Descended from a family of Florentine merchants, settled in Southampton in the sixteenth century, Guidott acted as agent for the Duke of Marlborough. Returned for Andover as a Whig for nearly twenty years on his own interest, he voted with the Administration on the septennial bill in 1716, was absent from the division on the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts, voted for the peerage bill, and was classed by Craggs in 1719 as to be approached through Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. In 1727 he was sued in Chancery by the Duchess for the recovery of £9,547, which she claimed he had embezzled. The court ordered him to pay £5,494, which on appeal was increased by £754.
biography text
Volume
Parliamentarian
57995
