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John COWPER [12680]
(-Bef 1664)
Martha HEWKELEY [12663]
Samuel HOLLED [12671]
Anne [12672]
Sir William COWPER 2nd Bt MP For Hertford [12625]
(1639-1706)
Sarah HOLLED Lady [12626]
(1644-1720)
Justice Spencer COWPER MP [12624]
(1669-1728)

 

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Spouses/Children:
1. Pennington GOODERE [12628]

Justice Spencer COWPER MP [12624]

  • Born: 1669
  • Marriage (1): Pennington GOODERE [12628]
  • Died: 10 Dec 1728 aged 59
picture

bullet  General Notes:


Spencer Cowper, MP and barrister was born in 1670, the second son of Sir William Cowper, 2nd Baronet of Hertford, and his wife, Lady Sarah Cowper the diarist, and the daughter of Samuel Holled, a London merchant. William Cowper, 1st Earl Cowper Lord Chancellor of England was his elder brother??
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencer_Cowper

He was admitted to Middle Temple in 1687. He was educated at Winchester College, Winchester, Hampshire, England He was a practising Barrister-at-Law in 1693. In July 1699 he was tried at the Hertford Assizes for the murder of Sarah Stout, a Quaker, and was acquitted. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Beeralston between 1705 and 1710. He was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1713. He was Attorney-General to the Prince of Wales between 1714 and 1717. He was invested as a King's Counsel (K.C.) in 1715. He held the office of Bencher of Lincoln's Inn in 1715. He held the office of Treasurer of Lincoln's Inn in 1715. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Truro between 1715 and 1727. He held the office of Chief Justice of Chester in 1717. He held the office of Bencher of the Middle Temple in 1718. He held the office of Justice of the Court of Common Pleas in 1724. He held the office of Serjeant-at-Law in 1727.
Ref: http://thepeerage.com/p15291.htm

History of Parliment
Constituency
Dates
BERE ALSTON 1 Dec. 1705 - 1710
TRURO 1715 - 1727
Family and Education
b. c.1670, 4th s. of Sir William Cowper, 2nd Bt. M.P., of Ratling Court, Kent by Sarah, da. of Samuel Holled, London merchant; bro. of Lord Chancellor Cowper. educ. Westminster, under Busby; Christ's, Camb. 1686; M. Temple 1687, called 1693, bencher 1719; transf. to L. Inn 1713, bencher 1715. m. (1) 4 Feb. 1688, Pennington (d. 17 Nov. 1727), da. of John Goodere, 4s. 1da.; (2) 25 July 1728, Theodora, wid. of John Stepney, s.p.
Offices Held.
Clerk of the Bridge House estates, Southwark 1690-?
Attorney-gen. to Prince of Wales 1714-27; K.C. 1715; c.j. Chester 1717-27; attorney-gen. to duchy of Lancaster and justice of common pleas 1727-d.; serjeant-at-law 1727.
Biography
A member of the leading Whig family at Hertford, Spencer Cowper is remembered for the cause célèbre at the Hertford assizes in 1699, when he was tried and acquitted on the charge of murdering a Quaker girl.1 Though there was no doubt as to his innocence, the affair so damaged the Cowper interest that it was many years before one of the family ventured to stand for Hertford again. After a brief spell in Parliament under Anne, Cowper was returned for Truro in 1715. He was a member of the secret committee of inquiry into the conduct of the late Queen's ministers, and a manager of the trial of the rebel, Lord Wintoun, in March 1716,2 voting for the septennial bill the following April. After his brother's dismissal from the lord chancellorship in April 1718, he went into opposition, speaking against the Address in November 1718, when he was described as one of the members of the Prince's party most troublesome to the Administration.3 He voted for the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts in January 1719, but against the peerage bill in December of that year. In a debate on the South Sea Company in December 1720 he 'said he deemed the directors to be bankrupts, and that in the eye of the law they were so, or if not, they ought to be declared so by the Parliament';4 in January 1721 he supported a bill restraining them from leaving the kingdom; and in March of that year he seconded a motion that the part of the inquiry concerning Sunderland should be proceeded with without delay.5 On 16 Oct. 1722 he opposed the suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act for one year, moving unsuccessfully that it might be limited to six months.
On the accession of George II Cowper was appointed attorney-general to the duchy of Lancaster and judge of the common pleas. He died 10 Dec. 1728, and was buried at Hertingfordbury, where a monument by Roubiliac was erected to his memory. He was the grandfather of William Cowper, the poet.


