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Biography of Mary Langham Countess Warrington 1652-1691

Paternal Family Tree: Langham

Around 8th December 1647 [her father] James Langham 2nd Baronet (age 27) and [her mother] Mary Alston (age 20) were married.

On 10th March 1652 Mary Langham Countess Warrington was born to James Langham 2nd Baronet (age 32) and Mary Alston (age 25).

In 1660 [her mother] Mary Alston (age 33) died.

Around 18th November 1662 [her father] James Langham 2nd Baronet (age 42) and [her step-mother] Elizabeth Hastings were married. She the daughter of Ferdinando Hastings 6th Earl Huntingdon and Lucy Davies Countess Huntingdon (age 49).

Around 13th April 1667 [her father] James Langham 2nd Baronet (age 47) and [her step-mother] Penelope Holles Lady Cottesbrooke were married. She the daughter of John Holles 2nd Earl de Clare and Elizabeth Vere Countess Clare.

Around 1670 Jacob Huysmans (age 37). Portrait of (possibly) Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 17).

All About History Books

The Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke. Baker was a secular clerk from Swinbroke, now Swinbrook, an Oxfordshire village two miles east of Burford. His Chronicle describes the events of the period 1303-1356: Gaveston, Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, the murder of King Edward II, the Scottish Wars, Sluys, Crécy, the Black Death, Winchelsea and Poitiers. To quote Herbert Bruce 'it possesses a vigorous and characteristic style, and its value for particular events between 1303 and 1356 has been recognised by its editor and by subsequent writers'. The book provides remarkable detail about the events it describes. Baker's text has been augmented with hundreds of notes, including extracts from other contemporary chronicles, such as the Annales Londonienses, Annales Paulini, Murimuth, Lanercost, Avesbury, Guisborough and Froissart to enrich the reader's understanding. The translation takes as its source the 'Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke' published in 1889, edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback.

On 7th July 1670 Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 18) and Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 18) were married at St Helen's Church, Bishopsgate.

Arounnd 1673 [her daughter] Elizabeth Booth was born to [her husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 20) and Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 20) at Mere Hall, Cheshire.

Before 9th January 1673 [her daughter] Mary Booth was born to [her husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 20) and Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 20) at Mere Hall, Cheshire.

On 2nd May 1675 [her son] George Booth 2nd Earl Warrington was born to [her husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 23) and Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 23) at Mere Hall, Cheshire.

After 23rd February 1679 Edward Conway 1st Earl Conway (age 56) and [her sister-in-law] Elizabeth Booth Countess Conway were married. They were fifth cousin once removed.

On 3rd December 1679 Edward Conway 1st Earl Conway (age 56) was created 1st Earl Conway. [her sister-in-law] Elizabeth Booth Countess Conway by marriage Countess Conway.

On 4th July 1681 [her sister-in-law] Elizabeth Booth Countess Conway died.

On 8th June 1684 [her son] Langham Booth was born to [her husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 32) and Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 32) at Mere Hall, Cheshire.

On 17th April 1690 [her husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 38) was created 1st Earl Warrington for habing supported William of Orange, raising a regiment of Cheshire volunteers. Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 38) by marriage Countess Warrington.

Before 23rd March 1691 Jacob Huysmans (age 58). Portrait of Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 39).

On 23rd March 1691 Mary Langham Countess Warrington (age 39) died. She was buried at Church of St Mary the Virgin, Bowdon [Map].

The inscription of his monument:

"Beneath lieth the body of the right hon'ble Henry Booth, earl of Warrington, and baron Delamer of Dunham Massey, a person of unblemished honour, impartial justice, strict integrity, an illustrious example of steady and unalterable adherence to the liberties and properties of his country in the worst of times, rejecting all offers to allure, and despising all dangers to deter him therefrom, for which he was thrice committed close prisoner to the Tower of London, and at length tried for his life upon a false accusation of high treason, from which he was unanimously acquitted by his peers, on 14 January, MDCLXXX V/VI which day he afterwards annually commemorated by acts of devotion and charity: in the year MDCLXXXVIII he greatly signalised himself at the Revolution, on behalf of the protestant religion and the rights of the nation, without mixture of self-interest, preferring the good of his country to the favour of the prince who then ascended the throne; and having served his generation according to the will of God was gathered to his fathers in peace, on the 2d of January, 169¾, in the XLIId year of his age, whose mortal part was here entombed on the same memorable day on which eight years before his trial had been."

