The Henry White who sat for Downton in 1555 was unquestionably either the brother
Like his uncle, the younger Henry White was specially admitted to the Inner Temple and thus makes no further appearance in its records, but from the settlement which preceded his marriage to a daughter of Henry Bradshaw, chief baron of the Exchequer and a member of the inn, it is clear that he was adequately set up, with an immediate provision of lands worth £13 a year and the prospect of receiving nearly as much again on the death of his father and mother. Since his wife was soon to add to the joint resources her share of the lands in Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire inherited by her brother Benedict, whose death had followed quickly upon his father’s, White had less reason to lament his own father’s decision to divide the bulk of his lands among his numerous progeny. He may hve settled in London, where his maternal uncle Sir John White became sheriff in 1556 and mayor in 1563. It was as of London, gentleman, that he made his will on 5 Feb. 1570, asking to be buried in St. Martin’s Ludgate. He left £30 as a marriage portion to each of his three daughters and the residue of his goods to two of his goods to two of hisbrothers, both named Stephen, whom he named executors, with Sir John White as overseer. He died two days after making the will, which was prove on 8 Jan. 1571. His widow married Thomas Fermor.
