James Paynter

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

James Paynter (1666 – date of death unknown) was the leader of a

Jacobite uprising in Cornwall
in the 18th century.

In 1715 he took an active part in proclaiming

Jacobite Peerage
on 20 June 1715.

Family

James Paynter was descended from the wealthy Paynter family of Trelissick Manor in Hayle; he was from a junior branch of this family that settled at Trekenning House in St Columb Major parish. His Paynter relatives at Boskenna were also known to be Jacobite sympathisers and in 1745 villagers at St Buryan were convinced that the Paynter family were harbouring Charles Edward Stuart (the Young Pretender).[2]

Other Jacobite leaders in the Southwest

References

  1. ^ Boase, George Clement (1890). Collectanea Cornubiensia. Netherton and Worth. p. 672. Retrieved 16 August 2007.
  2. ^ Pearce, John The Wesleys in Cornwall. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1964

Further reading

  • West Britons
  • An Incident in Cornwall in 1715, JRIC XX (1921) by Henry Jenner
  • "When Fortune Frowns" a novel by Kitty Lee Jenner (1895)
  • Jacobite days in the West an article published by
    Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art
    , (259-260) P.Q. Karkeek, (1896)
  • A Faithful Register of the late Rebellion. London, 1718. (Trials of Prisoners.)
  • The Jacobite Activities in South and West England in the Summer of 1715 by
    Charles Petrie
    (1935).
  • English Jacobitism, 1710-1715; Myth and Reality by G. V. Bennett

External links