Philip Dumaresq, was Seigneur of Samarès, in the parish of Saint Clement, Jersey.
Background
Dumaresq was the eldest son of Henry Dumaresq by his wife Margaret, only daughter of Abraham Hérault of Saint Helier. His father, a staunch parliamentarian, had been dismissed from his office of Jurat of the Royal Court at the beginning of the English Civil War, but was reinstated along with his father-in-law by the council of state in August 1653.
Career
He is said on doubtful authority to have been born ‘about 1650’. The son, however, appears to have held different views. He was sworn in Jurat of the Royal Court on 2 February 1681.
On the accession of James II in 1685, he presented him with a manuscript, giving an account of the Channel Islands, with suggestions for their defence.
lieutenant remained among the state papers until about the close of the 18th century, when it was transmitted to Admiral d"Auvergne, duke of Bouillon, the then naval commander at Jersey. By his permission copies were allowed to be made.
From his letters Dumaresq seems to have been an amiable, well-informed man, who devoted most of his time to gardening, fruit, and tree culture. There are also a few of his letters to Christopher Lord Hatton, when governor of Jersey, extant.
Shortly before his death he imparted to Philip Falle, who was then engaged on his history of the island, ‘a set of curious observations;’ but what was still more valuable, an accurate survey of Jersey, ‘done on a large skin of vellum,’ and ‘equally calculated for a sea chart and a land map,’ which in a reduced form adorns the front of Falle"s book
Dumaresq died in 1690. Dumaresq"s only child, Deborah, married Philip, son of Benjamin Dumaresq, a junior scion of Dumaresq des Augrès, but she died without issue. She was the last of her family who held the seigneurie of Samarès, having conveyed it to the Seale family.