Sir Ralph Creffeild (often incorrectly Creffield; Colchester, Essex, England, 1653 - Colchester, 22 June 1732) was an alderman and three times Mayor of Colchester. [1] A significant landowner, he controlled extensive estates in and around the town. [2] He came from a family of wealthy wool merchants, originally from Flanders, but at Chappel by 1348. His father, also Ralph, was himself mayor on four occasions. [3] [4]
Born in 1653, he ran the family business in the High Street of Colchester, but moved to Ardleigh, where he remained for fifty years. [5] Creffeild was knighted by Queen Anne in 1713, having presented her with an address of thanks from the town's Corporation on the conclusion of the peace of Utrecht earlier that year. [1] [5]
In 1684 he married Rachel, daughter of George Tayspill; [6] Rachel is now best remembered in Colchester for making a bequest to the poor of Trinity Parish. [1] Though they had five children, [6] only one survived to bear children: [7] his second son, another Ralph Creffeild, born in 1687. [5] Ralph predeceased his father, dying in 1723; [1] consequently the estate jumped him and proceeded to his son Peter Creffield.
Creffeild himself died on 22 June 1732, aged 79. He was buried in St. Nicholas Church. [1] His estate was described in the Ipswich Gazette for 5 July 1735, as "a very good house with coach-houses, stables, granaries, yards, gardens, rishponds and about 40 acres of arable land." [5] In addition to his houses in Colchester and Ardleigh, he held East Mersea Hall, eleven messuages, three gardens, three cottages and over 1,200 acres (4.9 km2) of land, incorporating Ardleigh, East Mersea, Elmstead, Frating, Great and Little Birch, Layer de la Haye, Layer Breton and Feering. [5]
The City of Colchester is a local government district with city status, in Essex, England, named after its main settlement, Colchester. The city covers an area of 125 square miles (320 km2) and stretches from Dedham Vale on the Suffolk border in the north to Mersea Island on the Colne Estuary in the south.
Mersea Island is an island in Essex, England, in the Blackwater and Colne estuaries to the south-east of Colchester. Its name comes from the Old English word meresig, meaning "island of the pool" and thus is tautological. The island is split into two main areas, West Mersea and East Mersea, and connected to the mainland by the Strood, a causeway that can flood at high tide.
Colchester Royal Grammar School (CRGS) is a state-funded grammar school in Colchester, Essex. It was founded in 1128 and was later granted two royal charters - by Henry VIII in 1539 and by Elizabeth I in 1584.
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Jane Mary Benham MBE was an English painter and sailor who was instrumental in the formation and operation of the East Coast Sail Trust.
Sir William Gurney Benham, FSA, FRHS was a British newspaper editor, published author and three times Mayor of Colchester.
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Ralph Creffeild JP was a barrister and dignitary in Colchester, Essex, England, from a family of wealthy drapers and landowners.
Ipswich Road, formally the A1232, is a road in Colchester, Essex, England. It was the historic coaching route and main road to Ipswich from the Middle Ages onwards, and was part of the A12, a main road in East Anglia, until the A12 was rerouted in 1974.
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Sir Isaac Rebow was a clothier and merchant who served as Member of Parliament for Colchester in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.