The youngest of four sons of the wealthy Northamptonshire Spencer family of Althorp, this Member received the same fulsome education as his brothers at Oxford, the inns of court, and in Europe. He seems to have derived a comfortable income from looking after the family’s legal and business affairs; his father paid him a modest annuity, as well as bequeathing him £2,000 in his will.
Gifts blind the eyes of the wise, or at the least tie their hands and tongues that they cannot be [as] free as otherwise ... The king’s ministers should so carry themselves as to expect their reward at home, and not to leave their English hearts behind them.
CD 1621, iii. 248, 302, iv. 369; Nicholas Procs. 1621, ii. 100.
This advice was seconded by Sir Edward Coke, and Spencer was thereupon appointed to the bill committee.
Spencer was re-elected for Brackley in 1624, and was again accompanied to Westminster by his brothers. Ordered to attend the conference of 8 Apr. 1624 on the monopolies bill,
At the report stage of the bill for repeal of statutes on 27 Apr., Spencer introduced a proviso concerning the export of undressed cloth, which gave rise to ‘much dispute’.
In September 1625 Spencer married a wealthy widow, whose ‘fidelity and kindness’ were attested in the will of Sir Michael Stanhope*.
Spencer does not seem to have stood for the third Caroline Parliament. He advanced money on mortgage to the earl of Castlehaven (Sir Mervyn Audley*), resulting in a petition to Parliament against Spencer in 1646, in which he was accused of defrauding another debtor of more than £600.
