Joyce Denny


Joyce Denny was an English courtier.

Family and court connections

She was a daughter of Edmund Denny, a Baron of the Exchequer, and Mary Troutbeck. Princess Elizabeth was lodged with her brother the courtier Anthony Denny at Cheshunt, a former property of Thomas Wolsey. A later country house on the site has been demolished. Her sister Martha Denny married Wymond Carew of Anthony, Cornwall, who was treasurer of the household for Catherine Parr, and her elder sister Mary Denny married John Gates, a gentleman of the privy chamber of Edward VI.

Marriages and children

She married William Walsingham of Scadbury, Chislehurst or Foots Cray Place, a son of Edmund Walsingham. Their London home was in the parish of St Mary Aldermanbury. Their children included:
It has been argued that she was a strong Protestant influence on the upbringing of Francis Walsingham, who was probably brought up in her second husband's household at Hunsdon.
On the death of William Walsingham, Joyce, her brother-in-law Edmund Walsingham, and John Walsingham were his executors. Joyce Walsingham's silver plate passed into the custody of another executor, Henry White, an undersheriff of London.
Joyce married, secondly, John Cary or Carey of Pleshey, a Groom of the Privy Chamber to Henry VIII. Henry VIII granted them the lands of Thremhall Priory in Essex in 1536, soon after their marriage. Their children included:
She died in 1560. According to her will, she wished to be buried in the parish church of Aldermanbury, London, next to William Walsingham. She bequeathed silver plate and a velvet bed tester embroidered with gold knots to Francis Walsingham. An entry in the diary of Henry Machyn describes her burial on 6 May 1559/60 at St Clement Danes, London.