Sir Walter Cope ( – 30 July 1614) of Cope Castle in the parish of Kensington, Middlesex, England, was Master of the Court of Wards, Chamberlain of the Exchequer, public Registrar-General of Commerce and a Member of Parliament for Westminster.
In 1603 Cope travelled to Edinburgh to welcome King James VI of Scotland at his proclamation as King James I of England and was subsequently at Worksop Manor. On 2 September 1603 Cope organised a demonstration of a canoe paddled on the River Thames near Cecil House by three Powhatan from Tsenacommacah.Alden T. Vaughan, Transatlantic Encounters: American Indians in Britain, 1500-1776 (Cambridge, 2006), p. 43: David B. Quinn, 'Virginians on the Thames in 1603', Terrae Incognitae: Journal of the Society for the History of Discoveries 2:1 (1970), pp. 7-14. In January 1605, he planned a revival of William Shakespeare's play Love's Labour's Lost by Cuthbert Burbage's theatre company at Cecil House to entertain James' consort, Anne of Denmark.
In 1604 Cope was elected a Member of Parliament for Westminster in James' first Parliament of England. His assistance was begged for by Dudley Carleton, 1st Viscount Dorchester who had been incorrectly suspected of involvement in the Gunpowder Plot. In 1605 Cope began building a grand house for himself known as Cope Castle, in Kensington, near London, subsequently inherited by his daughter, Isabel, Countess of Holland, and later known as Holland House.
He was made a Gentleman Usher of the Privy Chamber for life by 1607. In 1608 he was given a life position of Chamberlain of the Exchequer and in October of that year was granted one-sixth of all fines received by the king for the following twenty-one years. In 1611 or 1612, he was appointed the public Registrar-General of Commerce and together with Cecil, joint-keeper of Hyde Park, a royal park near his home at Kensington. Walks at Hyde Park were replanted with two hundred Tilia imported from the Low Countries and ponds were repaired. Cope was paid £33 for these works in October 1612. Historical Manuscripts Commission 9th Report: Alfred Morrison (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode), pp. 424–425.
Following the death of James' eldest son Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales in November 1612, the king spent the night at Cope Castle, and was joined there the following day by his next son Prince Charles and by his daughter Princess Elizabeth and by Frederick V, Elector Palatine. Shortly afterwards the king appointed Cope as Master of the Court of Wards.
During the Addled Parliament of 1614, Sir Thomas Parry, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, was found to have fraudulently altered an elector's return after his nominees, including Cope (to whom he had offered one of the Stockbridge seats), had been refused; Cope's election was subsequently annulled.
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