Fludyer was born a Dissenter, but, according to Ezra Stiles, president of Yale, his second marriage and his baronetcy led him away from his Church.
At the general election of 1761 Fludyer stood for the City of London as one of the four who had a majority on a show of hands at the meeting of the livery at Guildhall on 4 Mar.; and he signed a joint address with Thomas Harley, William Beckford, and Richard Glyn;
The Whigs seem to be cutting one another’s throats. The Dissenters divided. Dr. Chandler [a leading nonconformist minister] polled against Fludyer as he tells me ... The Ordnance and the Board of Works single Beckford. That is surprising. It is not unreasonable to ask that they should be for Fludyer not exclusive of Beckford; surely that cannot give offence anywhere [i.e. to Pitt].
Add. 32921, ff. 190, 184.
And here is the account of the election sent to Newcastle by one of his City agents, Joseph Watkins:
If I am rightly informed Sir Samuel was greatly to blame for, by acting secretly against Mr. Harley, he flung the whole weight of the merchant interest on a person whom they were determined to fling out, and whose corporation interest was nothing without the merchants’ support, a mortifying circumstance to him but he acknowledged the fact.
Fludyer was re-elected at Chippenham; in Bute’s parliamentary list of December 1761 was marked as a supporter of Newcastle, who still classed him as such in his list of 13 Nov. 1762. But the bidding had already started—Lord Harcourt wrote to Charles Jenkinson on 5 Nov.:
We find that great pains have been taken to bring Sir Samuel to a right way of thinking, every kind of civility and complaisance has been exerted by a great man whose Lady is related to Lady Fludyer [Henry Fox]. I fancy it will have its effect. Notwithstanding which I hope your Lord [Bute] will have an opportunity of explaining matters to him which will set everything right.
Fludyer appears in Fox’s list of Members favourable to the peace preliminaries with a query against his name. But presumably he voted with the majority, for in a paper drawn up after 10 Dec. Fox writes: ‘Sir Samuel Fludyer has my promise ... of some share in contracts and remittances that remain in peace.’
Fluyder appears as subscriber of £19,000 to Bute’s loan of £1,100,000 in 1762;
Sir Samuel Fludyer stood with me on the same footing that every other person does, whose subscription I promised to receive; the few excepted, who were immediately to take upon themselves the chance of carrying my plan into execution, and of them none have half what they desired ... I have no private list (as they call it); every man is welcome to see it, and to see that justice, not favour, has made the arrangement.
Also under the Grenville Administration Fludyer was one of the leading Government financiers.
For victualling contracts he had to wait till the existing ones expired. He and Adam Drummond signed one for the troops in West Florida, but gave it up in order to replace George Colebrooke and Arnold Nesbitt, merchant Members who adhered to Newcastle, in much bigger contracts for America and Quebec. These were not signed till April 1764.
In the autumn of 1763 Fludyer was classed by Jenkinson as a Government supporter, but in the crucial division on general warrants, 18 Feb. 1764, appears in the list of ‘absent friends’. In Newcastle’s lists preparatory to the formation of the Rockingham Government, Fludyer is among the contractors to be removed; but in Rockingham’s parliamentary lists of July he is once classed as ‘pro’ and another time as ‘query’; he did not vote against the repeal of the Stamp Act. Nevertheless notice to terminate his American contracts was given to him on 11 July 1766 by a moribund Treasury.
The following account appears in a biographical sketch of Fludyer published in 1800.
Fludyer died 18 Jan. 1768, ‘reputed worth £900,000’.
