Andrew Newport Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Andrew Newport
Office:Esquire of the Body
Term Start:1660
Term End:1667
Office1:Comptroller of the Great Wardrobe
Term Start1:1667
Term End1:1681
Office2:Commissioner of Customs
Term Start2:1681
Term End2:1685
Parliament3:English
Constituency Mp3:Montgomeryshire
Term Start3:1661
Term End3:1679
Predecessor3:Edward Vaughan
Successor3:Hon. Price Devereux
Constituency Mp4:Preston
Term Start4:1685
Term End4:1689
Predecessor4:Sir Thomas Chicheley
Successor4:James Stanley
Constituency Mp5:Shrewsbury
Term Start5:1685
Term End5:1689
Predecessor5:Thomas Harris
Successor5:Robert Wright
Birth Name:Andrew Newport
Birth Date:30 November 1622
Party:Tory

Andrew Newport JP (baptised 30 November 1622 – 11 September 1699), styled The Honourable from 1642, was an English Tory politician, courtier and royalist.

Background

He was the second son of Richard Newport, 1st Baron Newport, and his wife Rachel, daughter of Sir John Leveson, and baptised at High Ercall, Shropshire.[1] His older brother was Francis Newport, 1st Earl of Bradford. He was educated at a school in Wroxeter, and Christ Church, Oxford.[2] Like his father and brother, Newport was an active supporter of King Charles II of England during the English Civil War.[2] After the Penruddock uprising in 1655 and the failed pro-Royalist military activities of Sir George Booth, 2nd Baronet, in 1659, he was arrested each time and imprisoned.[2] Following the English Restoration, he was nominated for a proposed Order of the Royal Oak and an estate worth £800 a year was settled on him,[3] with his principal lands being at Deythur, near Llandrinio, Montgomeryshire.[4]

Career

In 1660, following the English Restoration, Newport was called to the court as Esquire of the Body. From 1667 to 1681 he served as comptroller of the Great Wardrobe[5] and was subsequently nominated a Commissioner of Customs in 1681, an office he held until 1685.[6] Newport entered the English House of Commons in a by-election in 1661, sitting for Montgomeryshire until 1679.[7] He was returned for Preston from 1685 until 1689[8] and then for Shrewsbury until 1698.[9] Militarily, Newport held commission as Captain of a company of foot on the Portsmouth garrison from 1662 to 1673.[3] [4] Newport was a Custos Rotulorum of Montgomeryshire between January and December 1679.[10] He was again appointed in 1685, until 1687 and exercised this post a third time from 1691 until his death eight years later.[10] Newport represented the county also as Justice of the Peace and was Commissioner for Assessment of Salop and Montgomeryshire several times.[2] Newport was one of a number of men unsuccessfully implicated by Jacobite conspirator Sir John Fenwick when prosecuted in 1695 prior to the latter's eventual execution in 1697, the allegation being that while Newport was absent from London he allowed his home in Berkeley Street to be used for meetings by two Jacobite noblemen.[4]

Death

Newport died unmarried and childless,[11] at Eyton-on-Severn, Shropshire, the home of his nephew, Lord Newport,[4] in 1699 aged 76, and was buried in the chancel at nearby Wroxeter church.[3] He left his estates and a £40,000 fortune to his younger nephew Thomas Newport.[4]

Literary reference

Andrew Newport has been speculatively identified with the Andrew Newport who nominally wrote Memoirs of a Cavalier (published 1720), a supposedly factual but possibly fictional account of experiences in the Thirty Years' War and Royalist campaigns in England by a Shropshire-born soldier. It was published by Daniel Defoe, strongly suspected to be the real author,[12] over 20 years after the death of this Andrew Newport, who was only ten years old in the year the account begins (1632). Although of age (twenty in 1642) to have served in the English Civil War, there is doubt in absence of record that Newport did and he appears in no list of royalists fined by parliament for delinquency, unlike his father and elder brother.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 40. 2004. Oxford University Press. 669–70. 0-19-861390-3. Article by C.H. Firth, revised by Sean Kelsey
  2. Book: Henning, Basil Duke . The House of Commons, 1660-1690 . I . Secker & Warburg . London . 1983 . 0-436-19274-8 . 136–137 .
  3. Book: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 40. 670.
  4. Web site: NEWPORT, Hon. Andrew (1622-99), of Deythur, Llandrinio, Mont. .
  5. Web site: Loyola University Chicago - The Database of Court Officers 1660-1837 . 24 July 2009 .
  6. Book: Haydn, Joseph . The Book of Dignities: Containing Rolls of the Official Personages of the British Empire . Longman, Brown, Green and Longman's . London . 1851 . 497 .
  7. Web site: Leigh Rayment - British House of Commons, Montgomeryshire . 23 July 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090810231651/http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/Mcommons3.htm . 10 August 2009 .
  8. Web site: Leigh Rayment - Baronetage, Preston . 23 July 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090810231457/http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/Pcommons2.htm . 10 August 2009 .
  9. Web site: Leigh Rayment - British House of Commons, Shrewsbury . 24 July 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20181008224720/http://www.leighrayment.com/commons/Scommons3.htm . 8 October 2018 .
  10. Web site: Institute of Historical Research - Custodes Rotulorum 1660-1828 . 23 July 2009 . https://archive.today/20121223031655/http://www.history.ac.uk/resources/office/custodes1660#xx . 23 December 2012 . dead .
  11. Book: Burke, John . A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland . Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley . London . 1831 . 396 .
  12. Book: Dickins, Gordon. An Illustrated Literary Guide to Shropshire. 1987. Shropshire Libraries. 22. 0-903802-37-6.