Thomas Posthumous Hoby came near to being born in France, where his father was ambassador. His mother Elizabethy—one of the famous daughters of Sir Anthony Cooke—seeing complications ahead if the birth should occur outside the realm, had inquired of Cecil, her brother-in-law, ‘whether any child born beyond sea shall inherit land in England’; but within three months Sir Thomas had died and Lady Hoby, still carrying her child, returned to England. When Thomas Posthumous was born, the Queen, whose condolences to the widow had been rather belated, honoured mother and son by being his godmother, sending the Earl of Leicester to represent her at the christening.
A diminutive child, who remained tiny, Hoby was incessantly at loggerheads with his intimidatingly learned and autocratic mother. When he was eight he was sent to Oxford. Intended for an Inn of Court when he was sixteen, he refused to go. Denied the means for foreign travel—Lady Hoby (or Lady Russell as she became on her remarriage in 1574) being unwilling to beggar herself in so unprofitable and dangerous a coursey—he seems to have been received into Burghley’s household with £100 a year from his mother: had he ‘gadded’ to the Earl of Leicester or anyone else his allowance would have been cut to £40. Presumably, however, he was the Thomas Hoby listed among the followers of Leicester in the Netherlands in 1586.
After soldiering in Ireland, where he was knighted, Hoby returned to England and in 1595 became for the second time a suitor for the hand of Margaret Dakins. Four years earlier, with Burghley’s support and urged on by his mother, he had sought to win the young heiress after her first husband’s death, but the 3rd Earl of Huntingdon, in whose household she had been brought up and to whose care she returned in her widowhood, had bestowed her on Thomas Sidney. On Sidney’s death Hoby renewed his suit, again with Burghley’s support and this time with Huntingdon himself on his side, but the lady was reluctant. Only when Huntingdon, seeing in the match a means of advancing protestantism in a backward part of Yorkshire, begged Margaret on his deathbed not to reject her persistent suitor did she agree to accept him. She was then 25. Her Hackness estates—bought for her and her first husband for £6,500 in 1568, and confirmed in the possession of herself and Hoby in 1601—were sufficient to support a position of some consequence in the county, and Hoby intended that they should. But first he had to establish his authority over the nearby borough of Scarborough. On 4 Sept. 1597, when he had been only a year in the county, he reminded the corporation of their earlier promise to elect him as their Member, and asked them to return John Mansfield as their second choice. He had heard that someone in London—probably their new high steward, the Earl of Nottingham—was pressing them to act otherwise; they should reply that they were already committed, and he, Hoby would see that their answer was taken in good part.
Unlike his brother, Hoby was not an outstandingly active Member. No mention is made of him in the records of the 1589 Parliament. In 1593 he reported two legal committees in place of his brother, and in 1597-8 he was appointed to committees concerning the penal laws (8 Nov.), forgery (12 Nov.), the relief of the poor (22 Nov.), the lessees and patentees bill (3 Dec.) and the excessive making of malt (12 Jan. 1598).
As a justice of the peace, and puritanical in every sense of the word, Hoby was alarmed by ‘the backwardness of our northern parts’ in matters of religion, and saw in every creek a suitable landing-place for ‘persons as come for evil intents’.
In his own estimation, Hoby’s strength as a county administrator derived from the fact that he was a stranger, and his wife’s father and mother strangers there also, so that his impartiality could be relied on. But in Yorkshire, its unruly clannishness aggravated by a resurgence of Catholicism, the officiousness of this undersized stranger, a Cecilite and a puritan, was ludicrous and insupportable. To his neighbours the Cholmleys, whose bailiwick of Whitby Strand was ‘a very bishopric of papists’,
By this time Hoby was a commissioner of oyer and terminer, for ecclesiastical causes, for musters, and had thrice been a commissioner for the subsidy,
