Henry Trengove, MP, of Nance

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Henry Trengove, MP

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Trengrove, Illogan, Cornwall, England
Death: November 10, 1561 (44-53)
Illogan, , Cornwall, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Alexander Nans, of Trengrove, Knight and Constance de Nans, of Trengrove
Husband of Cheston Trengove
Father of John Nance and Margaret De Nans
Brother of Richard Nans, of Trengrove; Ralph De Nans and Nicholas De Nans

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Henry Trengove, MP, of Nance

  • Henry Trengrove1
  • M, #20339, b. circa 1500, d. 1561
  • Father Richard Nans d. a 1520
  • Henry Trengrove Member of Parliament. He married Christen Nanspygan. Henry Trengrove was born circa 1500 at of Nans-in-Illogen, England. He died in 1561.
  • Family Christen Nanspygan
  • Child
    • John Nance (Trengough) Esq.+ d. a 1626
  • Citations
  • 1.[S6231] Unknown author, Letter from Jim Chester, 3 Nov 1990.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p677.htm#i...
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International Genealogical index

Repository: Family History Library

HENRY TRENGOVE; Male; Birth: About 1510; Death: 1561; Father: ALEXANDER NANS; Mother: CONSTANCE GYLETTE; Spouse: CHESTEN NANSPYAN; Marriage: About 1533 Of Nans, Illogan, Cornwall, England; Batch Number: F505403 Sheet: 019 Source Call No.: 1553274 Type: Film

http://patriot.net/~crouch/up/treng.html

V.d. Henry Trengove of Nans in Illogan 1536, wife Chesten Nanspyan, daughter of Joan Tregender and Henry Nanspyan of Powlsack. [Click for further ancestry]. Henry Tengove died 1561 and his widow died 1578, both in Illogan. Henry first appeared in adult records in 1525 when his older brother Richard Nans places in trust to Henry Trengove lands of their grandfather Henry Gylette's estate, their mother being Constance only child and heir of Henry Gylette. In 1536 Henry appears in the records as Henry Trengove, Esquire, of Nans in Illogan. This is the first year we find the place of Nans mentioned in Illogan Parish. It is my belief that Nans was built by Henry Trengove, and not an ancient family seat as given in some Cornish history books. If so, why weren't older members ever found of record as holding Nance in Illogan. Henry was a member of parliament from Helston (tin capital) in 1553 and began to amass a fortune in 1540, by buying real estate. Over a period of time, Henry purchased some fifty odd parcels of land in 15 or 20 Parishes. Besides buying land, he also loaned money to such people as William Godlphin, knight, and James Bevil, gentleman. Usually large sums of money, where as many as ten or twelve parcels or land would be mentioned as security for these loans. James Bevil failed to pay and he had to forfeit several places in St. Kerverne, said to be the entire Parish! Of all the records on Henry Trengove, we find only once that he sold land, that being an one acre garden. Doubtless his elders were well fixed but Henry Trengove was a very rich man at his death. Only one known son, John Nance, Esquire.

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  • TRENGOVE, alias NANCE, Henry (by 1521-61), of Nance in Illogan, Cornw.
  • Family and Education
  • b. by 1521, 2nd s. of Alexander Trengove of Nance by Margaret, da. and h. of Henry Gilly of Cornw. m. Cheston, da. of Henry Nanspan of Pulsack in Phillack, 1s.1
  • Offices Held
  • Clerk of the coinage, Cornw. by 1542-d.; bailiff, Tywarnhayle stannary by 1547-54.2
  • Biography
  • Henry Nance, as he was generally known, succeeded his father at Nance, the family property situated some ten miles north of Helston, although he had an elder brother Richard, one of whose daughters married John Courtenay and later Thomas Arundell. He was one of the three clerks of the coinage: the other clerks, John Caplyn and Thomas Carnsew, held their offices under the receiver-general of the duchy and the comptroller of the coinage, but Nance was responsible to Sir William Godolphin, vice-warden of the stannaries and the leading landowner in west Cornwall. In 1543 Nance and Carnsew were accused of fraudulent behaviour in the exercise of their offices. John Grenville, who drew on information provided by William Chambers, submitted a memorandum to the Privy Council regarding ‘certain deceitful peising of tin’ in Cornwall. He alleged that, when weighing their own tin and that of their ‘secret friends’, the two clerks used a false balance which made the tin appear to be lighter than it was with the result that ‘the King’s majesty loseth the third penny, which amounteth near to the sum of £160 loss every coinage, and at some coinages the king’s highness doth lose the one half of his grace’s duty by that false means’. In their reply Nance and Carnsew stated that the charge arose from a misunderstanding of the procedure of the Cornish coinage. They claimed that it had long been the custom to weigh the tin first with the ‘King’s beam’ and then with the ‘merchants beam’: the first figure was the official one for purposes of taxation and the second was an unofficial one which was recorded at the request of those wishing to sell their tin in the market. After further investigations Nance was evidently acquitted since he continued to exercise his clerkship until his death.3
  • In February 1553 Nance was one of the freeholders present at the election of Godolphin’s eldest son and Henry Chiverton to the second Edwardian Parliament, and in the following autumn he himself took the second place for Helston, one of the coinage boroughs (where he owned some property) in the first Marian Parliament. He is not one of the Members known to have opposed the reunion with Rome. Three years later Nance was outlawed for failing to settle a debt, but on surrendering himself to the Fleet he was pardoned this misdemeanour. He lived to witness the accession of Elizabeth and died on io Nov. 1561 seised of over 2,400 acres which passed to his son John, married to a daughter of Sir John Arundell of Trerice.4
  • Ref Volumes: 1509-1558
  • Author: J. J. Goring
  • Notes
  • 1. Date of birth estimated from first reference. Vis. Cornw. ed. Vivian, 485.
  • 2. St.Ch.2/31/161; Duchy Cornw. RO, 224, m. 3; information from G. Haslam.
  • 3. C142/134/184; St.Ch.2/31/161.
  • 4. C142/134/184; 219/20/21; CPR, 1555-7, pp. 426-7.
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/tr...
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  • LINKS
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Trengove
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Henry Trengove, MP, of Nance's Timeline

1512
1512
Trengrove, Illogan, Cornwall, England
1533
1533
Nans, Illogan, Cornwall, England
1545
June 16, 1545
1561
November 10, 1561
Age 49
Illogan, , Cornwall, England