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===Retirement and death=== He was imprisoned on suspicion of [[Jacobitism]] from May to July 1689 and again in June 1690, but no charges were ever successfully brought against him. After his release, he retired from public life at age 57. He moved out of London 10 years later (1701) to a house in [[Clapham]] owned by his friend [[William Hewer]], who had begun his career working for Pepys in the admiralty.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Samuel |last1=Pepys |last2=Latham |first2=Robert |last3=Matthews |first3=William |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J-JSalViBrMC&q=%22robert+blackborne%22+anne&pg=PA182 |title=The Diary of Samuel Pepys: A New and Complete Transcription, Volume 10 (Footnote on Will Hewer) |publisher=University of California Press |date=2001 |page=182 |isbn=9780520227156 |access-date=17 September 2015}}</ref> Clapham was in the country at the time; it is now part of inner London. Pepys lived there until his death on 26 May 1703. He had no children and bequeathed his estate to his unmarried nephew John Jackson. Pepys had disinherited his nephew Samuel Jackson for marrying contrary to his wishes. When John Jackson died in 1724, Pepys' estate reverted to Anne, daughter of Archdeacon Samuel Edgeley, niece of Will Hewer and sister of Hewer Edgeley, nephew and godson of Pepys' old Admiralty employee and friend Will Hewer. Hewer was also childless and left his immense estate to his nephew Hewer Edgeley (consisting mostly of the Clapham property, as well as lands in Clapham, London, Westminster, and Norfolk) on condition that the nephew (and godson) would adopt the surname Hewer. So Will Hewer's heir became Hewer Edgeley-Hewer, and he adopted the old Will Hewer home in Clapham as his residence. That is how the Edgeley family acquired the estates of both Samuel Pepys and Will Hewer, with sister Anne inheriting Pepys' estate, and brother Hewer inheriting that of Will Hewer. On the death of Hewer Edgeley-Hewer in 1728, the old Hewer estate went to Edgeley-Hewer's widow Elizabeth, who left the {{convert|432|acre|ha|abbr=off|adj=on}} estate to Levett Blackborne, the son of Abraham Blackborne, merchant of Clapham, and other family members, who later sold it off in lots. Lincoln's Inn barrister Levett Blackborne also later acted as attorney in legal scuffles for the heirs who had inherited the Pepys estate. Pepys' former [[protégé]] and friend Hewer acted as the executor of Pepys's estate.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gyq6euwfZj8C&q=%22hewer+edgeley&pg=RA2-PA271 |title=Will Hewer, The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Samuel Pepys, 1899 |last1=Pepys |first1=Samuel |year=1899 }}</ref> Pepys was buried along with his wife in [[St Olave's Church, Hart Street]] in London.
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