48 Sporting and Rural Records of the Cheveley Estate. 



Cheveley. 



Lord Dover 



Outlawed 

 and Attainted. 



His Death, 



pardon given to him on the following November 6, about which 

 time; hi was reported to have " made his peace with King William, 

 and kissed his hand, and soon after was allowed perfect liberty.'' At 

 any rate, he appeared publicly in London without molestation, and 

 then returned to Cheveley, where he lived in retirement at intervals, 

 during the remainder of his life. It was compulsory for him to retire 

 from the Turf, it being illegal at that time, and for many years after, 

 for Roman Catholics to possess a horse of the value of ten pounds 

 in lawful money of England. He married, April 17, 1673, Judith, 

 daughter of Sir Edward Foley, Knight, of Badley, co. Kent, by 

 whom he had no issue. As before mentioned, he died, sine prole, 

 at Cheveley, April 6, 1708, bequeathing his estate to his nieces, of 

 whom Mary, eldest daughter of his brother Thomas, 2nd Baron 

 Jermyn, married Sir Thomas Davers, Bart., who subsequently sold 

 the property to Charles Duke of Somerset. 



Tlie 

 Indictment, 



The Seizure of 



his Property 

 by the Crown. 



The juriors for the King and Queen present on oath that Henery Lord 

 Dover, James Duke of Berwick, Robert Lord Hunsden, John Earl Melfort, 

 Alexander Fitton, knight, William Jennings, knight, Francis Plowden> 

 esquire, Patrick Trant, knight, John Trinder, esquire, Thomas Collins, 

 gent, Dominic Sheldon, gent, William Mansell Barker, gent, Richard 

 Earl of Tyrconnell, Louis Dod, Gent, William Marquis Powis, Thomas 

 Lord Howard, Henery Bond, Buro Talbott, gent, Robert Parker, 

 knight, not having the fear of God in their hearts nor considering 

 their debt of allegiance, but being moved and seduced by diabolical 

 instigation as false traitors and rebels against the King and Queen, 

 &c., &c., on the ist of August in the first year of the reign of the said King 

 and Queen by force and arms in Ireland with other subjects of King Louis 

 of France to the number of 10,000 persons or more, assembled and 

 collected and then and there in a warlike manner with other traitors, 

 traitorously formed themselves in battle array and prepared a cruel war 

 against the said King and Queen and inhumanly waged the same with 

 gladiis, ensibus, hastis, hastulis, jaculis, et pugionibus, scfbpis, sclopetis, 

 tormentis, machinis et bombardis, ac galeis, cassidibus et paludamentis et 

 aliis armaturis et armis, tarn invasivis et offensivis, quam defensivis. 



CambridgeshirR. — Inquisition indented taken at the Castle of Cam- 

 bridge in the County ol Cambridge aforesaid the 3rd day of January in the 



