Simon Killigrew
(circa 1596 - before 1664)
See Cornish Worthies for further details.. Simon Killigrew was also known as Symond in records. He was born circa 1596 in Cornwall. He was aged 26 in 1620, but Graham suggests after Maria then Peter. He was described as the 5th son by Vivian. He was the son of John Killigrew and Dorothy Monk.
Chancery decree. Simon Killigrew of Arwennack, Esq., complainant, and Sir Warwick Hele and Sir Francis Hele, defendants. Disputed property (as G/372) granted to complainant.
Simon Killigrew married Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose) in 1620 in St Mary le Strand, London, Westminster.
In 1621: Simon Killigrew, Elizabeth Killigrew his wife and another were plaintiffs in a case against: George [Villiers] Marquis of Buckingham and another. Subject: manors of Laxton, Kneesall, Nottinghamshire . Document type: bill, answer. ...
Collection: Records created, acquired, and inherited by Chancery, and also of the Wardrobe, Royal Household, Exchequer and various commissions.
Lease for 99 years. Jas. Michell of Truro Esq., to Simon Killigrew of Glasney, Esq.
7 Aug. 1635 - Jn. Harris of Herne, Devon, esq., to Peter and Simon Killigrew, Jn. Trefusis and Abel Rolle.
1634 order in Chancery to Leonard Yeo, jun., Jn. Yeo, Arthur Arscott and Leonard Treise, defendants at suit of Edm. Yeo, esq., to transfer all their right to lands of Leonard Yeo sen. (as in X355/134 above) to Sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Harris, esq., Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., and Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent., appointed by court of Chancery as trustees; they also to receive custody of all Leonard Yeo's goods, clothes, cattle, plate, jewels, bills, bonds, household stuff and implements.
1 Dec. 1635 Chris. Ough of St. Cleer, gent., to Sir Peter Killigrew and Simon Killigrew, esq., both of London.
25 Nov. 1648 Sir Peter Killigrew and Simon Killigrew, esq., both of London, to Paul Yeo of North Petherwin, esq.
16 Jan. 1635. Marriage settlement/deed: Leonard Yeo of Huish, esq., Arthur Arscott of Dunsland, esq., Jn. Yeo of Hatherleigh, esq., and Leon Treise of St. Thomas-by-Launceston, esq., executors of will of Leonard Yeo sen. late of North Petherwin, decd., to Sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Harris of Heyne, Devon, Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., and Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent.
Surrender of lease. Hen. Facye of Borington, Devon, yeo., to sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent., and Eliz. Yeo, wid. of Edm.Yeo of North Petherwin, esq., decd.
Interest in Upcott in Borington late in occ. of Walter Forde and w. Thomasine, lately reputed to be the lands of inheritance of Leonard Yeo, esq., decd. Simon Killigrew was widowed on 20 March 1638 in St Giles in the Fields, Holborn, Middlesex, on the death of his wife Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose).
In 1641 SimonKilligrew was plaintiff in a case regarding property in Norwell,Ntt, against Thomas Danby.
Simon Killigrew travelled to Holland, the Netherlands, after 20 April 1655. On 20 April 1655: Warrants of the Protector & Council: Pass for Captain Simon Killigrew and one servant to Holland, at request of Sir Peter Killigrew.
Simon Killigrew paid the poll tax in 1660 in Penryn. Penryn Borough - Simon Kelligrew, wife & serving maid, 2.
Simon died before 1664 in Cornwall. The 1664 Hearth tax (ditto) for Penryn Borough: Simon Kelligrewe's wife, 2, ex now the widow John.
Chancery decree. Simon Killigrew of Arwennack, Esq., complainant, and Sir Warwick Hele and Sir Francis Hele, defendants. Disputed property (as G/372) granted to complainant.
Simon Killigrew married Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose) in 1620 in St Mary le Strand, London, Westminster.
In 1621: Simon Killigrew, Elizabeth Killigrew his wife and another were plaintiffs in a case against: George [Villiers] Marquis of Buckingham and another. Subject: manors of Laxton, Kneesall, Nottinghamshire . Document type: bill, answer. ...
Collection: Records created, acquired, and inherited by Chancery, and also of the Wardrobe, Royal Household, Exchequer and various commissions.
Lease for 99 years. Jas. Michell of Truro Esq., to Simon Killigrew of Glasney, Esq.
7 Aug. 1635 - Jn. Harris of Herne, Devon, esq., to Peter and Simon Killigrew, Jn. Trefusis and Abel Rolle.
1634 order in Chancery to Leonard Yeo, jun., Jn. Yeo, Arthur Arscott and Leonard Treise, defendants at suit of Edm. Yeo, esq., to transfer all their right to lands of Leonard Yeo sen. (as in X355/134 above) to Sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Harris, esq., Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., and Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent., appointed by court of Chancery as trustees; they also to receive custody of all Leonard Yeo's goods, clothes, cattle, plate, jewels, bills, bonds, household stuff and implements.
1 Dec. 1635 Chris. Ough of St. Cleer, gent., to Sir Peter Killigrew and Simon Killigrew, esq., both of London.
25 Nov. 1648 Sir Peter Killigrew and Simon Killigrew, esq., both of London, to Paul Yeo of North Petherwin, esq.
16 Jan. 1635. Marriage settlement/deed: Leonard Yeo of Huish, esq., Arthur Arscott of Dunsland, esq., Jn. Yeo of Hatherleigh, esq., and Leon Treise of St. Thomas-by-Launceston, esq., executors of will of Leonard Yeo sen. late of North Petherwin, decd., to Sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Harris of Heyne, Devon, Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., and Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent.
Surrender of lease. Hen. Facye of Borington, Devon, yeo., to sir Peter Killigrew of London, Jn. Trefusis of Trefusis, esq., Simon Killigrew of London, esq., Abel Rolle of North Petherwin, gent., and Eliz. Yeo, wid. of Edm.Yeo of North Petherwin, esq., decd.
Interest in Upcott in Borington late in occ. of Walter Forde and w. Thomasine, lately reputed to be the lands of inheritance of Leonard Yeo, esq., decd. Simon Killigrew was widowed on 20 March 1638 in St Giles in the Fields, Holborn, Middlesex, on the death of his wife Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose).
In 1641 SimonKilligrew was plaintiff in a case regarding property in Norwell,Ntt, against Thomas Danby.
Simon Killigrew travelled to Holland, the Netherlands, after 20 April 1655. On 20 April 1655: Warrants of the Protector & Council: Pass for Captain Simon Killigrew and one servant to Holland, at request of Sir Peter Killigrew.
Simon Killigrew paid the poll tax in 1660 in Penryn. Penryn Borough - Simon Kelligrew, wife & serving maid, 2.
Simon died before 1664 in Cornwall. The 1664 Hearth tax (ditto) for Penryn Borough: Simon Kelligrewe's wife, 2, ex now the widow John.
Children of Simon Killigrew and Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose)
- Simon Killigrew b. 20 Aug 1645
- Margaret Killigrew b. 28 Nov 1647
- Elizabeth Killigrew b. 13 Dec 1649
- Thomas Killigrew b. 26 Nov 1650, d. 28 Mar 1661
- Richard Killigrew b. 28 Dec 1651
- Jane Killigrew b. 6 Feb 1653, d. 20 Nov 1664
- Charles Killigrew b. 28 Jan 1654
- William Killigrew b. 14 Jun 1657
- Constance Killigrew b. 8 Nov 1658, d. 15 Dec 1664
- Frances Killigrew b. 23 Nov 1659
Simon Killigrew
(circa 1558 - )
Letter from him on the Manaton coat of arms is preserved among the Harleian mss (1079) in the British museum. The two younger brothers added to the family estates by purchases of a property, with a town house at Lothbury, a country seat at Kineton (?Kempton) Park near Hampton Court, besides sundry lands and manors in East Cornwall, Devon & Lincs. [Tregellas, Some Cornish worthies, p123].
A Symon Killigrew was godson of James Killigrew who's will was dated 1657 and proved 1568. He may have been a courtier.. Simon Killigrew was born circa 1558 in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall, England. He was the third son.. He was the son of Sir John Killigrew and Mary Wolverston.
A Symon Killigrew was godson of James Killigrew who's will was dated 1657 and proved 1568. He may have been a courtier.. Simon Killigrew was born circa 1558 in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall, England. He was the third son.. He was the son of Sir John Killigrew and Mary Wolverston.
Simon Killigrew
Simon Killigrew was born in St Erme, Cornwall. He was the son of Otho Killigrew and Joan Canterbury.
He may be the Simon mentioned in the Extent 1451-64 re Arundell lands: Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Moungleth (Mongleath in Budock), Simon Kyllygrew, yearly rent, with suit of court every weeks, and relief when it arises, 2 shillings.
By 1499 Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants - Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Relief from death of Simon Kyllygrewe, holding at Mounglith; "tenentes appr' 6 tabulas fraxinorum carrat' super medietat' per Galfridum Condorowe ad 12d ultra alteram medietatem eiusdem arboris pro labore ad carr' [?]." [margin] Boards sold..
He may be the Simon mentioned in the Extent 1451-64 re Arundell lands: Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Moungleth (Mongleath in Budock), Simon Kyllygrew, yearly rent, with suit of court every weeks, and relief when it arises, 2 shillings.
By 1499 Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants - Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Relief from death of Simon Kyllygrewe, holding at Mounglith; "tenentes appr' 6 tabulas fraxinorum carrat' super medietat' per Galfridum Condorowe ad 12d ultra alteram medietatem eiusdem arboris pro labore ad carr' [?]." [margin] Boards sold..
Child of Simon Killigrew
Simon Killigrew
( - before 1513)
Simon Killigrew was born. He was the second son.. He was the son of John Killigrew (Thomas?) and Mary Boleigh.
He may be the Simon mentioned in the Extent 1451-64 re Arundell lands: Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Moungleth (Mongleath in Budock), Simon Kyllygrew, yearly rent, with suit of court every weeks, and relief when it arises, 2 shillings.
By 1499 Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants - Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Simon died before 1513. He left no issue..
He may be the Simon mentioned in the Extent 1451-64 re Arundell lands: Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Moungleth (Mongleath in Budock), Simon Kyllygrew, yearly rent, with suit of court every weeks, and relief when it arises, 2 shillings.
By 1499 Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants - Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Simon died before 1513. He left no issue..
Simon Killigrew
(20 August 1645 - )
Simon Killigrew was christened on 20 August 1645 in St Gluvias, Cornwall. He was the son of Simon Killigrew and Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose).
son 8 Killigrew
Susan Killigrew
(1 April 1629 - )
Susan Killigrew was christened on 1 April 1629 in St Margaret, Lothbury, London. She was the daughter of Sir William Killigrew and Mary Hill.
Susan Killigrew married Richard Barrymore 2nd Earl.
Susan Killigrew married Richard Barrymore 2nd Earl.
Thomas Killigrew
(circa 1445 - circa April 1501)
Thomas Killigrew was born circa 1445 in Cornwall. He was the son of John Killigrew jr. Thomas Killigrew was the heir of Thomas Killigrew at the Inquisition Post Mortem held on 6 February 1461. John's son and heir Thomas was aged 15 on 6 Febrary 1461. He was the heir of Thomas Killigrew at the Inquisition Post Mortem held between 1466 and 1467 Another inquisition was held when he came of age.
Thomas Killigrew married Agnes Unknown (Killigrew) before 1469.
On 7 July 1479 title deeds re fields in Fowey were transferred from Thos. Kylligrew of Penryn, to Rich. Haryngdon.
Tregellas p.117-8 states: I am somewhat inclined to think that this may be the Thomas Killigrew who died at Biscay in Aragon. He married twice - Johanna Herry and Jane Darrell; possibly there may be some mistake in the Christian name of the later lady. Perhaps the same Thomas who is mentioned in the journals of Roger Machado, of an embassy to Spain & Portugal, in 1488, as having entertained the traveller, whom stress of weather drove into Falmouth Harbour; and as having bequeathed, in the year 1500, one hundred marks for the rebuilding of St Budock Church. In the autumn of 1882, whilst restoring St Gluvias church, the workmen came upon some leaden coffins in good preservation, which were supposed to contain the remains of members of the Killigrew family. The coffins were not opened.
