Jane Cornwallis

Jane, Lady Bacon (1581–1659), was an English courtier and letter writer, whose correspondence was published (in 1842 in London, 8vo, and in 2003).

Jane Meautys was the daughter of Hercules Meautys of West Ham, and Philippe Cooke, daughter of Richard Cooke of Gidea Hall.

Jane, Lady Cornwallis

She was made a lady of the bedchamber to Anne of Denmark. This appointment was probably secured by Lucy Russell, Countess of Bedford.

Rumour connected her with "young Garret", an usher to the lord treasurer.[1] However, in 1609, she married Sir William Cornwallis of Brome, Suffolk, over thirty years her senior. King James gave her a jewel provided by George Heriot worth £60.[2] William Cornwallis died in 1611. Their only son, born in March 1611, Frederick, would later be styled Lord Cornwallis.

In 1609 a fellow courtier in the queen's household, and cousin of the Countess of Bedford, Bridget Markham, bequeathed her a set of diamond and ruby buttons. Anne of Denmark gave her a jewel of gold with diamonds, supplied by George Heriot, at her wedding, and gifts of four elaborate gowns in the following years.[3]

Jane, Lady Bacon

In 1613, she married Sir Nathaniel Bacon, K.B., of Culford, Suffolk, seventh (or ninth) son of Sir Nathaniel Bacon of Culford, High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk.

Frederick Cornwallis married Elizabeth Ashburnham, daughter of Sir John Ashburnham and Elizabeth Villiers, at court in January 1631, but his mother did not attend because she was offended by some misdemeanour of his. Ashburnham's cousin, Susan Feilding, Countess of Denbigh, wrote to Bacon mentioning "her family be unfortunate", meaning their financial difficulty since her father's death in 1620.[4]

Dorothy Randolph, a close friend and Meautys family cousin, had helped to arrange Frederick's marriage by searching for suitable partners.[5] Randolph also sent news from London, and (much quoted) fashion advice for spring 1632;

"I have sent you some patterns of stuff such as is worn by many, but not much lace upon those wrought stuffs; but the newest fashion is plain satin, of what colour one will, emboidered all over with 'alcomedes' (jewels and stones), but it is not like to hold past summer. They wear white satin waistcoats, plain, raised, printed, and some embroidered with lace, more than any one thing, and white Holland (linen) ones much".[6]

In 1639 her daughter Anne Bacon married Thomas Meautys, despite the efforts of Philip Wodehouse who wrote poems to her.[7] Anne later married Harbottle Grimston. Another daughter Jane Bacon died young. She was the grandmother Charles Cornwallis, 2nd Baron Cornwallis

Jane, Lady Bacon died at Culford on 8 May 1659. In 1657 she had contracted with Thomas Stanton at St Andrew Holborn for her marble monument at Culford, agreeing the design with a drawing.[8]

References

  1. Felicity Heal & Clive Holmes, 'Lady Jane Bacon and the Management of her families', in Muriel C. McClendon, Joseph P. Ward, Michael MacDonald, Protestant Identities: Religion, Society, and Self-fashioning in Post-Reformation England (Stanford, 1999), pp. 106, 110.
  2. Frederick Madden, Issues of the Exchequer: James I (London, 1836), pp. 104-5.
  3. Jemma Field, 'The Wardrobe Goods of Anna of Denmark', Costume, 51:1 (March 2017), p. 20.
  4. Richard Griffin Baron Braybrooke, The Private Correspondence of Jane Lady Cornwallis; 1613-1644 (London, 1842), pp. 234-8: Joanna Moody, The Private Correspondence of Jane Lady Cornwallis Bacon, 1613-1644 (2003), p. 54.
  5. Rosemary O'Day, Women's Agency in Early Modern Britain and the American Colonies (2007), pp. 79-80.
  6. Richard Griffin Baron Braybrooke, The Private Correspondence of Jane Lady Cornwallis; 1613-1644 (London, 1842), pp. 238: Joanna Moody, The Private Correspondence of Jane Lady Cornwallis Bacon, 1613-1644 (2003), p. 215: John Styles, 'Innovation and Obsolescence', in Gerhard Jaritz & Ingrid Matschinegg, My Favourite Things: Object Preferences in Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture (Münster, 2018), pp. 77–8.
  7. Joanna Moody, 'The Courtship Letters and Poems of Philip Wodehouse (1633)', The Seventeenth Century, 18:1 (2003), pp. 44-53.
  8. Felicity Heal & Clive Holmes, 'Lady Jane Bacon and the Management of her families', in Muriel C. McClendon, Joseph P. Ward, Michael MacDonald, Protestant Identities: Religion, Society, and Self-fashioning in Post-Reformation England (Stanford, 1999), pp. 100-104.
  • Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Cornwallis, Jane" . Dictionary of National Biography. 12. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
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