This next armorial memorial in Canterbury Cathedral is a comparatively simple one, and yet I can't help but think it holds every bit as much love and pathos as many of the larger, more complex ones.
Near this place
lies the Body of
JOHN PORTER
of WANDSWORTH in the
County of Surry Esqr.
He departed this
Life
the 22d
of March 1764, Aged 67.
He married CATHERINE
Daughter of
Lieut.
General SUTTON
by whom he left
One Son and Five
Daughters.
Requiescat in
Pace.
John Porter of Allfarthing, married Catherine
Sutton, daughter of Lt. Gen. Richard Sutton, and by her had six surviving children. The manor of Allfarthing, in Wandsworth (London), had been granted by
James VI and I to his son Charles, apparently with a view toward it being given to
Endymion Porter. Thomas Porter, son of Endymion, had a remainder interest but
debt problems of his father caused the loss of the manor in 1652. Thomas
Porter's brother, George Porter, recovered the manor and it descended to John
Porter of Allfarthing, who was lord of the manor in 1723 when he married
Catherine Sutton.
Still, it was the arms at the top of the memorial plaque which caught my attention.
This marital coat of arms is blazoned: Sable three porter’s bells argent and a
canton ermine (Porter), impaled by Argent a canton sable (Sutton).
I find it interesting that both the husband's and the wife's coats of arms contain a canton; this is something that is not commonly seen. A canton is a rare enough charge; to find two of them must be very rare.
They did seem to go in for some pretty florid shield shapes in the late 18th Century, though, didn't they?
Thomas had a son called George, He also had a brother called George. George the son inherited a property in Newport court from his maternal grandfather. This may be the funds which recovered Allfarthing.
ReplyDeleteDavid Porter