Sir John SAVAGE of Rocksavage
Born: 1550, Rock Savage, Cheshire, England
Died: 1615, Rock Savage, Cheshire, England
Buried: 14 Jul 1615, Macclesfield, Cheshire, England
Father: John SAVAGE of Rocksavage (Sir)
Mother: Elizabeth MANNERS
Associated with: ¿?
Married: Mary ALLINGTON (dau. of Richard Allington and Joan Cordell) BEF 1582, Horshed, Cambridgeshire, England
Children:
1. John SAVAGE
4. Thomas SAVAGE (1º V. Savage)
5. Richard SAVAGE (b. ABT 1588 - d. AFT 1600)
6. Grace SAVAGE
7. George SAVAGE (b. ABT 1592 - d. AFT 1600)
8. Phillip SAVAGE (b. ABT 1594 - d. AFT 1600)
10. Edward SAVAGE
The details in this biography come from the
History of Parliament, a
biographical dictionary of Members of the House of Commons. Born 1554, second but first surv. son of Sir John
Savage, by his first wife Elizabeth, dau. of
Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland; and brother of
Edward. Educ. L. Inn 1571. Married ABT 1576, Mary, dau.
and coh. of Richard Allington. Suc. family 1597. Kntd. ?28 Jun 1599; cr.
Bt. 28 Jun 1611. Bailiff of manor and forest and keeper of
the gaol of Macclesfield from 1597; steward, Macclesfield from 1598, of manor of Halton from 1598; j.p.q. and commr. musters, Cheshire from c.1598, sheriff
1606-7, dep. Lt. from c. 1608; mayor, Chester 1607-8. Savage
first comes to notice in 1576 for refusing to make adequate arrangements for his
mistress (one of his stepmother's relatives, before his marriage). After his marriage he lived in or near London, perhaps at court,
but, finding the cost too great, in 1579 he accompanied Sir William Norreys to
Ireland. From
Chester he wrote to his cousin
Edward Manners, Earl of Rutland, asking him to provide
him with a good horse, as the other gentlemen in the company were well mounted,
and he ‘would be loath to be inferior’. He was back in England by 30 Jul
1585, when he was again writing to Rutland, this time in an effort to prevent
his father from disposing of certain entailed estates, an issue on which father
and son had reached agreement within a year. Savage twice sat for the county
before
becoming head of the family in 1597. He did not gain possession of all the
family estates, however, until after the death of his stepmother in 1612, and he
appears to have been in financial difficulties, perhaps a result of his father's
debts,
though the father was listed as of ‘great possessions’ in 1588. Even after
coming into all the Savage lands, the heir complained of poverty, still,
however, being among the first to purchase a baronetcy. He died at Rock Savage 7
Jul 1615,
having made his will the previous 20 Jun. To his overseer, his worthy friend
the Bishop of Chester, he bequeathed a piece of plate worth £5, and to the city
of Chester a pair of silver gilt flagons, valued at £20. His wife received his
houses
in Holborn and Chester; his coach and horses. He was buried at
Macclesfield on 14 Jul 1615, leaving as heir his eldest son Thomas. The will
was not proved until 1618.
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