Thomas, reputedly of Skipton in Cumberland (Skipton is in 
	  Yorkshire); see (Le Neve, Pedigrees of the knights pp. 155-6).
	  Although some kin settled in the north, it is probable that he belonged 
	  to the family of the name which early in the fifteenth century owned 
	  property in Pett in the parish of Stackbury in Kent (HASTED, History 
	  of Kent, ii.525 n).
	   
	    Heywood stated in 1637 that for two hundred years and upwards 
	  men of that name had been officers and architects in the Royal Navy 
	  (CHARNOCK, History of Marine Architecture, ii.284). 
	    Peter, was in the service of the crown from an early age; 
	  he was already Master-Shipwright at Deptford in the reign of Edward 
	  VI, and there he continued until his death on or about 6th 
	  September 1589. 
	    During this time he had a principle part in building most 
	  of the ships of the navy, though details are wanting. Richard Chapman 
	  who built the ARK, was brought up by Pett, and also, in all probability, 
	  was Matthew Baker, with whom, from 1570, Pett was associated in the 
	  works at Dover. In 1587 he and Baker accused Sir John Hawkyns, then 
	  treasurer of the navy, of malpractices in connexion with the repair 
	  of the Queen's ships. The charges were apparently held to be the outcome 
	  of a pique or jealousy. Hawkyns was annoyed, but suffered no material 
	  injury, and Pett remained in his office. In 1583 he was granted arms. 
	  Or, on a fess gules between three ogresses, a lion passant of the field; 
	  and the crest, out of a ducal coronet, a demi-pelican with wings expanded. 
	  
	Peter 
	  Pett (1610 - 1670?) 
	  Commissioner 
	  of the navy, fifth son of Phineas Pett, he was born at Deptford on 6th 
	  August 1610. He was brought up by his father as a shipwright; while 
	  still very young, he was his father's assistant at Deptford and Woolwich, 
	  and in 1635-7 built The Sovereign of the Seas under his father's 
	  supervision. In 1647 he was ordered by the parliament a gratuity of 
	  £10. For building The Phoenix at Woolwich. He would seem 
	  to have been appointed master-shipwright at Chatham, and in 1648 to 
	  have sent up important information to the parliament, and to have been 
	  mainly instrumental in preserving the ships at Chatham from revolting. 
	  Probably as a reward for his services, he was appointed commissioner 
	  of the Navy at Chatham, an office analogous to that of the present superintendent 
	  of the dockyard, with the important difference that Pett, as a practical 
	  man, exercised immediate and personal control over several departments 
	  of the yard, and was thus largely responsible for the efficiency of 
	  the ships during the Dutch wars.
	    That 
	  during the commonwealth the ships were fairly well maintained is matter 
	  of history, but Pett excited a strong feeling of animosity by filling 
	  all the more important posts in the yard with his near relatives. As 
	  early as November 1651, complaints were laid by some of the subordinate 
	  officials, including the chaplain, that members of the family worked 
	  into each other's hands, the stores were wasted or misappropriated, 
	  that higher wages were charged than were paid, and that false musters 
	  were kept. A special inquiry was ordered in the following January, when 
	  Pett had little difficulty in proving that the charges were malicious; 
	  but it is clear that there were great opportunities for fraud and reasonable 
	  grounds for suspicion. 
	    The commissioner's cousin, Joseph Pett, was master-shipwright 
	  at Chatham; another cousin, Peter Pett, was master-shipwright at Deptford; 
	  a younger brother, Christopher, assistant master-shipwright at Woolwich; 
	  another Phineas, clerk of the check at Chatham, and a cousin, Richard 
	  Holborne, master mast-maker. When, in the following summer, his cousin 
	  Peter at Deptford died, he was able to have his brother Christopher 
	  promoted to the vacancy, and Peter's son Phineas, appointed assistant. 
	  Pett was also permitted to undertake private contracts for building 
	  ships of war (Cal. State Papers, Dom. 7th Jan. 1650). 
	    He was reappointed to his office after the Restoration, and remained 
	  in it until the 29th September 1667, when he was charged 
	  with being the main cause of the disaster at Chatham in June, and was 
	  summarily superseded. He was accused in detail, of having neglected 
	  or disobeyed orders from the Duke of York, the Duke of Albamarle, and 
	  the navy commissioners to moor the Royal Charles in a place of safety, 
	  to block the channel of the Medway by sinking a vessel inside the chain, 
	  to provide boats for the defence of the river, and to see that the officers 
	  and seamen were on board their ships (19th December 1667). 
	  On the 18th June, he was sent a prisoner to the Tower, on 
	  the 19th was examined before the council, and on the 22nd 
	  October before the House of commons. There was talk of impeaching him, 
	  but the accusation was merely the outcome of a desire to make him answerable 
	  for the sins of those in high places, and the matter was allowed to 
	  drop. The general feeling was clearly put by Marvell, in the lines beginning: 
	  
