Bloodworth was the son of Edward Blidward,
yeoman of
Heanor,
Derbyshire and was baptised on 13 February 1620. In 1635, he was apprenticed to a London vintner and became a member of the mercantile
guild the
Company of Vintners. He became a Turkey merchant i.e. a member of the
Levant Company or
Turkey Company, an English chartered company formed in 1581 to conduct English trade with Turkey and the Levant or its successors, dissolved in 1825 and is any merchant dealing in the same geographic area or in similar goods. He was primarily a timber merchant. He was a member of the committee of the
East India Company (E.I.C.) from 1651 to 1661, and one of the
Court Assistants for the
Levant Company from 1652 to 1665. In 1658, he was elected an alderman of the City of London for
Dowgate ward. In 1660, he was elected
Member of Parliament for
Southwark in the
Convention Parliament. He was knighted on 16 May 1660. He was a member of the
Honourable Artillery Company in 1659, Colonel of the Orange Regiment of
London Trained Bands in 1659-60 and a colonel of their
Yellow Regiment from 1660 to 1682. In 1661, he was re-elected MP for Southwark for the
Cavalier Parliament. He became an alderman for
Portsoken ward in 1662, and was a member of the committee of the E.I.C. from 1662 to 1663. In 1663, he served as one of the two
sheriffs of London. He was
alderman of
Aldersgate from 1663 to 1682, and was on the committee of the E.I.C. again from 1664 to 1665. In 1665, he was Master of the
Vintners Company. ==Great Fire of London==