Peryam married three times: • Firstly, to Margery Holcote, daughter of John Holcote of
Barcote in
Berkshire (now
Oxfordshire) and widow of Roger Hutchinson of Yorkshire, without children. • Secondly, to Anne Parker, daughter of John Parker of
North Molton (ancestor of the
Earls of Morley of
Saltram House), by whom he had four daughters, all his co-heiresses, and all of whom made advantageous marriages to
West Country gentry: • Mary Peryam (died 1606), the eldest, (effigy in Colyton Church, see below), married as his first wife
Sir William Pole (1561–1635) the antiquarian and historian of Devon, of
Colcombe Castle,
Colyton, and
Shute, Devon. She was buried in Shute Church on 8 May 1606. • Elizabeth Peryam (1571–1635), 2nd daughter, (effigy in Heanton Punchardon Church, see below), married Sir
Robert Basset (1574–1641), MP, of
Heanton Punchardon, Devon. She inherited as her portion the estate of Little Fulford, which her husband sold to the Tuckfield family. • Jane Peryam (1572–1620), 3rd daughter, married twice: firstly to Thomas Poyntz (died 1597), of
North Ockendon, Essex &
Gray's Inn, son of Sir Gabriel Poyntz (died 1608), of North Ockendon,
Sheriff of Essex; secondly to Thomas Docwra,
Sheriff of Hertfordshire. • Anne Peryam, youngest daughter, married William Williams, son and heir of Sir John Williams of Herringstone, Dorset. • Thirdly, to
Elizabeth Bacon, daughter of
Sir Nicholas Bacon,
Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, and eldest half-sister of Sir
Francis Bacon, who survived him by seventeen years. Without children. It was a third marriage for both of them.
Monuments to daughters Mary Peryham Monument to Mary Periham (1567–1605), eldest daughter of Sir William Peryam and 1st wife of Sir William Pole (1561–1635), in the Pole Chapel,
Colyton Church, Devon, in which parish is situated
Colcombe Castle. The escutcheons show the arms of Pole and Peryam. Text: ''''
Elizabeth Periham Mural monument in
Heanton Punchardon Church, Devon, to Elizabeth Peryam (1571–1635), daughter of Sir William Peryam and wife of Sir Robert Bassett. Within a lozenge at the top and on an
escutcheon to the
sinister are shown her paternal arms of Peryam: ''Gules, a chevron engrailed or between three lion's faces affrontes of the last''. The arms of Peryam are also shown on an oval cartouche underneath,
impaled by Bassett. The text is as follows: Should monuments by merit then surely thine, With stone and orient should shine, But since thy world of worth ye world doth know, This marble stone may serve thy name to show. "Many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord delivereth him out of them all".
Psal. 34.19. Which may be translated literally into English as:
"Sacred to the memory to Lady Elizabeth Bassett wife of Robert Bassett, knight, arisen from a famous stock, daughter and co-heiress of William Peryam, knight, Lord Chief Justice of the Royal Treasury, (he was) most impartial and duty-bound, (she was) pious, prudent, just, long-suffering, modest, chaste, temperant, constant, hospitable, compassionate, kind, a mother and healer of the poor, a preserver of her own family. Arthur Bassett, Esquire, her sorrowing first-born son, of a duty of gratitude and respect therefore placed this monument to his mother in the year of Our Lord 1635 of her age 64 may she remain to the Lord...Thus does gold come forth into an oven". ==Death and burial==