KEMYS, Sir Charles, 3rd Bt. (1651-1702), of Cefn Mabli, Glam.; Llanfair Discoed, Mon. and Denmark Street, St. Giles in the Fields, Mdx.

biography text

Kemys’s ancestors had been seated at Cefn Mabli since the 15th century, but his grandfather, MP for Monmouthshire in 1628, was the first to enter Parliament; a man of gigantic strength and stature, he was killed at Chepstow Castle in the second Civil War. Kemys’s father was likewise a Royalist in both wars, and was fined £3,500. Kemys succeeded to an estate of £1,200 p.a., only two-thirds of its former value, and even before his first marriage, into a notoriously Whiggish aristocratic family, was described as ‘unsettled’. His wife proved a ‘doughty’ Puritan, but he was himself remarkable chiefly for his addiction to the bottle. Returned for Monmouthshire in 1685 as a follower of the Tory Duke of Beaufort (Henry Somerset), he was moderately active in James II’s Parliament, being appointed to the committee of elections and privileges and to three others of minor significance. He returned negative answers to Beaufort’s questions on the repeal of the Test Act and Penal Laws, and was removed from local office. He was not elected in 1689, but in the next two Parliaments voted with the court Whigs. He died in December 1702, and was succeeded by his son, a Jacobite who sat for Monmouthshire with one interval from 1713 to 1734.1W. R. Williams, Parl. Hist. Wales, 127; Cal. Comm. Comp. 1276; SP29/398/185; Beaufort mss, Lord to Lady Worcester, 11 Dec. 1681; NLW Jnl. xxi. 161, 166, 167-8.

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  • 1. W. R. Williams, Parl. Hist. Wales, 127; Cal. Comm. Comp. 1276; SP29/398/185; Beaufort mss, Lord to Lady Worcester, 11 Dec. 1681; NLW Jnl. xxi. 161, 166, 167-8.