Calthorpe was the third son, and the only one of ten children of Sir Henry Calthorpe and his wife Dorothy (daughter and heiress of Edward Humphrey) to survive to adulthood.[1] He was educated at Catherine Hall, Cambridge.[2]
James Calthorpe survived his father by twenty-one years, being interred in the chancel of Ampton Church the same day of the month on which Sir Henry died, 1 August 1658. [a]
Family
Calthorpe married Dorothy, second daughter of Sir James Reynolds, of Castle Camps, Cambridgeshire, and sister to Sir John Reynolds, Commissary-General in Ireland, on whose death she became his sole heiress).[b] They had three sons and six daughters who were still living when he died in August 1658:[3]
James (1649–1702), was nine years old when his father died. He inhered his father's, estate and during his adult life endowed a hospital for boys in Ampton (It was a school for six pupils).[4][5] His brother Christopher inherited the estate.[4]
Christopher (1652–1717), he married Elizabeth, one of the daughters and coheirs of Gardiner Kettleborough, of Elmswell in Suffolk, they had two sons, James 1699–1784) who became a politician and courtier; and Henry (1703–1780) who became a rector and never married; and three daughters. As Henry predeceased James and he also died unmarried, with his death, the direct male line of his family became extinct.
Reynolds(1655–1719). He was a member of parliament, married twice and had several children.[3]
Dorothy (1648–1693) she bequeathed £1,000 for the endowment of an alms-house in Ampton, for six poor old widows or old maids of the age of sixty years and upwards and another £500 to help apprentice poor boys into handicraft trades in the town of Bury St. Edmunds. She died unmarried.[6]
Katherine, (1656–1707), on 10 February 1680 married the Rev. Robert Lowe, Rector of Ingham in Suffolk.[6]
Jane (1657–1680), married Mr. Mordaunt Cracherode, citizen of London.[6]
Elizabeth, (1658–1686), married the Rev. Charles Trumbull, LL.D. Rector of Hadleigh.[6]
After Calthorpe's death, Dorothy remarried. On 15 June 1662, she married Sir Algernon May of Old Windsor, Berkshire, with whom she had several children.[6]
^The marriage contract of 10 May 1645, agrees that Sir James covenants to give his daughter a portion of £800 for the payment of which he assigns over an estate called Gouldstons, in the parish of Ashdon, Essex.[2]