Thomas Killigrew made a will dated 22 March 1500/1. I Thomas Kyllygrewe of Penryn burgh ... forgotten tithes of his parish church ... bequeaths to the stores of Holy Trinity, St Benedict, St Piran in Arworthal, St Piran in the sands (Perranzabuloe) 6/8 each and to the story of St Gluvias on condition that they put the names of me and my wife in the roll of memory for prayer on Sunday. Also I bequeath to the store of St Michael in the Mount 12d. Also to St Anthony in Meneage 6/8, St Keverne 6/8, St Macaccan 6/8, St Mary Magdalene in Cowawes 12d, Blessed Mary of Penryn 12d. Also I bequeath to the Friars of Truro on condition that they celebrate or cause to be celebrated a trental of St Gregory, that is to say 30 masses obsequies, and other things pertaining immediately after my death. Also I bequeath to the Friars Minor of Bodmin on the afsd condition and so that they pray especially for the soul of Thoomas Kylligrewe my son 40s. ...the poor of St George of Bodmin, St Laurence near Bodmin... 100 marks for the edification and new building of the body of the church of St Thomas the Maertyr in Glasney [Glasneth]...
Also I bequeath to each of my godsons 12d. to John Davy 26/8 ... my chapel in the church of St Gluvias ... to Humfrey Munnk and Mary his wife, one standing gilt nut. Also I bequeath to Agnes my wife, one gilt cup and one salt without a cover; also one collar of silver, gilt and enamelled, and one chain of gold with one bee [bye] attached to it ... and after the death of the said Agnes all the things bequeathed to her above shall remain to John Kylligrewe my first-born son and his heirs. Also I bequeath to Eleaor the daughter of Robert Kylligrewe, one silver not. Also I bequeath to the daughters of the said Robert, two silver cups. Also I bequeath to Elizabeth the daughter of John Kyyligrewe, one flat piece of silver. Also I bequeath to Thomas son of the said John, one silver cup. Also I bequeath to Agnes my daughter, one silver cup. To Thomas Boxxcarnon and John Pester, two silver cups. To Walter Tregos one silver cup. Also I bequeath to Thomas Kylligrewe of Arwenack, one silver cup. to Bendict Tregos, clerk, one gilt cup and one gilt salt on condition that the said cup and salt shall remain after the death of the said Benedict to the right heirs of Thomas Kylligrewe the testator.
The residue of all my goods not bequeathed above I give to Agnes my wife, John Kylligrewe, Robert Kylligrewe my sons and Agnes, my daughter ... executors ... Witnesses: Master William Nicholl, clerk, Alexander Penhill, clerk, Sir John Davy, chaplain, Thomas Bavyell, Nicholas Trevisan, William Gervys and others.
Thomas died circa April 1501 in Penryn, Cornwall. He was buried in St Gluvias. The earliest Killigrew monument is for a brass of Thomas Killigrew and his two wives Joan & Elizabeth, and all their children. He is described as generosus and is represented in the costume of the latter part of the fifteenth century, in a long handsome robe trimmed with fur, and carries on his right shoulder his head, after the fashion of the time - a wealthy merchant, in all probability.
His will was proved on 7 June 1501 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. His wife (but named as Joan) was co-executor of his will with sons John & Robert.
Thomas Killigrew married Agnes Unknown (Killigrew) before 1469.
On 7 July 1479 title deeds re fields in Fowey were transferred from Thos. Kylligrew of Penryn, to Rich. Haryngdon.
Tregellas p.117-8 states: I am somewhat inclined to think that this may be the Thomas Killigrew who died at Biscay in Aragon. He married twice - Johanna Herry and Jane Darrell; possibly there may be some mistake in the Christian name of the later lady. Perhaps the same Thomas who is mentioned in the journals of Roger Machado, of an embassy to Spain & Portugal, in 1488, as having entertained the traveller, whom stress of weather drove into Falmouth Harbour; and as having bequeathed, in the year 1500, one hundred marks for the rebuilding of St Budock Church. In the autumn of 1882, whilst restoring St Gluvias church, the workmen came upon some leaden coffins in good preservation, which were supposed to contain the remains of members of the Killigrew family. The coffins were not opened.
Thomas Killigrew made a will dated 22 March 1500/1. I Thomas Kyllygrewe of Penryn burgh ... forgotten tithes of his parish church ... bequeaths to the stores of Holy Trinity, St Benedict, St Piran in Arworthal, St Piran in the sands (Perranzabuloe) 6/8 each and to the story of St Gluvias on condition that they put the names of me and my wife in the roll of memory for prayer on Sunday. Also I bequeath to the store of St Michael in the Mount 12d. Also to St Anthony in Meneage 6/8, St Keverne 6/8, St Macaccan 6/8, St Mary Magdalene in Cowawes 12d, Blessed Mary of Penryn 12d. Also I bequeath to the Friars of Truro on condition that they celebrate or cause to be celebrated a trental of St Gregory, that is to say 30 masses obsequies, and other things pertaining immediately after my death. Also I bequeath to the Friars Minor of Bodmin on the afsd condition and so that they pray especially for the soul of Thoomas Kylligrewe my son 40s. ...the poor of St George of Bodmin, St Laurence near Bodmin... 100 marks for the edification and new building of the body of the church of St Thomas the Maertyr in Glasney [Glasneth]...
Also I bequeath to each of my godsons 12d. to John Davy 26/8 ... my chapel in the church of St Gluvias ... to Humfrey Munnk and Mary his wife, one standing gilt nut. Also I bequeath to Agnes my wife, one gilt cup and one salt without a cover; also one collar of silver, gilt and enamelled, and one chain of gold with one bee [bye] attached to it ... and after the death of the said Agnes all the things bequeathed to her above shall remain to John Kylligrewe my first-born son and his heirs. Also I bequeath to Eleaor the daughter of Robert Kylligrewe, one silver not. Also I bequeath to the daughters of the said Robert, two silver cups. Also I bequeath to Elizabeth the daughter of John Kyyligrewe, one flat piece of silver. Also I bequeath to Thomas son of the said John, one silver cup. Also I bequeath to Agnes my daughter, one silver cup. To Thomas Boxxcarnon and John Pester, two silver cups. To Walter Tregos one silver cup. Also I bequeath to Thomas Kylligrewe of Arwenack, one silver cup. to Bendict Tregos, clerk, one gilt cup and one gilt salt on condition that the said cup and salt shall remain after the death of the said Benedict to the right heirs of Thomas Kylligrewe the testator.
The residue of all my goods not bequeathed above I give to Agnes my wife, John Kylligrewe, Robert Kylligrewe my sons and Agnes, my daughter ... executors ... Witnesses: Master William Nicholl, clerk, Alexander Penhill, clerk, Sir John Davy, chaplain, Thomas Bavyell, Nicholas Trevisan, William Gervys and others.
Thomas died circa April 1501 in Penryn, Cornwall. He was buried in St Gluvias. The earliest Killigrew monument is for a brass of Thomas Killigrew and his two wives Joan & Elizabeth, and all their children. He is described as generosus and is represented in the costume of the latter part of the fifteenth century, in a long handsome robe trimmed with fur, and carries on his right shoulder his head, after the fashion of the time - a wealthy merchant, in all probability.
His will was proved on 7 June 1501 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. His wife (but named as Joan) was co-executor of his will with sons John & Robert.
Children of Thomas Killigrew and Agnes Unknown (Killigrew)
- John Killigrew+ b. b 1470, d. 8 Nov 1536
- Agnes Killigrew (Buscarnon)
- Robert Killigrew+ d. 4 Jan 1534
- Thomas Killigrew d. b 1500
Thomas Killigrew
Thomas died in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall, England. He was born in Cornwall. Son & heir, named in the Inquisition taken on the death of his grandson Thomas. He was the son of Simon Killigrew and Jane of Arwenack.
Thomas Killigrew married Unknown Beaupell in Cornwall?.
Thomas Killigrew married Unknown Beaupell in Cornwall?.
Children of Thomas Killigrew and Unknown Beaupell
- John Killigrew jr+ d. 9 Nov 1461
- John Killigrew (Thomas?)+
Thomas Killigrew
(circa 1584 - after 1620)
Thomas Killigrew was born circa 1584 in Cornwall. He was described as the second son and had no issue. He was aged 36 in 1620. He was the son of John Killigrew and Dorothy Monk.
Thomas died after 1620.
Thomas died after 1620.
Thomas Killigrew
(circa 1556 - )
Thomas Killigrew was born circa 1556 in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall, England. He was the second son and had no issue.. He was the son of Sir John Killigrew and Mary Wolverston.
Queen Elizabeth sent him on an embassy to the Count Palatine on the Rhine; and he was also commissioned to seize a certain ship of Brittany at Penzance and to distribute the spoil among such as by certain Britaines have been hertofore spoiled of their goods and wronged. [Some Cornish worthies, p.123]..
Queen Elizabeth sent him on an embassy to the Count Palatine on the Rhine; and he was also commissioned to seize a certain ship of Brittany at Penzance and to distribute the spoil among such as by certain Britaines have been hertofore spoiled of their goods and wronged. [Some Cornish worthies, p.123]..
Thomas Killigrew
(before 1530 - before 1558)
Thomas Killigrew was born before 1530 in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall. He was the third son. He was the son of Capt John Killigrew and Elizabeth Trewinnard.
About 1553 Peter and his brother Thomas engaged in piracy against Spanish ships in the Channel from a base in New Rochelle. In March 1554, they had three ships, one of which had been supplied by the King of France, and hoped to intercept King Philip of Spain on his way to England to marry Mary. The brothers were involved with Sir Peter Carew intrying to persuade the French to invade England, but they were captured in 1556. Peter was tortured in the Tower, while Thomas may have been hanged..
Thomas died before 1558 in Falmouth, Cornwall, England.
About 1553 Peter and his brother Thomas engaged in piracy against Spanish ships in the Channel from a base in New Rochelle. In March 1554, they had three ships, one of which had been supplied by the King of France, and hoped to intercept King Philip of Spain on his way to England to marry Mary. The brothers were involved with Sir Peter Carew intrying to persuade the French to invade England, but they were captured in 1556. Peter was tortured in the Tower, while Thomas may have been hanged..
Thomas died before 1558 in Falmouth, Cornwall, England.
Thomas Killigrew
(7 February 1611/12 - 18 March 1682/83)
Thomas Killigrew was born on 7 February 1611/12 in Hanworth, Middlesex. He was the son of Sir Robert Killigrew and Mary Woodhouse. Thomas Killigrew was christened on 20 February 1611/12 in St Margaret, Lothbury, London.
-Dictionary of national biography: Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683), playwright and theatre manager, was born on 7 February 1612 at Lothbury, London, and baptized on 20 February at St Margaret, Lothbury, the fourth son of Sir Robert Killigrew (1579/80-1633) and Mary Woodhouse; he was brother of Sir William Killigrew and Henry Killigrew.
Early years, 1612–1641
Although the seat of the family estate was at Hanworth, near Hampton Court, Killigrew was probably raised in London. His interest in the drama may have been aroused at an early age: in October 1662 Pepys reported the story of how Killigrew as a boy would go to the Red Bull playhouse at Clerkenwell, ‘and when the man cried to the boys, “Who will go and be a divell, and he shall see the play for nothing?”—then would he go in and be a devil upon the stage’ (Pepys, 3.243–4). The earliest mention of Thomas occurs in his grandmother Margerie Killigrew's will, dated 22 May 1623: to him and his brothers Charles (1609–1629), Robert (1611–1635), and Henry (1613–1700), she bequeathed the sum of £5 (Margerie Killigrew's will).
Unlike that of his brothers William (1606–1695) and Henry, who both studied at Oxford, Thomas's formal education appears to have been rather incidental. Correct spelling was an achievement that, even in later life, he never quite attained. As his brother Henry, in a letter to Anthony Wood, testified in November 1691, Thomas ‘wanted some learning to poise his excellent natural wit’ (Pritchard, 288). What education he had he obtained at court, to which his father, the queen's vice-chamberlain, must have introduced him. Contrary to what has been maintained, however, Thomas did not become a page at court as early as 1625 but some time later. Of his career at court until 1635 or 1636, not much is known. It has been (somewhat implausibly) suggested, on the authority of William Coventry's story as reported by Pepys in July 1665, that Thomas entered the service of Francis, Lord Cottington, when the latter became ambassador to Spain in the autumn of 1629 (Pepys, 9.256).
By July 1632 at the latest Killigrew was serving as a page of honour to Charles I, and over the next few years he tried to supplement his annual salary of £100 with the proceeds from confiscated properties. In his will, dated 12 September 1632, Sir Robert bequeathed to his sons Thomas and Robert his part and portion of all his real estate in the county of Cornwall and ‘the yearlie sum of fiftie pounds apeece … to be issuing and going out of all my Manors, lands, tenements and hereditaments’ in the same county (Sir Robert Killigrew's will). To Thomas and his heirs he also left 100 acres of fenland in Lincolnshire. But Sir Robert's heavily encumbered bequest was probably an insufficient financial basis for a young courtier to build a career on. In the scramble for money and favour characteristic of one in his position, Thomas managed to ingratiate himself with Queen Henrietta Maria herself. His first play, The Prisoners, a romantic tragicomedy composed in 1635 and performed at the Phoenix, Drury Lane, by Her Majesty's Servants in 1636, may have been a successful bid for royal favour. In October 1635 he was given the opportunity to accompany Walter Montague, the queen's favourite, on his travels to the continent. Montague and his attendants stayed at Calais, Paris, Tours, Orléans, and Loudun, where Killigrew recorded his experiences at the convent of the possessed Ursuline nuns. Before 17 January 1636 they arrived at Vercelli in Italy, then continued south to Rome and Naples, where Killigrew's next two tragicomedies, Claricilla and The Princess, were composed, in whole or in part. Claricilla was performed at the Phoenix before 1641; The Princess was probably acted at Blackfriars by the King's Men.
In the spring Killigrew returned to England and on 29 June he married Cecilia Crofts, a maid of honour to the queen. Thomas Carew, a friend of the Crofts family, celebrated the bride's beauty and the groom's happiness in a poem ‘On the Marriage of T. K. and C. C. the Morning Stormie’. Henry, the single son from this wedding, was born on Easter day, 9 April 1637. Cecilia died on 1 January 1638 and was buried in Westminster Abbey. In Van Dyck's famous double portrait of Killigrew and an Unknown Man, painted in 1638, Killigrew is shown in mourning for Cecilia, wearing her wedding-ring and a small cross with her intertwined initials. The evidence shows that her memory stayed with him throughout the years of his second marriage.
In the course of 1639 Killigrew set off on his travels again. The sons of the earl of Cork, Francis (who married Thomas's sister Elizabeth in October 1639) and Robert Boyle, recorded meeting him in Paris in November. From their correspondence, Killigrew's itinerary can be accurately reconstructed: in March 1640 he joined them in Geneva and left for Basel three weeks later, intending to cross the Alps. He visited the English College of the Jesuits at Rome twice in March 1641 and on his way back to England stopped at Geneva again in April. The title-page of the 1664 folio edition of Killigrew's best-known play, The Parson's Wedding, probably written in 1640–41, describes it as having been composed at Basel. Characterized by the Boyles' tutor as one that loved ‘profaine and irreligious discourses’ (Stoye, 247), Killigrew had somehow acquired the ill fame that was to haunt him ever after.
Exile, 1641–1660
Like most of his relatives, Killigrew joined the royalist side at the outbreak of the civil war. Already in November 1641 he had been employed as a messenger by both the king and the queen. He was summoned to appear before the Commons in February 1642 on suspicion of treason, but not until several months later was he taken into custody and probably placed under house arrest. He continued to occupy his lodgings at The Piazza, Covent Garden, until July 1643, when he was given a pass to join the royalist forces at Oxford. Soon afterwards he may have left England. By April 1647 he had become admitted to the circle of the exiled Prince Charles and was sent to Italy to borrow money for the support of his young master's cause, a mission that proved a moderate success. Killigrew's romantic tragedy The Pilgrim may have been written for the Prince of Wales's Company in Paris in 1646. When James, duke of York, established himself at The Hague in May 1648, Killigrew entered his service as groom of the bedchamber. Shortly after the execution of Charles I in 1649, he transferred his services again to the household of Prince Charles in Paris. As the new king's special envoy, he was entrusted with the task of seeking the recognition of Venice and the northern states of Italy. In November 1649 he scored some success at Turin, then travelled on to Genoa, Leghorn, Pisa, and Florence, where the reception given him was much cooler and the authorities' attitude to the king's cause noncommittal.
Killigrew reached Venice on 14 February 1650 and remained there as Charles's resident for more than two years. During his Italian stay, he found the time to write two lengthy dramatic romances, Cecilia and Clorinda, its first part composed in Turin, its second in Florence, and Bellamira her Dream, entirely written in Venice. As of June 1651 Killigrew began to experience difficulties in his relationship with the Venetian senate over his alleged involvement in illegal slaughtering and smuggling practices. The senate's request in June 1652 that the English resident be dismissed was largely inspired by political expediency, as the Venetian republic did not wish to antagonize Cromwell's government.
After leaving Venice, Killigrew stayed briefly at The Hague in attendance on the duke of Gloucester. When the duke removed his household to Paris in May 1653, to join his mother and King Charles, Killigrew accompanied him there. Whether Thomaso, or, The Wanderer, probably completed in 1654, was written in Madrid, as the title-page of the 1664 edition indicates, has never been ascertained. Largely autobiographical, Killigrew's two-part comedy is a verbose but often sparkling account of the exiled cavaliers' experiences in Spain, France, and the Low Countries. Soon after the court had departed from Paris in June 1654, Killigrew returned to The Hague, home to a large English community. At The Hague, he enjoyed the protection of Elizabeth, queen of Bohemia, who had been in exile there since 1621. To her intercession with Charles II, her nephew, and to the latter's mediation with Willem Frederik of Nassau-Dietz (1613–1664), stadholder of Friesland, Killigrew owed his appointment, in 1655, as a captain in the service of the states general.
It was possibly on the occasion of his first visit to The Hague in summer 1652 that Killigrew had made the acquaintance of Charlotte van Hesse-Piershil (1629–1715), the eldest and well-to-do daughter of Johan van Hesse (d. 1638), gentleman of the prince of Orange. The couple were married in the church of the Walloon Reformed Community, on 28 January 1655. As early as October 1655 the newly-weds contemplated leaving the city, signalling their intention to move to Maastricht, where Killigrew's company was garrisoned. On 29 December 1655, their first son, Charles Killigrew, the future theatre manager, was born there; and on 19 February 1657 a second son, Thomas (d. 3 June 1674), was added to the family. In the meantime, Killigrew had himself assigned to a different company, no doubt within the same city. On 1 May 1656, the council of state, in view of Killigrew's reputation as someone having ‘courage and experience in matters of war’ (Vander Motten, ‘Lost Years’, 321), appointed him to replace one John More, who had deserted his company.
While in the pay of the states of Friesland, Killigrew also acted as a kind of liaison officer for Charles II. In a letter from Maastricht (intercepted by the intelligence services of John Thurloe, Cromwell's secretary of state), he provided an astute summary of the doings of the major European powers in spring 1657. The English government went on to monitor closely his movements in Charles's service. On 5 April 1658 Sir George Downing informed Thurloe of Killigrew's intention to seek the appointment to a vacant post of regimental major. The prospect of such promotion may have necessitated the family's temporary return to The Hague, for on 28 March 1658 the church register of the Walloon Reformed Community there recorded the christening of a daughter, Charlotte-Marguerite (who may have died in infancy, before the end of 1660).
As groom of the bedchamber, Killigrew accompanied Charles on his semi-secret tour of the United Provinces in early September 1658, a tour which probably took the king as far north as Friesland, where he visited the Frisian stadholder. On 18 October Downing reported to Thurloe that he had ‘had an accompt from one Killigrew of his bed-chamber’ (Vander Motten, ‘Lost Years’, 324) of Charles's complete itinerary and the company he kept. It is not clear whether such information, if indeed supplied by Killigrew, amounted to a form of treason or was merely an apology for the king's presence on Dutch soil. From the five letters which Charles wrote to Willem Frederik between March 1659 and April 1662, it is evident that even after 1658 Killigrew continued to enjoy the protection and friendship of the monarch and the stadholder. Both men evidently co-operated in protecting Killigrew's interests, as on the occasion of the request which John Milton, Latin secretary to Cromwell, sent to Killigrew's Frisian paymasters on 27 January 1659, pleading that he be not allowed to escape an outstanding English debt. In the final months of the exile, Killigrew was not exclusively involved in state matters. In a letter from Maastricht dated 11 February 1659 and sent to an unknown friend, he declined the latter's offer to become a Catholic, criticizing at length the idolatrous practices of the church of Rome and its position on transubstantiation (Durham University Library, Cosin MS BI 13).
The theatre manager, 1660–1676
Although Pepys on 24 May 1660 recorded meeting Killigrew, ‘a gentleman of great esteem with the King’ (Pepys, 1.157), on board the Charles, the dramatist's wife, pregnant again, and the three children presumably prolonged their stay in Maastricht. Not until after the birth of Robert (baptized on 4 July 1660) did Charlotte move to London. Before the end of the year, she and her three sons were included in an act of naturalization, which in due course was ratified by the king. In May 1662 Charlotte became keeper of the sweet coffer for the queen, and in June she was made first lady of the privy chamber. Despite his recent re-establishment in London, Killigrew on 12 September 1660 acquired the rights of citizenship of Maastricht. His motives for doing so almost five years after settling down at Maastricht are a matter for speculation. As late as 30 November 1660, the king intervened on his behalf with the Frisian stadholder, asking that Killigrew be allowed to retain his military appointment, which he risked losing as a result of the council of state's plans to cut the expenditure for defence. In the course of 1660 Killigrew petitioned the king for a variety of offices and commodities, including the keepership of the armory at Greenwich, ‘in consideration of his expense in attendance on His Majesty abroad’ (CSP dom., 1660–61, 101), and a parcel of white plate worth £1200 that had belonged to Cromwell. But the financial compensations which Charles must have promised him during the exile had by the end of 1660 not yet materialized—hence perhaps the dramatist's request to retain his Dutch commandership. Not until November 1661 was he granted an annual pension of £500 as a groom of the bedchamber. By then he had completely changed his mind about his overseas obligations, for on 31 October 1661 the king once again intervened with the stadholder, asking him to allow Killigrew to transfer his company, supposedly for health reasons. The favour was granted and in January 1662 Killigrew's company was sold to one Jeremy Roper for 14,000 guilders.
The most singular mark of the king's esteem was of course the licence which in July 1660 he gave to Killigrew and Sir William Davenant ‘to erect two playhouses … to control the charges to be demanded, and the payments to actors … and absolutely suppressing all other playhouses’ (CSP dom., 1660–61, 124). Both men thus obtained a virtual monopoly to form two companies of players, produce all and any dramatic entertainments, and license all plays submitted to them. Killigrew's company, known as the King's Men, began acting at the Red Bull on 5 November 1660; they moved to Gibbons's Tennis Court, Vere Street, on 8 November. Davenant's company, under the patronage of the duke of York, possibly started their operations at Salisbury Court by 15 November; they moved to their Lincoln's Inn Fields theatre, fully equipped with movable scenery, in June 1661. When Claricilla was revived at Vere Street, on 4 July 1661, Pepys remarked on how empty Killigrew's theatre was ‘since the opera begun’ (Pepys, 2.132).
On 7 May 1663 the King's Company began acting at the new Theatre Royal, Bridges Street, Killigrew holding both acting and building shares in the company. Killigrew boasted a group of experienced actors and actresses drawn from various earlier troupes, including Michael Mohun, Nicholas Burt, Charles Hart, John Lacy, Anne Marshall, and Elizabeth Weaver. Davenant had to compete with a less seasoned troupe but managed to secure the services of Thomas Betterton, who had briefly been a member of the King's Company. Killigrew also had the exclusive rights to a large repertory of pre-Restoration plays, which included nearly all of Ben Jonson's works and many of Shakespeare's. Despite the heavy preponderance of old plays in the repertory of the Theatre Royal in the 1660s, there were few practising playwrights from the earlier period, but several new gentlemen dramatists attached themselves to Killigrew's company. Sir Robert Howard, holder of one quarter of the shares at Bridges Street, and James and Edward Howard wrote for his company in the early 1660s; so did Roger Boyle, earl of Orrery, and possibly Sir George Etherege. Of the professional playwrights Killigrew went on to recruit, none was more important that John Dryden. After negotiations with both companies, he became in April 1668 a playwright-sharer with the King's Company, agreeing to provide them with three plays annually in return for one and one-quarter shares. (Dryden broke the agreement in 1678.) Apparently Nathaniel Lee had a similar agreement, and so did Thomas D'Urfey during part of his career. Elkanah Settle also allied himself with the company in 1673.
