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Thomas Mackworth

Thomas Mackworth (1627–1696) of Betton Strange was an English politician of Shropshire landed gentry background. After limited military service on the Parliamentarian side in the Third English Civil War, he represented Shropshire in the House of Commons from 1656 to 1659 during the Second and Third Protectorate Parliaments.

Background and early life edit

Thomas Mackworth was the eldest son of

  • Humphrey Mackworth of Betton Strange, just south of Shrewsbury. The Mackworths' origins lay in Mackworth, near Derby,[1] and were related to the Mackworth baronets, originally of Mackworth Castle although they moved to Normanton, Rutland in the 17th century. Humphrey's junior branch of the family had held Betton Strange, a manor a few miles south of the town, since 1544[2] and were deeply involved in the politics and commerce of Shrewsbury.
  • Anne Waller, Mackworth's first wife, who had married him by May 1624. She was the daughter of Thomas Waller of Beaconsfield, who seems to have been the owner of the estate known as Gregory's Manor or Butler's Court in the early 17th century.[3] She was related to the poet Edmund Waller, who belonged to another branch of the family in Beaconsfield. However, the Waller's originated in Kent[4] so the Parliamentarian general William Waller was a very distant kinsman.

It is unlikely that Thomas Mackworth was born at Betton Strange. St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury, was the parish church which covered the area[5] and his christening is not included in its parish register. His year of birth is generally given as 1627,[6] although ODNB raises a very slight doubt by giving it as c.1628.[7] Owen and Blakeway's 1825 History of Shrewsbury includes an abstract from an earlier manuscript listing monuments in the old churchyard: important, as the church fell down in 1788 and was replaced by a building on a new site. The monument to Thomas Mackworth and his wife apparently recorded that he was in his 70th year when he died in 1696,[8] tending to validate 1627 as his birth year. His brother, Humphrey Mackworth, was born in 1631[9] and the first of three sisters, Anne, in 1632[10] Their mother died in 1636 and was buried at St Chad's on 26 May.[11] Humphrey Mackworth subsequently married and had further children by Mary Venables, the daughter of Thomas Venables of Kinderton in Cheshire.[6]

Thomas Mackworth's childhood and youth were shaped throughout by his father's developing career and commitments. At the time of Thomas's birth, Humphrey Mackworth was a young Gray's Inn lawyer, working in London, although he moved back and began to represent the town of Shrewsbury as his family grew, attaining the rank of alderman in 1633.[12] The family was by this time noted as Puritan: in autumn of the same year Humphrey Mackworth was one of twenty family heads who were denounced during a canonical visitation as "wilful refusers to communicate for the gestures sake."[13] because they persistently refused to bow at the name of Jesus or to kneel at the altar rail.

Education edit

Thomas Mackworth's education shadowed his father's: Shrewsbury School, the University of Cambridge and Gray's Inn. He was admitted to Shrewsbury School, then a noted centre of Calvinist and humanistic education, in 1638.[6] He matriculated as a pensioner or fee-paying student at St Catharine's College, Cambridge at Michaelmas 1642.[14][15] He was admitted at Gray's Inn, on 6 February 1645[16] and was awarded BA at Cambridge in 1646.[14][15]

The Civil War and Commonwealth edit

Mackworth's further education coincided with the early and, for his family, critical phases of the English Civil War. Humphrey Mackworth was a Parliamentarian from the outset.[12] However, Shrewsbury and most of its county fell into royalist hands and Charles I occupied Shrewsbury with his field army from 20 September 1642.[17] At Bridgnorth on 14 October the king issued a royal proclamation threatening with prosecution for high treason Shropshire gentry who had criticised his government: Humphrey Mackworth was one of only three who were named.[18] Thomas must have moved to university in safely-Parliamentarian Cambridge very soon after the family's flight and the sequestration of their home and estates by the royalists. The records of Thomas's admission to Cambridge and to Gray's Inn both describe him as the son of Humphrey Mackworth of Coventry, where Mackworth senior was employed by the city corporation as steward,[12] so it is likely that this was the family home during these years. It was from Coventry that Parliament's reconquest of the West Midlands was launched, with a series of county committees slowly establishing themselves and federating to provide the framework for a provisional government: the Shropshire committee gained an initial foothold at Wem in the autumn of 1643.[19] By the time Thomas Mackworth was entering Gray's Inn in February 1645, his father and the committee were already involved in plans for the taking of Shrewsbury, an aim they achieved on 21 February 1645.[20] Humphrey Mackworth was acclaimed governor by his committee colleagues, in preference to Thomas Mytton, the successful commander who had been governor of Wem.[21]

