John Savile, 1st Baron Savile of Pontefract

John Savile, 1st Baron Savile of Pontefract (1556–1630) was an English politician; M.P. for Lincoln, 1586: sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1590; knight of the shire for Yorkshire, 1597, 1614, 1624, and 1626; custos rotulorum of West Riding of Yorkshire; ejected from office in 1615, but reappointed in 1626. privy councillor, comptroller of house hold 1627–1630, and created Baron Savile in 1627.[1]

Early life

John Savile was born in 1556, the son of Sir Robert Savile of Barkston, Lincolnshire (d. 1585), by his wife Anne Hussey (d. 1562), sister of John Hussey, 1st Baron Hussey of Sleaford, and widow of Sir Richard Thimelby. His father was the illegitimate son of Sir Henry Savile of Thornhill in the West Riding of Yorkshire and had served as sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1573.[2]

Political career

He entered parliament as member for Lincoln in 1586, and he served as sheriff of that county in 1590. On 3 October 1597 he was elected knight of the shire for the county of York, for which he was again returned in 1614. In the latter Parliament he distinguished himself by his opposition to the king, and was consequently struck off the commission of the peace at the close of the session.[3] He was also custos rotulorum for the West Riding of Yorkshire, but is said to have made "use of his authority to satisfy his own ends". In 1615 he was removed from the office and Thomas Wentworth (afterwards Earl of Strafford) appointed in his place. There had long been bitter rivalry between the Saviles and the Wentworths, and they soon "imported their county quarrels into public affairs".[4] According to Clarendon, Wentworth's "first inclinations and addresses to the court were only to establish his greatness in the country where he apprehended some acts of power from the old Lord Savile, who had been his rival always there, and of late had strengthened himself by being made a privy councillor and an [ 373  ] officer at court";[5] and he "rested not until he had bereaved him of all power and place in court, and so sent him down a most abject, disconsolate old man to his country".[5]

Upon his ejection from the office of custos rotulorum, Savile began intriguing with the Duke of Buckingham, whom in September 1617 he induced to write to Wentworth demanding his resignation of the office. Wentworth, however, remonstrated, and, being powerfully supported in the county, carried his point. Buckingham acknowledged that he had been misled by Savile.[6] On 19 January 1624 Savile was again elected for Yorkshire, his colleague being his son Thomas; but in 1625 Wentworth and Lord Fairfax carried the election against him. This was the occasion of the famous dispute in parliament which first brought Wentworth and Eliot into collision. Savile accused the sheriff of having interrupted the polling when it was going against Wentworth, who was his friend. After a heated debate, in which Wentworth broke the rules of the house, and Eliot denounced him as Catiline, the election was declared void.[7] At the by-election Wentworth was again elected; but on 16 Jananuary 1625–6, in a new parliament, Savile once more carried the seat, Wentworth having been made sheriff to prevent his contesting it.[8]

Savile was now high in Buckingham's favour; in July 1626 he was again appointed custos rotulorum in Wentworth's place. Soon afterwards he was sworn of the Privy Council for his services in parliament, and in December was placed on a commission to inquire into abuses in the navy. In the following April his exertions secured the success of the forced loan in Yorkshire,[9] and soon after, through Buckingham's influence, he succeeded Sir John Suckling as comptroller of the household. In May he was placed on a commission to inquire into offices existing and fees taken in Elizabeth's reign. In July he was appointed receiver of the revenues from recusants in the north, and a year later he was created Baron Savile of Pontefract, on the same day (21 July) that Wentworth was raised to the peerage. He held the office of comptroller till his death, aged 74, on 31 August 1630, so that Clarendon's reference to him as an "abject, disconsolate old man" is exaggerated. He was buried in Batley church, Yorkshire, where a monument, with an inflated inscription (printed by Whitaker), was raised to his memory by his daughter, Anne Leigh.[8]

Domestic life

About 1590 Savile built Howley Hall in Batley, which he made his seat; Camden described it as "ædes elegantissimas", and its ruins were still extant in 1900. Tradition says that Rubens visited him there, and painted for him a view of Pontefract. Savile married, first, Catherine, daughter of Charles, lord Willoughby of Parham, by whom he had no issue; secondly, on 20 November 1586, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward, and sister of Sir Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland. By her he had five sons and three daughters; he was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Thomas Savile, Earl of Sussex.[8]

Notes

  1. Lee, Sidney (1903), Dictionary of National Biography Index and Epitome p. 1161.
  2. Pollard 1897, p. 372.
  3. Pollard 1897, p. 372 cites: Gardiner, ii. 249.
  4. Pollard 1897, p. 372 cites: Ranke, ii. 202–3.
  5. Pollard 1897, p. 373 cites: Clarendon Rebellion, i. 341.
  6. Pollard 1897, p. 373 cites: cf. Strafford Letters, passim; Fortescue Papers, Camden Soc., pp. 24, 27; and Browning, Life of Strafford, 1892, pp. 25, &c.
  7. Pollard 1897, p. 373 cites: Gardiner, v. 349–51; Forster, Eliot, i. 160.
  8. Pollard 1897, p. 373
  9. Pollard 1897, p. 373 cites: Gardiner, vi. 158.
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References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Pollard, Albert Frederick (1897). "Savile, John (1556-1630)". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 50. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 372, 373. The entry cites:
    • Cal. State Papers, Dom.;
    • Strafford Letters, passim;
    • Fortescue Papers (Camden Soc.);
    • Official Returns of Members of Parliament;
    • Journals of the House of Commons;
    • Clarendon's Rebellion;
    • Forster's Eliot;
    • Forster's Life of Strafford (sometimes attributed to Robert Browning);
    • Gardiner's Hist. of England;
    • G. E. C.'s Complete Peerage;
    • Burke's Extinct Peerage;
    • Foster's Yorkshire Pedigrees;
    • Hunter's Antiquarian Notices of Lupset;
    • Whitaker's, Life and Correspondence of Sir George Radcliffe;
    • Whitaker's, Loidis et Elmete, pp. 237–9.
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Stephen Thymbleby
John Joye
Member of Parliament for Lincoln
1586–1587
With: Thomas Fairfax
Succeeded by
George Anton
Peter Eure
Preceded by
Sir George Savile, Bt
John Aske
Member of Parliament for Yorkshire
1597–1598
With: Sir William Fairfax
Succeeded by
Sir Edward Stanhope
Thomas Fairfax
Preceded by
Sir Edward Stanhope
Thomas Fairfax
Member of Parliament for Yorkshire
1604–1614
With: Sir Francis Clifford 1604
Sir Richard Gargrave 1606
Sir Thomas Wentworth 1614
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Wentworth
Lord George Calvert
Preceded by
Sir Thomas Wentworth
Lord George Calvert
Member of Parliament for Yorkshire
1624–1625
With: Sir Thomas Savile
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Wentworth
Thomas Fairfax
Preceded by
Sir Thomas Wentworth
Thomas Fairfax
Member of Parliament for Yorkshire
1626
With: Sir William Constable, Bt
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Wentworth
Henry Belasyse
Peerage of England
New creation Baron Savile of Pontefract
1627–1630
Succeeded by
Thomas Savile
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