HCA 13/71 f.28v Annotate
Volume | HCA 13/71 |
---|---|
Folio | 28 |
Side | Verso |
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Status | |
Uploaded image; transcribed on 28/12/2012 | |
Note | |
IMAGE: P1080942.JPG | |
First transcriber | |
Colin Greenstreet | |
First transcribed | |
12/12/28 | |
Editorial history | |
Edited by Jill Wilcox 18/8/2013 and on 26/04/14 by Colin Greenstreet |
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Transcription
To the 10th article he saith he ćannot depose.
To the 11th article he saith that there was some wages payd to some of the sayd
shipps Company att Naples. And further or otherwise he ćannot depose
saving that he hath heard the sayd John Gridden say that the Chirugions
Chest belonging to the arlate Joseph Hobbs cost the sayd Owners seven
pounds.
To the 12th he saith that the arlate [G[?e]rma[?ns] was shipped as and for Cooper of
the sayd shipp. And that the sayd John Gridden did alsoe hire one Ridde
to doe some Coopers worke aboard the sayd shipp att the Barbadoes. And
otherwise he cannot depose.
To the 13th article he saith that the arlate White was Carpenter of the sayd shipp
and had the Carpenters store in his charge. and the said Thomas was Gunner
of the sayd shipp and had the charge of the Gunners store. And further or
otherwise he cannot depose.
To the last hee saith his foresayd deposition is true.
To the Crosse Interrogatories. [CENTRE HEADING]
To the first he saith he was and is a servant and apprentice to the sayd John Gridden
and wisheth that the Judges and the law may decide and judge this cause justly
betwixt the parties. And otherwise cannot answer
To the 2d. he saith he was of the Company of the sayd shipp as a servant to his sayd
master John Gridden, and not otherwise, and doth not know for what voyage
the sayd White or any other of the mariners were hired for. And otherwise
he cannot answer.
To the 3d. he saith he never heard that the sayd shipp was to returne from the
Barbadoes to the Straits before the sayd shipp arrived att the Barbadoes
as aforesayd. And otherwise or further he cannot answer.
To the 4th. he saith he heard not the parties interrogate (so farr as he remembreth)
to say and alledge as a reason of their refusall to goe to Genoa, that they
were hired to returne directly for England. And further, saving his
foregoeing depositions to which he referreth himselfe, he ćannot answer.
To the 5th. he saith that it is usuall as he conceyveth and convenient that
a Chirugion of a shipp goe a shoare in Port to furnish him selfe with
necessaries for his art. And otherwise he ćannot answer.
To the 6th. he saith he did heare aboard the sayd shipp that Joseph Hobbes
interrate was the servant and apprentice of one Mr Young. And otherwise
he cannot depose or answer.
James Moulton [SIGNATURE, RH SIDE]
*******************************
The third day of March .1655. [CENTRE HEADING]
Alderman Frederick and others}
against Keat Jennings and others}
Budd Smith}
Examined upon an allegation on the behalfe of the Alderman frederick and others
1
Captaine James Lutton of East Greenwich in the County of kent mariner
aged fifty three yeares or thereabouts a witness produced
sworne and examined saith as followeth.
To the fifth and sixth articles of the sayd allegation, This deponent saith that the direct
way to come from Salina Road in Ciprus for London is to come to the Straights mouth, and
so much is notorious; And he saith that in case the arlate George Hughes the
voyage in question had sayled his shipp either directly to the Streights mouth
or when he came to Zant if he had then gone directly to the Streights
mouth he had not come to Corsica, And so much he knoweth to be true
having formerly used these seas in severall shipps: And otherwise he
ćannot depose.
To the 7th article of the sayd allegation, This deponent saith that to sayle from Salina Road
to the Streights mouth is about six hundred forty four leagues and so accounted, and
to sayle from thense first to Zant, and so to the Streights mouth is about
six hundred sixty one leagues and so aććounted. which he knoweth having used the sayd
seas as aforesayd. And otherwise he cannot depose.
To
Topics
People
Bridgett Lutton
Bridgett Lutton was the wife of James Lutton by her second marriage. Her first marriage (according to James Lutton's will) had been to Henry Hodgkin, by whom she had a son (Ralph) and a daughter (Sarah). She had two daughters by James Lutton (Christian and Elizabeth). She survived her husband's death (1663), with her own will proved in 1668. Consequently, she appears in the Kent Heath Tax records for Lady Day 1664 as a widow, living in East Lane East in Greenwich in a sizeable property with twelve hearths.[1]
Places
East Lane, East Greenwich
In his 1655 deposition in the English Admiralty Court James gave his residence as "East Greenwich". However, the Kent Hearth Tax records for Lady Day 1664 enable us to identify Lutton's residence more precisely as East Lane East in East Greenwich, where his widow resided, in a sizeable property with twelve hearths. This was a fashionable area, inhabited by a number of leading London merchants and mariners. East Greenwich neighbours included the merchant Sir Theophilus Biddulph (in a twenty-one hearth residence in East Lane East, East Greenwich), the London merchant Benjamin Glanvill (of Devon origins, in a twelve hearth residence in Dock and Taverne Rowe, East Greenwich), and the London merchant Mr Nicholas Cooke.
Chancery Court records exist for a legal dispute between a William Glanvile and a James, Joan and William Lutton. It is possible that this William Glanvile was related to Benjamin Glanvill, who was a major London merchant trading in tin, and that the dispute involved Captain James Lutton and relatives.
Sources
Primary sources
TNA
Chancery
C 5/409/85 Short title: Glanvile v Lutton. Plaintiffs: William Glanvile. Defendants: James Lutton, Joan Lutton, widow, and William Lutton. Subject: property in Kenton, Devon. Document type: bill, answer. 1658
- This record is consistent with details of the Lutton family given in Frederick Thomas Colby (ed.), The visitation of the county of Devon in the year 1620 (London, 1872), p.173
C 10/487/159 Murthwaite and Hide v Reynolds, Lenthall, Moore, Lutton and others: Kent. 1662
C 22/77/10 Glanville v Lutton. Depositions taken in the country. 1649 - 1684
C 22/77/31 Glanville v Lutton. Depositions taken in the country. 1649 - 1684
- These records are consistent with details of the Lutton family given in Frederick Thomas Colby (ed.), The visitation of the county of Devon in the year 1620 (London, 1872), p.173
PROB
PROB 11/312/242 Will of James Lutton, Gentleman of East Greenwich, Kent 21 October 1663
- SEE Ancestry Digital Image
PROB 11/328/355 Will of Bridgett Lutton, Widow of East Greenwich, Kent 24 November 1668
- Jump up ↑ PROB 11/328/355 Will of Bridgett Lutton, Widow of East Greenwich, Kent 24 November 1668
- Jump up ↑ Frederick Thomas Colby (ed.), The visitation of the county of Devon in the year 1620 (London, 1872), p.173, viewed 15/04/14
- Jump up ↑ PROB 11/312/242 Will of James Lutton, Gentleman of East Greenwich, Kent 21 October 1663
- Jump up ↑ PROB 11/328/355 Will of Bridgett Lutton, Widow of East Greenwich, Kent 24 November 1668
- Jump up ↑ Frederick Thomas Colby (ed.), The visitation of the county of Devon in the year 1620 (London, 1872), p.173, viewed 15/04/14