SEYMOUR, Francis (c. 1590-1664)

SEYMOUR, Francis (c. 1590–1664)

cr. 19 Feb. 1641 Bar. SEYMOUR OF TROWBRIDGE

First sat 23 Feb. 1641; first sat after 1660, 22 May 1660; last sat 14 May 1664

MP Wiltshire 1621; Marlborough 1624; Wiltshire 1625, 1628–9, Apr.–May 1640; Marlborough 1640 (Nov.)–19 Feb. 1641

b. c.1590, 3rd but 2nd surv. s. of Edward Seymour, styled Ld. Beauchamp, later 2nd earl of Hertford, and Honora, da. of Sir Richard Rogers, of Bryanston, Dorset; bro. of William Seymour, 2nd duke of Somerset. educ. Trowbridge g.s.; ?Oxf.; M. Temple 1626. m. (1) 23 Feb. 1613, Frances (d. 6 Sept. 1626), da. and coh. of Sir Gilbert Prynne (Prinne) of Alington, Wilts., 1s. 1da.; (2) bef. 1636, Catherine (bur. 5 Mar. 1701), 4th da. of Sir Henry Lee, of Billesley, Warws., s.p. Kntd. 23 Oct. 1613. d. 12 July 1664; will 5 Sept. 1662, pr. 3 Nov. 1664.1

PC 8 Aug. 1641, 31 May 1660–d.; chan. duchy of Lancs. May 1645 (roy.), July 1660–d.2

Commr. to examine recusants and collect recusant debts, Wilts. 1624, for the king to treat for peace at Uxbridge, Jan. 1645; sheriff Wilts. 1625–6; custos rot. Wilts. 1660–4.

Associated with: Savernake, Wilts.; Marlborough Castle, Preshute, Wilts.; St Martin’s Lane, The Strand, London, Mdx.

Likeness: oil on canvas by William Larkin, National Trust, Petworth House.

After a career in the Commons which included opposition to George Villiers, duke of Buckingham, and support for Thomas Wentworth, earl of Strafford, Seymour was elevated to the peerage in February 1641. A royalist during the civil wars, he was a substantial landowner, with his income being assessed at £3,000 in November 1645 and £5,000 in August 1646.3 Although he was not publicly involved in national politics during the Interregnum he was held for questioning regarding a plot against Oliver Cromwell in June 1655.4

At the Restoration Seymour sought to re-establish his political interest in Wiltshire and at Westminster. He was reinstated as a privy councillor and as chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster and set about recovering crown property, writing on 21 Sept. to Walter Aston, 2nd Baron Aston of Forfar [S], about embezzlement at Tutbury Castle.5 To maximize crown revenues he insisted on security for yearly rents and leases of no more than 31 years.6 He was also petitioned by Wigan corporation in July 1660 to keep his chancery court in the town.7 The Seymours had strong connections to Wigan: the town was represented in the Commons by Sir Orlando Bridgeman, chief justice of the common pleas, who had been a contemporary of Seymour’s at the inns of court in the 1620s. Bridgeman was also chief legal counsel to Seymour’s brother, William Seymour, 2nd marquess of Hertford, who was soon to be restored to the dukedom of Somerset.

On the eve of the Convention, Philip Wharton, 4th Baron Wharton, listed Seymour as one of the ‘Lords with the king’. Seymour took his seat on 22 May 1660, being named to a committee charged with formulating a reply to the Commons on the issue of the Lords’ right to vote on the question of legal proceedings against the regicides. Two days later he was appointed to draw up a letter of congratulation upon the king’s safe landing in England. On 31 July 1660 he was absent from a call of the House, even though the Journal records his presence. On 21 Aug. he was one of three peers added to the committee which had managed the conference with the Commons on the bill of indemnity, in order to prepare heads for a further conference.