As Killigrew's annotated copy of his Comedies and Tragedies (1664) preserved in the library of Worcester College, Oxford, demonstrates, he was ambitious enough to prepare his own plays for production on the new, scenic stage. The Princess was revived at Vere Street on 29 November 1661, ‘the first time … since before the troubles’ in Pepys's words (Pepys, 2.223). Claricilla and The Parson's Wedding proved the most successful of Killigrew's plays. Clandestinely performed at Gibbons's Tennis Court in 1653, Claricilla (one of the stock plays of Mohun's troupe at the Red Bull in 1660) was successively revived at Vere Street on 1 December 1660 and 4 July 1661, at court in January 1663, and at Bridges Street in March 1669. A performance of The Parson's Wedding, ‘acted all by women’ according to Pepys (ibid., 5.289), was scheduled at Bridges Street on 5 or 6 October 1664; it was given again at Lincoln's Inn Fields in June 1672. Much more popular, however, than any of his plays was Aphra Behn's The Rover, a lively adaptation of Thomaso, first produced at Dorset Gardens in March 1677. (As groom of the bedchamber, Killigrew had probably introduced Behn to Charles's intelligence service in 1666.) Despite the manifest advantages Killigrew enjoyed as the manager of the King's Company, he appears to have had insufficient practical sense of the theatre to compete successfully with Davenant, a professional playwright and theatrical innovator. Nevertheless, his theatrical initiatives were by no means despicable. Before the end of 1660, Killigrew beat Davenant in the race to introduce actresses on the stage, a novelty made official in the April 1662 patent issued to him, decreeing that all female parts were to be played by women. On 2 August 1664 he told Pepys of his plans to set up a nursery theatre at Moorfields, ‘were we shall have the best Scenes and Machines, the best Musique … and to that end hath sent for voices and painters and other persons from Italy’ (Pepys, 5.230). And in February and September 1667 he boasted to the same interlocutor of the many improvements at his theatre, including the importation of distinguished Italian musicians.
Killigrew's company shared of course in the misfortunes that befell the London stage. In June 1665 the theatres were closed down on account of the plague and on 25 January 1672 a fire destroyed the Theatre Royal, forcing Killigrew's company to move to the playhouse at Lincoln's Inn Fields, recently vacated by the Duke's Men. It is undeniable, however, that the King's Company's problems must be attributed to Killigrew's dubious handling of his theatrical holdings, resulting in conflicts with the disgruntled sharing actors, and, indeed, his own son Charles. As early as 1663, Killigrew had made over his building shares to his brother-in-law Sir John Sayers, to be held in trust for him; he also temporarily delegated the direction of the company to Hart, Mohun, and Lacy. After the death of Sir Henry Herbert, who in 1661–2 had sued the patent-holders for usurping some of his powers, Killigrew was appointed master of the revels on 1 May 1673 but in February 1677 he resigned the post to his son Charles. Only three weeks later, he was forced by law to turn over to Charles his patent and governorship of the company (in 1682 it was discovered that his theatrical property had not been his to control).
Trying to cope with his expensive habits of getting and spending, including his theatrical investments, Killigrew had to borrow money from his wife, whose interests in the Piershil inheritance had been safeguarded by a 1655 contract. Throughout his term as a patentee he petitioned the king for diverse gifts and licences. In December 1663 he requested the grant of a lease of nineteen messuages ‘in Collier Row, Stepney, and Shoreditch, the manor of Puriton-cum-Crandon, and a house in Bridgewater’, worth £88 a year (CSP dom., 1660–70, 686). In March 1670, in consideration of his ‘long and faithful services’ (ibid., 1670, 133), he was given the benefit of a bond worth £500, due to the king from one Thomas Pritchard. And the state papers for the years 1671 to 1676 show that he obtained a patent to license ‘pedlars and petty chapmen’ (ibid., 1671, 216) and claimed the right to grant licences for lotteries. After 1676 his interest in the theatre business gradually dwindled.
Final years, 1676–1683
According to Pepys, writing on 13 February 1668, Killigrew had been given the title of ‘King's fool or jester … and may with privilege revile or jeere any body … without offence’ (Pepys, 9.66–7). Countless anecdotes survive to prove that it was during his years at Charles's court that Killigrew established his reputation as a flippant conversationalist endowed with a caustic wit. Whether or not this is indicative of a fundamental change of mind, in his declining years he took a fancy to having himself portrayed in a very different guise, first, in the 1670s, as a pilgrim of St James, and after 1680, bearded as St Paul, carrying a sword, the emblem of martyrdom. Financial worries, however, must have weighed the family down, as is suggested by his petition, dated 16 January 1680, for payment of arrears on his pension in the amount of £850.
In 1683 Pier Maria Mazzantini, an Italian physician, asked the king for leave to practise the antidote Orvietan, claiming that it had saved Killigrew's life. ‘Weak and indisposed in body’, on 15 March 1683 the dramatist drew up his will. He requested to be buried at Westminster Abbey, together with his first wife and his sister Elizabeth (d. 1681). The largest part of his estate, both ‘real and personal’, and the arrears on his pension went to his son Henry, who was also made the sole executor. Charlotte and her children were left unmentioned. Killigrew died at Whitehall on 19 March 1683. Within days after her husband's death Charlotte petitioned the king for relief, arguing that she had brought ‘a considerable fortune to her husband … though of late by the insinuation of ill people his affections were withdrawn from her so that he has left her and her two youngest sons in a very necessitous condition’ (CSP dom., 1683, 220). The king obliged by granting her an annual pension of £200; he also contributed £50 to the funeral. Charlotte was buried on 22 April 1715, having survived her children by several years. Roger, born on 17 September 1663, had died prior to July 1694; Robert, a brigadier-general, was killed at the battle of Almanzor on 14 April 1707; and Elizabeth, born on 3 July 1666, may have been buried at St Martin's on 21 April 1690.
J. P. Vander Motten
Sources
A. Harbage, Thomas Killigrew, cavalier dramatist, 1612–1683 (1930) · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Thomas Killigrew's “lost years”, 1655–1660’, Neophilologus, 82 (1998), 311–34 · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Unpublished letters of Charles II’, Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660–1700, 18/1 (1994), 17–26 · J. W. Stoye, ‘The whereabouts of Thomas Killigrew, 1639–41’, Review of English Studies, 25 (1949), 245–8 · Pepys, Diary, vols. 1–9 · J. Lough and D. E. L. Crane, ‘Thomas Killigrew and the possessed nuns of Loudun: the text of a letter of 1635’, Durham University Journal, 78 (1985–6), 259–68 · M. W. Walsh, ‘Thomas Killigrew's cap and bells’, Theatre Notebook, 38 (1984), 99–105 · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Thomas Killigrew: a biographical note’, Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire, 53/3 (1975), 769–75 · M. Rogers, ‘“Golden houses for shadows”: some portraits of Thomas Killigrew and his family’, Art and patronage in the Caroline courts: essays in honour of Sir Oliver Millar, ed. D. Howarth (1993), 220–42 · Margerie Killigrew's will, 22 May 1623, PRO, PROB 11/146, sig. 71 · Sir Robert Killigrew's will, 12 Sept 1633, PRO, PROB 11/164, sig. 69 · will, 15 March 1683, PRO, PROB 11/372, sig. 36 · CSP dom., 1660–85 · A. Pritchard, ‘According to Wood: sources of A. Wood's lives of poets and dramatists’, Review of English Studies, new ser., 28 (1977), 268–89, 407–20
Archives
BL, papers, Add. MS 20032 | Bodl. Oxf., Clarendon MSS · TCD, Trinity College MSS
Likenesses
A. Van Dyck, double portrait, oils, 1638, Royal Collection [see illus.] · A. Van Dyck, oils, 1638, Weston Park Foundation, Shropshire; copy, NPG · W. Sheppard, oils, 1650, NPG · J. J. Van den Berghe, stipple, 1650 (after W. Sheppard), BM, NPG · pencil drawing, 1650 (after W. Sheppard), NPG · W. Faithorne, line engraving, 1664 (after W. Sheppard), BM, NPG; repro. in T. Killigrew, Comedies and tragedies (1664) · mezzotint, 1670–1679, BM · J. vander Vaart, mezzotint, c.1680 (after W. Wissing), BM · mezzotint, BM, NPG
Wealth at death
two houses in Scotland Yard: will, PRO, PROB 11/372, sig. 36, 15 March 1683
© Oxford University Press 2004–5
All rights reserved: see legal notice
J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15538, accessed 24 Sept 2005]
Thomas Killigrew (1612-1683): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15538.
In Margaret or Margery Saunders (Leigh)'s will dated 22 May 1623, Thomas Killigrew was named as heir.
In Sir Robert Killigrew's will dated 12 September 1632, Thomas Killigrew was named as heir.
Thomas Killigrew married Cecilia Crofts on 29 June 1636 in Oatlands, Sussex. Thomas Killigrew was widowed on 1 January 1637/38 on the death of his wife Cecilia Crofts.
He was appointed Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the Duke of York 1 May 1649.
He was the notorious groom of the bedchamber to King Chas II. A page to King Chas I in 1633, and was sometime Resident at Venice, but is chiefly known for his intimate relations with Chas II. Mentioned by Pepys, had houses where Scotland Yard now stands (old court of Whitehall).
More information about Thomas Killigrew may be found at http://www.lowell-libson.com/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=5&tabindex=4&objectid=322941&categoryid=6556&page=7&keyword=&sold=.
Thomas Killigrew married secondly Charlotte de Hesse on 28 January 1655 in The Hague, The Netherlands.
Thomas was a dramatist & courtier.
For additional information see: " LoveToKnow 1911 Online Encyclopedia. © 2003, 2004 LoveToKnow. http://56.1911encyclopedia.org/K/KI/KILLIGREW_ELIZABETH.htm.
Thomas was appointed a Groom of the Bedchamber to King Charles II. He had to wait in the King's chamber during his Majesty's dressing, and wait at dinner (when he dines prvately), take wine, etc. from the servants, and give it to the Lords, to serve his Majesty. When the Gentlemen of the Bed-Chamber are not there, they perform the Office of dressing the Sovereign, and have their waiting Weekly, two and two, by turns.
These offices were in the gift of the Crown. The procedures for swearing and admitting them into waiting were the same as those for the gentlemen of the bedchamber.
The number of grooms fluctuated considerably. Under Charles II there were usually 12. Extra grooms were regularly appointed under Charles II and occasionally thereafter on 2 February 1661.
Letters Patent permitting Thomas Killigrew to erect a theatre and perform plays therein, in Cities of London and Westminster.
In 1673, he was appointed 'Master of the Revels'.
See Oxford Dictionary of National Biography for further information: www.oxforddnb.com/.
Thomas Killigrew (1612-1683) was a dramatist and wit who played an important role in the re-establishment of the theatre following Charles’ return. As a boy he had been page to Charles I and followed his son into exile. In 1660 Killigrew and Sir William Davenant were granted letters patent by the King to establish theatres. Two companies were formed: the King’s Players, led by Killigrew, and the Duke’s Players led by Davenant. Killigrew’s company played first at Gibbon’s Tennis-Court in Clare Market but in 1663 moved to the new Theatre Royal in what is now Drury Lane. Davenant’s company, after a period at the old Salisbury Court theatre, moved to Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and eventually in 1732 to the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden. These two theatres, subsequently rebuilt, were the only theatres in London licensed for dramatic performances until the mid 19th century and still survive as major performance venues today.
Thomas died on 18 March 1682/83 in Whitehall, London, Westminster, Middlesex, aged 71. Died in Oct 1682 according to his bible notes. He was buried on 18 March 1682/83 in Westminster Abbey, London. Mr Thomas Killigrew, in the Abbey.
His will was proved on 19 March 1682/83 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Will of Thomas Killigrew, Groom of His Majestiy's Bedchamber of Saint Martin in the Fields, Middlesex, dated 19 March 1683.
-Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683), English dramatist and wit, son of Sir Robert Killigrew, was born in Lothbury, London, on the 7th of February 1612. Pepys says that as a boy he satisfied his love of the stage by volunteering at the Red Bull to take the part of a devil, thus seeing the play for nothing. In 1633 he became page to Charles I., and was faithfully attached to the royal house throughout his life. In 1635 he was in France, and has left an account (printed in the European Magazine, 1803) of the exorcizing of an evil spirit from some nuns at Loudun. In 1641 he published two tragi-comedies, The Prisoners and Claracilla, both of which had probably been produced before 1636. In 1647 he followed Prince Charles into exile. His wit, easy morals and accommodating temper recommended him to Charles, who sent him to Venice in 1651 as his representative. Early in the following year he was recalled at the request of the Venetian ambassador in Paris. At the Restoration he became groom of the bedchamber to Charles II., and later chamberlain to the queen. He received in 1660, with Sir William Davenant, a patent to erect a new playhouse, the performances in which were to be independent of the censorship of the master of the revels. This infringement of his prerogative caused a dispute with Sir Henry Herbert, then holder of the office, but Killigrew settled the matter by generous concessions. He acted independently of Davenant, his company being known as the King's Servants. They played at the Red Bull, until in 1663 he built for them the original Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Pepys writes in 1664 that Killigrew intended to have four opera seasons of six weeks each during the year, and with this end in view paid several visits to Rome to secure singers and scene decorators. In 1664 his plays were published as Comedies and Tragedies. Written by Thomas Killigrew. They are Claracilla; The Princess, or Love at First Sight; The Parson's Wedding; The Pilgrim; Cicilia and Clorinda, or Lov\ in Arms; Thomaso, or the Wanderer; and Bellamira, her Dream, or Love of Shadows. The Parson's Wedding (actec c. 1640, reprinted in the various editions of Dodsley's Old Plays and in the Ancient British Drama) is an unsavoury play which displays nevertheless considerable wit, and some of its jokes were appropriated by Congreve. It was revived after the Restoration in 1664 and 1672 or 1673, all the parts being in both cases taken by women. Killigrew succeeded Sir Henry Herbert as master of the revels in 1673. He died at Whitehal on the igth of March 1683. He was twice married, first t< Cecilia Crofts, maid of honor to Queen Henrietta Maria, anc secondly to Charlotte de Hesse, by whom he had a son Thomas (1657-1719), who was the author of a successful little piece Chit-Chat, played at Drury Lane on the i4th of February 1719 with Mrs Oldfield in the part of Florinda.
-Dictionary of national biography: Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683), playwright and theatre manager, was born on 7 February 1612 at Lothbury, London, and baptized on 20 February at St Margaret, Lothbury, the fourth son of Sir Robert Killigrew (1579/80-1633) and Mary Woodhouse; he was brother of Sir William Killigrew and Henry Killigrew.
Early years, 1612–1641
Although the seat of the family estate was at Hanworth, near Hampton Court, Killigrew was probably raised in London. His interest in the drama may have been aroused at an early age: in October 1662 Pepys reported the story of how Killigrew as a boy would go to the Red Bull playhouse at Clerkenwell, ‘and when the man cried to the boys, “Who will go and be a divell, and he shall see the play for nothing?”—then would he go in and be a devil upon the stage’ (Pepys, 3.243–4). The earliest mention of Thomas occurs in his grandmother Margerie Killigrew's will, dated 22 May 1623: to him and his brothers Charles (1609–1629), Robert (1611–1635), and Henry (1613–1700), she bequeathed the sum of £5 (Margerie Killigrew's will).
Unlike that of his brothers William (1606–1695) and Henry, who both studied at Oxford, Thomas's formal education appears to have been rather incidental. Correct spelling was an achievement that, even in later life, he never quite attained. As his brother Henry, in a letter to Anthony Wood, testified in November 1691, Thomas ‘wanted some learning to poise his excellent natural wit’ (Pritchard, 288). What education he had he obtained at court, to which his father, the queen's vice-chamberlain, must have introduced him. Contrary to what has been maintained, however, Thomas did not become a page at court as early as 1625 but some time later. Of his career at court until 1635 or 1636, not much is known. It has been (somewhat implausibly) suggested, on the authority of William Coventry's story as reported by Pepys in July 1665, that Thomas entered the service of Francis, Lord Cottington, when the latter became ambassador to Spain in the autumn of 1629 (Pepys, 9.256).
By July 1632 at the latest Killigrew was serving as a page of honour to Charles I, and over the next few years he tried to supplement his annual salary of £100 with the proceeds from confiscated properties. In his will, dated 12 September 1632, Sir Robert bequeathed to his sons Thomas and Robert his part and portion of all his real estate in the county of Cornwall and ‘the yearlie sum of fiftie pounds apeece … to be issuing and going out of all my Manors, lands, tenements and hereditaments’ in the same county (Sir Robert Killigrew's will). To Thomas and his heirs he also left 100 acres of fenland in Lincolnshire. But Sir Robert's heavily encumbered bequest was probably an insufficient financial basis for a young courtier to build a career on. In the scramble for money and favour characteristic of one in his position, Thomas managed to ingratiate himself with Queen Henrietta Maria herself. His first play, The Prisoners, a romantic tragicomedy composed in 1635 and performed at the Phoenix, Drury Lane, by Her Majesty's Servants in 1636, may have been a successful bid for royal favour. In October 1635 he was given the opportunity to accompany Walter Montague, the queen's favourite, on his travels to the continent. Montague and his attendants stayed at Calais, Paris, Tours, Orléans, and Loudun, where Killigrew recorded his experiences at the convent of the possessed Ursuline nuns. Before 17 January 1636 they arrived at Vercelli in Italy, then continued south to Rome and Naples, where Killigrew's next two tragicomedies, Claricilla and The Princess, were composed, in whole or in part. Claricilla was performed at the Phoenix before 1641; The Princess was probably acted at Blackfriars by the King's Men.
In the spring Killigrew returned to England and on 29 June he married Cecilia Crofts, a maid of honour to the queen. Thomas Carew, a friend of the Crofts family, celebrated the bride's beauty and the groom's happiness in a poem ‘On the Marriage of T. K. and C. C. the Morning Stormie’. Henry, the single son from this wedding, was born on Easter day, 9 April 1637. Cecilia died on 1 January 1638 and was buried in Westminster Abbey. In Van Dyck's famous double portrait of Killigrew and an Unknown Man, painted in 1638, Killigrew is shown in mourning for Cecilia, wearing her wedding-ring and a small cross with her intertwined initials. The evidence shows that her memory stayed with him throughout the years of his second marriage.
In the course of 1639 Killigrew set off on his travels again. The sons of the earl of Cork, Francis (who married Thomas's sister Elizabeth in October 1639) and Robert Boyle, recorded meeting him in Paris in November. From their correspondence, Killigrew's itinerary can be accurately reconstructed: in March 1640 he joined them in Geneva and left for Basel three weeks later, intending to cross the Alps. He visited the English College of the Jesuits at Rome twice in March 1641 and on his way back to England stopped at Geneva again in April. The title-page of the 1664 folio edition of Killigrew's best-known play, The Parson's Wedding, probably written in 1640–41, describes it as having been composed at Basel. Characterized by the Boyles' tutor as one that loved ‘profaine and irreligious discourses’ (Stoye, 247), Killigrew had somehow acquired the ill fame that was to haunt him ever after.
Exile, 1641–1660
Like most of his relatives, Killigrew joined the royalist side at the outbreak of the civil war. Already in November 1641 he had been employed as a messenger by both the king and the queen. He was summoned to appear before the Commons in February 1642 on suspicion of treason, but not until several months later was he taken into custody and probably placed under house arrest. He continued to occupy his lodgings at The Piazza, Covent Garden, until July 1643, when he was given a pass to join the royalist forces at Oxford. Soon afterwards he may have left England. By April 1647 he had become admitted to the circle of the exiled Prince Charles and was sent to Italy to borrow money for the support of his young master's cause, a mission that proved a moderate success. Killigrew's romantic tragedy The Pilgrim may have been written for the Prince of Wales's Company in Paris in 1646. When James, duke of York, established himself at The Hague in May 1648, Killigrew entered his service as groom of the bedchamber. Shortly after the execution of Charles I in 1649, he transferred his services again to the household of Prince Charles in Paris. As the new king's special envoy, he was entrusted with the task of seeking the recognition of Venice and the northern states of Italy. In November 1649 he scored some success at Turin, then travelled on to Genoa, Leghorn, Pisa, and Florence, where the reception given him was much cooler and the authorities' attitude to the king's cause noncommittal.
Killigrew reached Venice on 14 February 1650 and remained there as Charles's resident for more than two years. During his Italian stay, he found the time to write two lengthy dramatic romances, Cecilia and Clorinda, its first part composed in Turin, its second in Florence, and Bellamira her Dream, entirely written in Venice. As of June 1651 Killigrew began to experience difficulties in his relationship with the Venetian senate over his alleged involvement in illegal slaughtering and smuggling practices. The senate's request in June 1652 that the English resident be dismissed was largely inspired by political expediency, as the Venetian republic did not wish to antagonize Cromwell's government.
After leaving Venice, Killigrew stayed briefly at The Hague in attendance on the duke of Gloucester. When the duke removed his household to Paris in May 1653, to join his mother and King Charles, Killigrew accompanied him there. Whether Thomaso, or, The Wanderer, probably completed in 1654, was written in Madrid, as the title-page of the 1664 edition indicates, has never been ascertained. Largely autobiographical, Killigrew's two-part comedy is a verbose but often sparkling account of the exiled cavaliers' experiences in Spain, France, and the Low Countries. Soon after the court had departed from Paris in June 1654, Killigrew returned to The Hague, home to a large English community. At The Hague, he enjoyed the protection of Elizabeth, queen of Bohemia, who had been in exile there since 1621. To her intercession with Charles II, her nephew, and to the latter's mediation with Willem Frederik of Nassau-Dietz (1613–1664), stadholder of Friesland, Killigrew owed his appointment, in 1655, as a captain in the service of the states general.
It was possibly on the occasion of his first visit to The Hague in summer 1652 that Killigrew had made the acquaintance of Charlotte van Hesse-Piershil (1629–1715), the eldest and well-to-do daughter of Johan van Hesse (d. 1638), gentleman of the prince of Orange. The couple were married in the church of the Walloon Reformed Community, on 28 January 1655. As early as October 1655 the newly-weds contemplated leaving the city, signalling their intention to move to Maastricht, where Killigrew's company was garrisoned. On 29 December 1655, their first son, Charles Killigrew, the future theatre manager, was born there; and on 19 February 1657 a second son, Thomas (d. 3 June 1674), was added to the family. In the meantime, Killigrew had himself assigned to a different company, no doubt within the same city. On 1 May 1656, the council of state, in view of Killigrew's reputation as someone having ‘courage and experience in matters of war’ (Vander Motten, ‘Lost Years’, 321), appointed him to replace one John More, who had deserted his company.
While in the pay of the states of Friesland, Killigrew also acted as a kind of liaison officer for Charles II. In a letter from Maastricht (intercepted by the intelligence services of John Thurloe, Cromwell's secretary of state), he provided an astute summary of the doings of the major European powers in spring 1657. The English government went on to monitor closely his movements in Charles's service. On 5 April 1658 Sir George Downing informed Thurloe of Killigrew's intention to seek the appointment to a vacant post of regimental major. The prospect of such promotion may have necessitated the family's temporary return to The Hague, for on 28 March 1658 the church register of the Walloon Reformed Community there recorded the christening of a daughter, Charlotte-Marguerite (who may have died in infancy, before the end of 1660).
As groom of the bedchamber, Killigrew accompanied Charles on his semi-secret tour of the United Provinces in early September 1658, a tour which probably took the king as far north as Friesland, where he visited the Frisian stadholder. On 18 October Downing reported to Thurloe that he had ‘had an accompt from one Killigrew of his bed-chamber’ (Vander Motten, ‘Lost Years’, 324) of Charles's complete itinerary and the company he kept. It is not clear whether such information, if indeed supplied by Killigrew, amounted to a form of treason or was merely an apology for the king's presence on Dutch soil. From the five letters which Charles wrote to Willem Frederik between March 1659 and April 1662, it is evident that even after 1658 Killigrew continued to enjoy the protection and friendship of the monarch and the stadholder. Both men evidently co-operated in protecting Killigrew's interests, as on the occasion of the request which John Milton, Latin secretary to Cromwell, sent to Killigrew's Frisian paymasters on 27 January 1659, pleading that he be not allowed to escape an outstanding English debt. In the final months of the exile, Killigrew was not exclusively involved in state matters. In a letter from Maastricht dated 11 February 1659 and sent to an unknown friend, he declined the latter's offer to become a Catholic, criticizing at length the idolatrous practices of the church of Rome and its position on transubstantiation (Durham University Library, Cosin MS BI 13).
