On this day … 9 June 1682

William Patten, a member of the family that owned Patten House in Preston, wrote to Roger Kenyon, the seventeenth-century clerk of the peace or ‘chief executive’ of Lancashire, with the latest salacious gossip from the capital, where he had his lawyer’s chambers.

This gossip included an early example of a restraining order, imposed on a Lord Mulgrave who ‘hathmade soe briske attempts upon the Lady Anne that he is forbidd the Court, St. James Street and St. James’ Parke.’

Lord Mulgrave was the 3rd Earl of Mulgrave and Lady Anne was the seventeen-year-old Princess Anne, later Queen Anne. Mulgrave was thirty-five and something of a rake. Bawdy ballads in the London taverns insinuated that he had seduced her. Anne was married to Prince George of Denmark the following year.

Another item involved a Lord Gray, who, on discovering that his new bride was not a virgin, kidnapped her younger sister. Apparently, he had declared that on marriage he ‘expected a maidens-heade, but not finding it, hee resolved to have one in the family, if any bee left.’

This Lord Gray was possibly the one who was the best friend of the Duke of Monmouth, who also gets a mention in the letter. Gray served with him in his ill-fated invasion three years later and was with him at the Battle of Sedgemoor. Broadsheets at the time described him as Monmouth’s pimp, and it was rumoured that he was cuckolded by Monmouth.

𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐥𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐫

1682, June 9. Gray’s Inn.—Greate matters since my comeinge hether have occurred, for the Lord Mowgrave [Mulgrave] hath made soe briske attempts upon the Lady Anne that he is forbidd the Court, St. James Street and St. James’ Parke. All his offices and employments, as that of Governor of Hull, one of the Attendants of the Bedd Chamber, and some place in the Guards, taken from him and disposed to other persons of quallity.

The Lord Gray was, by the King’s Bench, committed, and still standes committed, for detayneing the body of the Lord Barkley’s younger daughter, and as the reporte goes, hee saith that hee marryed her eldest sister and expected a maidens-heade, but not findeing it, hee resolved to have one in the family, if any bee left; but lest this should tende towards scandelum magnatum, pray keep it to yourself.

The Sheriffs are not as yet pricked, but it is supposed ours will bee Mr. Doddinge, none being his competitors but Mr. Norres and Mr. Bennet Sherrington. The Duke of Munmouth is not to bee discharged till towards the latter ende of the term, and I doe not heare that anythinge then will be offered against him.’


Sources
https://thehistoryjar.com/2019/06/20/the-scandalous-earl-a-leaky-boat-and-a-stuart-princess/
https://warwick.ac.uk/newsandevents/pressreleases/ne1000000086454/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne,_Queen_of_Great_Britain#cite_note-26


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