Dashwood was a Tory and strong Anglican; and a courtier under James II. Despite these views, he became involved in the matter of Edmund Prideaux, implicated in Monmouth's Rebellion in 1685. (There was a family connection, Prideaux being the brother of his mother-in-law Margaret.) Giving and lending money, Dashwood enabled Prideaux to pay off the accusation.[1][6] He was elected three times as Member of Parliament for Banbury from 1689; and for Oxfordshire in November 1699, losing his seat in 1700. As the 1690s proceeded, he became identified with the Country Party opposition.[7]
Their eldest son surviving to adulthood was Robert, who married Dorothea Read(e).[8] The next son Richard married a cousin, Elizabeth Lewis (as a granddaughter of Sir Samuel Dashwood, a second cousin once removed).[9] Their daughter Penelope married Sir John Stonhouse, 3rd Baronet, Member of Parliament for Berkshire.[10] The third daughter Catherine married Sir Banks Jenkinson, 4th Baronet.[11][12]
^A P Baggs, R J E Bush and M C Siraut, 'Parishes: Stogumber', in A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 5, ed. R W Dunning (London, 1985), pp. 177–190 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol5/pp177-190 [accessed 8 April 2015].