The theatre manager, 1660–1676
Although Pepys on 24 May 1660 recorded meeting Killigrew, ‘a gentleman of great esteem with the King’ (Pepys, 1.157), on board the Charles, the dramatist's wife, pregnant again, and the three children presumably prolonged their stay in Maastricht. Not until after the birth of Robert (baptized on 4 July 1660) did Charlotte move to London. Before the end of the year, she and her three sons were included in an act of naturalization, which in due course was ratified by the king. In May 1662 Charlotte became keeper of the sweet coffer for the queen, and in June she was made first lady of the privy chamber. Despite his recent re-establishment in London, Killigrew on 12 September 1660 acquired the rights of citizenship of Maastricht. His motives for doing so almost five years after settling down at Maastricht are a matter for speculation. As late as 30 November 1660, the king intervened on his behalf with the Frisian stadholder, asking that Killigrew be allowed to retain his military appointment, which he risked losing as a result of the council of state's plans to cut the expenditure for defence. In the course of 1660 Killigrew petitioned the king for a variety of offices and commodities, including the keepership of the armory at Greenwich, ‘in consideration of his expense in attendance on His Majesty abroad’ (CSP dom., 1660–61, 101), and a parcel of white plate worth £1200 that had belonged to Cromwell. But the financial compensations which Charles must have promised him during the exile had by the end of 1660 not yet materialized—hence perhaps the dramatist's request to retain his Dutch commandership. Not until November 1661 was he granted an annual pension of £500 as a groom of the bedchamber. By then he had completely changed his mind about his overseas obligations, for on 31 October 1661 the king once again intervened with the stadholder, asking him to allow Killigrew to transfer his company, supposedly for health reasons. The favour was granted and in January 1662 Killigrew's company was sold to one Jeremy Roper for 14,000 guilders.
The most singular mark of the king's esteem was of course the licence which in July 1660 he gave to Killigrew and Sir William Davenant ‘to erect two playhouses … to control the charges to be demanded, and the payments to actors … and absolutely suppressing all other playhouses’ (CSP dom., 1660–61, 124). Both men thus obtained a virtual monopoly to form two companies of players, produce all and any dramatic entertainments, and license all plays submitted to them. Killigrew's company, known as the King's Men, began acting at the Red Bull on 5 November 1660; they moved to Gibbons's Tennis Court, Vere Street, on 8 November. Davenant's company, under the patronage of the duke of York, possibly started their operations at Salisbury Court by 15 November; they moved to their Lincoln's Inn Fields theatre, fully equipped with movable scenery, in June 1661. When Claricilla was revived at Vere Street, on 4 July 1661, Pepys remarked on how empty Killigrew's theatre was ‘since the opera begun’ (Pepys, 2.132).
On 7 May 1663 the King's Company began acting at the new Theatre Royal, Bridges Street, Killigrew holding both acting and building shares in the company. Killigrew boasted a group of experienced actors and actresses drawn from various earlier troupes, including Michael Mohun, Nicholas Burt, Charles Hart, John Lacy, Anne Marshall, and Elizabeth Weaver. Davenant had to compete with a less seasoned troupe but managed to secure the services of Thomas Betterton, who had briefly been a member of the King's Company. Killigrew also had the exclusive rights to a large repertory of pre-Restoration plays, which included nearly all of Ben Jonson's works and many of Shakespeare's. Despite the heavy preponderance of old plays in the repertory of the Theatre Royal in the 1660s, there were few practising playwrights from the earlier period, but several new gentlemen dramatists attached themselves to Killigrew's company. Sir Robert Howard, holder of one quarter of the shares at Bridges Street, and James and Edward Howard wrote for his company in the early 1660s; so did Roger Boyle, earl of Orrery, and possibly Sir George Etherege. Of the professional playwrights Killigrew went on to recruit, none was more important that John Dryden. After negotiations with both companies, he became in April 1668 a playwright-sharer with the King's Company, agreeing to provide them with three plays annually in return for one and one-quarter shares. (Dryden broke the agreement in 1678.) Apparently Nathaniel Lee had a similar agreement, and so did Thomas D'Urfey during part of his career. Elkanah Settle also allied himself with the company in 1673.
As Killigrew's annotated copy of his Comedies and Tragedies (1664) preserved in the library of Worcester College, Oxford, demonstrates, he was ambitious enough to prepare his own plays for production on the new, scenic stage. The Princess was revived at Vere Street on 29 November 1661, ‘the first time … since before the troubles’ in Pepys's words (Pepys, 2.223). Claricilla and The Parson's Wedding proved the most successful of Killigrew's plays. Clandestinely performed at Gibbons's Tennis Court in 1653, Claricilla (one of the stock plays of Mohun's troupe at the Red Bull in 1660) was successively revived at Vere Street on 1 December 1660 and 4 July 1661, at court in January 1663, and at Bridges Street in March 1669. A performance of The Parson's Wedding, ‘acted all by women’ according to Pepys (ibid., 5.289), was scheduled at Bridges Street on 5 or 6 October 1664; it was given again at Lincoln's Inn Fields in June 1672. Much more popular, however, than any of his plays was Aphra Behn's The Rover, a lively adaptation of Thomaso, first produced at Dorset Gardens in March 1677. (As groom of the bedchamber, Killigrew had probably introduced Behn to Charles's intelligence service in 1666.) Despite the manifest advantages Killigrew enjoyed as the manager of the King's Company, he appears to have had insufficient practical sense of the theatre to compete successfully with Davenant, a professional playwright and theatrical innovator. Nevertheless, his theatrical initiatives were by no means despicable. Before the end of 1660, Killigrew beat Davenant in the race to introduce actresses on the stage, a novelty made official in the April 1662 patent issued to him, decreeing that all female parts were to be played by women. On 2 August 1664 he told Pepys of his plans to set up a nursery theatre at Moorfields, ‘were we shall have the best Scenes and Machines, the best Musique … and to that end hath sent for voices and painters and other persons from Italy’ (Pepys, 5.230). And in February and September 1667 he boasted to the same interlocutor of the many improvements at his theatre, including the importation of distinguished Italian musicians.
Killigrew's company shared of course in the misfortunes that befell the London stage. In June 1665 the theatres were closed down on account of the plague and on 25 January 1672 a fire destroyed the Theatre Royal, forcing Killigrew's company to move to the playhouse at Lincoln's Inn Fields, recently vacated by the Duke's Men. It is undeniable, however, that the King's Company's problems must be attributed to Killigrew's dubious handling of his theatrical holdings, resulting in conflicts with the disgruntled sharing actors, and, indeed, his own son Charles. As early as 1663, Killigrew had made over his building shares to his brother-in-law Sir John Sayers, to be held in trust for him; he also temporarily delegated the direction of the company to Hart, Mohun, and Lacy. After the death of Sir Henry Herbert, who in 1661–2 had sued the patent-holders for usurping some of his powers, Killigrew was appointed master of the revels on 1 May 1673 but in February 1677 he resigned the post to his son Charles. Only three weeks later, he was forced by law to turn over to Charles his patent and governorship of the company (in 1682 it was discovered that his theatrical property had not been his to control).
Trying to cope with his expensive habits of getting and spending, including his theatrical investments, Killigrew had to borrow money from his wife, whose interests in the Piershil inheritance had been safeguarded by a 1655 contract. Throughout his term as a patentee he petitioned the king for diverse gifts and licences. In December 1663 he requested the grant of a lease of nineteen messuages ‘in Collier Row, Stepney, and Shoreditch, the manor of Puriton-cum-Crandon, and a house in Bridgewater’, worth £88 a year (CSP dom., 1660–70, 686). In March 1670, in consideration of his ‘long and faithful services’ (ibid., 1670, 133), he was given the benefit of a bond worth £500, due to the king from one Thomas Pritchard. And the state papers for the years 1671 to 1676 show that he obtained a patent to license ‘pedlars and petty chapmen’ (ibid., 1671, 216) and claimed the right to grant licences for lotteries. After 1676 his interest in the theatre business gradually dwindled.
Final years, 1676–1683
According to Pepys, writing on 13 February 1668, Killigrew had been given the title of ‘King's fool or jester … and may with privilege revile or jeere any body … without offence’ (Pepys, 9.66–7). Countless anecdotes survive to prove that it was during his years at Charles's court that Killigrew established his reputation as a flippant conversationalist endowed with a caustic wit. Whether or not this is indicative of a fundamental change of mind, in his declining years he took a fancy to having himself portrayed in a very different guise, first, in the 1670s, as a pilgrim of St James, and after 1680, bearded as St Paul, carrying a sword, the emblem of martyrdom. Financial worries, however, must have weighed the family down, as is suggested by his petition, dated 16 January 1680, for payment of arrears on his pension in the amount of £850.
In 1683 Pier Maria Mazzantini, an Italian physician, asked the king for leave to practise the antidote Orvietan, claiming that it had saved Killigrew's life. ‘Weak and indisposed in body’, on 15 March 1683 the dramatist drew up his will. He requested to be buried at Westminster Abbey, together with his first wife and his sister Elizabeth (d. 1681). The largest part of his estate, both ‘real and personal’, and the arrears on his pension went to his son Henry, who was also made the sole executor. Charlotte and her children were left unmentioned. Killigrew died at Whitehall on 19 March 1683. Within days after her husband's death Charlotte petitioned the king for relief, arguing that she had brought ‘a considerable fortune to her husband … though of late by the insinuation of ill people his affections were withdrawn from her so that he has left her and her two youngest sons in a very necessitous condition’ (CSP dom., 1683, 220). The king obliged by granting her an annual pension of £200; he also contributed £50 to the funeral. Charlotte was buried on 22 April 1715, having survived her children by several years. Roger, born on 17 September 1663, had died prior to July 1694; Robert, a brigadier-general, was killed at the battle of Almanzor on 14 April 1707; and Elizabeth, born on 3 July 1666, may have been buried at St Martin's on 21 April 1690.
J. P. Vander Motten
Sources
A. Harbage, Thomas Killigrew, cavalier dramatist, 1612–1683 (1930) · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Thomas Killigrew's “lost years”, 1655–1660’, Neophilologus, 82 (1998), 311–34 · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Unpublished letters of Charles II’, Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660–1700, 18/1 (1994), 17–26 · J. W. Stoye, ‘The whereabouts of Thomas Killigrew, 1639–41’, Review of English Studies, 25 (1949), 245–8 · Pepys, Diary, vols. 1–9 · J. Lough and D. E. L. Crane, ‘Thomas Killigrew and the possessed nuns of Loudun: the text of a letter of 1635’, Durham University Journal, 78 (1985–6), 259–68 · M. W. Walsh, ‘Thomas Killigrew's cap and bells’, Theatre Notebook, 38 (1984), 99–105 · J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Thomas Killigrew: a biographical note’, Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire, 53/3 (1975), 769–75 · M. Rogers, ‘“Golden houses for shadows”: some portraits of Thomas Killigrew and his family’, Art and patronage in the Caroline courts: essays in honour of Sir Oliver Millar, ed. D. Howarth (1993), 220–42 · Margerie Killigrew's will, 22 May 1623, PRO, PROB 11/146, sig. 71 · Sir Robert Killigrew's will, 12 Sept 1633, PRO, PROB 11/164, sig. 69 · will, 15 March 1683, PRO, PROB 11/372, sig. 36 · CSP dom., 1660–85 · A. Pritchard, ‘According to Wood: sources of A. Wood's lives of poets and dramatists’, Review of English Studies, new ser., 28 (1977), 268–89, 407–20
Archives
BL, papers, Add. MS 20032 | Bodl. Oxf., Clarendon MSS · TCD, Trinity College MSS
Likenesses
A. Van Dyck, double portrait, oils, 1638, Royal Collection [see illus.] · A. Van Dyck, oils, 1638, Weston Park Foundation, Shropshire; copy, NPG · W. Sheppard, oils, 1650, NPG · J. J. Van den Berghe, stipple, 1650 (after W. Sheppard), BM, NPG · pencil drawing, 1650 (after W. Sheppard), NPG · W. Faithorne, line engraving, 1664 (after W. Sheppard), BM, NPG; repro. in T. Killigrew, Comedies and tragedies (1664) · mezzotint, 1670–1679, BM · J. vander Vaart, mezzotint, c.1680 (after W. Wissing), BM · mezzotint, BM, NPG
Wealth at death
two houses in Scotland Yard: will, PRO, PROB 11/372, sig. 36, 15 March 1683
© Oxford University Press 2004–5
All rights reserved: see legal notice
J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15538, accessed 24 Sept 2005]
Thomas Killigrew (1612-1683): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15538.
In Margaret or Margery Saunders (Leigh)'s will dated 22 May 1623, Thomas Killigrew was named as heir.
In Sir Robert Killigrew's will dated 12 September 1632, Thomas Killigrew was named as heir.