"Also rest by him the earthly remains of the r. hon'ble Mary countess of Warrington, his wife, sole daughter and heir of sir [her father] James Langham (age 71), of Cottesbrooke, in the county of Northamptom, [sic] knt. and bart. a lady of ingenious parts, singular discretion, consummate judgement, great humility, meek and compassionate temper, extensive charity, exemplary and unaffected piety, perfect resignation to God's will, lowly in prosperity and patient in adversity, prudent in her affairs, and endowed with all other virtuous qualities, a conscientious discharger of her duty in all relations, being a faithful, affectionate, and observant, wife, alleviating the cares and afflictions of her husband by willingly sharing with him therein; a tender, indulgent, and careful mother, a dutiful and respectful daughter, gentle and kind to her servants, courteous and beneficent to her neighbours, a sincere friend, a lover and valuer of all good people, justly beloved and admired by all who knew her, who having perfected holiness in the fear of God, was by him received to an early and eternal rest from her labours, on 23 March 1690/1, in the XXXVIIth year of her age, calmly and composedly meeting and desiring death with joyful hope and steadfastness of faith, a lively draught of real worth and goodness, and a pattern deserving imitation, of whom the world was not worthy. Heb. XI. 38."

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On 2nd January 1694 [her former husband] Henry Booth 1st Earl Warrington (age 41) died. He was buried at Church of St Mary the Virgin, Bowdon [Map]. His son [her son] George (age 18) succeeded 2nd Earl Warrington, 3rd Baron Delamer, 4th Baronet Booth of Dunham Massey.

The inscription of his monument:

"Beneath lieth the body of the right hon'ble Henry Booth, earl of Warrington, and baron Delamer of Dunham Massey, a person of unblemished honour, impartial justice, strict integrity, an illustrious example of steady and unalterable adherence to the liberties and properties of his country in the worst of times, rejecting all offers to allure, and despising all dangers to deter him therefrom, for which he was thrice committed close prisoner to the Tower of London, and at length tried for his life upon a false accusation of high treason, from which he was unanimously acquitted by his peers, on 14 January, MDCLXXX V/VI which day he afterwards annually commemorated by acts of devotion and charity: in the year MDCLXXXVIII he greatly signalised himself at the Revolution, on behalf of the protestant religion and the rights of the nation, without mixture of self-interest, preferring the good of his country to the favour of the prince who then ascended the throne; and having served his generation according to the will of God was gathered to his fathers in peace, on the 2d of January, 169¾, in the XLIId year of his age, whose mortal part was here entombed on the same memorable day on which eight years before his trial had been."

"Also rest by him the earthly remains of the r. hon'ble Mary countess of Warrington, his wife, sole daughter and heir of sir James Langham, of Cottesbrooke, in the county of Northamptom, [sic] knt. and bart. a lady of ingenious parts, singular discretion, consummate judgement, great humility, meek and compassionate temper, extensive charity, exemplary and unaffected piety, perfect resignation to God's will, lowly in prosperity and patient in adversity, prudent in her affairs, and endowed with all other virtuous qualities, a conscientious discharger of her duty in all relations, being a faithful, affectionate, and observant, wife, alleviating the cares and afflictions of her husband by willingly sharing with him therein; a tender, indulgent, and careful mother, a dutiful and respectful daughter, gentle and kind to her servants, courteous and beneficent to her neighbours, a sincere friend, a lover and valuer of all good people, justly beloved and admired by all who knew her, who having perfected holiness in the fear of God, was by him received to an early and eternal rest from her labours, on 23 March 1690/1, in the XXXVIIth year of her age, calmly and composedly meeting and desiring death with joyful hope and steadfastness of faith, a lively draught of real worth and goodness, and a pattern deserving imitation, of whom the world was not worthy. Heb. XI. 38."

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Around 1705 Johnathan "The Elder" Richardson (age 37). Portrait of Mary Langham Countess Warrington.

Ancestors of Mary Langham Countess Warrington 1652-1691

Mary Langham Countess Warrington

GrandFather: Edward Alston

Great x 2 Grandfather: Arthur Penning of Kettleborough in Suffolk

Great x 1 Grandmother: Margaret Penning

Mother: Mary Alston