. The visitation of Suffolke . ldest son and heir Charles Clere,t Esq., in 1552 Lord of Stokesby, in Norfolk, married Mary, daughterof Robert Spring of Lavenham, by whom he had Thomas Clere, Esq., and CharlesClere, who married Elizabeth, daughter of AViUiam Drury, Esq., of Brctts Hall, inTendring, Essex, , and Judge of the Prerogative Court. Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Spring of Lavenham, married John Jennoy of GreatCressingham, in Norfolk, by whom she had William Jeuney, Lord of the Manor of GreatCressingham, in 1671. After the death of John Jenney, Elizabeth, his widow, marriedEdward


. The visitation of Suffolke . ldest son and heir Charles Clere,t Esq., in 1552 Lord of Stokesby, in Norfolk, married Mary, daughterof Robert Spring of Lavenham, by whom he had Thomas Clere, Esq., and CharlesClere, who married Elizabeth, daughter of AViUiam Drury, Esq., of Brctts Hall, inTendring, Essex, , and Judge of the Prerogative Court. Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Spring of Lavenham, married John Jennoy of GreatCressingham, in Norfolk, by whom she had William Jeuney, Lord of the Manor of GreatCressingham, in 1671. After the death of John Jenney, Elizabeth, his widow, marriedEdward Flood, Esq. On a marble gravestone in Gt. Cressingham Church, is a brassportraiture of a lady, with the following inscription :— Hie in resurrectionis spe requiescit Elizabetha Fludd, uxor Edwardi Fludd, serenis-6ima3 EUzabethoD Rcginaj Ante Ambulonis qua; prius fuerat uxor Johanuis Jennyarmigeri. Obdorniivit in Christo die xvij Febi-uarij, anno salutis on another brass plate the arms of Flood impaling Spriiic/ ;—. Flood, quarterly I and 4, Vert, a chevron between three wolves heads erased Or; 2 and 3, .... three boars heads fessways coupod, two and one .... impaling Sprinij. Rose, second daughter of Thomas Spring and Alice Appleton, married Gibbon J of Lynn Regis, in Norfolk, Esq. In the Library of Caius College, Cambridge, is agenealogical MS. containing a pedigree of this family, of whom John Guybon wasliving at Lynn, in 14 Edw. II. Sir ?WDliam Spring, son and heir of Sir John, was a minor at the time of his fathersdeath, and in 2 that King granted to Edmund Wright, Esq., of Bradfield,the custody and marriage of William Spring, aged 14 years and a half; Margaret,Countess of Bath, in the following year, gave Edmund Wright 400 marks for themarriage of his ward with her daughter, Anne Kytson. The Countess of Bath, by her will dated 10 Dec, 1561, gave to her daughter AnnoSpring, £40, one gown, one kirtle, one brooch, one brilliant, and her tablet with saphi


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidvisitationofsuff01harv