As Conservative MP for Essex South, Bowyer-Smijth adopted a persona of deep piety, but his personal life after leaving Parliament showed little moral restraint. After hoodwinking a 16 year old into a sham marriage, he fathered 13 illegitimate children, before the death of his first wife, with whom he also had three children, enabled him to make their union legal. A member of one of Essex’s most illustrious families, he was a descendant of Sir Thomas Smith (1513-77), who served as principal secretary to Queen Elizabeth I in 1572.
Bowyer-Smijth’s zealous attachment to the established church was evident when he was brought forward in the Conservative interest for Essex South at the 1847 general election. Attacking Lord John Russell’s support for the extension of religious liberties, he warned ‘if that principle has no limit, Jews, Turks, Infidels, and Heretics may be Prime Minister’. For him, the established church was ‘the sheet anchor of the state’ and ‘as necessary as a state army’. He argued that without state religion, Britain would end up like France, ‘where the legitimate births are nearly equalled by the illegitimate’, a statement that would later become particularly ironic.
Bowyer-Smijth made little impact in his only Parliament. An irregular attender, he was present for 60 out of 257 divisions in 1853, and 32 out of 198 divisions in 1856.
At the 1857 general election he described Cobden’s motion as ‘an apology to a parcel of atrocious barbarians’, arguing that its success would have been a threat to national security. Compared to his previous campaigns, he struck a softer tone on the Maynooth grant, stating that if Roman Catholics throughout the world were as ‘kind and liberal’ as those in Essex, he would reconsider his position. He also called for the abolition of the malt tax and the income tax. His support for Palmerston over the Canton issue, though, upset a section of the local Conservative party, and following an extremely bitter contest, he was defeated in third place, by just seventeen votes.
Out of Parliament, Bowyer-Smijth appeared to abandon his moral scruples. Despite remaining married to his first wife, in July 1858 he proposed to the sixteen year-old Eliza Malcolm, whom he had first met three years earlier while on a fishing holiday at Blair Atholl, Perthshire. According to the later testimony of his illegitimate children, Eliza, knowing him only as ‘William Smith’, agreed to the proposal, and the next month, whilst driving in a cab in Leith, he reportedly produced a ring and declared ‘with this ring I thee wed’, adding to Eliza ‘you are now my lawful wedded wife’.
Bowyer-Smijth died at Twineham Court in November 1883. He was buried at Theydon Mount churchyard, near Hill Hall, Essex.
