Leonard Willoughby
Leonard Willoughby was an English landowner who sat as MP for Wareham in Dorset.
Origins
Born by 1509, he was the first son and heir of Nicholas Willoughby and his wife Robegia, daughter of William Satchfield. His grandfather was Sir William Willoughby, who first acquired the lands of Turners Puddle, and his great-grandfather was John Willoughby, 8th Baron Latimer. His sister Margaret Willoughby married another Dorset landowner and MP, John Wadham of Catherston Leweston, who was Captain of Sandsfoot Castle in 1550 and Recorder of Lyme Regis in 1558.Life
Primarily occupied with his estates, he had land on the outskirts of Wareham, together with an annuity of £10 out of the dissolved Wareham Priory, and also holdings in Devon and Cornwall. On the death of his father in 1542, he inherited Turners Puddle. In October 1553, possibly through the influence of his wife's brother James Turberville, an associate of Stephen Gardiner, he was one of two MPs elected for the constituency of Wareham in the first Parliament of Queen Mary's reign. Neither he nor his fellow-member Thomas Phelips opposed the initial measures in Parliament towards the restoration of Catholicism in England but, unlike Phelips, he did not stand again.Family
Shortly after 3 September 1533, he married Mary, daughter of John Turberville of Bere Regis and his wife Isabel, daughter of John Cheverell. They had two sons who did not live and six daughters, three of whom married:- Anne, whose husband's surname was Cuff.
- Elizabeth married Thomas Gerard of Trent, Dorset, whose grandson was the antiquarian Thomas Gerard.
- Bridget married John Samborne of Timsbury, Somerset, and was mother of Sir Barnaby Samborne.