During the mid-Tudor period Roger Smith†, a sewer to Henry VIII and great-grandfather of the 1624 MP, exploited his connections with the Dudley faction at Court to acquire 1,000 acres of ex-chantry land at Morville, three miles west of Bridgnorth, and substantial property in the borough itself.
Smyth made a single recorded speech in Parliament on 7 May 1624, during a debate on a charge of malpractice levelled against lord keeper Williams over his conduct of a Chancery case. When Arthur Pyne attempted to excuse Williams’s conduct, Smyth retorted, somewhat precociously, that ‘it did better become young men to hear than speak. The gentleman that spake last ..., had it [the lawsuit] been his own case, would have thought otherwise’.
Smyth’s father died in 1636, leaving his estate saddled with a substantial jointure to his second wife, whose administration of her late husband’s estate caused some friction within the family. In May 1641, shortly after her death, Smyth mortgaged his main estate at Morville to Edward Acton† for £2,500, and before he could retrieve his financial situation he died, on 8 Nov. 1641. His only son was killed at Edgehill, and thereafter his remaining estates passed to his sister, Jane Weaver of Bettws, Montgomeryshire.