Thomas seems to given his father some assistance during the years of his governorship. When Shrewsbury was fortified against the army of Charles II of Scotland in August 1651, Thomas was in charge of a detachment of soldiers in the garrison.[22] He is also known to have helped during 1650–52 in the appointment of Francis Tallents as minister at Mary's church in Shrewsbury, pressing for £50 in London to supplement the £150 salary available in Shrewsbury.[23] This suggests that up to this point he was still fairly closely engaged and well connected in the capital. The situation must have changed, as it had with his father, with marriage and the growth of his family. He married Anne Bulkeley, from a Shropshire gentry family, and their first son, named Bulkeley after his mother's family, was born on 14 December 1653 and baptised at Chad's church a fortnight later.[24] From this point he was closely involved in the government of his native county.

The Protectorate edit

Local government and justice edit

Thomas Mackworth's first recorded appearance as a justice of the peace in Shropshire, alongside his father, was at the quarter sessions of 10 January 1654.[25] The cases considered were fairly typical of the time and included local government matters as well as poor relief, the administration of justice and moral policing. It is possible his debut indicated that Humphrey Mackworth knew that he was to be nominated a member of the Protector's Council the following. Mackworth senior was heavily committed in London from that point and perhaps relied on Thomas to represent him. Thomas appeared on the bench at the next sessions, on 4 April [26] He was not listed as present for the sessions of 11 July. Nevertheless, the magistrates referred to him and Robert Corbet the case of a widow requesting poor relief and appointed him a commissioner of the house of correction, so he was now regarded as an active local justice of the peace. He heads the list of justices at the 3 October 1654 sessions, traditionally linked with Michaelmas but in the record for this year, apparently wrongly, with St. Martin's Day.[27] It was at this session that the justices decided to take a firm line over money owed for the rebuilding of Stokesay parish church, resulting in the construction of one of the very few parish churches in the country dating from the Commonwealth or Protectorate periods. Mackworth missed the Epiphany sessions of 1655,[28] which were held soon after his father's funeral in Westminster Abbey. Humphrey Mackworth senior's death must have been unexpected and he died intestate, probably preoccupying Thomas Mackworth, the heir, in administrative complications and family difficulties. However, for the remaining three quarter sessions of the year both Thomas and his younger brother Humphrey appeared on the bench. Both seem to have remained active even when unable to attend. For example, Thomas was not on the bench at Easter 1657 but those present acted on an order he had issued under the Poor Law.[29]

Member of Parliament edit

In 1656, Mackworth was elected Member of Parliament for Shropshire for the Second Protectorate Parliament.[30][31] This was elected under the Instrument of Government, like the First Protectorate Parliament of 1654–5, and was similarly intended to legitimise the rule of Oliver Cromwell. The election results were more favourable to the government on the second attempt, as senior military figures worked hard to vet candidates and to encourage sympathetic electors.[32] As before, this was a unicameral legislature in which all representatives had to meet a £200 property qualification, and the seats were redistributed according to a system that removed some of the small borough seats and gave four, instead of two, to the counties.[33] Thomas's brother, Humphrey, now addressed as Colonel, represented Shrewsbury in the same parliament[31] and it is not always easy to distinguish them in the parliamentary record. Neither was very prominent. However, it was Mr Mackworth who was appointed to an important committee on an Act for the Security of the Protector's Person on 26 September.[34] It may have been his experience of intestacy, as well as his legal training, that obtained him a place on a committee to discuss an Act for the Probate of Wills a month later.[35] In November he was deputed to help consider the case of John Cole,[36] a case concerning contract and debt that had simmered since 1640 and was to consume a considerable amount of parliamentary time in future. Not until June 1658 did he appear again in the record, as one appointed to a committee on a bill concerning recusants.[37] He seems to have become gradually more involved in the parliamentary process, acting as teller in a number of divisions of the House. One of these was in relation to a Bill for Preventing Multiplicity of Buildings, which was intended to tackle a serious shortage of housing by preventing wealthy householders annexing neighbouring properties to their own.[38]