Thomas Killigrew married Cecilia Crofts on 29 June 1636 in Oatlands, Sussex. Thomas Killigrew was widowed on 1 January 1637/38 on the death of his wife Cecilia Crofts.
He was appointed Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the Duke of York 1 May 1649.
He was the notorious groom of the bedchamber to King Chas II. A page to King Chas I in 1633, and was sometime Resident at Venice, but is chiefly known for his intimate relations with Chas II. Mentioned by Pepys, had houses where Scotland Yard now stands (old court of Whitehall).
More information about Thomas Killigrew may be found at http://www.lowell-libson.com/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=5&tabindex=4&objectid=322941&categoryid=6556&page=7&keyword=&sold=.
Thomas Killigrew married secondly Charlotte de Hesse on 28 January 1655 in The Hague, The Netherlands.
Thomas was a dramatist & courtier.
For additional information see: " LoveToKnow 1911 Online Encyclopedia. © 2003, 2004 LoveToKnow. http://56.1911encyclopedia.org/K/KI/KILLIGREW_ELIZABETH.htm.
Thomas was appointed a Groom of the Bedchamber to King Charles II. He had to wait in the King's chamber during his Majesty's dressing, and wait at dinner (when he dines prvately), take wine, etc. from the servants, and give it to the Lords, to serve his Majesty. When the Gentlemen of the Bed-Chamber are not there, they perform the Office of dressing the Sovereign, and have their waiting Weekly, two and two, by turns.
These offices were in the gift of the Crown. The procedures for swearing and admitting them into waiting were the same as those for the gentlemen of the bedchamber.
The number of grooms fluctuated considerably. Under Charles II there were usually 12. Extra grooms were regularly appointed under Charles II and occasionally thereafter on 2 February 1661.
Letters Patent permitting Thomas Killigrew to erect a theatre and perform plays therein, in Cities of London and Westminster.
In 1673, he was appointed 'Master of the Revels'.
See Oxford Dictionary of National Biography for further information: www.oxforddnb.com/.
Thomas Killigrew (1612-1683) was a dramatist and wit who played an important role in the re-establishment of the theatre following Charles’ return. As a boy he had been page to Charles I and followed his son into exile. In 1660 Killigrew and Sir William Davenant were granted letters patent by the King to establish theatres. Two companies were formed: the King’s Players, led by Killigrew, and the Duke’s Players led by Davenant. Killigrew’s company played first at Gibbon’s Tennis-Court in Clare Market but in 1663 moved to the new Theatre Royal in what is now Drury Lane. Davenant’s company, after a period at the old Salisbury Court theatre, moved to Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and eventually in 1732 to the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden. These two theatres, subsequently rebuilt, were the only theatres in London licensed for dramatic performances until the mid 19th century and still survive as major performance venues today.
Thomas died on 18 March 1682/83 in Whitehall, London, Westminster, Middlesex, aged 71. Died in Oct 1682 according to his bible notes. He was buried on 18 March 1682/83 in Westminster Abbey, London. Mr Thomas Killigrew, in the Abbey.
His will was proved on 19 March 1682/83 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Will of Thomas Killigrew, Groom of His Majestiy's Bedchamber of Saint Martin in the Fields, Middlesex, dated 19 March 1683.
-Killigrew, Thomas (1612-1683), English dramatist and wit, son of Sir Robert Killigrew, was born in Lothbury, London, on the 7th of February 1612. Pepys says that as a boy he satisfied his love of the stage by volunteering at the Red Bull to take the part of a devil, thus seeing the play for nothing. In 1633 he became page to Charles I., and was faithfully attached to the royal house throughout his life. In 1635 he was in France, and has left an account (printed in the European Magazine, 1803) of the exorcizing of an evil spirit from some nuns at Loudun. In 1641 he published two tragi-comedies, The Prisoners and Claracilla, both of which had probably been produced before 1636. In 1647 he followed Prince Charles into exile. His wit, easy morals and accommodating temper recommended him to Charles, who sent him to Venice in 1651 as his representative. Early in the following year he was recalled at the request of the Venetian ambassador in Paris. At the Restoration he became groom of the bedchamber to Charles II., and later chamberlain to the queen. He received in 1660, with Sir William Davenant, a patent to erect a new playhouse, the performances in which were to be independent of the censorship of the master of the revels. This infringement of his prerogative caused a dispute with Sir Henry Herbert, then holder of the office, but Killigrew settled the matter by generous concessions. He acted independently of Davenant, his company being known as the King's Servants. They played at the Red Bull, until in 1663 he built for them the original Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Pepys writes in 1664 that Killigrew intended to have four opera seasons of six weeks each during the year, and with this end in view paid several visits to Rome to secure singers and scene decorators. In 1664 his plays were published as Comedies and Tragedies. Written by Thomas Killigrew. They are Claracilla; The Princess, or Love at First Sight; The Parson's Wedding; The Pilgrim; Cicilia and Clorinda, or Lov\ in Arms; Thomaso, or the Wanderer; and Bellamira, her Dream, or Love of Shadows. The Parson's Wedding (actec c. 1640, reprinted in the various editions of Dodsley's Old Plays and in the Ancient British Drama) is an unsavoury play which displays nevertheless considerable wit, and some of its jokes were appropriated by Congreve. It was revived after the Restoration in 1664 and 1672 or 1673, all the parts being in both cases taken by women. Killigrew succeeded Sir Henry Herbert as master of the revels in 1673. He died at Whitehal on the igth of March 1683. He was twice married, first t< Cecilia Crofts, maid of honor to Queen Henrietta Maria, anc secondly to Charlotte de Hesse, by whom he had a son Thomas (1657-1719), who was the author of a successful little piece Chit-Chat, played at Drury Lane on the i4th of February 1719 with Mrs Oldfield in the part of Florinda.
Child of Thomas Killigrew and Cecilia Crofts
- Henry Killigrew+ b. 9 Apr 1637, d. b 16 Dec 1705
Children of Thomas Killigrew and Charlotte de Hesse
- Charles Killigrew+ b. 29 Dec 1655, d. b 4 Jan 1724/25
- Thomas Killigrew b. Feb 1656/57, d. Jul 1719
- Gen Robert Killigrew b. c 1659, d. 25 Apr 1707
- William Killigrew b. 21 Jun 1662
- Roger Killigrew b. 2 Oct 1663
Child of Thomas Killigrew
- Elizabeth Killigrew b. 7 Jul 1666
Thomas Killigrew
(February 1656/57 - July 1719)
Thomas Killigrew was born in February 1656/57 in Maestricht?, The Netherlands. He was the son of Thomas Killigrew and Charlotte de Hesse. They was listed as Charlotte de Hesse's child at naturalization on 3 June 1664. Thomas was a playwright and courtier, in London. He was Gentleman of the Bedchamber to George II, when Prince of Wales.
Thomas died in July 1719 aged 62. He was buried on 21 July 1719 in Kensington, Middlesex, England.
Thomas died in July 1719 aged 62. He was buried on 21 July 1719 in Kensington, Middlesex, England.
Thomas Killigrew
( - before 1500)
Thomas Killigrew was born in Penryn, Cornwall. He was the son of Thomas Killigrew and Agnes Unknown (Killigrew).
Thomas died before 1500.
Thomas Killigrew was mentioned as being deceased in the will of Thomas Killigrew dated 22 March 1500/1.
Thomas died before 1500.
Thomas Killigrew was mentioned as being deceased in the will of Thomas Killigrew dated 22 March 1500/1.
Thomas Killigrew
(before 1500 - )
Thomas Killigrew was born before 1500 in Cornwall. He was the fourth son. He was named in the will of his grandfather Thomas Killigrew of Penryn 1500. Possibly the Thomas Killigrew listed in 1543 subsidy at Budock, lands 2, with John & Alex [Stoate] or his cousin 2nd son of Robert. He was the son of John Killigrew and Jane or Joan or Maude Petit.
Thomas Killigrew and Agnes Unknown (Killigrew), John Killigrew, Agnes Killigrew (Buscarnon), Robert Killigrew, Thomas Killigrew, Elinor Killigrew and Elizabeth Killigrew were beneficiaries in Thomas Killigrew's will dated 22 March 1500/1. He was bequeathed one silver cup by his grandfather.
Thomas Killigrew and Agnes Unknown (Killigrew), John Killigrew, Agnes Killigrew (Buscarnon), Robert Killigrew, Thomas Killigrew, Elinor Killigrew and Elizabeth Killigrew were beneficiaries in Thomas Killigrew's will dated 22 March 1500/1. He was bequeathed one silver cup by his grandfather.
Thomas Killigrew
(before 1505 - )
Thomas Killigrew was born before 1505. He was the second son.. He was the son of Robert Killigrew and Elizabeth Morys (of Wolstane).
Thomas Killigrew
(before 1475 - 20 September 1513)
Thomas Killigrew was born before 1475 in 'Arwenack', Budock, Cornwall. He was the third son and heir. He was the son of John Killigrew (Thomas?) and Mary Boleigh.
Thomas Killigrew married Jane Darrell.
(12 Hen VII); at Trelees, Defeazance of gift (of mortgage bond).
Thomas Kylligrewe de Penrynburgh, esquire = (1); William Skeberyowe and John Skeberyowe his son and heir = (2)-(3); Recites: (a) gift of same date by (2)-(3) to (1) and his heirs for ever, of all their messuages, lands, tenements, rents, services and reversions in Trelees iuxta Trevehan;
(b) release and quitclaim, of same date at Trelees, by (2)-(3) to (1) and his heirs, of all right in the property.
Nevertheless, if (2)-(3) pay 1500 lb of white tin uncoined (quindecimcentenas libr' albi stanni non coinati), of good, pure and marketable metal, at Truruburgh, at the coinage of white tin to be held there at the Nativity of St John Baptist 1501 [?] (millesimo CCCCmo LXXXXXImo), then the charter of feoffment shall be null and void; otherwise, it stands in its strength.
John Trevenor, Richard Boneython, James Trefusys.
Seal.
Trelees iuxta Trevehan [= Trelease in Kea].
Tied to AR/1/28 by a thong of parchment; a small sheet of paper (19th-century) lists 3 places called Trelease (but 'Trelease', supposedly in Merther, is an error for Treleage in Merther; the error comes from Symons's Gazetteer). For the correct identification, compare AR/4/30; and the Skeberyowe family is attested nearby in Kenwyn parish at about the same date. Date: 26th Jun 1497.
Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Thomas Killigrew and Jane Darrell were mentioned in a civil court action in Cornwall. Kyllygrewe v Harryes. Plaintiffs: Thomas Kyllygrewe, of Arwynnek, and Jane, his wife. Defendants: John Harryes and Richard Candyche. Subject: Detention of deeds relating to messuages and land in Dunmow and Olyff. Essex. 2 documents. Date: 1486-1493, or 1504-1515.
He may be the Thomas Kylligrewe of Arwenack bequeathed one silver cup in the will of Thomas Kylligrewe of Penryn dated 22 March 1500/01. Thomas Killigrew was the subject of an Inquisition 5 Henry VIII (1513). He was named in will of his cousin Thomas Killigrew of Penryn 1500 ( of Arwennack).
Thomas died on 20 September 1513 in Biscay, Aragon, Spain.
Thomas Killigrew married Jane Darrell.
(12 Hen VII); at Trelees, Defeazance of gift (of mortgage bond).
Thomas Kylligrewe de Penrynburgh, esquire = (1); William Skeberyowe and John Skeberyowe his son and heir = (2)-(3); Recites: (a) gift of same date by (2)-(3) to (1) and his heirs for ever, of all their messuages, lands, tenements, rents, services and reversions in Trelees iuxta Trevehan;
(b) release and quitclaim, of same date at Trelees, by (2)-(3) to (1) and his heirs, of all right in the property.
Nevertheless, if (2)-(3) pay 1500 lb of white tin uncoined (quindecimcentenas libr' albi stanni non coinati), of good, pure and marketable metal, at Truruburgh, at the coinage of white tin to be held there at the Nativity of St John Baptist 1501 [?] (millesimo CCCCmo LXXXXXImo), then the charter of feoffment shall be null and void; otherwise, it stands in its strength.
John Trevenor, Richard Boneython, James Trefusys.
Seal.
Trelees iuxta Trevehan [= Trelease in Kea].
Tied to AR/1/28 by a thong of parchment; a small sheet of paper (19th-century) lists 3 places called Trelease (but 'Trelease', supposedly in Merther, is an error for Treleage in Merther; the error comes from Symons's Gazetteer). For the correct identification, compare AR/4/30; and the Skeberyowe family is attested nearby in Kenwyn parish at about the same date. Date: 26th Jun 1497.
