There were several Prowse families in Devon and Somerset during this period, but their recorded pedigrees are scanty, and it is not known whether this Member was directly related to Conrad Prowse, who sat for Minehead in 1597, or to John Prowse*. The grandson of a Tiverton clothier, Prowse was still under age when his father died. Ostensibly he was bequeathed only £40, though this probably did not represent his entire inheritance, given that his younger brothers were each allotted £100.
Prowse represented Taunton in the last Jacobean Parliament, but left no trace on its records. Summoned to compound for knighthood in 1630, he claimed that although he had previously been assessed for subsidy at £12 in lands, he had recently sold one-third of this property, situated in Devon. Accordingly, he offered to pay just £28 in respect of the remainder. In 1634 he was in trouble at the Somerset quarter sessions for failing to provide a tithingman for his property in Wilton.
