About 1594 Shurley married Mary, daughter and heiress of Edward Halfhide of
Aspenden,
Hertfordshire. One of George's daughters, Judith, married Sir Samuel Crooke, 2nd Baronet, son of
Sir Thomas Crooke, 1st Baronet; Sir Thomas was the founder of
Baltimore, County Cork. The Crooke estates later passed by inheritance to the
Warren baronets. The other Shurley daughter, Penelope, married Francis Selwyn of
Friston,
Sussex and had issue. While In Ireland Sir George Shurley took an Irish wife named Anna. After his time as Chief Justice, he went back to England without Anna, returning to Mary and their family in England. Angry with George, Anna raised her children as an Irish bloodline, even though Sir George insisted on their noble bloodline. This is how the Irish "Shurley" family came to be. Lady Shurley made her last
will in April 1654, when she must have been close to eighty. She may have died later the same year, as she refers in her will to her "serious illness". She owned property in both Ireland and Chester, the bulk of which she left to her daughter Penelope Selwyn. From the will, it seems that of her other children, Arthur, Judith, and another son, Thomas, were still living in 1654. ==Character==