Edward Popham

In the chapel of St John the Baptist at Westminster Abbey there is a monument to Colonel Edward Popham, naval and army officer, and his wife Anne. The black and white marble monument shows two life-size alabaster figures on either side of a pedestal on which is a helmet. Above, a draped canopy is drawn back over the figures. Colonel Popham is in armour and his foot rests on what is thought to be a ship's chart box.

At the top is a coat of arms "argent on a chief gules two bucks' heads or, a crescent for difference (for Popham) impaling "gules on a chevron argent, three mullets [stars] sable" (for Carr). Beside Anne's figure is another shield showing a different coat of arms for Popham "an inescutcheon or, charged with a lion rampant double quevee [double tailed] gules". A third shield has disappeared. The monument is attributed to sculptor William Wright. There is now no inscription.

Edward was born in about 1610, a son of Sir Francis Popham (d.1644) and his wife Anne (Dudley). He was a naval lieutenant by 1636 and was made a captain in the following year. With his brothers Alexander and Hugh Edward supported Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War and served in the cavalry. In 1645 he was a colonel in the new Model Army and the same year he married Anne, daughter of William Carr, who had been a groom of the bedchamber to James I. Their children were Letitia and Alexander. Popham died of fever at Dover in Kent on 19th August 1651 and was given a magnificent funeral in the Abbey. His widow married Philip, 4th Lord Wentworth.

But at the Restoration of Charles II in 1660 his body, along with many other Cromwellians, was disinterred. Instead of being re-buried in a pit outside like the others his friends were permitted to take his body away. The monument was allowed to stay in the Abbey as long as its inscription was erased. A story that the panel was just turned around was disproved in 1866 when it was inspected but no wording was found. It is assumed a new plain panel was put in at the time.

Further reading

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

Died

19th August 1651

Occupation

Soldier; sailor

Location

Chapel of St John Baptist; St Margaret's Church

Memorial Type

Statue

Material Type

Marble

Edward Popham
Edward Popham monument

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster