died 1498?) and Agnes his wife, daughter of John Bland of Nottinghamshire. The family was settled in Kent, and Sir Brian's father or grandfather, also named Richard, is said to have been tutor to Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. Possibly through Norfolk's influence, Brian Tuke was introduced at court; in 1508 he was appointed king's bailiff of Sandwich, Kent, and in 1509 he was clerk of the signet. On 28 October 1509 he was appointed clerk of the council at Calais. He accompanied Henry VIII at Tournai in September 1513, and his correspondence with Richard Pace, Wolsey's secretary relates valuable information on the Battle of Flodden.

    The earliest mention of Master of the Posts is in the King's Book of Payments where a payment of £100 was authorised for Tuke as master of the posts in February 1512. Belatedly, in 1517, he was officially appointed to the office of Governor of the King's Posts, a precursor to the office of Postmaster General of the United Kingdom, by Henry VIII.

    In 1516 he was made a knight of the king's body, and in 1517 governor of the king's posts. For some time Tuke was secretary to Cardinal Wolsey, and in 1522 he was promoted to be French secretary to the king; much correspondence passed through his hands, and there are more than six hundred references to him in the fourth volume alone of Brewer's Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.

    On 17 April 1523 Tuke was granted the clerkship of parliament surrendered by John Taylor. In 1528 he was one of the commissioners appointed to treat for peace with France, and in the same year was made treasurer of the household. In February 1530-1 Edward North was associated with him in the clerkship of parliaments, and in 1533 Tuke served as High Sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire. Among the numerous grants with which his services were rewarded Tuke received the manors of Southweald, Layer Marney, Thorpe, and East Lee in Essex. He performed his official duties to the king's satisfaction, avoided all pretence to political independence, and retained his posts until his death at Layer Marney on 26 October 1545. He was buried with his wife in St. Margaret's, Lothbury.

    Tuke married Grissell Boughton (d. 28 December 1538), daughter of Nicholas Boughton of Woolwich, by whom he had three sons and three daughters. The eldest son, Maximilian, predeceased him; the second, Charles, died soon after him, and the property devolved on the third, George Tuke, who was sheriff of Essex in 1567. His eldest daughter, Elizabeth, married George Tuchet, 9th Baron Audley. His second daughter, Mary, married Sir Reginald Scott of Scot's Hall, Kent, by whom she was the mother of five sons and four daughters, including Mary Scott, who married firstly Richard Argall, by whom she had five sons, including Sir Samuel Argall, and six daughters; and secondly Lawrence Washington of Maidstone, by whom she had no issue.

    Six portraits of Tuke are ascribed to Holbein, whose salary it was Tuke's business to pay. Tuke was a patron of learning as well as of art; John Leland speaks of his eloquence, and celebrates his praises in nine Latin poems in Encomia. He wrote the preface to William Thynne's edition of Chaucer published in 1532. He is said to have written against Polydore Vergil, and to have been one of the authors from whom Raphael Holinshed derived his facts (which may refer to Tuke's numerous letters and state papers.)

    Buried:
    Find A Grave:

    Grave location, and portrait by Hans Holbein:
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=2383881&GRid=65340133&

    Bryan married Grissell Boughton. Grissell (daughter of Nicholas Boughton) was born ca 1475, Kent, England; died 28 Dec 1538, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; was buried , Saint Margaret Lothbury, City of London, England. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Grissell Boughton was born ca 1475, Kent, England (daughter of Nicholas Boughton); died 28 Dec 1538, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; was buried , Saint Margaret Lothbury, City of London, England.

    Notes:

    Wikipedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Tuke#Family

    Sir Brian Tuke married Grissell Boughton (d. 28 December 1538), daughter of Nicholas Boughton of Woolwich, by whom he had three sons and three daughters. The eldest son, Maximilian, predeceased him; the second, Charles, died soon after him, and the property devolved on the third, George Tuke, who was sheriff of Essex in 1567. His eldest daughter, Elizabeth, married George Tuchet, 9th Baron Audley. His second daughter, Mary, married Sir Reginald Scott of Scot's Hall, Kent, by whom she was the mother of five sons and four daughters, including Mary Scott, who married firstly Richard Argall, by whom she had five sons, including Sir Samuel Argall, and six daughters; and secondly Lawrence Washington of Maidstone, by whom she had no issue.

    Buried:
    Grave location:
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=73744082

    Children:
    1. 3. Mary Tuke was born ca 1522, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; died Aft 1555, Kent, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Sir William Scott was born 1459, Kent, England (son of Sir John Scott and Agnes Beaufitz); died 24 Aug 1524, Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    History of Parliament, 1439-1509, I:752

    "Sir William (1459-1524); of Iden, and Brabourne, Kent. Marshal of Calais 1491-2; Lieut. of Dover 1492; P.C. and Controller of Household, M.P. Kent 1495 etc.S. and h. of Sir John Scott M.P. (1423-85) controller of the Household, by Agpes (Beaufitz);m. Sybil (d. 1527) da. of Sir John Lewkenor of Goring, and had Sir John Scott (d. 1533), who m. Anne Pimpe."

