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John Gage (abt. 1537 - 1598)

John Gage
Born about in Firle, Sussex, Englandmap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married before 16 Jul 1559 [location unknown]
Died at about age 61 in Firle, Sussex, Englandmap
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Profile last modified | Created 8 Apr 2011
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Biography

John Gage was the first son of Sir Edward Gage and his wife Elizabeth Parker. He was born in about 1537, based on his being aged 30 at his father's death, as recorded in the inquisition post mortem.[1]

He died on 10 October 1598, leaving nephew John Gage as his heir.[2]

Biography from History of Parliament

It was as well for him that John Gage sat in the last Parliament of Mary’s reign, for the Catholicism which he shared with his whole family was to debar him from any public service thereafter. He was joined in the House by his cousin Thomas Parker II. Nothing is known about Gage’s part in Parliament, but it was perhaps his meeting there with Thomas Copley that led to his marriage to Copley’s sister, a niece of (Sir) Richard Shelley, prior of the order of St. John of Jerusalem. On inheriting his extensive patrimony Gage was charged by his father with the upbringing of his younger brothers ‘in learning and virtue and in the fear and love of God and of his Catholic church’, but he was to have little opportunity of fulfilling this duty in person. He spent several years abroad with his wife and his brother-in-law Thomas Copley: he was an executor of Copley’s will and adopted his daughter Margaret, who later married Gage’s nephew John Gage of Haling, Surrey.

After his return to England early in 1576 Gage was soon in trouble for his faith. In August 1580 he was committed to the Fleet with William Shelley for ‘obstinacy’ in popery, while his brother Edward languished in the Marshalsea. He procured his own release on bonds, but was confined to a house in London, with occasional visits to Sussex but also recurrent spells in close custody. In Armada year he was removed with many others to the bishop’s palace at Ely, and after a sojourn at Leyton in Essex he was brought back there in 1590 when another Spanish invasion was rumoured. Only in 1593, when weakened by illness, was he allowed to go to Firle, and three years later it cost him 20s. a day to have a London doctor certify that he could not obey a summons to wait upon the Council. In 1592 his servant Henry Collins had been committed to the Marshalsea for plotting to kill the Queen.

Gage was also heavily mulcted in fines and obliged to part with some of his lands to pay them. That the estate none the less bore much the same aspect on his death as it had on his succession was probably due to his second fortunate marriage, to a lady whose name indicates an (undiscovered) relationship to his first wife. All the same, when he made his will in January 1596 Gage instructed his executors to pay all his debts, ‘which are great and many by reason of my troubles’.' Neither of his marriages had produced sons, and his heir was his nine year-old nephew John, son of Thomas Gage of Firle.' Family legacies included £1,500 each to the younger John Gage’s two sisters and £200 each to five other nieces, whose marriages were to be arranged by Gage’s brother-in-law (Sir) Edward Stradling. The executors were Henry Guildford, Edward Gage of Bentley, Ralph Hare of Bolney and Francis Eyerman, and the overseer Anthony Browne I, Viscount Montagu. Gage died on 10 Oct. 1598 and was buried in West Firle church beside his two wives beneath a monument erected under his own supervision and carved by the eminent sculptor Gerard Johnson. [3]


Sources

  1. Sussex Record Society vol. 14: "Notes of post mortem inquisitions taken in Sussex. 1 Henry VII, to 1649 and after" (London: The Society, 1912) (p. 97 no. 447); Internet Archive (https://archive.org : accessed 28 August 2020).
  2. Sussex Record Society vol. 14: "Notes of post mortem inquisitions taken in Sussex. 1 Henry VII, to 1649 and after" (London: The Society, 1912) (p. 98 no. 450); Internet Archive (https://archive.org : accessed 28 August 2020).
  3. The History of Parliament Online

See also:

  • Benolte, Thomas; Philipot, John; & Owen, George. The Visitations of the County of Sussex: 1530 and 1633-4. London: The Harleian Society, 1905. Vol LIII, pp 9, Gage & 22, Parker.




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