- Peyton Ventris
Sir Peyton Ventris (November 1645 –
6 April 1691 ) was an Englishjudge andpolitician , the first surviving son ofEdward Ventris (d. 1649) of the manor ofGranhams inGreat Shelford ,Cambridgeshire , although he was born inLittle Wenham ,Suffolk .Ventris entered
Jesus College, Cambridge , on4 July 1660 and proceeded, as his father had done before him, to theMiddle Temple on3 February 1664 . He was called tothe bar on2 June 1671 and kept a chamber inFleet Street above Middle Temple. Having begun noting cases while a student, he turned to reporting for his livelihood, enjoying little success as a pleader. The result was two volumes of reports, principally of arguments in king's bench and common pleas, published posthumously in 1696.Ventris married
Margaret Whiting , daughter of Henry a shipowner ofCoggeshall ,Essex , and ofIpswich ,Suffolk . They had five sons and one daughter. Ventris established his family home in Ipswich, and in 1681 he became thetown clerk and one of three counsels to the corporation. In July 1684 he lost these offices when his name was omitted from the town's new charter.Despite losing his previous offices, Ventris was made a
justice of the peace for Suffolk in 1685, and in 1687, he inherited extensive properties from his father-in-law.Ventris came to prominence after 1688. He was chosen to one of Ipswich's seats in the
Convention Parliament in January 1689. He took the oath as aserjeant-at-law on 2 May 1689, the king made him ajustice of common pleas on 4 May 1689, and aknighthood followed on 31 October 1689.After a long illness Ventris died on 6 April 1691 and was buried in the chancel of
St Nicholas' Church, Ipswich , survived by his wife, his mother, five sons, and a daughter.ources
* [http://www.oxforddnb.com/auth/login.jsp?url=%2Fview%2Farticle%2F28197 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography] (requires subscription)
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