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Everything about Thomas Seckford totally explained

Thomas Seckford (1515 - January 1587) was an official at the court of Queen Elizabeth I of England. Born near Woodbridge, Suffolk, England, Seckford was educated at Cambridge and in 1540 entered Gray's Inn, Thomas became one of Queen Elizabeth I’s two Masters in Ordinary of the Court of Requests which dealt with poor men’s causes. One of the duties of this post was to accompany the monarch as she journeyed around her realm. He would thus have been particularly known to the Queen. He is believed to have played a prominent part in arranging the Elizabethan Church Settlement. In 1564, she gave him the manor of Woodbridge, and he became a benefactor to both the church and town.
   Elizabeth is known to have held court at the Seckford family seat, Seckford Hall.
   In 1574 Thomas commissioned Christopher Saxton to survey all the English counties and produce an atlas of the realm. This was published in 1579, the first ever done from an actual survey. Elizabeth granted him a patent for its sole publication for ten years.
   He founded seven almshouses in Woodbridge in 1586 which he endowed with an income of £112 13s 4d per year from land in Clerkenwell Middlesex. He also paid for the old Woodbridge Abbey to be rebuilt. His wealth is still benefiting Woodbridge today.
   He died in 1587 aged 72, never having had children, and was buried in a Chapel on the north side of Woodbridge church which is now an organ chamber. His coat of arm can be seen in the north window of the west wall of the church.
   Sekforde Street in Clerkenwell, London, is built on land once owned by Seckford and is named for him. Sekforde Street adjoins Woodbridge Street, laid out at the same time in the 1830s. In the movie About a Boy starring Hugh Grant the main character, Will, lives in a flat in No.1 Sekforde Street. Woodbridge Chapel on Woodbridge Street also features in the movie as the scene of the "Single Parents Alone Together" (SPAT) meeting.

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