Constituency | Dates |
---|---|
Great Grimsby | 1640 (Nov.), 1654, 1656, 1659, 1660 |
Capt. of horse (parliamentary) c.1643–5.
Commr. for assessment, Lincs. 1645, 1649 – 52, 1657, Jan. 1660, 1661 – 63, 1664 – d., (Lindsey) 1648, Aug. 1660–1, 1663 – 64; j.p. (Lindsey) 1647 – 50, 1651 – d.; commr. for militia, Lincs. 1648, Mar. 1660, security 1655 – 56, col. of militia ft. Apr. 1660, capt. vol. horse Aug. 1660, dep. lt. c. Aug. 1660 – d.; commr. for sewers, Hatfield chase and Lincs. Aug. 1660.1Thurloe, iii. 185; Merc. Pub. 19 Apr. 1660; SP29/26/73; C181/7/20.
Wray was the great-grandson of Sir Christopher Wray, the Elizabethan Speaker. Wray’s father represented the borough, in both the Short and Long Parliaments, and raised a regiment for the parliamentary army in which Wray himself is said to have held a commission. However, he was abroad on his travels when he was returned under age as a recruiter for the second seat in the family borough. He ‘little minded anything except drinking and folly’ at this stage in his career, and did not sit after Pride’s Purge. But he held local office for most of the Interregnum, and sat in all the Protectorate Parliaments. He was listed by Gervase Holles among the local Presbyterian Royalists in 1659.2Keeler, Long Parl. 400; Evelyn Diary, 484; Eg. 2541, f. 362.
Wray was re-elected at the general election of 1660. Doubtless a court supporter, he was given a baronetcy soon after the Restoration. An inactive Member of the Convention, he was named only to the committee for reparations to the Earl of Bristol. Although his estate was later estimated at £3,000 a year, a bill was introduced to enable him to pay his debts, reported from committee by Sir Anthony Irby, and received the royal assent. As a brother-in-law of Sir Henry Vane, he is unlikely to have stood in 1661. Like his father before him, he died in his 44th year, on 17 Oct. 1669, and was buried at Ashby.3Her. and Gen. ii. 126; CJ, viii. 182.
This biography is based on C. Dalton, Wrays of Glentworth, ii. 66-84.