This article is about the Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland. For the heraldic writer and cleric, see Edward Waterhouse (FRS).
Sir Edward Waterhouse (1535–1591) was an English-born Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland from 1586 to 1589[1] and Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1566 to 1567 and again from 1568 to 1569.
He was born in Helmstedbury, Hertfordshire, the youngest son of John Waterhouse of Whitchurch, Buckinghamshire, auditor to Henry VIII, and his wife Margaret Turner, daughter of Henry Turner of Blunt's Hall, Suffolk. According to family tradition the King saw Edward as a boy and predicted that he would grow up to be a man "fit to serve Princes". Edward was educated at Oxford, which he entered at the age of just twelve, and then joined the King's Court.
^Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Waterhouse, Edward (1535-1591)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Sir EdwardWaterhouse (1535–1591) was an English-born Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland from 1586 to 1589 and Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1566...
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students to more easily write braille. Farrell and Abraham worked with EdwardWaterhouse, who was a math teacher at Perkins, to create the design for the Brailler...
later identified as that of Capt Raleigh Croshaw References ""CCX. EdwardWaterhouse. "A Declaration of the State of the Colony and . . . a Relation of...
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musician of the old Earl of Essex", who was mentioned in writings by EdwardWaterhouse, Essex's secretary. Hughes is referred to as a musician who is called...
Tremayne was in the service of Edward Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon, who, as a great-grandson and last male heir of King Edward IV, had a strong claim to the...
James Waterhouse (1842–1922) was a British photographer and Indian Army officer who headed the Photographic Department of the Survey of India and pioneered...
Deputy of Ireland, Sidney's own personal secretaries (especially EdwardWaterhouse) assumed control over affairs of state which should have come under...
thus making Lamia's gender ambiguous. This was later incorporated into Edward Topsell's 17th-century envisioning of the lamia. It is somewhat uncertain...
fledgling British colonies in North America are important to another (Daniel Waterhouse). Quicksilver takes place mainly in the years between the Restoration...