He was re-elected MP for Shropshire in 1659 for the Third Protectorate Parliament,[30][39] once again accompanying his brother to Westminster. This went back to the old, unreformed distribution of seats and had a small upper chamber. Richard Cromwell delivered its opening address on 27 January.[40] The following day a Mr Mackworth, probably Thomas, was appointed to its important Privileges committee.[41] However, the parliament was short-lived and Thomas Mackworth played little further part in its proceedings before Cromwell dissolved the parliament on 22 April, fearing that Charles Fleetwood, was about to launch a coup.[42]

Restoration edit

By now the Protectorate regime was itself dissolving. Mackworth's last recorded appearance at the Shropshire quarter sessions before the restoration of the monarchy was on 12 July 1659.[43]

Thomas Mackworth's identification with the Cromwellian regime had not been as complete as his brother Humphrey's. While Humphrey disappeared as Charles II appeared, Thomas seems to have been largely content to settle into private life. By 1668 he was sufficiently rehabilitated to be selected as Sheriff of the county for the following year.[6][44] However, it took the Glorious Revolution to bring him back to the bench. He appeared at the quarter sessions of July 1689[45] Thereafter he was a regular and active member of the bench until October 1696,[46] a month before his death.

Marriage and family edit

Mackworth twice and had issue by both wives.

Anne Bulkeley, daughter of Richard Bulkeley of Buntingsdale, Shropshire, was Mackworth's first wife.[6] The children of this marriage included:

  • Bulkeley Mackworth (1653–1731), an important Shropshire landowner.
  • Anne Mackworth (born 1656), who married Edward Minshull of Stoke, Cheshire.
  • Sir Humphrey Mackworth (1657–1727), industrialist in Wales, Tory MP, fraudster and constitutional writer.

Anne died in 1666 and was buried at St Chad's on 27 April.[47]

Sarah Mytton, daughter of General Thomas Mytton was Mackworth's second wife.[6] They married at St Chad's on 29 September 1674.[48] This marriage produced a daughter:

Sarah Mackworth outlived her husband, died on 28 August 1698[6] and was buried at St Chad's on 3 September.[49]

Death edit

Thomas Mackworth died on 12 November 1696[6] and was buried at St Chad's on 19 November.[50]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Blakeway, p. 390.
  2. ^ Blakeway, p. 391.
  3. ^ Victoria County History: Buckinghamshire: Beaconsfield parish Gregory's Manor alias Butler's Court
  4. ^ Victorian County History: Buckinghamshire: Beaconsfield parish Manors
  5. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. v.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Blakeway, p. 393.
  7. ^ Griffith, William P. "Mackworth, Sir Humphry". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17631. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ Owen and Blakeway, Volume 2, p. 241.
  9. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 77.
  10. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 86.
  11. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 109.
  12. ^ a b c Gaunt, Peter. "Mackworth, Humphrey". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37716. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ Coulton, p. 85.
  14. ^ a b "Mackworth, Thomas (MKWT642T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  15. ^ a b Venn, John; Venn, J.A., eds. (1924). "Mackworth, Thomas". Alumni Cantabrigienses (Part 1). Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 124 – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ Foster, Register of Admissions to Gray's Inn, p. 239, folio 1007.
  17. ^ Coulton, p. 91-2.
  18. ^ Coulton, p. 94.
  19. ^ Coulton, p. 95-6.
  20. ^ Coulton, p. 102-3.
  21. ^ Coulton, p. 105.
  22. ^ Coulton, p. 115.
  23. ^ Coulton, p. 117-8.
  24. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 243.
  25. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 9-12.
  26. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 12-14.
  27. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 16-17.
  28. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 18.
  29. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 42-3.
  30. ^ a b Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ... London. pp. 229–239.
  31. ^ a b Notitia Parliamentaria, p. 277. at Internet Archive.
  32. ^ Roots, p. 217-8.
  33. ^ Roots, p. 201-2.
  34. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:26 September 1656
  35. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:27 October 1656
  36. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:22 November 1656
  37. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:1 June 1657
  38. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:20 June 1657
  39. ^ Notitia Parliamentaria, p. 291. at Internet Archive.
  40. ^ Roots, p. 258-9
  41. ^ House of Commons Journal Volume 7:28 January 1659
  42. ^ Roots, p. 262-3
  43. ^ Wakeman (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 65.
  44. ^ "No. 311". The London Gazette. 9 November 1668. p. 2.
  45. ^ Lloyd Kenyon (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 121.
  46. ^ Lloyd Kenyon (ed), Orders of the Quarter Sessions, p. 164.
  47. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 330.
  48. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 1, p. 415.
  49. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 2, p. 811.
  50. ^ Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, volume 2, p. 804.

