Descended from seventeenth century Yorkshire settlers, the Smyths of Drumcree were part of a Westmeath dynasty with branches at Ballynegall, Gaybrook, Glananea and Barba Villa House, the ancestral home of William Meade Smythe, Member for Drogheda, 1822-6.
At the 1826 general election he offered again with the support of Longford and the ‘High Protestant interest’, but denied allegations that he was a ‘person of violent political opinions’. After a turbulent contest against a pro-Catholic candidate he was narrowly defeated.
on his first journey to London he put up from the stage-coach at a famous inn called The Bull and Mouth, in the city. He liked the accommodation, though it is three or four miles ... from St. Stephen’s chapel, and accordingly [there] he remained while attending his parliamentary duties. Whether in reference to the inn, or to his mental or gastronomic or physical qualities ... to distinguish him from the nine or ten Smiths in the House, he was known by the prenomen of ‘Bull and Mouth’ Smyth. His voting was regulated by a most impartial and original rule. On any question that presented itself he voted as the first Smith he happened to follow voted ... Where it was his good luck to follow Mr. Smith of Norwich, he voted against the Marriage Act and in favour of the Unitarians. If he happened to light on John Smith of London, he voted with him against the slave trade and for emancipation. If another Smith, he voted for the West Indian planters and for the Orangemen of Ireland. In short Westmeath Smyth was all things to all men.
Dublin Evening Post, 17 June 1826.
Referring to ‘how embarrassed he was in France owing to his ignorance of the language’, the Dublin Evening Post quipped that he should ‘make good use of his retirement’ and ‘get a master, and in seven years he may acquire some knowledge of French’.
The date of Smyth’s death has not been ascertained. He was still acting as a magistrate in 1851, but on 16 Nov. 1866 his son-in-law Major Leicester Curzon (1829-91), who had married his elder daughter Alicia Maria Eliza, heiress to his 4,431-acre estate in February that year, assumed by royal licence the surname of Smyth.
