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Trappes of Nidd: A Family History by Richard Trappes-Lomax

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2015

Extract

In Ripon Liberty only one [Catholic] gentry family survived this period [the eighteenth century] (the Trappes of Nidd) and in their case the main line died out and a cadet branch from Carlton succeeded them’; this fact of mere survival both justifies and permits setting this account before the reader. Christopher Trappes (XIa), the founder of the Carlton branch, would probably have remained single, if he had not found an heiress with just sufficient income for marriage; had he remained single, the Trappes family would have died out in 1761, and this history would have remained unwritten. As it is, there survives just enough material to show something of how one recusant family contrived to retain its identity through and after the penal times.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Catholic Record Society 2005

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References

Notes

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51 PRO REQ 2/65/34.

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53 DNB27, pp. 313–4.

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57 Information of W.A. Prideaux (see n10).

58 VCH Lanes 3, p. 417.

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64 PCC Reg. Martyn f. 27; abstract in Surtees Society 121, p. 230 (see n41).

65 PRO C 142/166/2.

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68 PRO E 377/14.

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70 PCC Reg. Parker f. 114.

71 VCH East Yorks 7, p. 345.

72 Gillow 3, pp. 467–8.

73 Venn’s Alumni Cantabrigienses, loc. cit, (see n35).

74 Lincoln’s Inn Admissions Register 1, p. 109; The Records of Lincoln’s Inn: The Black Books (Lincoln’s Inn 1898) 2, p. 16.

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78 YASRS 53 (1915) pp. 97, 105 bis.

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82 Gillow 3, pp. 63–4.

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84 Wentworth Woodhouse Muniments (which have been accepted in lieu of Inheritance Tax by HM Government and allocated to Sheffield City Council); The Earl of Strafford’s Papers 2, p. 172.

85 Ibidem WWM Str P 12/17.

86 Ibidem WWM Str P 13/10.

87 Ibidem WWM Str P 5 p. 7.

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90 British Library, Add. MSS 18979.

91 Johnson 2, p. 288

92 DNB 43, p. 170.

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97 A List of Officers Claiming to the Sixty Thousand Pounds, & c. Granted by His Sacred Majesty for the Relief of His Truly-Loyal and Indigent Party (printed by Henry Brome; London 1663).

98 As for n97; for Lucas, cf. DNB 34, pp. 229–31.

99 CSP Charles, II, 1671-2 (London 1897) p. 135 Google Scholar; 1675–6 (London 1907) p. 57; 1678 (London 1913) p. 185; 1679–80 (London 1915) pp. 338, 350. He is probably the ‘George Trapper’ who received a bounty of £100 in 1682; cf.Moneys Received and Paid for the Secret Services of Charles II and James II’, ed. Akerman, J.Y., Camden Society 52 (1851) p. 176.Google Scholar

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106 CRS 40 (1943), p. 76.

107 Information of Joseph Gillow to RTL (XVII); see Gillow 1, pp. 520–2, for the history of the Institute in England.

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116 BL Add MSS 29562/150; Ibidem 29563/226 & 228.

117 Information of Brother Ninian Arbuckle OFM to JMTL (XlXa). That RT was permitted to return to France is made all the more probable by the fact that William Philpot(s), chaplain on Jersey (Anstruther 3, p. 169), received similar permission although he had been accused of plotting to facilitate a French occupation of Jersey on behalf of James II; cf. Syvret, M. and Stevens, J., Bulleine’s History of Jersey Revised and Enlarged (Chichester 1998) p. 163.Google Scholar

118 RCP G112, p. 363.

119 Aveling, p. 299.

120 DNB 47, pp. 123–6.

121 Whitaker pp. 256–8.

122 RCP, G136 p. 470; G234, pp. 161–2; G136 p. 443; G18 p. 944 (YASRS 20, p. 106).

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124 Whitaker pp. 295–6; his will is P.R. York, vol. 58 f. 500.

125 Whitaker pp. 123–74.

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143 Aveling, pp. 295–6.

144 RCP G124, p. 365 (YASRS 20, p. 170).

145 RCP G124, p. 361 (YASRS 20, p. 170).

146 Aveling (York) pp. 343–1.

147 DNB49, pp. 419–22.

148 Aveling p. 234.

149 RCP G18 p. 925 (YASRS 20, p. 171).

150 The Parish Records of le Belfrey, St Michael, ed. Collins, F., Yorkshire Parish Records Society 11 (1901) p. 8.Google Scholar

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152 Anstruther 2, pp. 14–5.

153 Anstruther 3, p. 137.

154 As for nl50, pp. 41, 42.

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157 Hilton pp. 35–6.

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159 Estcourt & Payne pp. 19, 98, 321.

160 For the Douai correspondence of FT (XI) and his brother Michael, cf. RH 24 (1999), pp. 455–471.

161 List of Papists in the West Riding in 1680, Record Office of the House of Lords, Main Papers 321 c140 c57.

162 For the whole letter, cf. RH 25 (2001), pp. 423–33; little is known of Blakiston’s career from any other source; cf. Foley 7, p. 62; CRS 74 (1994) p. 122.

163 PRO E 377/14777.

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172 Anstruther 3, p. 96.

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175 Thaddeus pp. 244–5.

176 Estcourt & Payne p. 308.

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179 CRS 13 (1913) p. 63.

180 Estcourt & Payne p. 308.

181 YASRS 146 (1990) p. 165; for Gastrell, cf. DNB 21, pp. 58–9.

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185 The Times 5 Jan 1920.

186 Hilton p. 272.

187 YASRS 46 (1912), p. 85.

188 PRO EEC 1/587–1592.

189 CRS 32 (1932) p. 231.

190 As for n170.

191 CRS 32 (1932) p. 359. For Catholicism in Bishop Thornton, cf. also ROP 2, pp. 65–6.

192 ROP 2, p. 45.

193 Stonyhurst Magazine 6, p. 421.

194 ROP I, p. 161.

195 Anstruther 4, p. 235.

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201 PRO ADM 37/2142.

202 Anstruther 4, p. 216.

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204 Information of Elizabeth Bassett to TBTL (XVIII) from Gillows archives.

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207 For the Roskells, a Lancashire Catholic family, cf. CRS 6 (1909) p. 205n.

208 The curious second name is that of a Manor held by the very distinguished de Trappe family of Liège, with which a totally spurious connection had been fancied; cf. Burke’s Commoners (1837).

209 For FT (XV) and his ecclesiastical disputes, cf. CRS 77 (2000), pp. 14–20.

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