MARTYN, alias ORME, John (d 1627), of Nottingham, Notts.

Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629, ed. Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris, 2010
Available from Cambridge University Press

Constituency

Dates

Family and Education

3rd s. of Richard Martyn alias Orme (d.1607/8), yeoman, of Strelley, Notts.1 m. 1 Dec. 1611, Anne, wid. of James Seele of Lenton, Notts. 2s. 2da. bur. 3 Oct. 1627.2

Offices Held

Under-sheriff, Notts. 1608-10, 1612-13.3

Freeman, Nottingham by 1624.4

Biography

Martyn’s father was an illiterate yeoman from Strelley, about five miles west of Nottingham, who bequeathed him £30.5 Martyn himself became an attorney in Common Pleas, and was practising law in Nottingham from about 1605. Three times under-sheriff of Nottinghamshire, he was accused of extortion, forgery and bribe-taking, but he fought back, and on one occasion accused his opponents of ‘procuring morris-dancers to assault’ him. His legal troubles may partly have arisen because he became entangled in disputes over the inheritance of (Sir) Philip Strelley†, the owner of Strelley manor, who died in 1607, for having been Sir Philip’s solicitor, Martyn was administrator of the estate.6

Martyn’s connection with the Strelleys brought him into contact with the Byrons of Newstead, one of the most important families in Nottinghamshire. By 1607 he was a trustee for the Byron estate, in which capacity he was mentioned in the Byron estate bill, which was laid before Parliament in 1610. Martyn was also connected to Sir Philip Stanhope, later 1st earl of Chesterfield, from whom he rented the manor of East Stoke, near Newark. As tenant of this property he was involved in a dispute with Sir John Holles* in 1613 over the profits of the manor.7

Martyn was one of the signatories to Nottingham’s election return of 1624, which suggests that by then he was one of the town’s freeman. Elected himself to the first Caroline Parliament after the corporation agreed to elect freemen rather than outsiders, he took no known part in debate or committee. The town subsequently employed him on legal business in 1626.8

Martyn drafted his will on 22 Sept. 1627, in which he bequeathed £300 to each of his two unmarried daughters as portions, which money was to be paid out of debts owed to him by members of the Nottinghamshire gentry, including Sir John Byron* and Sir Percival Willoughby*. He left his colleague in the 1625 Parliament, Robert Greaves, money for a memorial ring and appointed Byron’s brother-in-law, Sir Thomas Hutchinson*, one of his executors. In accordance with his will he was buried on 3 Oct. 1627 in St. Peter’s, Nottingham.9 His son, John, was a parliamentarian captain in the Nottingham garrison in the Civil War. No other members of the family sat in Parliament.10

Ref Volumes: 1604-1629

Author: George Yerby

Notes

  • 1. Notts. RO, PRNW, will of Richard Martyn alias Orme of Strelley, proved 16 Jan. 1607/8.
  • 2. Borthwick, Reg. Test. 40, ff. 108-110v; Notts. RO, St. Peter’s, Nottingham par. reg.
  • 3. STAC 8/11/4; 8/22/9.
  • 4. C219/38/178.
  • 5. Notts. RO, PRNW, will of Richard Martyn alias Orme.
  • 6. STAC 8/11/4; 8/20/7; 8/22/9; 8/215/13; 8/219/16; Thoroton, Notts. (1790), ii. 221; HP Commons, 1558-1603, iii. 456.
  • 7. HLRO, O.A. 7 Jas.I, c. 63; Thoroton, ii. 285; Letters of John Holles ed. P.R. Seddon (Thoroton Rec. Soc. xxxi), 43.
  • 8. Recs. of Bor. of Nottingham ed. W.T. Baker, v. 102, 119
  • 9. Borthwick, Reg. Test. 40, ff. 108-110v.
  • 10. A.C. Wood, Notts. in the Civil War, 135.