References edit

  • Blakeway, John Brickdale (1889). Fletcher, William George Dimock (ed.). "History of Shrewsbury Hundred or Liberties: Betton Strange". Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. 2. Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. 1: 380–396. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  • Coulton, Barbara (2010). Regime and Religion: Shrewsbury 1400-1700. Little Logaston: Logaston Press. ISBN 978-1-906663-47-6.
  • Foster, Joseph, ed. (1889). The Register of Admissions to Gray's Inn, 1521–1889. London: Hansard. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  • Foster, Joseph, ed. (1913). Shropshire Parish Registers: Diocese of Lichfield: St Chad's, Shrewsbury. Vol. 1. London: Shropshire Parish Register Society. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Foster, Joseph, ed. (1916). Shropshire Parish Registers: Diocese of Lichfield: St Chad's, Shrewsbury. Vol. 2. London: Shropshire Parish Register Society. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Gaunt, Peter. "Mackworth, Humphrey". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37716. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Griffith, William P. "Mackworth, Sir Humphry". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17631. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 7, 1651-1660. Institute of Historical Research. 1802. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  • Lloyd Kenyon, Robert, ed. (1908). Abstract of the Orders made by the Court of Quarter Sessions for Shropshire, January, 1660–April, 1694. Shrewsbury: Shropshire County Records. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Owen, Hugh; Blakeway, John Brickdale (1825). A History of Shrewsbury. Vol. 2. London: Harding Leppard. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Page, William, ed. (1925). A History of the County of Buckingham. Vol. 3. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Roots, Ivan (2009). The Great Rebellion. Stroud: History Press. ISBN 9780752443850.
  • "Mackworth, Thomas (MKWT642T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  • Venn, John; Venn, J.A., eds. (1924). "Mackworth, Thomas". Alumni Cantabrigienses (Part 1). Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 124 – via Internet Archive.
  • Wakeman, Offley, ed. (1900). Abstract of the Orders made by the Court of Quarter Sessions for Shropshire, January, 1638–May, 1660. Shrewsbury: Shropshire County Records. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  • Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria. London. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
Parliament of England
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Shropshire
1656–1659
With: Samuel More 1656
Andrew Lloyd 1656
Philip Young 1656–1659
Succeeded by
Not represented in Restored Rump

