Carey was descended from a younger son of the family that had provided both knights of the shire for Devon in 1362.
Re-elected to Parliament in 1604, Carey was among those appointed to manage a conference on wardship and purveyance (26 Mar.), to consider Southampton’s restitution bill (2 Apr.), and to hear the king explain the intended Union with Scotland (20 April). On 16 June he was added to the committee for a bill concerning the tanning of leather.
Carey brought his pregnant wife to town ‘in great pomp’ in the winter of 1608-9; she later recalled that whilst he was always ‘very absolute’ towards her, he was so tenderly careful of their offspring ‘that he could supply both the part of a father and mother’.
In 1611 Carey surrendered the lease of Berkhamsted to Prince Henry, in return for £4,000.
As comptroller, Carey was appointed to the Privy Council in 1618, and given a Scottish viscountcy on 14 Nov. 1620, taking his title from the royal palace of Falkland, since he did not himself possess a foot of land in the country. This did not deter him from standing for Hertfordshire at the general election a few weeks later, and on 7 Dec. he asked the 2nd earl of Salisbury (William Cecil*), the county’s lord lieutenant, to ‘afford me your defence and favour for the place, which I am determined to pursue’.
Out of Parliament, Falkland carried assurances of Buckingham’s love and affection to the disgraced lord chancellor, Sir Francis Bacon*, and during the recess he helped to interrogate the 3rd earl of Southampton over the attack on Villiers and other monopolists.
A lifelong moderate in religion, lord deputy Falkland was at first constrained by the Spanish marriage negotiations to turn a blind eye to the prevalence of Catholicism in Ireland.
Upon his return to England, Falkland was readmitted to the English Privy Council, and brought Coryton and Thomas Cotton* into Star Chamber for their parliamentary activity in the Buskin case.
While hunting with the king in 1633, Falkland broke his leg ‘with a fall out of a standing within Theobalds Park’. Charles was the first to come to his aid, whereupon Falkland struggled to his feet, sustaining two further fractures, and took the opportunity of begging a captaincy in the Irish army for his second son. His injuries proved serious, and to arrest the spread of gangrene the leg was amputated; but his doctors failed to arrest the bleeding, and he died intestate on 25 Sept. 1633.
