Grenfell Family History Site
Pascoe Grenfell (1729-1810)
GRENFELL, Pascoe was baptised 27 April 1729, at St Hilary, Cornwall the second
son of Pascoe Grenfell and his wife Mary Maugham the daughter of John Maugham
of Penzance, Cornwall [see below]. In both his will and in the diary of his youngest daughter
Lydia Grenfell, there is a suggestion of
estrangement in the relationship between him and his wife and children.
In
his will dated 1802, he bequeathed the sum of 1/- to his wife and each of his
children "while under trouble & sorrow of mind occasioned by the ill
treatment of my wife, for which may God forgive my wife, as I do, and my
children...."; while in an entry of her diary dated February 3, 1804, Lydia
describes a visit to Penzance for the first time in 3 years to see her father
(the family home was in Marazion). His eldest son was
Pascoe Grenfell MP (1761-1838).
In
his Parochial History of Cornwall
(1838) Davies Gilbert writes: "Mr Pascoe Grenfell, Commissary to the States
of Holland, resided here [Marazion] during a long life, although he was
originally of Penzance." Davies
Gilbert while still calling himself Davies Giddy (he later took his wife's
maiden name on
their marriage for inheritance purposes) was one of his executors.
Pascoe Grenfell had married Mary Tremenheere (1734-1826), a solicitor's
daughter and niece of the Cornish antiquarian William Borlase (1696-1772) at
Madron Church 13 December 1758. He is described as of St Hilary which is the
mother church of Marazion, Madron
being the mother church of Penzance where Mary was brought up. Pascoe's own
father [another Pascoe Grenfell (1692-1752)], who is referred to as "of
Penzance" had married secondly Mary Maugham of Marazion in 1727, and the
Maugham connection is likely to have been the main factor for Grenfell settling there. That he was already living there at the time of his
marriage is borne out by the fact of his being described as "of St
Hilary" at the time.
The deeds to his lease of the family home in Chapel Street, Marazion, of 1765
include mention of a Maugham cousin as one of the three lives on which it is
drawn up. While Chapel Street still exists, it is unlikely that the house in
question is one of those still extant.
Pascoe Grenfell served several terms as Mayor of Marazion - in 1763, 1770
(jointly), 1777 & 1782 and is named on Marazion Borough Council
regalia.
He
died 28 May 1810 aged 82 and was buried on 2 June in St Mary's Chapel Yard,
Penzance. His tombstone is now incorporated into a wall in the later St Mary's
Church.
[Compiled by Penny Watts-Russell].
[The portrait is reproduced by courtesy of the Royal Borough of Windsor &
Maidenhead].
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