The great-uncle of the famous diarist, Samuel Pepys†, Talbot Pepys came from a long line of Cambridgeshire yeomen. His father, John, purchased the half-manor of Ferme Part, Impington in 1579, and began to build Impington Hall on the site of the old manor house; however, the work remained incomplete at his death in 1589.
In 1624 Pepys replaced Francis Brakin* as Cambridge’s recorder after the town was informed by the duke of Buckingham that Pepys ‘hath been employed in some affairs of mine’ and had given good service. He also received an endorsement from Viscount Mandeville (Sir Henry Montagu*), his kinsman by marriage, in which he was described as being of ‘very honest conversation and integrity’.
As recorder, Pepys received a yearly retainer of £6 12s. 4d. and after 1631 this sum was supplemented by an additional 40s. a year as one of the town’s fee’d counsel.
In the summer of 1661 Pepys was visited several times by Samuel Pepys, who noted that his great-uncle was ‘sitting all alone, like a man out of this world. He can hardly see, but all things else he doth pretty lively’.
