Catalogue description COOPER, FAMILY

This record is held by London Metropolitan Archives: City of London

Details of ACC/0775
Reference: ACC/0775
Title: COOPER, FAMILY
Description:

Family records

Date: 1713 - 1892
Arrangement:

Cooper and Honywood wills 1820 - 1891

 

Lady Cooper's Settlement Trust 1777 - 1855

 

Miscellanea: chiefly solicitors letters and accounts to Lady Cooper 1730 - 1892

 

Sir William Henry Cooper and Peregrine Bertie 1816 - 1835

 

Dawkins family papers 1859 - 1892

 

William Honywood's marriage settlement 1844 - 1892

 

William Honywood's financial papers 1851 - 1892

 

Misses Elizabeth and Caroline Honywood's financial papers 1844 - 1892

 

Philip Honywood's papers 1843 - 1851

 

Isleworth Estate Settlement 1836 - 1885

 

Title deeds and abstracts for Isleworth Estate 1768 - 1880

 

Leases of Isleworth Estate property 1750 - 1878

 

Estate Accounts and Vouchers for Isleworth 1833 - 1856

 

Sale of Isleworth Estate 1834 - 1880

 

Maps and Plans of Estate

 

Chilton Lodge Estate and other Berks property 1674 - 1847

 

Mortgages held by Lady Cooper and William Honywood 1830 - 1855

 

Dukinfield Hall Plantation, Jamaica: Franks wills 1777 - 1832

 

Early title deeds 1719 - 1777

 

Abstracts of title to shares in plantation 1736 - 1818

 

Title deeds to Moses Franks moiety 1785 - 1828

 

Title deeds to Arnold Nesbitt's moiety 1773 - 1841

 

Conveyances of Plantation stock 1780 - 1868

 

Accounts and Inventories 1764 - 1877

 

Grenada Plantations 1773 - 1867

Held by: London Metropolitan Archives: City of London, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Cooper family, baronets, of Gogar, Midlothian

Physical description: 954 documents
Immediate source of acquisition:

ACCESSION 775

Administrative / biographical background:

The collection is of family papers belonging to Isabella Lady Cooper, her children and grandchildren. Lady Cooper, born Isabella Ball Franks, of a rich Jewish business family, married William Henry Cooper, clerk and baronet (as he is frequently described). She inherited a considerable amount of money from her father Moses Franks and her mother's father Aaron Franks, and a group of documents gives details of this trust and assignments of its stock to her husband and children. Her considerable property she inherited from her aunt Priscilla (see Franks family tree), both the estate at Isleworth, and several West Indies Plantations.

 

There is a collection of title deeds for Isleworth Estate, together with leases of various parts of it, tradesmen's vouchers, accounts and particulars of its eventual sale (1855-78). On the death of her only son, William Henry, without issue (1835) the estate was settled on her eldest surviving daughter, Lady Mary Anne Honywood, who in her will provided that on her death, or that of her mother, if she should survive her (which she did) the estate should be sold and the proceeds divided among her own children,

 

By Lady Cooper's will, apart from numerous pecuniary legacies, she leaves her estate of Chilton Lodge in Berks/Wilts to Lady Honywood's son William, there are some 17th century title deeds to property in Hidden, Hungerford, as well as later deeds, accounts, rentals and leases.

 

Among the personal papers are a group concerning the settlement made on his marriage with Barbara Whyte, and a group of financial papers chiefly on the subject of loans and securities, the same is true of the papers belonging to his sisters Elizabeth and Caroline. There are also papers dealing with a mortgage he held from Sir John Shelley on property in Maresfield and Fletching in Sussex and as an executor of his grandmother's will he was forced into lengthy proceedings against the Ware family of Cheltenham for a long outstanding mortgage debt owed to Lady Cooper. The last group of family papers relates to Elizabeth, Lady Cooper's younger surviving daughter, who married, secondly, the Reverend Edward Henry Dawkins. It includes their marriage settlement, and a number of his financial papers.

 

The most interesting part of the whole collection relates to the sugar plantation of Dukinfield Hall, Jamaica (1719 - 1877). It fell into Franks' hands in payment of a mortgage debt and by 1822 belonged to Priscilla who bequeathed it along with her other property to Isabella, one of the original third part shares having belonged to Isabella's father Moses.

 

There are title deeds for a particularly tortuous descent, yearly accounts of crops, letters from the Jamaica agents and inventories of stock, which include slaves and give their names, ages, country of origin, occupation and state of health. There is also the will of Robert Dukinfield (1755), the original owner of the plantation, which xx makes provision for his negre mistress and their children out of his other property. The family name has a variety of spellings, Dukinfield being the one most frequently applied to the estate, although the main branch of the family comes from Duckenfield, Chester. There is no record at all of any of the owners ever visiting the plantation. It was left by Lady Cooper's will in trust for Mrs. Dawkins and was eventually sold in 1877. Under its earlier owners it was heavily mortgaged, and soon after it passed to Lady Cooper slavery was abolished, so it is unlikely that the family ever derived any great profit from it. There are also a few papers concerned with three plantations on the Island of Grenada, which Lady Cooper also inherited (1773-1867).

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