Mary Habington

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Mary Habington or Abington, née Parker was an English recusant. Antiquarian writers thought that she was the author of the anonymous letter to her brother William Parker, 4th Baron Monteagle which warned of the Gunpowder Plot.[1] This theory is dismissed by modern historians. She sheltered a number of Catholic priests and recusants at her Worcestershire home Hindlip Hall.[2]

Heraldry of Thomas Habington

She was the eldest daughter of Edward Parker, 12th Baron Morley and Elizabeth Stanley, a daughter of William Stanley, 3rd Baron Monteagle.[3] Around the year 1593, she married Thomas Habington (1560–1647) of Hindlip Hall, a son of Queen Elizabeth's cofferer John Habington and his wife, Catharine Wykes.[4] She signed her letters "Mary Abington".[5]

Dorothy Habington, described as Mary Habington's sister-in-law, was a Catholic convert by 1590.[6] She was identified as a recusant and "spinster" in a list made in 1594.[7] She was said to have been brought up a Protestant at Elizabeth I's court and converted by Edward Oldcorne.[8] Thomas Habington's stepmother Dorothy Habington née Bradbelt (died 1577) had been a member of the royal household.[9]

Dorothy Habington resided at Hindlip, receiving priests including Richard Broughton alias Rowse,[10] and Oldcorne was so frequently at Hindlip that locals thought he was a relative of the family.[11] The 1594 roll of recusants names Thomas Habington's wife as "Dorothy Abyngton", rather than Mary, by mistake.[12] Adding to possible confusion, an 18th-century writer Treadway Russell Nash mentions another Dorothy Habington, a niece of Mary and daughter of Richard Habington, who, he writes, was brought up at court.[13]

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