Gregory Clement
Gregory Clement was an English Member of Parliament and one of Charles I's regicides, who was tried for treason, found guilty, and hanged, drawn and quartered on 17 October 1660.
Gregory Clement and his wife Martha Spaight had two sons documented as reaching adulthood. No confirmed record of either son has been discovered after 1660 and no confirmed record of either having descendants.
Biography
Gregory Clement was baptised at St Andrew's, Plymouth on 21 November 1594. His father, John Clement, was a merchant, elected mayor of Plymouth in 1614, and his mother was Judith, daughter of John Sparke of Plymouth; he was their second son.East India Company
After working for a Mr Hewkeley, he contracted on 10 December 1623 for seven years with the British East India Company and sailed to their factory at Surat in 1624. In 1626, he was already being accused of "private trade" for his own profit. In February 1627 he was promoted to head the Company's factory at Agra, where the new Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan had established his court. In March 1628 he was briefly detained by the emperor for buying saltpetre without a licence, but managed to acquire the licence for this trade.In April 1630, after working seven years in India, Clement was sent back to London in disgrace, having been accused and fined for private trading. His superior, Richard Wylde, governor of Surat, was also charged, and both returned on either the ship Charles or Jonas, which both sailed from Surat on 14 April 1630 and arrived in The Downs on 9 April 1631. Subsequently, he testified against Wylde.
London Merchant
Following his return to England with sufficient capital to set himself up in trade, Clement married Martha Spaight at St Botolph's Aldgate, London, on 1 December 1631. She was the widow of mariner William Spaight, who died at Livorno in 1631. Her father was Thomas Trenchfield, later Rear-Admiral in Parliament's Navy.The association with Trenchfield was mutually profitable. Aside from trade with the North American colonies, they sometimes obtained a Letter of marque allowing them to seize the shipping of hostile parties such as Spain, sometimes in partnership. On 13 January 1637/8, a petition of sailors to the House of Lords stated: "that they were last summer employed by Capt. Trenchfield, Mr. Clements Mr. Willoughby, and other merchants of London, in the Discovery, under Capt. Man, and were promised their wages and the sixth part of goods taken in any prizes. The ship took four prizes of a very great value, but the merchants have not performed their agreement..." In 1638, his house in the parish of St George Botolph Lane was valued at £70 per annum, the fourth highest valued, the highest being £100.
Parliamentarian
When the Civil War broke out, Gregory Clement supported Parliament, although he did not take up arms and continued his overseas trade.On 4 July 1648 he was elected as recruiter MP for Fowey in Cornwall, replacing his mother's brother-in-law John Rashleigh, who was disqualified as a Royalist.
Only months after he took his seat, he was faced with a summons to sit on a High Court of Justice to try King Charles I for his role in the Civil War.
His colleague Edmund Ludlow wrote: "he durst not refuse his assistance in that service." He did so conscientiously, attending all four days of the trial in January 1649 and signing the king's death warrant at its completion - 54th out of 59 signatories - although his signature appears to have been written over an erased signature.
He profited from the purchase of estates confiscated by Royalists after the Civil War, and in 1652 sold part of the estate in East Greenwich Kent confiscated from merchant Andrew Cogan, which would be his residence.
He was dismissed from the House of Commons in 1652 over a scandal involving his maidservant.