Sir Edward Phelips, MP, Speaker of the Commons

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Edward Phelips

Birthdate:
Death: September 11, 1614 (55-64)
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas Phelips, MP and Elizabeth Phelips
Husband of Margaret Phelips and Elizabeth Phelips
Father of Sir Robert Phelips, MP; Richard Phelips; Francis Phelips and Edward Phelips
Brother of Sir Thomas Phelips; John Phelips; Elizabeth Ancketill; Ursula Farwell; Audrey Kell and 1 other

Managed by: Tom Conway
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About Sir Edward Phelips, MP, Speaker of the Commons

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Phelips_(speaker)

Family and Education b. c.1560, 4th s. of Thomas Phelips† of Montacute by Elizabeth, da. of Matthew Smith of Bristol. educ. New Inn; M. Temple 1572, called 1578. m. (1) Margaret (d.1590), da. of Robert Newdigate of Newdigate, Surr., 2s.; (2) Elizabeth (d.1638), da. of Thomas Pigott of Doddershall, Bucks. Kntd. May 1603.

Offices Held

J.p. Som. from c.1591, custos rot. from c.1608.

Bencher and Autumn reader, M. Temple 1596; King’s serjeant 1603; justice of common pleas, Lancs. 1604; master of the rolls 1611; ranger of royal forests 1613.

Speaker of House of Commons 1604-11.

Biography Phelips, the builder of Montacute, was a lawyer related to the Horseys of Dorset, and friendly with Thomas Gorges and (Sir) Walter Ralegh, though appearing for the government at the latter’s trial. He was first returned for Bere Alston, no doubt through the influence of the dowager Marchioness of Winchester, who in her will of 1586, left him £10, ‘for the good counsel he hath given me’. Another of his clients was the 2nd Earl of Pembroke, who was high steward of Weymouth, where Phelips was returned in 1586. His relative (Sir) John Horsey was sheriff of the county at the time and his uncle had represented the borough in 1554. Phelips’s return for Penryn in 1593 is difficult to explain. The patronage there was in the hands of the Killigrew family, who had some influence at court, and Phelips may have obtained the seat through a common acquaintance there, perhaps Sir Walter Ralegh, lord lieutenant of Cornwall and warden of the stannaries. After sitting for Andover in 1597, presumably through the influence of the Sandys family, Phelips achieved a county seat in 1601.

So far as is known Phelips was inactive in the Parliament of 1584. On 17 Mar. 1586 he was named to two committees, one concerned with the continuation of statutes, one with sheriffs. On 28 Feb. 1593 he spoke in favour of the bill against recusants and was appointed to its committee, and to that considering the subsidy. On 1 Mar. he was one of those chosen to discuss the subsidy with the Lords. In the 1597-8 Parliament he was named to committees concerned with rebuilding Langport Eastover (10 Nov.), the poor (22 Nov.), Arthur Hatch (22 Nov.), lewd wandering persons (20 Dec.), corporations (12 Jan.), defence (12, 16 Jan.), Sir A. Mildmay’s lands (16 Jan.) and Lady Mary Verney’s jointure (24 Jan.). In Elizabeth’s last Parliament he was named to the committee on the penal laws (2 Nov.), the main business committee (3 Nov.), and committees on the poor, law reform and alehouses (all 5 Nov.), the reform of the Exchequer (9 Nov.), clothworkers (18 Nov.), Severn harbour (21 Nov.), monopolies (23 Nov. and 11 Dec.), and prisoners in Ludgate (12 Dec.). On 7 Nov. he spoke in the subsidy debate, urging that the £3 men should be spared, and four subsidies be taken from the rich, to be termed a ‘contribution’ to avoid making a precedent. On 24 Nov. ‘he thought it a duty in conscience to offer to the consideration of the House’ a bill to explain the Act passed in 1597 concerning charitable uses. After the matter had been referred to a committee, Phelips drew up a bill to repeal the Act, which was opposed by Francis Bacon in the ensuing debate on 7 Dec. Phelips answered with ‘many persuasions for the bill and bitter answers to Mr. Bacon’, and desired that it should be put to the question whether the Act should be repealed by public act or private bill. Edward Glascock also spoke against Phelips,

so after long dispute till almost one of the clock, it was put to the question, whether it shall be repealed by the general law of repeal and continuance of statutes. And the most voices were ay, ay, ay, and so it was agreed. Philips was re-elected for Somerset in the first Parliament of the next reign, and became Speaker, when he earned the reputation of being too closely aligned with the court. He died 11 Sept. 1614.

DNB; Vis. Som. (Harl. Soc. xi), 85; SP14/33; St. Ch. 5/C21/26; E. Edwards, Life of Raleigh, i. 428-9; PCC 32 Windsor; Townshend, Hist. Colls. 103, 107, 119, 122, 198, 246, 285, 291; D’Ewes, 416, 476, 477, 478, 481, 561, 575, 578, 581, 587, 622, 624, 626, 631, 642, 647, 649, 679, 681, 685.

Ref Volumes: 1558-1603 Author: P. W. Hasler