Background
Baptised at Hillesden in Buckinghamshire, he was the eldest son of Sir Edmund Verney and his wife Margaret, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Denton.
Baptised at Hillesden in Buckinghamshire, he was the eldest son of Sir Edmund Verney and his wife Margaret, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Denton.
Verney was educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford and was called to the bar by the Middle Temple.
He was re-elected Member of Parliament for Aylesbury for the Long Parliament in November 1640. He was present in the trial of Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford in January 1641, making notes, and was knighted in March. Verney opposed William Laud before the Civil War, and sided with the Parliamentarians at its outset.
However, when he didn"t partake in the Solemn League and Covenant in 1643, he was forced to flee into exile.
Three years thereafter his assets were confiscated. He was disabled from sitting in Parliament on 22 September 1645.
Following his return to England in 1653, Verney was captured and imprisoned two years later, however released with a fine in 1656. After the English Restoration in 1660, on advice of Anne Wilmot, Countess of Rochester, Verney stood for Great Bedwyn, but was unsuccessful.
He was appointed a Commissioner of Oyer and Terminer for the Norfolk circuit in July and a Commissioner of Assessment in August, serving in Buckinghamshire.
Foreign the latter county Verney was a Justice of the Peace as well as a Deputy Lieutenant. On 16 March 1661, King Charles II of England made him a Baronet, of Middle Claydon, in the County of Buckingham. A year later, he became a Commissioner of Sewers in Bedfordshire and was additionally Commissioner of Loyal and Indigent Officers in the same county.
In 1675, Verney was nominated a Commissioner of Recusants in Buckinghamshire.
He was re-elected to the House in 1681 and represented Buckingham until 1690. He died, aged 82 and was buried at Middle Claydon on 9 October 1696.
Short Parliament]
Verney entered the Short Parliament in 1640, sitting as Member of Parliament for Aylesbury. During this time as Member of Parliament, he spoke against the coronation of William of Orange as king of England.