Skip navigation

If you would like to write a summary for this topic, email phil [at] gyford [dot] com

Wikipedia

Valentine Walton[1] (c. 15941661) was one of the regicides of King Charles I of England.[2]

Walton was of very ancient, and knightly family of Great Staughton, in Huntingdonshire. Upon a vacancy he was returned a member of the Long Parliament for the county of Huntingdon. He was from the commencement of the English Civil War a soldier in the army of Parliament, rose to be a colonel, and fell into the king's hands; but was released, and ever after sided with greater steadiness to the army interest. Having married Margaret, sister of Oliver Cromwell, he followed Cromwell in all his designs, and in none with more willingness than in putting King Charles I to death. Walton was one of the 59 Commissioners who sat in judgment at the trial of Charles I. He attended the trial on all the days except 12, 17, 18, 19, and 24 January 1649. He was present on 27 January when sentence was pronounced against Charles, and he signed and sealed that instrument, which commanded Charles to execution.[3]

In the republic he was greatly employed, and confided in; he was of the Council of State in the years 1650, 1651, and 1652, appointed governor of King's Lynn and Croyland, with all the level of Ely, Holland, and Marshland.[3]

Walton was one of those who were steady, real republicans, who wished to change the form of government entirely, and refused honours under his Cromwell's protectorate, who mistrusting him was obliged to have Walton watched to prevent his revolt.[3]

At the return of the Long Parliament, in derision called the Rump, Walton rose again to greater power and authority than he had possessed before the Protectorate, and having seen the fate of a nation governed by an army, he took a decided part with Parliament, in preference to the military; and they trusted to him as one of those that were to counterpoise General George Monck; but he had no political capacity for such an enterprise, and seeing, what he most feared, that the monarchy would be restored, he prudently retired to the continent, and settled at Hanau, in Germany, of which he was elected a burgess; but knowing the extreme hatred the royal family, especially the queen dowager, had to him, he left that town, and hid himself in the garb of a gardener in Flanders, and did not reveal his whereabouts until just before his death in 1661. Occasioned, no doubt, from the many misfortunes which overwhelmed him, and the dread of still greater.[3]

Parliament had absolutely excepted Walton out of the Act of Indemnity, and confiscated his estate; a great part of what he had acquired belonged to the queen, as part of her dower: had he been seized, his destruction would have been inevitable.[3]

Walton's first wife dying, he married the daughter of Colonel Thomas Pride, the well-known regicide, and one of Cromwell's lords, who partaking of the misfortunes of her husband, died in poverty and wretchedness at Oxford, 14 November 1662, and was buried in St. Mary's church in that city. By one or both these marriages he had children, who also were greatly affected by his reduced circumstances after the Restoration.[3]

[edit] References

Attribution
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "The lives of the English regicides: and other commissioners of the pretended High court of justice, appointed to sit in judgement upon their sovereign, King Charles the First" Volume II, by Mark Noble (1798)
Persondata
Name Walton, Valentine
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth
Place of birth
Date of death 1661
Place of death

This text was last fetched from this Wikipedia page (where you can edit it) on
11 Feb 2012, 9:02pm under the terms of the GFDL.

Post an annotation

Before posting an annotation please read the annotation guidelines.
If your comment isn't directly relevant to this page, try the discussion group for other Pepys-related topics or the social group for general chat.

(required)

(required)

(optional)


No HTML in annotations. URLs will be turned into links. About copyright

(required)

References in the diary

A graph of all the references in the diary

1661
May: 1