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John Hales (died 1608)

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Name
  
John Hales

Role
  
Died 1608

Died
  
January 1, 1608


John Hales (died 1608)

Spouse(s)
  
Frideswide Faunt Avis (surname unknown)

Children
  
Mary Hales Jane Hales Bethany Hales

Parent(s)
  
Christopher Hales, Mary Lucy

John Hales (died 1 January 1608) was the owner of the Whitefriars in Coventry at which two of the Marprelate tracts were printed on a secret press. He was the nephew and heir of John Hales, Clerk of the Hanaper, and the nephew of Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote.

Contents

Family

John Hales was the son of Christopher Hales of Coventry and Mary Lucy, the daughter of William Lucy, esquire, and Anne Fermor, and sister of Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote, Warwickshire.

Career

Little is known of Hales' early life. In 1589, at the request of his great-uncle, Sir Richard Knightley of Fawsley, he allowed the secret press on which the Marprelate tracts were being printed to be brought to his house at the Whitefriars in Coventry by Knightley's servant, Stephen Gyfford. The first of the tracts, Martin Marprelate's Epistle, had been printed at the home of Elizabeth Hussey in East Molesey. The second tract, The Epitome had been printed at Sir Richard Knightley's home at Fawsley. At the time, Knightley was married to his second wife, Elizabeth Seymour, daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, and cousin of King Edward VI. Two of the Marprelate tracts, Certain Mineral and Metaphysical Schoolpoints and Hay Any Work for Cooper, as well as John Penry's A View, were printed at the Whitefriars by Robert Waldegrave. The secret press was then moved to the home of Sir Roger Wigston at Wolston Priory.

Henry Sharpe, who had bound the printed copies of the Marprelate tracts, gave evidence implicating Hales, Knightley and the Wigstons, and a special commission appointed on 16 November 1589 by the Privy Council ordered their interrogation, having concluded that:

Sir Richard Knightley, Roger Wigston and John Hales have been acquainted with the printing and publishing of the said books, and have been favourers and abetters of the said Martin Marprelate in his disordered proceedings.

In November 1589 Hales, Elizabeth Hussey, Sir Richard Knightley, and Sir Roger Wigston and his wife were arrested and imprisoned in the Fleet. However their interrogation failed to elicit the identity of Martin Marprelate, which appears to have been unknown to those who harboured the secret press.

On 13 February 1590 Hales, Knightley and the Wigstons were arraigned in the Star Chamber. At trial Knightley admitted to having written to Hales requesting that he provide room for the secret press at Coventry. Despite his plea for the Queen's forgiveness, Knightley was fined £2000, and it was ordered that he be imprisoned at the Queen's pleasure. Hales denied all knowledge of the nature of the books printed on the secret press, and protested, in excuse of his actions, that:

He had great reason, as he thought, to gratify Sir Richard Knightley in anything, to whom he owed much reverence, as he that had married his aunt'.

Hales was fined 1000 marks, and, like Knightley, was ordered committed to prison.

Sir Roger Wigston was fined 500 marks, with a similar order for his imprisonment. His wife, who took upon herself the blame for persuading her husband to allow the printing of the tracts at their home, was fined £1000, and similarly imprisoned at the Queen's pleasure.

The latter part of Hales' life appears to have been uneventful. He left a will dated 30 August 1607 in which he named a son, John, and three daughters, Mary, Jane and Bethany.

Marriages and issue

Hales married firstly, by settlement dated 18 September 1586, Frideswide Faunt, the daughter of William Faunt, esquire, of Foston, Leicestershire, and his second wife, Jane Vincent (d.1585). She was the widow of Roger Cotton, esquire.

He married secondly a wife named Avis, who survived him.

References

John Hales (died 1608) Wikipedia