Seymour was known to be strongly in favour of punishing all the regicides, but on 25 Aug. he was named to a small select committee to consider the Commons request for a proviso to the indemnity bill saving some of them.8 Subsequently he registered his dissent when the House agreed to the proviso offered by John Robartes, 2nd Baron Robartes (later earl of Radnor), that those who had surrendered according to the proclamation of 6 June 1660, even if legally attainted for the murder of Charles I, should have their execution suspended until fresh legislation had been passed. On 6 Sept. the House ordered that the Duchy House in the Strand, and all belonging thereunto, be forthwith delivered up into the present possession of Seymour as chancellor of the duchy. He was named to a further nine committees during this part of the session, including that on 18 Aug. to examine into the patent claiming the dukedom of Somerset for Edward Somerset, 2nd marquess of Worcester, a title also claimed by Seymour’s brother. In all, he attended on 73 days of the session before the prorogation on 13 Sept. (76 per cent of the total), his main absence being between 2 and 13 August.

Seymour was present when the Convention resumed on 6 Nov. 1660, but attended only until the end of the month, 16 days in all, around 36 per cent of the total. He was named to a further three committees. It was probably at this point that he registered a proxy in favour of Robartes, a peer with whom he shared many committee appointments. Seymour re-established his political interest in Wiltshire when his son, Charles Seymour, later 2nd Baron Seymour of Trowbridge, was returned for the county seat in 1661 in partnership with Henry Hyde, later 2nd earl of Clarendon.

Seymour was present at the opening of the Cavalier Parliament on 8 May 1661. He was listed as absent from a call of the House on 20 May, despite his attendance being recorded in the Journal. On 11 July he was thought to be an opponent of the case of Aubrey de Vere, 20th earl of Oxford, to be lord great chamberlain. He attended on 55 days of the session before its adjournment at the end of July 1661, nearly 86 per cent of the total, and was named to nine committees.

Seymour was present when the session resumed on 20 Nov. 1661. He attended regularly until the Christmas adjournment on 20 Dec. but then did not reappear in the House until 7 Mar. 1662. There was a further gap in his attendance between 20 Mar. and 11 Apr. 1662. He attended on the last day of the session, 19 May, having been present on 47 days of that part of the session, nearly 36 per cent of the total.

Seymour first sat on the second day of the 1663 session, 19 February. On 23 Feb. he was absent from a call of the House, and although he attended on the 25th he was then absent until 9 April. He was reckoned by Wharton on 13 July to be a likely opponent of the attempt by George Digby, 2nd earl of Bristol, to impeach the lord chancellor, Edward Hyde, earl of Clarendon.9 Seymour last attended on 20 July, a week before the end of the session. In all he attended on 34 days of the session, approximately 42 per cent of the total, but was named to only two committees, old age and illness apparently curtailing his activity.

Seymour attended on the second day of the 1664 session, 21 March. He was present on 12 days of the session (just over 32 per cent of the total), being named only to the committees for privileges and petitions. He last sat in the Lords on 14 May, shortly before the session’s adjournment. He died on 12 July 1664, ‘resigning himself up very quietly’,10 and was buried in Great Bedwyn, alongside his ancestors.11 In his will he bequeathed to his wife Catherine £600 per year and the use of the house in St Martin’s Lane, London. His son, Charles, duly succeeded as 2nd baron.

A.C./S.N.H.

  • 1 TNA, PROB 11/315.
  • 2 Somerville, Duchy of Lancaster Officeholders, 3.
  • 3 CCAM, 639.
  • 4 CSP Dom. 1655, p. 220.
  • 5 Add. 36452, f. 183.
  • 6 CTB, i. 54–55.
  • 7 CSP Dom. 1660–1, p. 119.
  • 8 E. Ludlow, A Voyce from the Watch Tower, ed. Worden (Cam. Soc. ser. 4, xxi), 176.
  • 9 Bodl. Carte 81, f. 224.
  • 10 Eg. 71, f. 104.
  • 11 J. Aubrey, Wiltshire: Topographical Collections, ed. Jackson, 378.