Henry Danvers (Baptist)

Henry Danvers
"Murder will Out", a pamphlet published by Danvers in 1684 claiming the July 1683 suicide of Arthur Capell, 1st Earl of Essex was in fact state-sponsored murder
Commissioner, Staffordshire Militia
In office
July 1659  April 1660
Member of Parliament
for Leicestershire (Nominated to Barebone's Parliament)
In office
July 1653  December 1653
Governor of Stafford
In office
1650–1652
Parliamentary Committee for Staffordshire
In office
1647–1652
Personal details
Born8 July 1622
Swithland, Leicestershire
Died1687 age 65 (approximate)
Utrecht, Dutch Republic
NationalityEnglish
SpouseAnne Coke (1644–1686 her death)
ChildrenSamuel (1652–1693), Mercy (1654–1702) and William (1666–1740) (four others died young)
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
OccupationPolitician and minister
Military service
Allegiance Parliamentarians
RankColonel
Battles/wars

Henry Danvers (8 July 1622 – before March 1687) was an English radicalist politician, General Baptist minister and theologian. He sided with the Parliament in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, serving on the Committee for Staffordshire from 1647 to 1652 and as Governor of Stafford from 1650 to 1652, during which time he became conviced of baptizing only believers. He also contributed to the constitutional manifesto known as An Agreement of the People and was nominated as MP for Leicestershire in the short-lived Barebone's Parliament of 1653. Following the 1660 Stuart Restoration, he was associated with numerous plots to overthrow the regime and died in Utrecht in 1687.