Manor of Tregarn (Tregarne in St Keverne) Free tenants: Monglegh (Mongleath in Budock). Thomas Kelygrew de Arwennak, common suit of court; 2 shillings.
Thomas Killigrew and Jane Darrell were mentioned in a civil court action in Cornwall. Kyllygrewe v Harryes. Plaintiffs: Thomas Kyllygrewe, of Arwynnek, and Jane, his wife. Defendants: John Harryes and Richard Candyche. Subject: Detention of deeds relating to messuages and land in Dunmow and Olyff. Essex. 2 documents. Date: 1486-1493, or 1504-1515.
He may be the Thomas Kylligrewe of Arwenack bequeathed one silver cup in the will of Thomas Kylligrewe of Penryn dated 22 March 1500/01. Thomas Killigrew was the subject of an Inquisition 5 Henry VIII (1513). He was named in will of his cousin Thomas Killigrew of Penryn 1500 ( of Arwennack).
Thomas died on 20 September 1513 in Biscay, Aragon, Spain.
Child of Thomas Killigrew and Jane Darrell
- Alexander Killigrew b. c 1493
Thomas Killigrew
(21 July 1663 - )
Thomas Killigrew was christened on 21 July 1663 in St Martin in the Fields, Westminster. He was the son of Sir Robert Killigrew and Barbara Unknown (Killigrew).
Thomas Killigrew
(23 February 1694 - 1719)
Thomas Killigrew was born on 23 February 1694. He was the son of Charles Killigrew and Jemima Bockenham.
Killigrew, Thomas (bap. 1694, d. 1719), playwright, was baptized on 23 February 1694, the second son of Charles Killigrew (1655-1724/5), theatre manager, and Jemima, niece of Richard Bokenham, mercer, of London, and the grandson of Thomas Killigrew the elder (1612-1683), with whose son Thomas (1657–1674) he has sometimes been confused. He was probably the author of Chit-Chat, a comedy, first performed at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, on 14 February 1719, and published in two separate editions in the same year. Its strong cast included Barton Booth as Worthy, Robert Wilks as Bellamar, Colley Cibber as Alamode, and Anne Oldfield as Florinda. Described in the prologue as the author's ‘first Coup d'Essay’, Chit-Chat proved one of the most popular plays of the 1718–19 season. It was given eleven performances at Drury Lane between its première and 19 March, and another two at Richmond on 6 and 20 June, the former, ‘by his Royal Highness's Command’ (Avery, 542), celebrating the opening of William Pinkethman's new theatre. Chit-Chat was also a financial success: in addition to two author benefits and a sum of 150 guineas presented him by the prince and the princess of Wales, Killigrew secured the patronage of John Campbell, second duke of Argyll, ‘whose interest was so powerfully supported, that it was said the profits of his play amounted to above a thousand pounds’, according to Thomas Whincop (Nicoll, 18). In letters addressed to Booth and Steele, the critic John Dennis expressed his indignation at the success of such trivia as Chit-Chat and other comedies, when his own tragedy The Invader of his Country had never even reached the stage. Killigrew contributed ‘The Fable of Aumilius and the Statue of Venus’ to Miscellanea aurea, or, The Golden Medley, a collection of ‘epistolary essays in prose and verse’ (1720). He was buried at Kensington on 21 July 1719.
J. P. Vander Motten
Sources
Highfill, Burnim & Langhans, BDA, vols. 9, 11 · E. L. Avery, ed., The London stage, 1660–1800, pt 2: 1700–1729 (1960) · A. Harbage, Thomas Killigrew, cavalier dramatist, 1612–1683 (1930) · A. Nicoll, A history of early eighteenth-century drama, 1700–1750, 2nd edn (1929) · The critical works of John Dennis, ed. E. N. Hooker, 2 (1943) · DNB
© Oxford University Press 2004–5
J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Killigrew, Thomas (bap. 1694, d. 1719)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15539, accessed 24 Sept 2005]
Thomas Killigrew (bap. 1694, d. 1719): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15539.
Thomas died in 1719.
Killigrew, Thomas (bap. 1694, d. 1719), playwright, was baptized on 23 February 1694, the second son of Charles Killigrew (1655-1724/5), theatre manager, and Jemima, niece of Richard Bokenham, mercer, of London, and the grandson of Thomas Killigrew the elder (1612-1683), with whose son Thomas (1657–1674) he has sometimes been confused. He was probably the author of Chit-Chat, a comedy, first performed at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, on 14 February 1719, and published in two separate editions in the same year. Its strong cast included Barton Booth as Worthy, Robert Wilks as Bellamar, Colley Cibber as Alamode, and Anne Oldfield as Florinda. Described in the prologue as the author's ‘first Coup d'Essay’, Chit-Chat proved one of the most popular plays of the 1718–19 season. It was given eleven performances at Drury Lane between its première and 19 March, and another two at Richmond on 6 and 20 June, the former, ‘by his Royal Highness's Command’ (Avery, 542), celebrating the opening of William Pinkethman's new theatre. Chit-Chat was also a financial success: in addition to two author benefits and a sum of 150 guineas presented him by the prince and the princess of Wales, Killigrew secured the patronage of John Campbell, second duke of Argyll, ‘whose interest was so powerfully supported, that it was said the profits of his play amounted to above a thousand pounds’, according to Thomas Whincop (Nicoll, 18). In letters addressed to Booth and Steele, the critic John Dennis expressed his indignation at the success of such trivia as Chit-Chat and other comedies, when his own tragedy The Invader of his Country had never even reached the stage. Killigrew contributed ‘The Fable of Aumilius and the Statue of Venus’ to Miscellanea aurea, or, The Golden Medley, a collection of ‘epistolary essays in prose and verse’ (1720). He was buried at Kensington on 21 July 1719.
J. P. Vander Motten
Sources
Highfill, Burnim & Langhans, BDA, vols. 9, 11 · E. L. Avery, ed., The London stage, 1660–1800, pt 2: 1700–1729 (1960) · A. Harbage, Thomas Killigrew, cavalier dramatist, 1612–1683 (1930) · A. Nicoll, A history of early eighteenth-century drama, 1700–1750, 2nd edn (1929) · The critical works of John Dennis, ed. E. N. Hooker, 2 (1943) · DNB
© Oxford University Press 2004–5
J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Killigrew, Thomas (bap. 1694, d. 1719)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15539, accessed 24 Sept 2005]
Thomas Killigrew (bap. 1694, d. 1719): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15539.
Thomas died in 1719.
Thomas Killigrew
(26 November 1650 - 28 March 1661)
Thomas Killigrew was christened on 26 November 1650 in St Gluvias, Cornwall. He was the son of Simon Killigrew and Elizabeth Orell (Ross or Roose).
Thomas was buried on 28 March 1661 in St Gluvias, Cornwall. Thomas Killegrew, son of Simon.
Thomas was buried on 28 March 1661 in St Gluvias, Cornwall. Thomas Killegrew, son of Simon.
Thomas Killigrew
(10 December 1823 - )
Thomas Killigrew was christened on 10 December 1823 in Chatham, Kent. He was the son of William Killigrew and Elizabeth Unknown.
Thomas Killigrew
(3 January 1716/17 - )
Thomas Killigrew was christened on 3 January 1716/17 in St Luke, Chelsea, London. He was the son of Capt Thomas Killigrew and Olive Unknown.
Thomas Killigrew
(29 February 1743/44 - )
Thomas Killigrew was christened on 29 February 1743/44 in St Michael, Cornhill, London. He was the son of Thomas Guilford Killigrew and Catherine Chubb.
Capt Thomas Killigrew
Capt Thomas Killigrew married Olive Unknown.
Child of Capt Thomas Killigrew and Olive Unknown
- Thomas Killigrew b. 3 Jan 1716/17
Thomas Guilford Killigrew
(4 February 1719/20 - 1782)
Thomas Guilford Killigrew was also known as Thomas Guildford in records.
Tregellas states: Thomas Guildford Killigrew, I find from Notes and Queries, 1873, p. 224, and also from other sources, including information[69] with which I have been favoured by Mrs. Boddam Castle, that he married Miss Catharine Chubb, a distant relative, after having much impoverished himself in the Stuart cause in 1745, and that he settled in Bristol for the sake of economy. He died in 1782 without issue. At his death Mrs. Killigrew adopted her great niece, Mary Iago, afterwards married to Daniel Wait, Mayor of Bristol, in 1805. On the death of Mrs. Killigrew, in 1810, the family plate and portraits (one of the latter, Sir Peter Killigrew, by Sir Godfrey Kneller, and another, of Thomas Guildford Killigrew himself) passed to Mrs. Wait by will, and from her to Mrs. Boddam Castle, wife of Mr. Boddam Castle, barrister-at-law, now residing at Clifton. Some of the plate is more than 150 years old; the crest a demi-griffin, with 'T.C.K.' over it.. He was born on 30 January 1719/20 in Westminster, London. He was christened on 4 February 1719/20 in St Anne, Soho, Westminster. He was the son of Charles Killigrew.
Thomas Guilford Killigrew married Catherine Chubb on 1 March 1740 in London. Thomas Killigrew of St Martin's in the Fields, Gent and Catherine Chubb of the same, spinster.
She was distant relation. Mrs Killigrew adopted her great niece Mary Iago who married Daniel Wait, Mayor of Bristol, in 1805, - their descendant Mrs Boddam Castle had portraits. His presumed wife is Katherine Killigrew, widow of Bristol, Gloucestershire whose will was proved 24 Nov 1809 PROB 11/1505.
Thomas died in 1782.
His will was proved on 31 December 1782 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Will of Thomas Guildford Killigrew, otherwise Thomas Killigrew, gentleman of Bristol, Gloucestershire.
Tregellas states: Thomas Guildford Killigrew, I find from Notes and Queries, 1873, p. 224, and also from other sources, including information[69] with which I have been favoured by Mrs. Boddam Castle, that he married Miss Catharine Chubb, a distant relative, after having much impoverished himself in the Stuart cause in 1745, and that he settled in Bristol for the sake of economy. He died in 1782 without issue. At his death Mrs. Killigrew adopted her great niece, Mary Iago, afterwards married to Daniel Wait, Mayor of Bristol, in 1805. On the death of Mrs. Killigrew, in 1810, the family plate and portraits (one of the latter, Sir Peter Killigrew, by Sir Godfrey Kneller, and another, of Thomas Guildford Killigrew himself) passed to Mrs. Wait by will, and from her to Mrs. Boddam Castle, wife of Mr. Boddam Castle, barrister-at-law, now residing at Clifton. Some of the plate is more than 150 years old; the crest a demi-griffin, with 'T.C.K.' over it.. He was born on 30 January 1719/20 in Westminster, London. He was christened on 4 February 1719/20 in St Anne, Soho, Westminster. He was the son of Charles Killigrew.
Thomas Guilford Killigrew married Catherine Chubb on 1 March 1740 in London. Thomas Killigrew of St Martin's in the Fields, Gent and Catherine Chubb of the same, spinster.
She was distant relation. Mrs Killigrew adopted her great niece Mary Iago who married Daniel Wait, Mayor of Bristol, in 1805, - their descendant Mrs Boddam Castle had portraits. His presumed wife is Katherine Killigrew, widow of Bristol, Gloucestershire whose will was proved 24 Nov 1809 PROB 11/1505.
Thomas died in 1782.
His will was proved on 31 December 1782 at the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Will of Thomas Guildford Killigrew, otherwise Thomas Killigrew, gentleman of Bristol, Gloucestershire.
Children of Thomas Guilford Killigrew and Catherine Chubb
- Mary Killigrew b. 23 Nov 1742
- Thomas Killigrew b. 29 Feb 1743/44
Unknown Killigrew
(21 December 1583 - )
Unknown Killigrew was stillborn on 21 December 1583 in England; Stillborn child of Mr Killigrewe, buried in the New Churcyard, St Thomas the Apostle. He was the son of Sir Henry Killigrew and Katherine Cooke.
Walter Killigrew
(circa 1593 - circa 1598)
Walter Killigrew was born circa 1593 in Cornwall. He was the son of John Killigrew and Dorothy Monk.
Walter died circa 1598 in Cornwall.
Walter died circa 1598 in Cornwall.
William Killigrew
(before 1695 - )
William Killigrew was born before 1695. He was the son of Capt William Killigrew.