104:. Vaughan was one of those who witnessed Annesley's return, probably indicating that he intended to stand aside on Annesley's behalf. Vaughan's name in the Crown Office list, which had been entered after his initial return, was duly erased on receipt of Annesly's return, but Annesley's name did not replace it. This was presumably because parliament was dissolved before a final judgement could be made. Vaughan was returned without incident at the 1626 election, and again in 1628, sitting until 1629 when
56:, and his first wife Mary, daughter of Griffith Rice of Newton, Llandefaisant, Carmarthenshire. His date of birth is unknown, but assuming him to have been at least 21 in 1607, when he is recorded to have been appointed a deputy-coroner, he had been born by at least 1586. He was a younger brother of
180:, after his estate was valued at £600 a year. Vaughan was however in dire financial straits, claiming that he had debts of £3,600, and that the most valuable parts of his estate were part of his wife's inheritance. He remained in prison for some years, being excluded from pardons as part of the
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Vaughan was a prisoner allegedly as late as 1659, although he was reported on as a potential
Royalist activist in Carmarthenshire in 1658, and had some role in the 1659 elections in Carmarthen. He made his will when living at Derwydd on 27 November 1660 and was dead before a
96:, and was returned again in 1624. The 1625 election was a confused affair. Vaughan was returned for the third time for Carmarthen, as witnessed by the mayor and members of the common council. But shortly afterwards another return was made out in favour of
156:, but abandoned the town in March 1644, supposedly after a stampede of cattle was mistaken for an attack by Laugharne's troops. Vaughan moved to Carmarthen, but was again forced to move on after this town fell to Parliamentarian forces a few weeks later.
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Notitia
Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ...
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Vaughan had three sons, one of whom was illegitimate, and seven daughters. His eldest son, John, predeceased him and his estates descended to his second son,
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on 14 January 1643, and was disabled from sitting in parliament on 5 February 1644. He was
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in 1644, and the general pardon of 13 October 1648, on account of his apparent brutal conduct during the war. Vaughan's fellow prisoner,
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inventory of his estate was made on 5 January 1661, prior to proof of his will at
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on 14 June 1645, and brought before the House of
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Cobbett's
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and imprisoned there until 1 October 1647, when he was removed to the
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264:"Vaughan, Henry (by 1586-1660/1), of Derwydd, Llandybie, Carm"
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Bowen, Lloyd. "Vaughan, Sir Henry (1587?–1660/61)".
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Vaughan returned to Oxford, and was captured at the
379:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 56
148:in February 1644 by the Parliamentarian leader,
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439:Sir Henry Vaughan's Company of the Sealed Knot
381:. Oxford University Press. 2004. p. 170.
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206:And would be loyal to his king
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