Samuel Gott (1682–1725), of Stanmer, Sussex, was a British landowner and Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1708 to 1710.
Gott was returned as Whig Member of Parliament for Lewes at a by-election on 6 December 1708 in place of his father, who had been returned for Lewes and Sussex at the 1708 British general election, and opted to sit for Sussex.
However his brother failed to balance his accounts by 1713 and Gott was left to pay £10,000 to the Treasury to settle them.
[1] He and his relatives Robert and Anne Western sold the manor of Stanmer to Henry Pelham for £7,500 in May 1713[2] and he thereafter made his seat at Crundale, Kent.
His widow, who remarried Sir Roger Meredith, 5th Baronet, died in 1742, and his estate ultimately passed to his sisters.