The History of Parliament
Constituency
Dates
BERE ALSTON </volume/1690-1715/constituencies/bere-alston>
1 Dec. 1705 - 1710
TRURO </volume/1690-1715/constituencies/truro>
1715 - 1727
Family and Education
b. 23 Feb. 1669, 4th but 2nd. surv. s. of Sir William Cowper, 2nd Bt.*; bro. of William Cowper*. educ. Westminster (Dr Busby); Christ's, Camb. 1686; M. Temple 1687, called 1693, bencher 1719; L. Inn 1713, bencher 1715, treasurer 1716. m. (1) lic. 4 Feb. 1688, Pennington (d. 1727), da. of John Goodere, 4s. (1 d.v.p.) 1da; (2) 25 July 1728, Theodora (d. 1750), wid. of John Stepney, s.p.1
Offices Held
Clerk of the Bridge House estates, Southwark 1690-?d.2
Attorney-gen. to Prince of Wales 1714-27; KC 1715; c.j. Chester 1717-27; j.c.p. 1727-d.; serjeant-at-law 1727.
Keeper L. Inn lib. 1717, dean of chapel 1718; gov. St. Thomas' Hosp. 1719.3
Biography
Spencer Cowper was advised as a young man to begin each day with a prayer, to 'be humble and obedient' to his tutor, and to 'be courteous of gesture and affable to all men, [for] there is nothing that winneth so much with so little cost'. He was also told to delight in cleanliness, to think before he spoke, and that 'only by a virtuous life and good actions' might he 'become valuable'. However, the first public notice of him came amid scandal and allegations of an indecent and murderous nature. In 1699 a rich Hertford Quaker heiress named Sarah Stout had been found floating face down in a local pond: Cowper had the misfortune to have been the last person with whom she was seen, and he was known to have been involved in her financial dealings. When local doctors concluded that she had not drowned but had been murdered, Cowper was charged with the crime. The accusation nevertheless had political connotations, since her father had 'at all elections promoted the interest of the Cowpers to the utmost of his power; through which a great intimacy was created between the families'; Sarah Stout had fallen in love with the married Cowper, who may have acted as her tutor and who regularly visited the town for the assizes. It was later claimed by Mrs Manley that Cowper was morally weak, and 'never saw a woman he could not have bestowed some of his favours upon', though even she admitted that Sarah Stout was 'the aggressor' in the affair. It emerged during the trial, which became a cause célèbre, that she had sent him a love letter in which she proposed cohabitation, and, when he refused, had probably killed herself for unrequited love. Prosecution resulted when the Quakers, unable to accept that one of their sect had turned away from the inner spirit of God, allied with local Tories who allegedly sought revenge for the 'feuds that have arisen at the elections' in the town, in which Cowper's brother and father had taken part. Describing himself at his trial as 'of some fortune in possession . . . in a good employment, thriving in my profession, living within my income, [and] never in debt', he defended himself and produced expert medical witnesses to prove that Stout had died from drowning. Sir William Ashurst* and Sir Thomas Lane also gave evidence on his behalf, declaring Cowper to be 'a gentleman of singular humanity and integrity' and 'altogether untainted' character, who performed his job for the corporation well. Charles Cox, MP for Southwark and Cowper's neighbour there, also testified that he was 'a person of integrity and worth, all the neighbours court his company'. At the original inquest Cowper had foolishly denied any knowledge of why Sarah Stout should have committed suicide, perhaps, ironically, in order to avoid scandal, and although he was acquitted of murder the trial destroyed his family's local standing with the Quakers, and with it their electoral influence, despite Cowper's protestation of sympathy for the sect and declaration 'that if he ever changed his religion he said it should be for theirs'. In 1700 an appeal was lodged against his acquittal, but, under suspicious circumstances, the writ was burnt, and after the lapse of legal time-limits it became impossible to proceed with the case. The whole proceeding had stimulated great public interest, including the publication of a number of tracts, one of which was distributed to MPs, and on 13 Mar. 1701 Stout's mother petitioned the Commons for a new writ of appeal. No action was taken, however, before the Commons was prorogued. The affair finally ended on 16 Nov. 1702, when a complaint for deprivation of justice was made to the Commons against the under-sheriff, who was believed to be Cowper's friend, 'but the House thought not fit to do anything thereupon'. The affair may have sent Cowper into a temporary depression, for his brother wrote in September 1701 that Spencer threatened 'to bespeak a vessel to trip beyond seas'.4
Cowper's first attempt to enter the Commons may have come at the Totnes election of January 1701. His brother William had initially been proposed by Lord Somers (Sir John*) and the Duke of Bolton (Charles Powlett I*) in opposition to the outgoing Tory Members. William had, however, declined to take the election to a poll, and it may be that following this withdrawal Spencer was suggested as a possible candidate, for a week after the election Bishop Trelawny wrote that he had declined to support Bolton's candidate as 'I look on Cowper as a murderer'. However, the Totnes election of January 1701 was not contested and Spencer did not enter the Commons until December 1705, when he was returned for the seat at Bere Alston vacated by his brother's appointment as lord keeper. As a lawyer, on 10 Jan. 1706 he voiced reservations in the House about the wording of the treason clauses of the regency bill. Warning that it 'may have some ill consequences to [the] people and the constitution', he wanted provisos included to require two witnesses and a tighter formula for prosecution for spoken and written words. Five days later he spoke on the bill's arrangements for summoning Parliaments, but nevertheless concluded 'for the whole bill', and was noted as having supported the Court during February's proceedings upon the 'place clause' of the bill. His legal practice thrived, and in June 1706 it was rumoured that he would be made a Queen's Counsel, but perhaps his brother again barred his promotion, for he had to wait for this honour until after the Hanoverian succession. He was marked as a Whig on two analyses of Parliament in 1708, and on 30 Mar. successfully moved for an address for the accounts of the armed forces to be presented as part of an attempt by the 'Lord Treasurer's Whigs' to bring the troops up to strength, indicating that he followed his brother's political allegiance to Lord Godolphin (Sidney†). That month he and other lawyers looked over the archbishop of Canterbury's copies of cathedral statutes before they were presented to the House of Commons in connexion with the cathedrals bill.5
