biography text

Towthby could trace the pedigree of his ancestors based at Towthby back to the thirteenth century. His father acquired a substantial estate of some nine manors in Lincolnshire, and Towthby himself improved his position by a series of marriages to rich widows. Gibbons, 143-6; Lansd. 168, f. 200; PROB 11/93, f. 294. In 1611 he was among those nominated to negotiate the rates of composition for purveyance on behalf of the county. HMC Rutland, i. 430. Returned for Grimsby in 1614, possibly as a result of his third wife’s connections with the borough, which her father had represented four times, he took no known part in the proceedings of the Addled Parliament, and does not appear to have stood again. In 1617 he was accused in Star Chamber of trespass and perjury by Robert, 14th Lord Willoughby de Eresby, but the case, and another in Chancery, were eventually dismissed. C2/Jas.I/W21/25; STAC 8/84/26. For reasons that are unclear, Towthby was briefly dropped from the commission of the peace in 1625. He remained neutral during the Civil War. He died intestate, and was buried at Alford on 10 Sept. 1646; administration of his estate was not granted until 1649. Gibbons, 144-8; Lincoln Admons. (Index Lib. lii), 354. No further member of the family entered Parliament.

Author
Parliamentarian
5009