a blacksmith and ironmonger of Dartmouth, turned his attention to the matter.
Thomas Newcomen was a member of a very ancient family.
In the church of Stoke Fleming, near Dartmouth, is a brass with this inscription:—
Elias old lies here intombed in grave,
But Newcomin to heaven's habitation.
In knowledge old, in zeal, in life most grave,
Too good for all who live in lamentation.
Whose sheep and seed with heavie plaint and mone,
Will say too late, Elias old is gone!
The 13th May, 1614.
Over this inscription is a shield of arms, with helmet, crest, and mantling, bearing the arms of Newcomen, of Saltfleetby, in Lincolnshire, with six quarterings. This is the monument of Elias Newcomen, rector of Stoke Fleming. The pedigree of the family commences with Hugo Newcomen, of Saltfleetby, in 1189-99. Elias Newcomen, rector of Stoke Fleming, had a brother Robert, who went to Ireland and was created a baronet.
The son of the Rev. Elias was Thomas, who settled in Dartmouth, and this Thomas had a son Elias, who was the father of the inventor Thomas, who was baptized at Dartmouth 28 February, 1663-4. He married Hannah, daughter of Peter Waymouth, of Maiborough, Devon, in 1705, and died in 1729.
He left two sons, Thomas and Elias; and Thomas Newcomen, son of the inventor, compiled a pedigree with a view to proving his claim to the Irish baronetcy, but probably abandoned the attempt from want of funds to prosecute the claim.[1]
Although of gentle blood, Thomas Newcomen, son of Elias, and the inventor, was a tradesman in Dart-
- ↑ Worthy (C.), Devonshire Parishes, II, pp. 371-4. Exon., 1888.