In April 1708 William, now Lord Cowper, wrote requesting Lord Stamford's continuing support for Spencer at Bere Alston, where he was duly re-elected in May at the general election. On 29 Jan. 1709 he was appointed to prepare a bill for improving the Union by unifying the laws for treason, and, following the failure of this bill, told on 30 Mar. for the committal of a similar measure which had been initiated in the Lords. On 5 Apr. he spoke, as Bishop Nicolson said, on the subject in favour of oyer and terminer. During this session he also supported the naturalization of the Palatines. It was the impeachment of Dr Sacheverell that allowed him to display his lawyer's eloquence at its best. Despite his brush with the Hertford Quakers, he evidently retained his sympathy for Dissent, and on 13 Dec. 1709 seconded John Dolben's* motion to take Sacheverell's sermon into consideration as a libel, being duly appointed the following day to draw up the articles of impeachment. On 22 Dec. he told against granting the doctor bail. In March 1710 he was appointed to the committee to manage the ensuing trial, over which his brother, the lord chancellor, presided, and at which he spoke to the second article which accused the doctor of declaring the toleration to be unreasonable and unwarrantable. Defending the Toleration Act as 'a legal Indulgence' he accused Sacheverell of having represented it
as an open violence . . . Mr Cowper was far from saying that sentences ratified in Heaven could be reversed by the power of this world, but he desired to be excused from thinking any of his curses upon persons who enjoyed the toleration, meaning the Doctor's, were ratified there; and as to any ecclesiastical censure, not ratified there, he thought it downright insolence to say there was no power on earth could reverse it.
He 'spoke with so fine and deliberate a cadence and so soft and engaging a tone' that one observer 'had not time to mind the sense of his speech, only that he maintained that religion had nothing at all to do with the state'. In summing up on 10 Mar. 1710, he again attacked Sacheverell's pedantic distinction between the legal toleration and a universal toleration, implying that the doctor had invented it since the impeachment, and
the better to enforce what he had said before, in the same elegant way of delivery repeated it, and was very smart upon the whole sermon . . . then pretended to prove the doctor had raised this late mob because this seditious libel (as he all along called the sermon) had produced an actual rebellion; and that the meeting-houses were burnt etc. at the instigation of one at the same time stickling for passive obedience; he said the doctor, for maintaining all schismatics damned, wanted to be sweetened by that gentle spirit of moderation he ridicules in his sermon and that he wanted even Christianity itself . . . and to his reflecting upon men in high stations he said his words were too big and mighty to mean any little subordinate powers.
Cowper duly voted for the impeachment, but his prominence in the prosecution caused him electoral problems at Bere Alston where his brother quarrelled with Lord Stamford, and Cowper was dropped in favour of a moderate Tory. Even before the trial, Sir Francis Drake, 3rd Bt.*, who had an important electoral interest in the borough, had advised Cowper 'to get an easy discount of a bill' owed to one of the voters there who was a servant of Lord Stamford and who had 'suffered for not complying with his landlord's folly', an indication that trouble had been brewing there for some time.6
Cowper was unable to regain his seat before 1715, and although he 'had a great deal of wit and attempt, [and] understood well his business, [he] had not the good fortune to be born an elder brother', and his legal career was overshadowed by that of the more illustrious William, whose scruples about nepotism actually counted against Spencer's appointment as solicitor-general in 1716. Cowper followed his brother into opposition in 1718, and shared his hostility to the South Sea Company, but on the succession of George II was appointed justice of the common pleas. He died on 10 Dec. 1728, though the year is sometimes given in error as 1727. Ironically for a lawyer, he died intestate, and it is therefore difficult to establish how wealthy he had become, though from other sources it is known that he had possessed L4,000 of Bank of England stock in 1710, enough to qualify him as a director. His second wife left L200 for the erection of a funeral monument by Roubillac, so 'that as long as marble can endure, his memory might be preserved, whom living she so much honoured, so tenderly loved, [and] whose loss she so deeply lamented'.7
Notes
1. Herts. RO, Panshanger mss D/EP F25, Sir William Cowper's commonplace bk., entry for birth date; VCH Herts. Fams. 145.
2. Corp. London RO, Rep. 95, f. 145.
3. J. Aubrey, Surr. [1719], v. 312.
4. Cobbett, Parlty. Hist. ix. 115; Add. 17677 TT, f. 218; State Trials, xiii. 1109-249; CJ, xiv. 35; Post Man, 8-10 June 1699; London Post, 27-29 May 1700; HMC Portland, iii. 606; Panshanger mss D/EP F81, f. 96, William Cowper to wife, 3 Sept. 1701; D/EP F29, Lady Cowper's commonplace bk. pp. 67, 71-72, 107.
5. Panshanger mss D/EP F99, f. 1, Somers to [William Cowper], n.d; f. 2, William Cowper to Bolton, n.d.; ff. 4, 7, Bolton to William Cowper, 28 Dec. 1700, n.d.; f. 6, Robert Symons et al. to Bolton, 24 Dec. 1700; D/EP F31, Lady Cowper's commonplace bk. p. 205; Devon RO, Exeter dioc. archs. Bp. Trelawny to Adn. Cook, 11, 18 Jan. [1701]; Staffs. RO, Paget mss D603/K/3/6, R. Acherley to R. Paget, 13 June 1706; Speck thesis, 221; Nicolson Diaries ed. Jones and Holmes, 458.
6. Panshanger mss D/EP F100 (unfol.) Cowper to Ld. Stamford, 14 Apr. 1708; D/EP F54, f. 77, Drake to Ld. Cowper, 15 Dec. 1709; Nicolson Diaries, 494; BL, Trumbull Alphab. mss 53, Ralph Bridges to Sir William Trumbull*, 14 Dec. 1709; Cobbett, vi. 825; Impartial View, 182-3, 214; Yale Univ. Beinecke Lib. Osborn mss box 21/22, 'Acct. of trial of Dr. Sacheverell', ff. 6, 18-19; G. Holmes, Pol. in Age of Anne, 320.
7. D. Manley, Secret Mems. (1709), 227-30; VCH Herts. Fams. 145.

