Crisp, whose family had purchased Parbold c.1680, was recommended to be sheriff of the county in 1715 as ‘a person of known affection to his Majesty and his government’. In 1716-17 he petitioned the Treasury for compensation for loss of the sheriff’s profits (normally amounting to £800) as a result of the rebellion, receiving £1,284 in repayment, together with £475 ‘in consideration of his own extraordinary care, pains and diligence in the discharge of his office of sheriff’.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
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