    Buried:
    Grave location and tombstone:
    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=51530537

    William married Sibill Lewknor. Sibill (daughter of Sir John Lewknor) was born 1450, Goring, Oxfordshire, England; died 14 Jan 1529, Brabourne, Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Sibill Lewknor was born 1450, Goring, Oxfordshire, England (daughter of Sir John Lewknor); died 14 Jan 1529, Brabourne, Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    History of Parliament, 1439-1509, I:752

    "Sir William (1459-1524); of Iden, and Brabourne, Kent. Marshal of Calais 1491-2; Lieut. of Dover 1492; P.C. and Controller of Household, M.P. Kent 1495 etc.S. and h. of Sir John Scott M.P. (1423-85) controller of the Household, by Agpes (Beaufitz);m. Sybil (d. 1527) da. of Sir John Lewkenor of Goring, and had Sir John Scott (d. 1533), who m. Anne Pimpe."

    Children:
    1. 4. Sir John Scott was born 1480, Kent, England; died 07 Oct 1533, Aldington Ashford Borough Kent, England; was buried , The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brabourne, Kent, England.

  3. 10.  Reynold/Reginald Pympe was born ca 1448, Pympe's Court, Nettlestead, Kent, England; died 21 Mar 1531, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    He was Sheriff Of Kent.

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Scott_(died_1533)

    Sir John Scott married, before 22 November 1506, Anne Pympe, daughter and heiress of Reynold Pympe, esquire, of Nettlestead, Kent, by Elizabeth Pashley, the daughter of John Pashley, esquire.

    Reynold/Reginald married Elizabeth Pashley. Elizabeth (daughter of Sir John Pashley, II and Lady Lowys (Lois) Gower) was born ca 1448, Kent, England. [Group Sheet]


  4. 11.  Elizabeth Pashley was born ca 1448, Kent, England (daughter of Sir John Pashley, II and Lady Lowys (Lois) Gower).

    Notes:

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Scott_(died_1533)

    Sir John Scott married, before 22 November 1506, Anne Pympe, daughter and heiress of Reynold Pympe, esquire, of Nettlestead, Kent, by Elizabeth Pashley, the daughter of John Pashley, esquire.
    ------------

    The Retrospective Review, and Historical and Antiquarian Magazine, by Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas, pp113-115

    "The petition of Ann Pympe in the I of Henry VII for the reversal of said John Gower's attainder contains much information on the pedigree of that family. She describes her self as 'Ann Pympe daughter of Reginald Pympe and of Elizabeth, his late wife, cousin and heir of John Gower, late of Clapham in Surrey, Esquire, now dead. That is to say the daughter of said Elizabeth, daughter of Lowys, sister of the same John' who she states lost all of his lands and good supporting Henry VI, at Palm Sunday Field, and afterward attending the late Prince of Wales at Tewkesbury Field was taken and slain. [Note: this was during the War of the Roses between the houses of Lancaster and York.] From her petition, which was successful, and the will of Thomas Gower in 1458, in is manifest that the said John and Thomas Gower, and William and Isabel Paselse all died without issues before 1485, and the petitioner Ann Pympe, became the heiress of Passele and Gower families of Clapham."

    Children:
    1. 5. Anne Pympe was born 1485, Pympe's Court, Nettlestead, Kent, England ; died 1535, Kent, England; was buried , St Mary the Blessed Virgin Churchyard, Brabourne, Ashford Borough, Kent, England .

  5. 12.  Richard Tuke

    Notes:

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Tuke#Family

    He may have been the son of Richard Tuke (died 1498?) and Agnes his wife, daughter of John Bland of Nottinghamshire. The family was settled in Kent, and Sir Brian's father or grandfather, also named Richard, is said to have been tutor to Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. Possibly through Norfolk's influence, Brian Tuke was introduced at court.

    Richard married Agnes Bland. [Group Sheet]


  6. 13.  Agnes Bland (daughter of John Bland).

    Notes:

    Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Tuke#Family

    He may have been the son of Richard Tuke (died 1498?) and Agnes his wife, daughter of John Bland of Nottinghamshire. The family was settled in Kent, and Sir Brian's father or grandfather, also named Richard, is said to have been tutor to Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk. Possibly through Norfolk's influence, Brian Tuke was introduced at court.

    Children:
    1. 6. Sir Bryan Tuke was born ca 1471, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; died 26 Oct 1545, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; was buried , Saint Margaret Lothbury, City of London, England.

  7. 14.  Nicholas Boughton was born ca 1449, Woolwich, Kent, England; died ca 1540, Kent, England.

    Notes:

    Wikipedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Tuke#Family

    Sir Brian Tuke married Grissell Boughton (d. 28 December 1538), daughter of Nicholas Boughton of Woolwich, by whom he had three sons and three daughters. The eldest son, Maximilian, predeceased him; the second, Charles, died soon after him, and the property devolved on the third, George Tuke, who was sheriff of Essex in 1567. His eldest daughter, Elizabeth, married George Tuchet, 9th Baron Audley. His second daughter, Mary, married Sir Reginald Scott of Scot's Hall, Kent, by whom she was the mother of five sons and four daughters, including Mary Scott, who married firstly Richard Argall, by whom she had five sons, including Sir Samuel Argall, and six daughters; and secondly Lawrence Washington of Maidstone, by whom she had no issue.

    Nicholas may have served as Secretary to Cardinal Wolsey of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Children:
    1. 7. Grissell Boughton was born ca 1475, Kent, England; died 28 Dec 1538, Layer Marney, Colchester, Essex, England; was buried , Saint Margaret Lothbury, City of London, England.