http://books.google.co.nz/books?id=h_U8AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA249&lpg=PA249&dq=Major+William+Cowper+of+Park+House&source=bl&ots=NExTmtybbq&sig=NHxMvHTOsqdYW2HDaP5o9B96JqQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=e8HNT_a_Do2uiQfFo6WCDA&ved=0CE4Q6AEwAjgK#v=onepage&q=Major%20William%20Cowper%20of%20Park%20House&f=false

COWPER, SPENCER (1669-1728), judge, was the younger brother of William Cowper the chancellor [q. v.] He was born in 1669, educated at Westminster, called to the bar, and in 1690 made controller of the Bridge House estates, with a residence at the Bridge House, St. Olave's. He went the home circuit and was acquainted with a quaker family at Hertford, named Stout, who had been supporters of his father and brother at elections. The daughter, Sarah Stout, fell in love with him, though he was already married, and became melancholy upon his avoiding her company. At the spring assizes in 1699 he was at her house in the evening, having to pay her the interest on a mortgage. He returned to his own lodgings, and next morning she was found dead in the river. Cowper, with three lawyers who had spent that night at Hertford and gossiped about Sarah Stout, were accused of murdering her. They were tried before Baron Hassell on 16 July 1699. There was absolutely no direct evidence: the pro- secution relying chiefly upon the argument that, as the body had floated, the girl must have been put into the water after death, and therefore had not drowned herself. To meet this assumption evidence was given by the famous physicians Garth, Hans Sloane, and William Cowper (no relation to the defendant). The judge was singularly feeble, but the defendants were acquitted. Their innocence is beyond a doubt, as was admitted by impartial people at the time (Luttrell, iv. 518, 539). The prosecutions were said to be suggested by a double motive. The tories of Hertford wished to hang a member of an eminent whig family, and the quakers to clear their body of the reproach of suicide. Pamphlets were published on both sides, and an attempt was made to carry on the case by an appeal of murder. The judges, however, refused the writ, considering (besides various technical reasons) that the prosecution was malicious.

