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5 - ‘Horrible Secrets … not for his Majesty’s Service’: The Evidence of William Lloyd’s Shorthand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2022

Andrea McKenzie
Affiliation:
University of Victoria, British Columbia
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Summary

In April 1686, the Tory propagandist Roger L’Estrange, who had recently been given a warrant to reopen the investigation into Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey’s death, wrote to William Lloyd, bishop of St Asaph, soliciting information. Lloyd had in October 1678 been the curate of Godfrey’s parish, St Martin-inthe- Fields, and well-acquainted with the magistrate and many of his circle; he also had viewed the body and interrogated some of the leading Plot witnesses and suspects, including the three innocent men hanged for Sir Edmund’s murder. L’Estrange’s three original letters and the shorthand drafts of three of the bishop’s five replies – which have until now remained undeciphered – are housed in the Gloucestershire Archives. Extracts from the bishop’s responses were cited in L’Estrange’s 1688 Brief History of the Times, as though confirming the author’s suicide hypothesis. However, after successfully decoding the shorthand, using the key included with the papers and comparing text from Lloyd’s drafts with L’Estrange’s published excerpts, I was able to determine that in fact Lloyd had said very much the opposite, not only maintaining that Godfrey had been murdered, but darkly hinting that he knew by whom.

William Lloyd is perhaps best known for delivering Godfrey’s funeral sermon and hence has a reputation as a fanatical antipapist, hardly improved by Roger North’s characterisation of him in the reign of Anne as ‘a crazy grey haired Profet’. His biographer Tindal Hart seems to dismiss Lloyd simultaneously as a religious maniac who in his old age embarrassed visitors to court with his anti-Catholic and millenarian prognostications, and a political opportunist in his prime who ‘strove … to run with the hare while hunting with the hounds’. Lloyd was both ‘a noted latitudinarian and friend of Non-conformists’ and a court clergyman during the reign of Charles II, becoming chaplain in ordinary to the king in 1666, and bishop of St Asaph in 1680. He had also been made chaplain and almoner to the duke of York’s Anglican daughter Mary in November 1677, the same month as her marriage to the Dutch Calvinist William of Orange – of which Protestant match Lloyd, along with most of the nation, heartily approved. Lloyd would later become one of the ‘Seven Bishops’ prosecuted in 1688 by James II for seditious libel for petitioning against the king’s Declaration of Indulgence, which would have granted Catholics freedom of worship.

Type
Chapter
Information
Conspiracy Culture in Stuart England
The Mysterious Death of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey
, pp. 159 - 194
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2022

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