thomas, mackworth, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1627, 1696, betton, strange, english, politician, shropshire, landed, gentry, background, after, limited, military, service, parliamentarian, side, third, english, civil, represented, shropshire, house, . For other people named Thomas Mackworth see Thomas Mackworth disambiguation Thomas Mackworth 1627 1696 of Betton Strange was an English politician of Shropshire landed gentry background After limited military service on the Parliamentarian side in the Third English Civil War he represented Shropshire in the House of Commons from 1656 to 1659 during the Second and Third Protectorate Parliaments Contents 1 Background and early life 2 Education 3 The Civil War and Commonwealth 4 The Protectorate 4 1 Local government and justice 4 2 Member of Parliament 5 Restoration 6 Marriage and family 7 Death 8 Footnotes 9 ReferencesBackground and early life editThomas Mackworth was the eldest son of Humphrey Mackworth of Betton Strange just south of Shrewsbury The Mackworths origins lay in Mackworth near Derby 1 and were related to the Mackworth baronets originally of Mackworth Castle although they moved to Normanton Rutland in the 17th century Humphrey s junior branch of the family had held Betton Strange a manor a few miles south of the town since 1544 2 and were deeply involved in the politics and commerce of Shrewsbury Anne Waller Mackworth s first wife who had married him by May 1624 She was the daughter of Thomas Waller of Beaconsfield who seems to have been the owner of the estate known as Gregory s Manor or Butler s Court in the early 17th century 3 She was related to the poet Edmund Waller who belonged to another branch of the family in Beaconsfield However the Waller s originated in Kent 4 so the Parliamentarian general William Waller was a very distant kinsman It is unlikely that Thomas Mackworth was born at Betton Strange St Chad s Church Shrewsbury was the parish church which covered the area 5 and his christening is not included in its parish register His year of birth is generally given as 1627 6 although ODNB raises a very slight doubt by giving it as c 1628 7 Owen and Blakeway s 1825 History of Shrewsbury includes an abstract from an earlier manuscript listing monuments in the old churchyard important as the church fell down in 1788 and was replaced by a building on a new site The monument to Thomas Mackworth and his wife apparently recorded that he was in his 70th year when he died in 1696 8 tending to validate 1627 as his birth year His brother Humphrey Mackworth was born in 1631 9 and the first of three sisters Anne in 1632 10 Their mother died in 1636 and was buried at St Chad s on 26 May 11 Humphrey Mackworth subsequently married and had further children by Mary Venables the daughter of Thomas Venables of Kinderton in Cheshire 6 Thomas Mackworth s childhood and youth were shaped throughout by his father s developing career and commitments At the time of Thomas s birth Humphrey Mackworth was a young Gray s Inn lawyer working in London although he moved back and began to represent the town of Shrewsbury as his family grew attaining the rank of alderman in 1633 12 The family was by this time noted as Puritan in autumn of the same year Humphrey Mackworth was one of twenty family heads who were denounced during a canonical visitation as wilful refusers to communicate for the gestures sake 13 because they persistently refused to bow at the name of Jesus or to kneel at the altar rail Education editThomas Mackworth s education shadowed his father s Shrewsbury School the University of Cambridge and Gray s Inn He was admitted to Shrewsbury School then a noted centre of Calvinist and humanistic education in 1638 6 He matriculated as a pensioner or fee paying student at St Catharine s College Cambridge at Michaelmas 1642 14 15 He was admitted at Gray s Inn on 6 February 1645 16 and was awarded BA at Cambridge in 1646 14 15 The Civil War and Commonwealth editMackworth s further education coincided with the early and for his family critical phases of the English Civil War Humphrey Mackworth was a Parliamentarian from the outset 12 However Shrewsbury and most of its county fell into royalist hands and Charles I occupied Shrewsbury with his field army from 20 September 1642 17 At Bridgnorth on 14 October the king issued a royal proclamation threatening with prosecution for high treason Shropshire gentry who had criticised his government Humphrey Mackworth was one of only three who were named 18 Thomas must have moved to university in safely Parliamentarian Cambridge very soon after the family s flight and the sequestration of their home and estates by the royalists The records of Thomas s admission to Cambridge and to Gray s Inn both describe him as the son of Humphrey Mackworth of Coventry where Mackworth senior was employed by the city corporation as steward 12 so it is likely that this was the family home during these years It was from Coventry that Parliament s reconquest of the West Midlands was launched with a series of county committees slowly establishing themselves and federating to provide the framework for a provisional government the Shropshire committee gained an initial foothold at Wem in the autumn of 1643 19 By the time Thomas Mackworth was entering Gray s Inn in February 1645 his father and the committee were already involved in plans for the taking of Shrewsbury an aim they achieved on 21 February 1645 20 Humphrey Mackworth was acclaimed governor by his committee colleagues in preference to Thomas Mytton the successful commander who had been governor of Wem 21 Thomas seems to given his father some assistance during the years of his governorship When Shrewsbury was fortified against the army of Charles II of Scotland in August 1651 Thomas was in charge of a detachment of soldiers in the garrison 22 He is also known to have helped during 1650 52 in the appointment of Francis Tallents as minister at Mary s church in Shrewsbury pressing for 50 in London to supplement the 150 salary available in Shrewsbury 23 This