	After 
	  the loss, to relish discontent,
	  Some one must be accused by Parliament:
	  A all 
	  our miscarriages on Pett must fall;
	  His 
	  name alone seems fit to answer all." 
	  After 
	  being deprived of his office, Pett disappears from view. He married 
	  on the 8th September 1632, Catherine, who herself was born 
	  in August 1617. She was the daughter of Edward Cole of Woodbridge, Suffolk 
	  (Register of St. Mary's Woodbridge, by favour of Mr. Vincent B. Redstone). 
	  Mention is made of one son, Warwick. Pett has often been confused with 
	  his cousin Peter, the master shipwright of Deptford, who died in 1652, 
	  and with each of Peter's two sons, Sir Peter, advocate General for Ireland, 
	  and Sir Phineas Pett, master shipwright at Chatham, who was knighted 
	  in 1680, was comptroller of stores and resident commissioner at Chatham, 
	  and to be distinguished from the commissioner Peter's brother Phineas, 
	  a clerk of the check at Chatham. Three others, named Phineas Pett, were 
	  at the same time in the naval service at Chatham or on the Thames, one 
	  of whom was killed in action in 1666, while in command of the Tiger. 
	  The name Phineas Pett continued in the navy till towards the close of 
	  last century. 
	[Calendar 
	  of State Papers, Dom., the indices to which have so confused the Peters 
	  and Phineases as to be useless; the only possibility of clearing the 
	  confusion is by reference to the original documents, and by carefully 
	  distinguishing the signatures; Pepys's Diary; Harl. MS. 6279; Literae 
	  Cromwellii, 1676, p.229.] J.K.L. 
	Sir 
	  Peter Pett (1630-1699) 
	  
	  Lawyer and author, son of Peter Pett (1593-1652), master shipwright 
	  of Deptford, grandson of Peter Pett of Wapping, shipbuilder, and great 
	  grandson of Peter Pett (died 1589), was baptised in St. Nicholas Church, 
	  Deptford, on 31st October 1630. He was educated in St. Paul's 
	  School and at Sidney-Sussex College Cambridge, where he was admitted 
	  in 1645. After graduating B. A. He migrated to Pembroke College, Oxford, 
	  and in 1648 was elected to a fellowship at All Souls'. He then graduated 
	  B. C. L. In 1650, was entered as a student at Grey's Inn, and settled 
	  there "for good and all" about a year before the Restoration. From 1661 
	  to 1666 he sat in the Irish Parliament as M. P. for Askeaton. He was 
	  called to the bar from the Middle Temple in 1664. 
	    When the Royal Society was formed, in 1663. Pett was one 
	  of the original fellows, elected on 20th May, but was expelled on 18th 
	  November 1675 for "not performing his obligation to the society". 
	  He was probably absorbed in other interests. He had been appointed advocate-general 
	  for Ireland, where he was knighted by the Duke of Ormonde. 
	    He was also much engaged in literary work, more or less of a 
	  polemical nature. A short tract of his, headed "Sir Peter Pett's Paper, 
	  1679, about the Papists," is in the Public Record Office (Shaftsbury 
	  Papers, ii. 347). His published works are: 1. "A Discourse concerning 
	  Liberty of Conscience," London,1661, 8vo. 2. "The happy future Estate 
	  of England," 1680, fol.; republished in1689 as "Discourse of the Growth 
	  of England in Populousness and Trade... By way of a Letter to a person 
	  of Honour." 3. "The obligation resulting from the Oath of Supremacy..." 
	  1687, fol. He edited also the "memoirs of Arthur [Ammesley], Earl of 
	  Anglesey," 1698, 8vo, and "The Genuine Remains of Doctor Thomas Barlow, 
	  late Lord Bishop of Lincoln," 1693, 8vo. He died on the 1st 
	  April 1699.
	    Pett has been confused with his father's first cousin, Peter, 
	  commissioner of the navy at Chatham. [Knight's Life of Cloet, p.407; 
	  Foster's Alumni Oxon.; Wood's Athenae, iv. 576; St. Paul's School Reg. 
	  p.43; Burrows's Worthies of All Souls', pp. 476, 540.] J.K.L. 
	Phineas 
	  Pett (1570 - 1647) 
	  
