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Thomas Benson (1707-1772) – Member of Parliament

Taken from The History of Parliament:
The House of Commons 1715-1754, ed. R. Sedgwick, 1970.

Transcribed by David Carter 2022

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Constituency: Barnstaple.
Served as MP: 1747 – 1754.

Family and Education
Baptised 13 Feb 1708, 2nd son of John Benson of Nap, by his wife Grace Melhuish. 
Married 1737, to his cousin Frances, daughter of Roger Melhuish by his 2nd wife Eleanor Barber.
2 sons, 2 daughters.
Succeeded his father to property at Appledore, a number of merchantmen and £1,000 in Aug. 1739; [1] and succeeded his brother Peter Benson in 1743.

Offices Held
Sheriff of Devon 1746-7.

Biography
Benson came of an old Bideford merchant family, trading to France, Portugal and Placentia in Newfoundland and owning lime and ash works in the town. In 1743 his elder brother advised him in his will that ‘considering the great uncertainty and hazard of trading and the great risk which does now attend the same’ he should ‘as soon as possible ... discontinue all trading with ... ships and vessels ... and do with all convenient speed dispose of the same’ [2].

However, he continued to trade, supplementing his legitimate business by smuggling and piracy. In 1747 he obtained a contract from the Government for the exportation of convicts to Virginia, shipping them instead to Lundy Island, which he leased from Lord Gower for £60 in 1748. At Lundy he employed them as slave labourers on rebuilding the island, defending himself on the ground that "the sending convicts to Lundy was the same as sending them to America, saying ‘they were transported from England, no matter where it was so long as they were out of the kingdom’, an interpretation of the law which was upheld." [3]

In 1747 Benson was resumed for Barnstaple, classed as Opposition. In 1752 he was prosecuted in the Exchequer for unpaid duties on some £40,000 worth of British plantation tobacco [4].

On failing to pay the duties and penalties, amounting to almost £8,000, his estate at Nap was sequestered for his lifetime. In 1753 he arranged for his ship, the Nightingale, which had been heavily insured, to be scuttled in the Bristol channel, her cargo having been previously unloaded on Lundy. A member of the crew turning informer, the master of the ship and his principal associates were arrested and eventually hanged. Benson himself escaped to Portugal, where he died in 1772 [5].

Ref Volumes: 1715-1754
Author: Shirley Matthews.

Notes
[1] PCC 169 Henchman.
[2] PCC 221 Boycott.
[3] Trans. Dev. Assoc. iv. 587; L. R. W. Loyd, Lundy, 133-4.
[4] E159/599, memoranda roll Easter term 26 Geo. II 1753.
[5] Trans. Dev. Assoc. iv. 588; Loyd, 136-7.
 

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