suggests that up to this point he was still fairly closely engaged and well connected in the capital The situation must have changed as it had with his father with marriage and the growth of his family He married Anne Bulkeley from a Shropshire gentry family and their first son named Bulkeley after his mother s family was born on 14 December 1653 and baptised at Chad s church a fortnight later 24 From this point he was closely involved in the government of his native county The Protectorate editLocal government and justice edit Thomas Mackworth s first recorded appearance as a justice of the peace in Shropshire alongside his father was at the quarter sessions of 10 January 1654 25 The cases considered were fairly typical of the time and included local government matters as well as poor relief the administration of justice and moral policing It is possible his debut indicated that Humphrey Mackworth knew that he was to be nominated a member of the Protector s Council the following Mackworth senior was heavily committed in London from that point and perhaps relied on Thomas to represent him Thomas appeared on the bench at the next sessions on 4 April 26 He was not listed as present for the sessions of 11 July Nevertheless the magistrates referred to him and Robert Corbet the case of a widow requesting poor relief and appointed him a commissioner of the house of correction so he was now regarded as an active local justice of the peace He heads the list of justices at the 3 October 1654 sessions traditionally linked with Michaelmas but in the record for this year apparently wrongly with St Martin s Day 27 It was at this session that the justices decided to take a firm line over money owed for the rebuilding of Stokesay parish church resulting in the construction of one of the very few parish churches in the country dating from the Commonwealth or Protectorate periods Mackworth missed the Epiphany sessions of 1655 28 which were held soon after his father s funeral in Westminster Abbey Humphrey Mackworth senior s death must have been unexpected and he died intestate probably preoccupying Thomas Mackworth the heir in administrative complications and family difficulties However for the remaining three quarter sessions of the year both Thomas and his younger brother Humphrey appeared on the bench Both seem to have remained active even when unable to attend For example Thomas was not on the bench at Easter 1657 but those present acted on an order he had issued under the Poor Law 29 Member of Parliament edit In 1656 Mackworth was elected Member of Parliament for Shropshire for the Second Protectorate Parliament 30 31 This was elected under the Instrument of Government like the First Protectorate Parliament of 1654 5 and was similarly intended to legitimise the rule of Oliver Cromwell The election results were more favourable to the government on the second attempt as senior military figures worked hard to vet candidates and to encourage sympathetic electors 32 As before this was a unicameral legislature in which all representatives had to meet a 200 property qualification and the seats were redistributed according to a system that removed some of the small borough seats and gave four instead of two to the counties 33 Thomas s brother Humphrey now addressed as Colonel represented Shrewsbury in the same parliament 31 and it is not always easy to distinguish them in the parliamentary record Neither was very prominent However it was Mr Mackworth who was appointed to an important committee on an Act for the Security of the Protector s Person on 26 September 34 It may have been his experience of intestacy as well as his legal training that obtained him a place on a committee to discuss an Act for the Probate of Wills a month later 35 In November he was deputed to help consider the case of John Cole 36 a case concerning contract and debt that had simmered since 1640 and was to consume a considerable amount of parliamentary time in future Not until June 1658 did he appear again in the record as one appointed to a committee on a bill concerning recusants 37 He seems to have become gradually more involved in the parliamentary process acting as teller in a number of divisions of the House One of these was in relation to a Bill for Preventing Multiplicity of Buildings which was intended to tackle a serious shortage of housing by preventing wealthy householders annexing neighbouring properties to their own 38 He was re elected MP for Shropshire in 1659 for the Third Protectorate Parliament 30 39 once again accompanying his brother to Westminster This went back to the old unreformed distribution of seats and had a small upper chamber Richard Cromwell delivered its opening address on 27 January 40 The following day a Mr Mackworth probably Thomas was appointed to its important Privileges committee 41 However the parliament was short lived and Thomas Mackworth played little further part in its proceedings before Cromwell dissolved the parliament on 22 April fearing that Charles Fleetwood was about to launch a coup 42 Restoration editBy now the Protectorate regime was itself dissolving Mackworth s last recorded appearance at the Shropshire quarter sessions before the restoration of the monarchy was on 12 July 1659 43 Thomas Mackworth s identification with the Cromwellian regime had not been as complete as his brother Humphrey s While Humphrey disappeared as Charles II appeared Thomas seems to have been largely content to settle into private life By 1668 he was sufficiently rehabilitated to be selected as Sheriff of the county for the following year 6 44 However it took the Glorious Revolution to bring him back to the bench He appeared at the quarter sessions of July 1689 45 Thereafter he was a regular and active member of the bench until October 1696 46 a month before his death Marriage and family editMackworth twice and had issue by both wives Anne Bulkeley daughter of Richard Bulkeley of Buntingsdale Shropshire was Mackworth s first wife 6 The children of this marriage included Bulkeley Mackworth 1653 1731 an important