Capell’s ancestors held the Herefordshire manor of How Capell from at least the fifteenth century. Capell himself was the younger son of a younger son, and inherited only £20 from his father, but prospered as a mercer in Gloucester. His father was a Catholic, bequeathing his soul to ‘our blessed lady St. Mary and to all the holy company of heaven’.
Capell was nominated by the corporation of Gloucester for election to the second Jacobean Parliament but was unsuccessful.
I would not that his father should have to do with him by no means; he have other children enough to look to. For Ned Caple to be with my wife, his grandmother, is best, for she will love him, and there be no children in her house.
He named as his executor his son-in-law John Hanbury* and asked to be buried with his first wife in his parish church of St. Nicholas, Gloucester. However, the funeral was held in London, at St. Dunstan-in-the West. He bequeathed St. Nicholas’ a communion cup, such as the one ‘as is in the church by Westminster where the House of Parliament did receive the sacrament’.
