Background
Born in Exeter, Devon, son of John Hakewill and his wife Thomasine (née Periam).
Born in Exeter, Devon, son of John Hakewill and his wife Thomasine (née Periam).
Educated, according to Anthony Wood at Exeter College, Oxford (though he did not take a degree), he later studied law at Lincoln"s Inn.
Though a tyro Member of Parliament Hakewill was active and spoke out against the excessive granting of monopolies. He also delivered speeches against allowing the export of ordnance to Spain and in favour of keeping a strong navy. Hakewill was called to the bar in 1606, was a Bencher of Lincoln"s Inn by 1616 and Lent Reader in 1625.
Unfortunately she died in 1619 and his benefactor Sir Francis Bacon was disgraced in 1621.
Her elder half-sister Ann was the third wife of Sir Julius Caesar, Master of the Rolls, to whom Hakewill addressed gratulatory Latin verses (now in the British Library). Although originally elected to parliament for Cornish seats he sat in the parliaments of 1624 and 1628/9 for Amersham in Buckinghamshire.
As a result of his researches three Buckinghamshire boroughs were re-enfranchised in 1624 (Wendover, Amersham and Marlow). Hakewill was elected as one of Amersham"s two Member of Parliament"s and his distant relative the famous John Hampden was elected for Wendover.
He leased Chequers (now the country home of British Prime Ministers) near Ellesborough in 1619.
In the latter part of his life Hakewill lived at The Hale in Wendover, Buckinghamshire and was survived by at least two sons, William and Robert. His will left instructions that expenditure on his funeral was not to exceed £40. He is buried in the Church at Wendover under a commemorative stone that still survives.
Happy Parliament; Addled Parliament]
Hakewill was also an early member of the Society of Antiquaries, a friend of Sir Robert Cotton, a kinsman and executor of Sir Thomas Bodley and the elder brother of the author and divine George Hakewill.