NameMary CARY
Birthabt 1580
Spouses
Birth22 Nov 1576, Trerice,CON
Death? 1656
Burial? , Duloe,CON
Marriage20 Oct 1612, Morwenstow,DEV.
Notes for John (Spouse 1)
He was aged 3 years and 9 months when his father died.
ARUNDELL SIR JOHN, of Trerice, (1576-1656 ?), 'Jack for the King,' was grandson of Henry VIII's ' Jack of Tilbury,' and was was born about 1576. He was the son of John Arundell of Trerice by Gertrude Dennys of Holcombe in Devon. Richard Carew, the historian of Cornwall, married his half-sister Julian. He was amongst the Cornish gentry present in 1643 at the battle of Braddock Down, near Lostwithiel, when the king's army obtained so decided a victory over the forces of the parliament. He was M.P. in 1697 for Michell, a now disfranchised borough situated within their manor of Medeshole (Michell?) which the Arundells had held at least as early as the time of Edward I; in 1601 and 1621 for Cornwall; in 1624 for St. Mawes; and in 1628 and the Short parliament of 1640 for Tregony. About 1643 he was appointed governor of Pendennis Castle. which, with St. Mawes castle, commands the the entrance of Falmouth harbour, a place of strategic importance.
He succeeded in office Sir Nicholas Slanning; and at Pendennis in 1644 he harboured for a night or two Queen Henrietta Maria on her flight from Exeter into France, and also Charles II in February 1646. The story of Fairfax's five months' siege of Pendennis Castle and its gallant defence by old Sir John Arundell and his colleagues is told in Clarendon, and in greater detail by Captain Oliver, RA, in his 'Pendennis and St. Mawes, an Historical Sketch of two Cornish Castles.' Sir John Arundell's reply (dated 18 May 1646) to Fairfax's summons to surrender within two hours (preserved among the Clarendon State Papers) closes thus: 'and, having taken less than two minutes' resolution, I resolve that I will here bury myself before I deliver up this castle to such as fight against his majesty, and that nothing
you can threaten is formidable to me in respect of the loss of loyalty and conscience.' On the 16th of the following August, however Pendennis was starved out, and became the fast castle but one (Raglan) to surrender to the parliament. The surrender was conducted with the full honours of war (Original Articles of Surrender, Egerton ton MSS. Brit. Mus 1048, fol. 86). Sir John Arundell did not live to see the Restoration and reap his well-earned honours. The fall of Pendennis and the defeat of the king's cause ruined his estates, and probably hastened his death; he was even reduced to the necessity of suing Cromwell himself for assistance urging that the Trerice Arundells 'had once the honour to stand in some friendship or even kinship, with your noble family ' ( Tanner MSS. Bod. Lib. 64, fol. 18). He was buried at Duloe in Cornwall; and Richard, his second son, who, like many other members of his family, was a staunch royalist, was ennobled in 1564, partly in recognition of the loyalty and sufferings of his father
|[Forster's Life of Eliot (1872), IL 388, 396. Cary's Memorials of the Civil War (1842), ii.. I 268; Carlyle's CromweII, iii. App. 20.]