	  Master-builder 
	  of the navy and naval commissioner, elder son of Peter Pett (died 1589) 
	  by his second wife, Elizabeth Thornton, was born at Deptford on 1st 
	  November 1570. After three years at the free school at Rochester, and 
	  three more at a private school at Greenwich, he entered Emmanual College, 
	  Cambridge, in 1586. After his fathers death in 1589, Phineas was left 
	  destitute and in 1590 was bound "a convent servant" to Richard Chapman, 
	  the queen's master-shipwright at Deptford.
	    Within three years Chapman died, and he shipped as carpenter's 
	  mate on board the Edward and Constance, in the second expedition of 
	  Edward Glemham. The voyage had no great success, and after two years 
	  of hardship and privation, Pett found himself again in London, as poor 
	  as when he started. In August 1595 he was employed "as an ordinary workman" 
	  in rebuilding the Triumph at Woolwich. Afterwards he worked, under Matthew 
	  Baker, on the Repulse, a new ship which was being prepared for the expedition 
	  to Cadiz. 
	    During this winter Pett studied mathematics, drawing, and the 
	  theory of his profession, in which Baker gave him much assistance and 
	  instruction. In April 1597 Lord Howard, the lord admiral, who was much 
	  at Baker's house, accepted him as his servant. It was not, however, 
	  until near Christmas 1598 that Howard was able to employ him in "the 
	  finishing of a purveyance of plank and timber" in Norfolk and Suffolk, 
	  which occupied Pett through the whole of 1599; and in June 1600 Howard 
	  appointed him "keeper of the plankyard, timber, and other provisions" 
	  at Chatham, "with promise of better preferment to the utmost of his 
	  power."
	    A quarrel with Matthew Baker followed, and for the next ten or 
	  twelve years, according to Pett's story, Baker lost no opportunity of 
	  doing him a bad turn. According to Pett, the administration of the dockyards 
	  was at that time altogether swayed by personal interest, jealousy, and 
	  malicious intrigue.
	    In March 1601 Pett was appointed assistant to the master-shipwright 
	  at Chatham. In November 1602 his good services in fitting out the fleet 
	  in six weeks won for him Mr. Greville's "love, favour, and good opinion;" 
	  and shortly after the accession of King James he was ordered by Howard 
	  to build a miniature ship - a model, it would seem, of the Ark - for 
	  Prince Henry. This was finished in March 1634, and Pett took her round 
	  to the Thames, where on the 22nd the prince came aboard. 
	  The admiral presented Pett to him; and on the following day Pett was 
	  sworn as the prince's servant, and was appointed captain of the little 
	  vessel. He was also granted the reversion of the places held by Baker 
	  or his brother Joseph, whichever should first become vacant; and in 
	  November 1605, on the death of Joseph, he succeeded as master-shipwright 
	  at Deptford.
	    In 1607 he was moved to Woolwich, and there remained for many 
	  years, favourably regarded by Howard, John Trevor, the surveyor of the 
	  navy, and Mansell the treasurer; and, in consequence, hated and intrigued 
	  against by their enemies and his own, of which, as a successful man 
	  he had many. In October 1608 he laid the keel of a new ship, the largest 
	  in the navy, which was launched in September 1610 as the Prince Royal, 
	  but in April 1609, definite charges of incompetence displayed in her 
	  construction were laid against him by the Earl of Northampton, instigated 
	  by Baker and George Weymouth, "a great braggadocio." A commission was 
	  ordered to investigate the matter, and reported in Pett's favour; but 
	  as Northampton refused to accept their decision and press the charges, 
	  the King had the case formally tried before him at Woolwich on the 8th 
	  May, Pett was formally acquitted on all points.
	    In 1612, Pett was the first master of the Shipwrights' Company, 
	  then incorporated by royal charter. In 1613 he was in the Prince with 
	  Howard when he took the Lady Elizabeth and her husband, the Paltine, 
	  to Flanders; and was ordered by Howard to dine at his table during the 
	  voyage. In 1620-1 he seems to have accompanied Sir Robert Mansell in 
	  the expedition against the Algerian pirates; and in 1623 went to Santander 
	  in the Prince, which he had fitted specially for the reception of the 
	  infanta. Charles I, on his accession to the throne, gave him a gold 
	  chain valued at £104.
	    In June 1625 he was in Boulogne in the Prince, which brought 
	  the young queen to Dover on the 12th. In August 1627 he was 
	  sent to Portsmouth to hasten the equipment of the fleet, and, continuing 
	  there, "saw many passages and the disaster which happened to the Lord 
	  Duke [of Buckingham]." In February 1629-30 he was appointed an assistant 
	  to the principle officers of the navy, and in the following December 
	  one of the principal officers and a commissioner of the navy. He still, 
	  however, continued to exercise the supervision over Deptford and Woolwich 
	  yards, assisted to a great extent by his son Peter (1610 - 1670?).
	    In 1635 he was sent to Newcastle to provide timber, etc., for 
	  a new ship to be built at Woolwich, the keel of which was laid on 21st 
	  December. She was launched on 13th October 1637, and named The Sovereign 
	  of the Seas - the largest and most highly ornamented ship in the 
	  English navy. A model of her, possibly contemporary, is preserved in 
	  the museum of the Royal Naval College at Greenwich. However, although 
	  the Prince Royal and the Sovereign of the Seas were the chief products 
	  of Pett's art, he was more or less responsible for every ship added 
	  to the navy during the reigns of James I and Charles I, as well as for 
	  many of the largest merchant ships then built, among others the Trades's 
	  Increase and the Peppercorn.
	    During this period shipbuilding was improved and the size of 
	  ships increased. It has been said that the secrets of the trade were 
	  preserved in the Pett family - handed down from father to son (Charnock, 
	  History of Marine Architecture, ii. 284); but Phineas Pett learned 
	  nothing directly from his father, and indirectly only as far as Chapman 
	  and Baker were his father's associates. The excellence which he attained 
	  and handled down to his successors may be more justly assigned to his 
	  Cambridge training and his subsequent studies in mathematics. He died 
	  in 1647, and was buried at Chatham on 21st August.
	    Pett was married thrice: the first time in 1598 to Anne, daughter 
	  of Richard Nichols of Highwood Hill in Middlesex; she died in February 
	  1626-7; the second time in July 1627, to Susan, widow of Robert Yardley, 
	  and mother, or stepmother, of the wife of his son John; she died in 
	  July 1636; and the third time in January 1636-7, to one Mildred. By 
	  his first wife he had three daughters and eight sons, the eldest of 
	  whom, John, a captain in the navy, married, in 1625, Katherine, daughter 
	  of Robert Yarley, and died in in 1628. Peter, was the fifth son. Phineas, 
	  was the seventh son Born in 1618, he was in 1651 clerk of the check 
	  at Chatham; Christopher was the youngest son, born in 1620, he was master-shipwright 
	  at Deptford, where he died in 1668, leaving a widow, Ann, and for children.
	    The 
	  principal authority for the life of Pett is his autobiography - Harl. 
	  MS. 6279 - a late seventeenth or early eighteenth century copy. It appears 
	  to be trustworthy as to its facts, though with a strong personal bias. 
	  A lengthy abstract is printed in Archaelogia, xii. 207 et seq. Pett 
	  is frequently mentioned in the Calendars of State Papers, Domestic; 
	  see also Birch's Life of Prince Henry. 
	William 
	  Petts (? 1838 ?) 
	Convict, 
	  arrived in Australia in 1838, aboard the Loch Lynoch. His trial took 
	  place at Derby in 1838.
	 
