Sir William Davie, 4th Baronet explained

Sir William Davie, 4th Baronet (1662–1707) of Creedy in the parish of Sandford, near Crediton in Devon, inherited the Davie baronetcy and the Davie estates from his elder brother Sir John Davie, 3rd Baronet (1660–1692), MP for Saltash 1679–85 and Sheriff of Devon in 1688,[1] who died unmarried at the age of 32.[2]

Origins

He was the younger son of William Davie (1614-1663) of Dar.(?),[3] barrister-at-law (second son of Sir John Davie, 1st Baronet (-1654) of Creedy) by his wife Margaret Clarke (d.1702), daughter of Sir Francis Clarke (1622/3-c.1690), a merchant of the City of London and member of the Levant Company.[4]

Marriages and children

He married twice, but left no male children, as follows:

"Near this place lye interred the remains of Mrs.[10] Mary Hooper, relict of Nicholas Hooper of Rawleigh Esqr. and daughter of Sr. William Davie of Creedy in this county, Baronet. She died the 16th of May in the year of our Lord 1762 (in the year) of her age 74. In testimony of his great esteem and to perpetuate the memory of so valuable a friend & so worthy a relation, John Hippisley Coxe of Ston-Easton in the county of Somerset Esqr. caused this monument to be erected in the year of our Lord 1764"

Death and succession

He died leaving no sons and was buried on 24 March 1707 at Sandford. His heir to the baronetcy and to the Davie estates was his first cousin Sir John Davie, 5th Baronet (died 1727), son of Humphry Davie (born 1625), a merchant in the City of London (a younger son of the 1st Baronet), by his wife Mary White.[15]

Notes and References

  1. [John Prince (biographer)|Prince, John]
  2. [John Lambrick Vivian|Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L.]
  3. Vivian, p.270, printed with last letter missing
  4. Sir Francis Clarke (1622/3-c.1690), knighted 1665, "His second wife (whom he married in 1667) was a thirty-year-old spinster, Elizabeth Proby, of Mortlake, Surrey. Clarke's City of London house was on the south side of Fenchurch Street in the parish of St Gabriel. It was a relatively modest ten hearth residence. He also had a house in Putney, Surrey. Sir Francis Clarke was from Devon and Dorset-born parents. His father was Christopher Clarke, a justice of the peace in Exeter, and his mother, Francis Pitt, was from Weymouth, Dorset. He died intestate in 1690, at the age of about sixty-eight, and was buried at St. Helen's, Bishopsgate."http://www.marinelives.org/wiki/MRP:_11th_October_1667,_Letter_from_Francis_Clarke_to_Sir_GO,_London
  5. Fulbroke per Venn, 1897
  6. Vivian, p.633, pedigree of Pyne of East Down
  7. Reed, Margaret A., Pilton, its Past and its People, Barnstaple, 1985, p.31
  8. Somerset Heritage Centre, Papers of the Hippisley Family of Ston Eastonhttp://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/fdc120b2-d5b2-4e9b-8e82-fa28882c9b21
  9. Web site: NORTHLEIGH, Stephen (C.1692-?1731), of Peamore, Exminster, Devon | History of Parliament Online.
  10. i.e. "Mistress"
  11. Not listed in Pollexfen pedigree, Vivian, pp.600-1
  12. Web site: NORTHLEIGH, Stephen (C.1692-?1731), of Peamore, Exminster, Devon | History of Parliament Online.
  13. [Tristram Risdon|Risdon, Tristram]
  14. Vivian, p.190
  15. Vivian, p.270