The founding members of The Sealed Knot,…
March 1655 CE
The founding members of The Sealed Knot, a secret Royalist association active from 1652 that plots for the Restoration of the Monarchy, are John Belasyse, 1st Baron Belasyse; Sir William Compton, third son of Spencer Compton, 2nd Earl of Northampton; Henry Hastings, 1st Baron Loughborough; Col. John Russell; Col. Sir Edward Villiers (father of Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey); and Sir Richard Willis (sometimes spelt 'Willys').
The Sealed Knot plans a series of of coordinated uprisings for a Royalist insurrection to start in March 1655.
The conspirators plan to seize Salisbury, Newcastle, York and Winchester and instigate smaller uprisings in Nottinghamshire and Cheshire.
The New Model Army garrison in Winchester had been reinforced shortly before the uprising so plans to attack it are abandoned.
No men answer the call in Cheshire, but risings do take place in the other places.
However, at all of the locations except Salisbury, the Royalists disband without a fight due to lack of support.
The rendezvous point for the York uprising is on Marston Moor.
Notable for the presence of the Earl of Rochester, who had arrived from the exiled court of Charles II to take part, it is put down by Colonel Robert Lilburne, Governor of York and on its failure Rochester flees the country.
Colonel John Penruddock, along with Sir Joseph Wagstaffe, organizes and leads the Royalist uprising in the West.
Penruddock, with between three hundred and four hundred other Cavaliers, takes Salisbury on March 11 and raises the Royal standard.
The next morning he leads his followers out of Salisbury heading west through Blandford, Sherborne and Yeovil hoping to pick up more supporters, but a single troop of horse of the New Model Army under Captain Unton Crook defeats them on March 14 after a three-hour street fight in South Molton in Devon.
Most of the Royalists either flee or are killed but Crook captures Penruddock and the other ringleaders.