Thomas St George

Thomas St George (1615–1703) was an English officer of arms who rose to the rank of Garter Principal King of Arms (1686–1703).

Life

He was the eldest child of the herald Henry St George and lived at Woodford in Essex.[1] Around 1646 he married Clara Pymlowe (d. 1691), whose father was a Northamptonshire rector. They had six children. At the Restoration he was appointed Somerset Herald. As deputy to Sir Edward Walker he went on a mission to Dresden and invested the elector of Saxony on 13 April 1669 with the Order of the Garter. He was knighted in 1669 and appointed Norroy King of Arms in 1680, in succession to his younger brother Henry. The seniority was reversed when in 1686, he was appointed Garter on the death of William Dugdale. In 1690 he appointed a deputy to deliver the Garter to a Continental recipient, but the following year he undertook the task himself as William III was to attend the ceremony. In 1693 Gregory King acted as his deputy to deliver the Garter to the Elector of Saxony. Following his first wife's death, he married Anne (d. 1721), daughter of Sir John Lawson and widow of William Attwood in 1692. Their only daughter died in infancy. In 1693 he and his brother Sir Henry were appointed commissioners for the rebuilding of St Paul's Cathedral after the Great Fire of London. He died at the College of Arms on 6 March 1703 and was buried at Woodford. His manuscripts were purchased by Peter Le Neve, Norroy King of Arms. According to Noble, ‘he died more esteemed as a good, and more respected as an elegant man, than praised for his knowledge’.[2]

References

  1. D. Lysons, The Environs of London, vol. 4 (1796), 273-87
  2. M. Noble, The History of the College of Arms (1804), 331-3


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