Sir Francis Cherry (18 October 1552 – 14 April 1605) of the parish of All Hallows, Barking, in Essex, Citizen of the City of London and a Merchant Vintner,[1][2] was the English ambassador to the Court of Russia from April 1598 to 23 March 1599.
He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I on 4 July 1604 at Chatham in Kent, "for faithful and gallant service".
Sir Francis Cherry was born on 18 October 1552 at North Kilworth in Leicestershire.
He died on 14 April 1605 and was buried at All Hallows' Church in Barking.
He married twice; his first wife died giving birth to her twelfth child, and his second wife Elizabeth (of unrecorded family) survived him and remarried (at St Olave's Church, Hart Street) (as his third wife[3]) to Sir Thomas Hunt (d.1616) of Foulsham, Norfolk, whose mural monument with effigies of his three wives survives in the Church of the Holy Innocents, Foulsham.