Zij is getrouwd met Sir Robert Kempe, MP..
Zij zijn getrouwd op 25 november 1657 te St. Andrews, Holborn, London, England, zij was toen 20 jaar oud.Bron 5
It is probable that the marriage was celebrated here owing to Sir Robert being a barrister belonging to Gray's Inn, the members of which were considered parishioners of St. Andrews.
Kind(eren):
Shown as Mary Sone Birth 6 Apr 1637 Nayland, Suffolk, England IGI Film No. 177996 Page No. 702 Ref No. 23902 She died in 1705 [Kemp Pedigree]
Probate records - Suffolk Archdeaconry Court ref.IC/AA1/115/83
The last will and testament of Mary Sone ‘in the county of Suffolk', widow, dated 10 September 1679
Testatrix directs:
My body to be buried in the chancel of the parish church of Ubbeston by the body of my deceased husband.
To my dear cousin Mrs Mary Astwood of Chesterton near Cambridge, £3 to buy a ring. To my uncle Mr Thomas Dade of Pettistree and to so many of my brothers and sisters as shall be living at the time of my death, £3 each to buy rings, except for my brother, William Dade, to whom I give £10 to buy horse. To ‘my Man', £5. To my maid Sarah Grenlene, an annuity of £10 a year for life, also ‘the bed shee lyes on as it stands, and some other things sett downe in a note annexed to my will'. The rest of the servants in the family are to be rewarded according to their trouble occasioned by my sickness and death. To my cousin Hannah Dade, the daughter of my brother Anthony, £10. To the three daughters of my youngest sister, £10 each. To Mr Jones, the present minister of Ubbeston and his successors ‘provided they be Orthodox' the tithe corn of the same parish on condition that they keep the chancel in good repair. To the poor of the towns of Halesworth, Wissett and Laxfield, £3 to each parish to be distributed by the churchwardens and overseers of the poor within one week after my death. To the poor of Heveningham, 40s to be distributed after the same manner. To the poor of Ubbeston, £10 of which 40s to be distributed as above, and the other £8 to be laid out in 4 years at the rate of 40s a year in bread corn, to be distributed by the churchwardens and overseers at the beginning of Lent.
I give all my lands, meadows and pastures called Cookes, containing by estimation 40 acres with their appurtenances, lying in Ubbeston and Heveningham, now in my own use, which I purchased of Borret of Huntingfield, yeoman, of an indenture between him the said Simon and me Mary Sone, dated the 7 September 1654, to my ‘dear and only daughter' Dame Mary Kemp and her heirs. If she has no issue I give the same to my brother William Dade of Tannington, gent., paying thereout the sum of £250 to the rest of my younger brothers and sisters within 2 years after he inherits. If any brother or sister is dead by this time, their share is to go to their children.
To my son-in-law Sir Robert Kemp, Bart., the sum of £20. To Mrs Mary Kemp, one of my grandchildren - a tent-stitch purse with £10 of old gold, and my ring with 7 diamonds and my silver porringer [a small soup or porridge dish]. To Mrs Jane Kemp, another of my grandchildren, a wrought purse with £5 of gold, a silver tankard and silver candlestick, and a pair of earrings with small diamonds, also two pair of the best sort of sheets and two pair of ‘pillowbiers' [pillow cases], ‘a sute of diaper table linning', viz. a long table cloth, one short one, a dozen napkins and a towel. To my two grandsons Mr Robert Kemp and Mr William Kemp, £20 each.
The aforesaid Sir Robert Kemp to be supervisor of my will ‘who have promised to permit my daughter freely to dispose of what I give her to any of her children as shee please'. To my dear and only daughter, the residue of my whole personal estate. She is to be sole executrix and is to pay the legacies within one year of my death, apart from the legacies to the poor which are to be paid as directed above.
Testatrix says that she has written the will with her own hand and signs her name.
Witnesses: Thomas Jeffery, Robert Kemp junior, Thomas Bottwright
Memorandum attached to the will, dated 10 September 1679 [This one is in the same handwriting as the will]
I give unto my maid Sarah Grenlene my ‘saveguard' [a special petticoat worn by a woman to protect her dress when riding] and pilion cloth, the joined cupboard in my own chamber, the little table, the andirons with the firepan, tongs and bellows, the chair and barred trunk in her own chamber, the joined box where her linen lies, 6 pewter dishes of such sizes as are fittest for her use, a pewter basin, the brass candlestick used in my chamber, a brass pot, a baking pan and two pair of sheets such as she use to lie in.
Signed Mary Sone Witnesses: Thomas Jeffery, Robert Kemp junior, Tho: Bottwright
Sone Coat of Arms
Per pale or and azure, on a fess wavy three crescents between four cinquefoils all counterchanged, Sone