Sir Thomas Bond, 1st Baronet


Sir Thomas Bond, 1st Baronet was an English landowner and Comptroller of the household of Queen Henrietta Maria.

Biography

The son of Dr. Thomas Bond, by his marriage to Catherine, daughter of John Osbaldeston, Bond was born about 1620 at Peckham. The exact dates of his birth, death and marriage are unknown.
On 9 October 1658, before the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Bond was created by King Charles II a Baronet in the Baronetage of England. He also became Comptroller of the household of Queen Henrietta Maria, the mother of Charles II, an appointment which it was suggested he had obtained by the payment of one thousand pistoles, a very large sum, to Henry Jermyn, a favourite of the Queen who had recently been created Earl of St Albans.
After the Restoration, Bond had a house in Pall Mall, assessed for Hearth Tax in 1674 as having 20 hearths, and a country estate in Peckham and Camberwell. He also owned land in Yorkshire, at Kirkby Malham, Malham Dale, and Fountains Fell. He bought a large estate from his brother-in-law Sir Thomas Crymes, Baronet, and Westminster's Bond Street is named after one of his developments. He built a new manor house at Peckham, long since demolished and now the site of Peckham Hill Street. After his death, his estate was plundered by "a fanatic Whig mob."
Sir Thomas Bond was buried on 3 June 1685, in Saint Giles Church, Camberwell.

Marriage

Bond married a French woman, Marie de la Garde, a daughter of Charles Peliot, Sieur de la Garde, of Paris, one of the maids of the Queen Mother's privy chamber. They had two sons, Henry and Thomas, who respectively succeeded in the baronetcy, and a daughter, Mary Charlotte, who married Sir William Gage, 2nd Baronet of Hengrave Hall in Suffolk.

Arms and motto

The arms of the Bond family and their crest, with the motto Orbis non sufficit, were emblazoned in a window of the church of St Giles, Camberwell, destroyed by a fire in the 19th century.

Mention in Pepys

Bond is mentioned in the diary of Samuel Pepys, in the entry for 26 December, Boxing Day, 1660, some months after the Restoration.

Legacy

, Westminster, is named after Bond. However, he may be best known today as the supposed ancestor of the fictional spy James Bond. His family motto Orbis non sufficit is shown as Bond's family motto in the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and also became the title for the Bond film The World Is Not Enough. This motto was used previously by Philip II of Spain. A medal struck in 1583 bore the inscriptions PHILIPP II HISP ET NOVI ORBIS REX and NON SUFFICIT ORBIS.