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1 Biography  





2 Family  





3 References  





4 External links  














Samuel Smith (17541834)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Arms of Smith: Or, a chevron cotised sable between three demi-griffins couped of the last the two in chief respecting each other[1]

Samuel Smith (14 April 1754 – 12 March 1834) was a British Tory Member of Parliament and banker.

Biography

[edit]

Samuel Smith the fourth son of Abel Smith, a wealthy Nottingham banker and Member of Parliament. Four of his brothers were also Members of Parliament and one, Robert, was raised to the peerage as Baron Carrington. A portion of the family wealth was devoted to buying control of two pocket boroughs, Wendover and Midhurst, and Carrington kept the seats here almost exclusively for use by various members of the Smith family until his power was ended by the Great Reform Act.

Smith entered Parliament in 1788 as member for St Germans,[2] and was an MP for the next 44 years, also representing Leicester (1790–1818), Midhurst (1818–1820) and Wendover (1820–1832). He and his son Abel were Wendover's last MPs, as they sat together as its members for the last two years before the borough's abolition. In 1826, being the longest continually-serving MP, he became Father of the House. He did not return to Parliament after the 1832 Great Reform Act, dying two years later.

In 1801 Smith bought Woodhall Park in Hertfordshire, which still belongs to his descendants.

Family

[edit]

Smith married Elizabeth Turnor on 2 December 1783. They had seven daughters and four sons. As well as his son Abel, his grandson Samuel George Smith was a Member of Parliament.

Several of his children married into the family of the Earl of Leven. The eldest son, Abel Smith, married Lady Marianne Leslie-Melville, youngest daughter of Alexander Leslie-Melville, 9th Earl of Leven, on 28 August 1822. The third son, Henry Smith, married Lady Lucy Leslie-Melville, eldest daughter of the 9th Earl of Leven, on 14 July 1824. The youngest daughter, Charlotte Smith, married the Hon. Alexander Leslie-Melville, fifth son of the 9th Earl of Leven, on 19 October 1825.[3] In addition, his grandson Henry Abel Smith (1826–1890), son of Henry Smith and Lady Lucy Leslie-Melville, married his first cousin Elizabeth Mary Pym, daughter of Francis Pym and Lady Jane Elizabeth Leslie-Melville, second daughter of the 9th Earl of Leven, on 30 October 1849; they were the grandparents of Sir Henry Abel Smith who served as Governor of Queensland.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.223, Smith/Carington, Baron Carrington; p.145, Smith, Baron Bicester, both descendants of the banker Abel Smith II (1717–1788)
  • ^ Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs
  • ^ Cracroft's Peerage Archived 5 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Heraldic Media Ltd.
  • [edit]
    Parliament of Great Britain
    Preceded by

    John Hamilton
    Abel Smith

    Member of Parliament for St Germans
    1788–1790
    With: John Hamilton 1788–1790
    Sir Charles Hamilton 1790
    Succeeded by

    Marquess of Lorn
    Hon. Edward James Eliot

    Preceded by

    John Macnamara
    Charles Loraine Smith

    Member of Parliament for Leicester
    1790–1801
    With: Thomas Parkyns 1790–1800
    Thomas Babington 1800–1801
    Succeeded by

    Parliament of the United Kingdom

    Parliament of the United Kingdom
    Preceded by

    Parliament of Great Britain

    Member of Parliament for Leicester
    1801–1818
    With: Thomas Babington
    Succeeded by

    John Mansfield
    Thomas Pares

    Preceded by

    Thomas Thompson
    Sir Oswald Mosley

    Member of Parliament for Midhurst
    1818–1820
    With: John Smith
    Succeeded by

    John Smith
    Abel Smith

    Preceded by

    George Smith
    Robert Smith

    Member of Parliament for Wendover
    1820–1832
    With: George Smith 1820–1830
    Abel Smith 1830–1832
    Constituency abolished
    Preceded by

    Sir John Aubrey, 6th Baronet

    Father of the House
    1826–1832
    Succeeded by

    George Byng


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Samuel_Smith_(1754–1834)&oldid=1061121119"

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    This page was last edited on 19 December 2021, at 19:52 (UTC).

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