Shropshire landowner Anne Mackworth born 1656 who married Edward Minshull of Stoke Cheshire Sir Humphrey Mackworth 1657 1727 industrialist in Wales Tory MP fraudster and constitutional writer Anne died in 1666 and was buried at St Chad s on 27 April 47 Sarah Mytton daughter of General Thomas Mytton was Mackworth s second wife 6 They married at St Chad s on 29 September 1674 48 This marriage produced a daughter Dorothy born 1677 who married William Taylor of Rodington Shropshire Sarah Mackworth outlived her husband died on 28 August 1698 6 and was buried at St Chad s on 3 September 49 Death editThomas Mackworth died on 12 November 1696 6 and was buried at St Chad s on 19 November 50 Footnotes edit Blakeway p 390 Blakeway p 391 Victoria County History Buckinghamshire Beaconsfield parish Gregory s Manor alias Butler s Court Victorian County History Buckinghamshire Beaconsfield parish Manors Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p v a b c d e f g h Blakeway p 393 Griffith William P Mackworth Sir Humphry Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17631 Subscription or UK public library membership required Owen and Blakeway Volume 2 p 241 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 77 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 86 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 109 a b c Gaunt Peter Mackworth Humphrey Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 37716 Subscription or UK public library membership required Coulton p 85 a b Mackworth Thomas MKWT642T A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b Venn John Venn J A eds 1924 Mackworth Thomas Alumni Cantabrigienses Part 1 Vol 3 Cambridge University Press p 124 via Internet Archive Foster Register of Admissions to Gray s Inn p 239 folio 1007 Coulton p 91 2 Coulton p 94 Coulton p 95 6 Coulton p 102 3 Coulton p 105 Coulton p 115 Coulton p 117 8 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 243 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 9 12 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 12 14 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 16 17 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 18 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 42 3 a b Willis Browne 1750 Notitia Parliamentaria Part II A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541 to the Restoration 1660 London pp 229 239 a b Notitia Parliamentaria p 277 at Internet Archive Roots p 217 8 Roots p 201 2 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 26 September 1656 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 27 October 1656 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 22 November 1656 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 1 June 1657 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 20 June 1657 Notitia Parliamentaria p 291 at Internet Archive Roots p 258 9 House of Commons Journal Volume 7 28 January 1659 Roots p 262 3 Wakeman ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 65 No 311 The London Gazette 9 November 1668 p 2 Lloyd Kenyon ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 121 Lloyd Kenyon ed Orders of the Quarter Sessions p 164 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 330 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 1 p 415 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 2 p 811 Register of St Chad s Shrewsbury volume 2 p 804 References editBlakeway John Brickdale 1889 Fletcher William George Dimock ed History of Shrewsbury Hundred or Liberties Betton Strange Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society 2 Shropshire Archaeological and Natural History Society 1 380 396 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Coulton Barbara 2010 Regime and Religion Shrewsbury 1400 1700 Little Logaston Logaston Press ISBN 978 1 906663 47 6 Foster Joseph ed 1889 The Register of Admissions to Gray s Inn 1521 1889 London Hansard Retrieved 22 May 2015 Foster Joseph ed 1913 Shropshire Parish Registers Diocese of Lichfield St Chad s Shrewsbury Vol 1 London Shropshire Parish Register Society Retrieved 25 June 2015 Foster Joseph ed 1916 Shropshire Parish Registers Diocese of Lichfield St Chad s Shrewsbury Vol 2 London Shropshire Parish Register Society Retrieved 25 June 2015 Gaunt Peter Mackworth Humphrey Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 37716 Subscription or UK public library membership required Griffith William P Mackworth Sir Humphry Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17631 Subscription or UK public library membership required Journal of the House of Commons Volume 7 1651 1660 Institute of Historical Research 1802 Retrieved 22 May 2015 Lloyd Kenyon Robert ed 1908 Abstract of the Orders made by the Court of Quarter Sessions for Shropshire January 1660 April 1694 Shrewsbury Shropshire County Records Retrieved 25 June 2015 Owen Hugh Blakeway John Brickdale 1825 A History of Shrewsbury Vol 2 London Harding Leppard Retrieved 25 June 2015 Page William ed 1925 A History of the County of Buckingham Vol 3 Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 25 June 2015 Roots Ivan 2009 The Great Rebellion Stroud History Press ISBN 9780752443850 Mackworth Thomas MKWT642T A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Venn John Venn J A eds 1924 Mackworth Thomas Alumni Cantabrigienses Part 1 Vol 3 Cambridge University Press p 124 via Internet Archive Wakeman Offley ed 1900 Abstract of the Orders made by the Court of Quarter Sessions for Shropshire January 1638 May 1660 Shrewsbury Shropshire County Records Retrieved 25 June 2015 Willis Browne 1750 Notitia Parliamentaria London Retrieved 25 June 2015 Parliament of EnglandPreceded byHumphrey MackworthThomas MyttonRobert CorbetPhilip Young Member of Parliament for Shropshire1656 1659 With Samuel More 1656Andrew Lloyd 1656Philip Young 1656 1659 Succeeded byNot represented in Restored Rump Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Mackworth amp oldid 1107078162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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