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  1. Elizabeth Claypole. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. An engraving by George Vertue by of a medal of Elizabeth Claypole by Thomas Simon. Elizabeth Claypole (née Cromwell), by John Michael Wright (died 1694). Portrait of Elizabeth Claypole, c.1680 Jacob Huysmans Chequers, England. Category: Elizabeth Claypole.

  2. The reverse of this miniature is inscribed in a nineteenth-century hand: Mrs Claypole Daughter of Oliver Cromwell Painted by S. Cooper. There is no authenticated likeness in existence of Elizabeth Claypole, second daughter of Oliver Cromwell, who married, in 1646, John Claypole, although many portraits have acquired this identification.

  3. When Elizabeth Claypool was born in 1567, in Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England, her father, Esquire James Cleypole Sr, was 37 and her mother, Joan Henson, was 28. She had at least 2 sons and 5 daughters with John Osborne I. She died on 8 December 1626, in her hometown, at the age of 59. More. Photos and Memories (0)

  4. In 1648 Elizabeth Cromwell married John Claypole (c.1623 - 1688), the eponymous son of a ship money defaulter whom Cromwell had raised to a baronetcy. The younger Claypole had fought on the Parliamentary side at the battle of Newark in 1645 - 46, and in 1651 was engaged in raising soldiers to oppose the march of King Charles II into England from Scotland.

  5. Portrait of Elizabeth Claypole (Cromwell), circle of Sir Peter Lely, c. 1655, Oil on Canvas. This painting shows Cromwell’s second daughter, ‘Bessie’ who married John Claypole of Northborough Manor near Peterborough.

  6. Elizabeth Claypole (1629–1658) (copy of John Michael Wright) Second daughter of Oliver Cromwell. She married John Claypole of Northborough in 1646 near Peterborough. Claypole was the son of an old family friend. This is a copy of a painting by John Michael Wright which is now in the National Portrait Gallery.

  7. Elizabeth Claypole, favourite daughter of Oliver Cromwell, is buried in Henry VII's chapel in Westminster Abbey. A small stone marks her burial place.