	  John Petts (10th January 1914 - 26th August 1991)
	 
	    Born in London, John was a stained glass and wood engraver. 
	  There has an example of his work in the windows of the 16th 
	  Street Baptist Church in Alabama. 
	    He lived in Wales, and had a spinal disability. He went to the 
	  Hersy College of Art, he studied engraving and painting under Robert 
	  Lyon and Norman James of the Royal Acadamy, his tutors were Thomas Mornington 
	  and Walter Russel. (In 1934 for hastle to Art studies).
	    Married Brenda Chamberlain, with whom he founded the Casey Press 
	  at Llanlledud in Snowdonia. He produced wood engravings and typography 
	  first in 1930s. Engraving published in Welsh review and London Mercury, 
	  then a new venture with Alun Lewis - Caseg Broadsheet. He was a conscientious 
	  objector in the war and served with R. A. M. C. resuscitation unit. 
	  
	    He worked on a commission of wood engraving for the Golden Cockrel 
	  Press (Against Woman 1953). In 1960s produced stained glass for the 
	  Brighton and Hove Synagogue. Married three times and has two sons and 
	  a daughter. 
	Flt. 
	  Lt. Nick Petts 
	  From 
	  a report in the newspaper dated 13th May 1989. At a celebration 
	  to mark the 40th anniversary of the maiden flight of the 
	  Canberra, Britain's first jet bomber, held at R. A. F. Wyton, Cambridgeshire. 
	  The Canberra was designed by W. E. W. Petter at Preston for the English 
	  Electric Company, to follow their production of the Vampire fighter. 
	  More than 1,600 planes were built before production ceased in 1964, 
	  140 are still in operation, 40 with the R. A. F. .
	    Camberras were deployed in Suez, Malaysia and Vietnam and by 
	  the Argentine air force in the Falklands, where at least one was shot 
	  down. They have very good handling capabilities, out-turning the Tornado 
	  fighter at 50,000 ft. Flt. Lt. Petts, 55, who first flew in a Camberra 
	  in 1957 said, "You would be hard pressed to find a pilot anywhere in 
	  the world who did not like the Camberra. It is very forgiving." Report 
	  by John Harlow. 
	 
	War 
	  Veterans 
	  The 
	  following pages show the lists of inscriptions on war memorials in the 
	  United Kingdom showing the name Petts.
	All 
	  lists are exactly as written.
	Places 
	  listed are:-