Background
Firebrace was the second son of Sir Henry Firebrace, a courtier to both Charles I and Charles II, and Elizabeth Dowell. He was born in 1652.
Firebrace was the second son of Sir Henry Firebrace, a courtier to both Charles I and Charles II, and Elizabeth Dowell. He was born in 1652.
He was prosecuted for fraud and bribery, acquitted, and created a baronet in 1698. Firebrace became a vintner and supplier of wines to the royal household. He was Sheriff of London in 1687, and knighted.
He was also appointed Colonel of the Orange Regiment of the London militia.
He was admitted into the Worshipful Company of Vintners the following year and became an Alderman for Billingsgate. He was elected Member of Parliament for Chippenham as a Tory on 9 December 1690, but the election was declared void almost a year later, on 1 December 1691, and was re-run on 14 December.
In 1694 he purchased West Lodge, Enfield Chase, where he resided until 1716. Firebrace also became a prominent figure in the East India Company and was imprisoned in the Tower of London by Parliament for bribery and fraud in relation to its activities.
In April 1695 the House of Lords ordered that he be kept in "close confinement", having no contact with other prisoners.
He was perhaps more of a go-between than a principal, and although criticised for his entrepreneurialism, he was eventually acquitted of all charges. He was appointed 1st Baronet Firebrace in 1698 by King William III., was bankrupted in 1701 and again imprisoned, for stabbing a creditor. They produced five children, two of whom, Basil and Thomas, died in infancy.
Firebrace died on 7 May 1724.
West. H. Auden was among his descendants.