Sir Robert Bassett, MP

Is your surname Bassett?

Connect to 11,159 Bassett profiles on Geni

Sir Robert Bassett, MP's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Related Projects

Sir Robert Bassett, MP

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Umberleigh Manor, Atherington Parish, Devon, England
Death: November 11, 1641 (67)
Atherington, Devon, England
Place of Burial: North Devon District, Devon, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Arthur Basset, Kt. MP, of Heanton Court and Eleanor Bassett
Husband of Elizabeth Basset
Father of Elizabeth Yeo; Col. Arthur Bassett, MP; William Bassett; Mary Sparke (Basset); Anne Rashleigh and 1 other
Brother of Margaret Duke; Eleanor Basset; Anne Chichester; John Bassett; Francis Basset and 2 others

Managed by: Woodman Mark Lowes Dickinson, OBE
Last Updated:

About Sir Robert Bassett, MP

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Basset

Sir Robert Basset (1573–1641), lord of the manor of Umberleigh and lord of the manor of Heanton Punchardon in Devon, England, was MP for Plymouth in 1593.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

. 1574, 1st s. of Arthur Bassett by Eleanor, da. of Sir John Chichester. m. 1591, Elizabeth (d.1635), da. of William Peryam, 2s. 4da. suc. fa. 1586. Kntd. 1599.

Offices Held

J.p. Devon 1597, dep. lt. 1600.

Biography Bassett was returned to the first Parliament after his marriage to the daughter of a judge, one of the executors of his father’s will. Though his name is not to be found in the extant journals of the House (he was only 19), the burgesses for Plymouth as such were put on committees for kerseys (23 Mar., 2 Apr.) and fish (5 Mar.).

In 1595 Bassett obtained a licence to travel abroad for three years, was back in Devon in the following year, and in 1597 was chosen by the lord lieutenant to deputize for one of his former guardians, the infirm deputy lieutenant Hugh Fortescue, whom Bassett succeeded in the office after his return from Ireland, where he was knighted by the Earl of Essex. He was retained as deputy lieutenant on the accession of James despite rumours that he was a Catholic. Suddenly he fled the realm, whether because of his religious views, his debts, or for some reason directly connected with his father-in-law has not been ascertained. At any rate he wrote to his brother

I wish with all my heart that I were at Lundy in as poor case as I came from thence ... I pray curse that damned filthy old judge as heartily as myself, who, for my natural affection to my children and his base brood, has forced me to this desperate course. Intercepted at Plymouth, the letter was sent by the mayor to the Privy Council, since Bassett was ‘in reputation of a fugitive or traitor’. Confessing his ‘rash miscarriage’ and ‘follies’ in a letter to the King, he bombarded Cecil and others with letters pleading for permission to return, and for protection against his creditors. At length, in 1611, he was granted a conditional pardon as ‘having been lately distracted’, and allowed to return home or stay with a friend of good conformity in religion.

Thenceforward Bassett lived quietly in Devon until his death in 1641. He may have been the author of the anonymous Lyfe of Syr Thomas More by ‘Ro: Ba.’, written about 1600. His son was Col. Arthur Bassett.

Roberts thesis; D’Ewes, 487, 507, 513.

Ref Volumes: 1558-1603

view all

Sir Robert Bassett, MP's Timeline

1574
January 20, 1574
Umberleigh Manor, Atherington Parish, Devon, England
1579
1579
1597
1597
Shobrooke, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
1602
March 28, 1602
1606
1606
1641
November 11, 1641
Age 67
Atherington, Devon, England
????
????
????
Atherington, North Devon District, Devon, England (United Kingdom)