40 THE TOKENS OF CORNWALL. 



PENRYN. 



44 *0. MICHAEL . COODE — Armorial bearings } 



B. OF . PENRIN . 1667 — M . C 



T.M., B., S. — The arms on the token in the Museum are apparently 

 those of the Coode family, a chevron between three moor cocks. 



45. *0. lAMES . KEMPE — The Salters' Arms 1 



B. OF . PENRYN . 1668 — I . K 



G. — Kemp's monument is in St. Gluvias Church, St. Gluvias being the 

 parish in which Penryn is situated. He died in April, 1711, aged 74. 



46. *0. JOHN . PEARCE — The Haberdashers' Arms ^ 



B. OF . PENRYN . 1666 — I . P 

 S. 



47. *0. ANDREW . RIDER — A Bell \ 



B. IN . PENRYN . 1664 — A . C . R 



G., S. — Richard Eider was sent to prison as a Quaker by the Mayor of 

 Marazion. — " Sufferings of Quakers." 



48. 0. THOMAS . SPRY . 1667 — Two bars, chevron in chief, 



impaling on a bend engrailed three fleurs de lis ^ 



B. OF . PENRIN . CORN WELL — T . s Conjoined 



B., G., S. — The first coat is that of the Spry family of Cutcrew, in St, 

 Germans ; the coat impaled that of Melhuish. The issuer was in all proba- 

 bility a member of the younger branch of the Spry family, settled for several 

 descents at Place, in Anthony in Eoseland. 



49. *0. VRSVLA . SPVRR — 1668 \ 



B. IN , PENRYN — V . S 



S. — Ursula, relict of Henry Spoure, died in May, 1678, and was buried 

 at St. Gluvias. Her husband was probably connected with the now extinct 

 family of Spoure, of Trebartha. 



50. 0. THOMAS . WORTH — A double headed eagle \ 



B. IN . CORNWELL . 1665 — T . W 



T.M., G. — This token is erroneously assigned by Boyne to Cornwell, 

 Oxford. It will be seen that several of the tokens spell Cornwall with 

 the " e" in the final syllable. The Worths of Penryn were a younger branch 

 of the still extant family of Worth, of Worth, in Devonshire, and bore the 

 same arms-^a two-headed eagle displayed. William Worth, merchant, of 

 Penryn, died in January, 1689, and was buried at St. Gluvias. His son 

 John was sheriff of the county in 1690 and 1711, and in 1703 bought 

 Tremough, now the seat of Mr. Shilson, who has an example of this token. 

 Thomas Worth may have been a brother of William. He was evidently 

 unmarried when the token was issued. 



