Abel Smith

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Abel Smith (14 March 1717-12 July 1788) was a British Member of Parliament and banker.

Smith was the son of a wealthy banker in Nottingham, also called Abel Smith (c. 1690-1756), and followed him into the same business. (By the end of the century the family bank was one of the biggest in England). He entered Parliament as member for Aldborough in 1774, and later also represented St Ives and St Germans. These were all pocket boroughs, and Smith may well have had to pay considerable sums to the proprietors to secure his seats; later a proportion of the family wealth was devoted to buying the Smiths a couple of pocket boroughs of their own, and by the early 19th century his son, Lord Carrington, could nominate the MPs at both Midhurst and Wendover.

Smith seems to have become an MP as much with the business advantages in mind as with any high political ambitions. Brooke quotes him as writing, shortly before he was first elected in 1774, "I see many solid advantages accruing to my family from a seat in Parliament, the best of which, the article of franking [the right to free postage, valuable in those days of heavy postal rates], will save a very considerable expense in so extensive a business as that I am engaged in." Although he supported the government, his first two speeches in the House of Commons were both attacks on the government for the way in which they had allotted subscriptions for government loans, in each case referring to occasions when his own firm had been excluded.

He married Mary Bird (c. 1725-1780), and they had eight children, several of whom followed their father into Parliament:

  • Lucy Smith
  • Abel Smith (1748-1779), MP for Nottingham
  • Robert John Smith (1752-1838), MP for Nottingham, created Baron Carrington in 1796
  • Samuel Smith (1754-1834), MP for Leicester, Malmesbury, Midhurst, St Germans and Wendover
  • William Smith (1756- 1820? exact date unknown), the only son not to achieve prominence.
  • George Smith (1765-1836), MP for Lostwithiel, Midhurst and Wendover
  • John Smith (1767-1842), MP for Nottingham, Wendover, Midhurst and Buckinghamshire
  • Thomas Smith (d. 1769)

Abel Smith died on 12 July 1788 at Wilford House, the family home in Nottinghamshire, aged 71.

[edit] References

  • thePeerage.com
  • Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page
  • John Brooke, The House of Commons 1754-1790: Introductory Survey (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968, reprinted from Volume I of Namier & Brooke, The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1754-1790, London: HMSO, 1964)
  • Lewis Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)
  • Abel Smith Last Will and Testament November 12, 1785. Public Record Office catalogue Reference: Prob 11/1168
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Hon. Aubrey Beauclerk
Earl of Lincoln
Member of Parliament for Aldborough
with Charles Wilkinson 1774-1777
William Baker 1777-1778

1774–1778
Succeeded by
William Baker
Hon. William Hanger
Preceded by
Adam Drummond
Philip Dehany
Member of Parliament for St Ives
with William Praed

1780–1784
Succeeded by
Richard Barwell
William Praed
Preceded by
Edward James Eliot
Dudley Long
Member of Parliament for St Germans
with John James Hamilton

1784–1788
Succeeded by
John James Hamilton
Samuel Smith