File:Cure (of Blake Hall, Bobbingworth, Essex) arms.svg

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Description

Arms of Cure of Blake Hall, Bobbingworth, Essex: Gules, a chevron argent between two roses in chief or and in base a fleur-de-lis of the second (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.252)

Genealogy

Source: Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.541 "Cure of Blake Hall":

  • George Cure I (c.1661-?), "upholsterer to the Prince of Wales" (probably the future King George II, Prince of Wales 1714-27), married (circa 1684) Margaret Baker (d.1723) (ancestry unrecorded). Dictionary of English Furniture Makers, 1660-1840[1]: Cure was recorded in the Royal Household accounts for 1691 (during the reign of William and Mary) working on "20 caned bottom chairs with banister backs and carved, 20 cushions of crimson damask for the chairs, squabs, valences, floor mats for St. James's House". These goods were charged at £43 9s 8d. In 1718 took out insurance cover of £400 on his rented house in King Street, St James's. Probably the father of George Cure at the sign of the 'Three Golden Chairs', Haymarket (1721-59). In 1709 in Hay Market but in 1718 in King Street, Parish of St Ann, Westminster.
    • George Cure II, son, married Catherine Payne, a daughter of Capel Payne of Westminster;
      • (George Cure III, eldest son, of Eversley, Berkshire)
      • Capel Cure I (1726-1816), 2nd son, who in 1789 purchased Blake Hall; High Sherriff of Essex in 1799; he married Joanna Coape. He invested in the 'Belvedere' plantation - producing rum and sugar - in Saint Thomas Parish, Jamaica. An 1804 estate map demonstrates that Cure had extended the house and organised new planting for the gardens at Blake Hall. (per Wikipedia)
        • Capel Cure II (1797-1878), of Blake Hall, High Sheriff of Essex in 1830, married Frederica Cheney, eldest daughter of Robert Cheney of Badger Hall, Shropshire;
          • (Rev. Edward Capel (1828-1891), 4th son, Rector of St George's Hanover Square, Chaplain to the Queen and a Canon of Windsor);
          • Rev. Lawrence George Capel Cure (1833-1912) (5th son), Rector and Patron of Abbess Roding, Essex, who married Augusta Elizabeth Smith (1830-1915), youngest daughter of Sir Charles Joshua Smith, 2nd Baronet (1800–1831), of Suttons, Stapleford Tawney, Romford, Essex (w:Spencer-Smith baronets The Smith, later Hamilton-Spencer-Smith, later Spencer-Smith Baronetcy, of Tring Park in the County of Hertford, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 11 June 1804 for Drummond Smith, with remainder to the heirs male of his niece Augusta Smith (daughter of his eldest brother Joshua Smith, of Stoke Park, Wiltshire), wife of Charles Smith, MP, of Suttons, Essex, a descendant of Robert Smith, of Ilminster)
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Source own work, using fleur-de-lis from File:Coat of arms of Raffaello Martinelli.svg by User:SajoR
Author Lobsterthermidor (talk) 09:37, 30 August 2023 (UTC)

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current09:37, 30 August 2023Thumbnail for version as of 09:37, 30 August 2023578 × 666 (49 KB)Lobsterthermidor (talk | contribs){{Information |Description=Arms of Cure of Blake Hall, Bobbingworth, Essex: ''Gules, a chevron argent between two roses in chief or and in base a fleur-de-lis of the second'' (Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.252) |Source=own work, using fleur-de-lis from File:Coat of arms of Raffaello Martinelli.svg by User:SajoR |Date=2023 |Author=~~~~ |Permission= |other_versions= }} Category:Cure arms

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