SOUTH, Thomas (c.1574-1636), of Northlegh, nr. Lymington, Hants and the Middle Temple, London; later of Winchester, Hants.
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biography text
South’s ancestors were leading citizens of Salisbury by the reign of Edward IV.Vis. Wilts. (Harl. Soc. cv), 187. His father settled at Northlegh, some two-and-a half miles from Lymington, and by 1576 had become the principal taxpayer in his tithing.Lay Subsidy Rolls ed. C.R. Davey (Hants Rec. Ser. iv), 84. South himself became a lawyer. He was called to the bar in 1604, and in the same year was elected for the borough. He left no trace on the records of the first Stuart Parliament, and may have moved to Winchester on his marriage in 1605. A prominent figure on the bench of the Middle Temple, he was chosen as recorder of Lymington in 1622, and doubtless assisted in the election of his brother-in-law John Button three years later.Vis. Wilts. (Harl. Soc. cv), 33. The Hampshire Forced Loan commissioners in 1627 noted that ‘Thomas South, a counsellor, saith he hath paid in the Middle Temple £2 13s.4d., but ought to pay by the rate in the subsidy book £4 13s.4d.’. J. Stevens, St. Mary Bourne, 257. He compounded for knighthood at £25 in 1631. Add. 21922, f. 182v. He gave instructions for his will on 23 Apr. 1636, but did not live to sign it, and his chambers were declared vacant on 6 May. PROB 11/171, f. 48v; MTR, 847. No later member of the family entered Parliament.