Background
Smythe was born in Stockholm, Sweden, the son of Percy Smythe, 6th Viscount Strangford, by Ellen Burke, daughter of Sir Thomas Burke, Baronet
Smythe was born in Stockholm, Sweden, the son of Percy Smythe, 6th Viscount Strangford, by Ellen Burke, daughter of Sir Thomas Burke, Baronet
He attended Tonbridge School and Eton College, and was later admitted to Street John"s College, Cambridge.
He served briefly as Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in 1846 under Sir Robert Peel. Smythe"s father had been Disraeli"s friend during the 1830s, and had sponsored the latter for the Carlton Club (along with Lord Chandos). Both of them were heavily influenced by Frederick Faber, an apostle of John Henry Newman, leader of the Oxford Movement.
Disraeli and Smythe had known each other through the latter"s father since an early age, but it was in the House of Commons that the two became close.
Young England finally splintered over the Maynooth Grant. In 1845 Peel proposed to increase the annual subsidy granted to the Catholic seminary at Maynooth, in Ireland.
Smythe, possibly under pressure from his father, supported Peel, as did Lord John Manners. Disraeli, then in open rebellion against Peel, opposed the grant.
Lord Blake, Disraeli"s biographer, noted that Disraeli"s speech was "essentially ad hominem" and that Disraeli had a "poor case." In January 1846 Smythe accepted minor office in Peel"s government as Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
Nevertheless, Smythe and Disraeli apparently remained close friends until the former"s death. The title character in Disraeli"s novel Coningsby was modeled after Smythe, and Smythe wrote to Disraeli in 1852 that "you were of old the Cid and Captain of my boyish fanaticism."
Smythe"s career was shattered later in 1846 when he was caught in a summerhouse with the 21-year-old Lady Dorothy Walpole the daughter of Horatio Walpole, 3rd Earl of Orford. Newspaper gossip alleged that he got her pregnant, and then refused to marry her.
Lady Dorothy was hastily married off to an elderly cousin.
In the nineteenth century social and political ruin often went hand-in-hand. At his last electoral appearance in 1852 Smythe fought a duel with his fellow Member of Parliament, Colonel Romilly, and lost in a landslide.
The younger Smythe believed in the sort of romantic Toryism espoused by Lord John Manners. Along with Disraeli, Manners, and Alexander Baillie-Cochrane, they comprised "Young England", a sect of the Conservative Party which, in espousing a romantic Toryism, was often at odds with the moderate, business-like administration of then-Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel.
13th United Kingdom Parliament. 14th United Kingdom Parliament. 15th United Kingdom Parliament]
Smythe sat as a Member of Parliament for Canterbury from 1841 until 1852, when he was defeated.