John Hele (died 1608)


Sir John Hele of Wembury in Devon, serjeant-at-law, was a Member of Parliament for Exeter and was Recorder of Exeter. He was one of Prince's Worthies of Devon. He built at Wembury one of the grandest manor houses ever seen in Devon, called by his near contemporary Risdon : "A magnificent house, equalling, if not exceeding, all other in these western parts, for uniform building; a sightly seat for shew; for receipt spacious; for cost sumptuous; for sight salubrious". It was already a ruin by about 1700, and was finally demolished in 1803. He founded a boys' hospital in Plymouth. His monument and effigy survives in Wembury Church.

Origins

He was born in about 1543, the 6th son of Nicholas Hele of South Hele in Devon, by his second wife Margery Dune, daughter of Richard Dune of Holsworthy, Devon. His mother Margery Dune married secondly to Ellis Warwick of Holbeton and of Batsborow, in the parish of St Budeaux, both in Devon, whose daughter and co-heiress from his earlier marriage, Mary Warwick, would become Sir John Hele's wife. One of his elder brothers was Thomas I Hele of Exeter and of Flete, Holbeton, Sheriff of Devon in 1600–01. The Hele family had originated at the estate of Hele in the parish of Cornwood in Devon.

Career

He entered the Inner Temple as a law student and eventually became Lent Reader of the Inner Temple. He served as Member of Parliament for from 1592 to 1601, and was Recorder of Exeter from 14 July 1592 to the beginning of 1606. In November 1594 Hele became a serjeant-at-law and on 16 May 1602 was appointed Queen's Serjeant to Queen Elizabeth I. At the beginning of the reign of her successor King James I his patent was renewed, and he was knighted. In November 1603 Hele was employed as King's Serjeant at the trial of Sir Walter Raleigh. On 8 February 1608 Hele obtained a dispensation, on grounds of age, from attendance as serjeant.

Marriage and children

Hele married his step-sister Mary Warwick, a daughter and co-heiress of Ellis Warwick of Holbeton and of Batsborow, in the parish of St Budeaux, both in Devon. The arms of Warwick, quartered by Hele, are visible on the monument to Sir John Hele in Wembury Church: Argent, a fess azure fretty or between three fleurs-de-lys of the second. By his wife he had eight sons and two daughters, including:
Until about 1600 Hele had a high reputation, but then personal attacks on him started. Through his making of loans, and actions in recovering them, he exposed himself to attacks from the circle of Sir Thomas Egerton, one of his debtors, whose clients ran a successful personal vendetta against him. Hele had hoped to succeed Egerton as Master of the Rolls, but the outcome of his intrigues was quite different.
Hele lost a large sum in 1601 through the attainder of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, a key ally of his at court and was also owed a large sum by Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham. In 1602 he went on circuit with Judge Francis Gawdy, making himself "odious and ridiculous", according to the gossip circulated by the letter-writer John Chamberlain. Cobham was then caught up in the Main Plot of 1603, and Hele was thought to have taken advantage of his legal position to exact repayment from him.
A petition was presented to the Privy Council by Sir William Dethick, Garter King-at-Arms, accusing Hele of violent conduct towards him in public, and Hele hardly denied it. The Council investigated Hele in 1604, and the matter was referred to the Star Chamber, which found against Hele on the ground that he had gone outside due process in dealing with Cobham. The result was that he was suspended from office, fined, and imprisoned for six weeks.

Landholdings

Having amassed a fortune, he bought an estate at Wembury, near Plymouth, in Devon, where he built a grand mansion-house. He also had a house at Kew, and owned the manor of Shirford, Knighton hundred, Warwickshire. He purchased the manor of Yealmpton in Devon and from Sir Robert Prideaux the estate of Orcheton, Modbury.

Death and burial

Hele died on 4 June 1608 and was buried in Wembury Church, where his monument survives, showing effigies of himself and his children, inscribed in Latin as follows:
His will was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury on 1 October 1608.