According to Snygge’s epitaph, the Snygges had been connected with Bristol since the early fifteenth century.
Snygge was re-elected in 1604, and named to 20 committees in the opening session of the first Stuart Parliament. He took the chair in the committee for privileges, and complained on 29 Mar. that only ‘some few committees’ had attended one of its meetings.
Snygge was made a baron of the Exchequer in October 1604, and summoned to the Lords by a writ of assistance when Parliament reconvened in November 1605. On 9 Nov. the Commons considered whether to recall him and the chief baron, Sir Thomas Fleming I, but in the event it was decided not to do so.
Snygge drafted a brief will on 12 Mar. 1613. Although at least two of his sons were then alive and were to survive him, he had apparently settled his lands on his eldest daughter Anne, and he named her principal executrix, ‘to pay my debts and to perform the trust I have reposed in her for the preferment of herself and my other daughters’.
