Thomas Smythe (customer)

Thomas Smythe

Thomas 'Customer' Smythe
Spouse(s) Alice Judde

Issue

Andrew Smythe
John Smythe
Thomas Smythe (died 1625)
Henry Smythe
Richard Smythe
Robert Smythe
Symon Smythe
Elizabeth Smythe
Mary Smythe
Joan Smythe
Katherine Smythe
Alice Smythe
Ursula Smythe
Father John Smythe
Mother Joan Brouncker
Born 1522
Died 7 June 1591
Buried Ashford, Kent

Thomas Smythe (Kent (1522 – 7 June 1591)[1] was the collector of customs duties ("customer") in London during the Tudor period. His son and namesake Sir Thomas Smythe was an active supporter of the Virginia colony.

Family

Thomas Smythe, born in 1522, was the second son[2] of John Smythe (d.1538), a substantial yeoman and clothier of Corsham, Wiltshire, and Joan Brouncker, the daughter of Robert Brouncker of Melksham, Withshire.[3] John Smythe left Thomas a farm in the Hundred of Amesbury, Wiltshire, of the value of £20 per annum. Thomas, who must have been about sixteen years of age at the time of his father's death, came up to London with the intention of seeking his fortune.[4]

Career

Thomas took up his freedom in his father's guild, the Haberdashers, and subsequently in the Worshipful Company of Skinners, which may account for his intimate connection with Sir Andrew Judde, Lord Mayor of London in 1550, whose daughter Alice he married circa 1554.[5][6]

In the reign of Mary I of England Smythe purchased the Office of the Customs from one Mr. Cocker, for the sum of £2500. He was confirmed in his appointment at the Customs on the accession of Elizabeth I in 1558, and continued in the office for a period of eleven years. In 1567 he appears to have incurred her Majesty's severe displeasure, having been accused of issuing privy warrants whereby a loss of revenue was sustained, to the extent of some £6000, and it was only through the kind intervention of his friend William Cecil, Lord Burghley that he escaped imprisonment. Cecil persuaded the Queen to be lenient, as if time were allowed he would doubtless pay up, but if he were imprisoned her Majesty would be the loser.[7]

The increasing wealth of the Customer only tends to shew that his gains were large; and Elizabeth, ever on the watch to replenish her exchequer, did not fail to require larger and larger fines for a renewal of the leases; with these demands he at length found himself unable to comply, and in consequence he again fell under her Majesty's severe displeasure. His October 1589 counteroffer of a more modest payment was rejected. His increasing infirmities and the weight of his royal Mistress's displeasure combined to shorten his life. He died 7 June 1591, leaving his widow, then sixty years of age, and twelve children, six sons and six daughters.[8]

Smythe was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Tavistock October 1553, for Aylesbury April 1554, Rye November 1554, Winchelsea 1555 and Portsmouth 1563.[9]

Marriage and issue

Alice Judde, 1579/80.

By his wife Alice Judde, Thomas Smythe had thirteen children.

Notes

  1. Dietz 2004.
  2. Wadmore 1887, p. 193.
  3. Dietz 2004.
  4. Wadmore 1887, p. 193.
  5. Wadmore 1887, p. 193.
  6. Hearn, p. 108–110
  7. Wadmore 1887, p. 194.
  8. Wadmore 1887, pp. 200–1.
  9. Members Constituencies Parliaments Surveys (2012-10-08). "SMITH, Thomas II (1522-91), of London, Ashford and Westenhanger, Kent.". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  10. Wadmore 1887, pp. 193, 202.
  11. Wadmore 1887, pp. 193, 202.
  12. "SMYTHE, Sir John I (1557-1608), of Westenhanger, nr. Hythe, Kent". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  13. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  14. Morgan 2004.
  15. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  16. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  17. Wadmore 1887, pp. 197, 202.
  18. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  19. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  20. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  21. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  22. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.
  23. Wadmore 1887, p. 202.

References

External links

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