Thomas Covell

Thomas Covell (c.1561 August 1, 1639) was the keeper of Lancaster Castle for 48 years and mayor of Lancaster six times. He is known for jailing the Pendle witches.

Thomas Covell
Bornc.1561
Died(1639-08-01)August 1, 1639
Resting placeLancaster Priory
OccupationMayor of Lancaster, Magistrate, Coroner, Keeper of the Castle
Spouse(s)Dorothy Watson
ChildrenElizabeth Covell (born 1601)

Biography

The Covell Cross outside Judges' Lodgings in Lancaster is named after Thomas Covell.

Career

Thomas Covell was well known in Lancaster during the 17th Century. He held a number of positions in the city including magistrate, coroner, keeper of Lancaster Castle, and mayor of the city.[1]

Covell was keeper of Lancaster Castle for 48 years, from 1591 until his death.[2] Whilst keeper of the castle he would have been responsible for the Pendle witches' time there.[1] He was also Mayor of Lancaster six times during his life, though the only known years are 1621 and 1628, and a coroner for 46 years from 1593.[2]

Personal life

Covell married Dorothy Watson, with whom he had one daughter named Elizabeth in 1601. There are records of the birth of a son named Phillip, but no further information is available on him.[2]

He built Judges' Lodgings in Lancaster where he lived at the time of his death on August 1, 1639. Covell had made his will the day before his death, asking to be buried in Lancaster Priory. At the time of his death the value of the goods in his inventory totalled £3047, and he also owned a number of properties. Buried in the church's chancel, a brass memorial was also fixed to the floor.[2]

gollark: * would be
gollark: If they were actually working to improve citizens' lives and whatever, and not just retain power, then accepting more aid and whatnot with a risk of having the government be replaced is probably better than trying to work on nukes.
gollark: ... to deter *what*?
gollark: The best way to, you know, stop people starving and all would probably be to... reconcile with other countries, be less authoritarian, and accept aid.
gollark: They probably could do better.

References

  1. Purkis, Anthea (14 November 2008). "Man who jailed Pendle Witches". Lancaster Guardian. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  2. Eija Kennerley (1989). Thomas Covell of Lancaster, Esquire. Lancaster City Museums.
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