Carew’s ancestors had held large estates in Devon since about 1300,
Carew took the opportunity of the accession of the new king, James I, to press his claims in Ireland. One Thomas Wadding of Waterford provided him with a written discourse on his right to various lands and lordships in Munster, and between December 1603 and April 1604 several parcels of land in Ireland, some of them substantial, were granted to Carew in recompense for his service under the queen.
Carew served on the joint commission for the Union, which sat following the end of the first session. Described by one well-placed observer as ‘a great favourite’ of Cecil’s, he was given a peerage during the recess, thereby removing him from the Commons.