Cowper represented Beeralston in the parliaments of 1705 and 1708. He was one of the managers of the impeachment of Sacheverell, and lost his seat in the reaction which followed. In 1715, when he was made a king's counsel, he was elected member for Truro; in 1714 he had become attorney-general to the Prince of Wales, and in 1717 chief justice of Chester. On 24 Oct. 1727 he was promoted to the office of judge of the common pleas. He died 10 Dec. 1728. He was buried at Hertingfordbury, where there is a monument to him by Roubillac.

Cowper was the grandfather of William Cowper the poet, in whose life several of this judge's descendants are mentioned. By his first wife, Pennington Goodere, Spencer Cowper had three sons and a daughter. William, the eldest son, was clerk of the parliaments, and died 14 Feb. 1740, when the patent of his office passed to his eldest son, William, of Hertingfordbury, who is mentioned in the poet's life as 'Major Cowper,' and who died in 1769. Spencer, the second son of the clerk of the parliaments and brother of Major Cowper, was in the guards, commanded a brigade in the American war, became lieutenant-governor of Tynemouth, and died at Ham, Surrey, 13 March 1797 (Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. xi. 248). He is mentioned in the poet's life as 'General Cowper.' The judge's second son John, was the poet's father. His third son, Ashley, was barrister, clerk of the parliaments, and died 1788. The profits of his 'very lucrative office' were not his but his nephew's, General Cowper (Southey's Cowper, vi. 259). Ashley Cowper had three daughters: Harriet (d. 15 Jan. 1807), married to Sir Thomas Hesketh (d. March 1778); Elizabeth Charlotte, married to Sir Archer Croft; and Theodora Jane, the poet's first love, who died in 1824. The judge's daughter, Judith, married Colonel Martin Madan, M.P., and by him was mother of Martin Madan, author of 'Thelyphthora,' of Spencer Madan, bishop of Peterborough, and of a daughter, who married her cousin Major (William) Cowper, and died 15 Oct. 1797 in her seventy-first year. Some of Mrs. Madan's poems will be found in 'Poems by Eminent Ladies' (1755), ii. 137-44.

[Foss's Judges, viii. 114-20; Burke's Peerage (1883), 327; Cobbett's State Trials, xiii. 1106-1250, where are printed several pamphlets relating to the trials; Notes and Queries, 3rd ser. i. 91, 191, 214, 275, 354, 438; Macaulay's History, v. 236-39; Blackwood's Mag. for July 1861; article reprinted in Paget's Puzzles and Paradoxes.]


picture

Spencer married Pennington GOODERE [12628] [MRIN: 4247], daughter of John GOODERE Esq [12629] and Unknown.


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