Saltash (UK Parliament constituency)
Saltash | |
---|---|
Former Borough constituency for the House of Commons | |
County | Cornwall |
Major settlements | Saltash |
1552–1832 | |
Number of members | Two |
Replaced by | East Cornwall |
Saltash, sometimes called Essa, was a "rotten borough" in Cornwall which returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons in the English and later British Parliament from 1552 to 1832, when it was abolished by the Great Reform Act.
History
The borough consisted of the town of Saltash, a market town facing Plymouth and Devonport across the Tamar estuary, and the inhabitants by 1831 were mainly fishermen or Devonport dockworkers. Like most of the Cornish boroughs enfranchised or re-enfranchised during the Tudor period, it was a rotten borough from the start.
Saltash was a burgage borough, meaning that the right to vote rested with the tenants of certain specified properties. For a long period in the 18th century, there was a contest for control of the borough between the government and the Buller family of Morval, depending partly on legal uncertainties over the precise number and identity of the burgage properties to which votes were attached. In the 1760s it was considered an entirely secure Admiralty borough, where the naval influence could sway all the voters, but by 1831 the Bullers owned all the tenancies and considered themselves the patrons.
In 1831, the borough had a population of 1,637, and 245 houses.
Members of Parliament
MPs 1552–1660
Parliament | First member | Second member | |
---|---|---|---|
Parliament of 1547 | Christopher Smith | Henry Fisher[1] | |
Parliament of 1553 (Mar) | George Kekewich | Edward Saunders | |
Parliament of 1553 (Oct) | Richard Weston | Thomas Martin | |
Parliament of 1554 (Apr) | Peter St Hill | Humphrey Cavell | |
Parliament of 1554 (Nov) | Oliver Debett | Humphrey Cavell | |
Parliament of 1555 | Alexander Nowell | Nicholas St John (?) | |
Parliament of 1558 | Thomas Williams | Francis Yaxley | |
Parliament of 1559 | Richard Reynell | Richard Forsett | |
Parliament of 1562 | Thomas Carew | James Dalton | |
By-election 1566 | Henry Killagrew | ||
Parliament of 1571 | William Page | ||
Parliament of 1572-1581 | |||
Parliament of 1584 | Richard Carew | Dr William Clerk | |
Parliament of 1586-1587 | George Carew | John Acland | |
Parliament of 1588-1589 | Arthur Gorge | ||
Parliament of 1593 | Jerome Horsey | ||
Parliament of 1597-1598 | Gregory Downhall | Ellis Wynn | |
Parliament of 1601 | Sir Robert Cross | Alexander Nevill | |
Parliament of 1604-1611 | Sir Peter Manwood | Thomas Wyvell | |
Addled Parliament (1614) | Ranulph Crewe | Sir Robert Phelips | |
Parliament of 1621-1622 | Sir Thomas Trevor | Sir Thomas Smith | |
Happy Parliament (1624-1625) | Francis Buller | ||
Useless Parliament (1625) | Sir Richard Buller | ||
Parliament of 1625-1626 | Sir John Hayward | ||
Parliament of 1628-1629 | Sir Francis Cottington | ||
No Parliament summoned 1629-1640 |
MPs 1640–1832
Year | First member | First party | Second member | Second party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
April 1640 | George Buller | Parliamentarian | Francis Buller | Parliamentarian | ||
November 1640 | Edward Hyde | Royalist | ||||
August 1642 | Hyde disabled from sitting - seat vacant | |||||
1646 | John Thynne | Henry Wills | ||||
December 1648 | Thynne and Wills excluded in Pride's Purge - both seats vacant | |||||
1653 | Saltash was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate | |||||
January 1659 | Edmund Prideaux (of Prideaux Place, Padstow) | John Buller | ||||
May 1659 | Not represented in the restored Rump | |||||
April 1660 | Francis Buller | Anthony Buller | ||||
1661 | John Buller | |||||
February 1679 | Bernard Granville | Nicholas Courtney | ||||
September 1679 | William Jennens | Sir John Davie | ||||
1681 | Bernard Granville | |||||
1685 | Sir Cyril Wyche | Edmund Waller | ||||
1689 | Bernard Granville | John Waddon | ||||
1690 | Sir John Carew | Richard Carew | ||||
1691 | Narcissus Luttrell | |||||
1692 | Michael Hill | |||||
1695 | Francis Buller | Walter Moyle | Whig | |||
March 1698 | Francis Pengelly | |||||
August 1698 | John Specott | John Morice | ||||
1699 | James Buller | |||||
January 1701 | Alexander Pendarves | Tory | ||||
March 1701 | Thomas Carew | |||||
1702 | Benjamin Buller | |||||
1703 | John Rolle | |||||
1705 | James Buller | Joseph Moyle | ||||
May 1708 | Alexander Pendarves | Tory | ||||
December 1708 | Sir Cholmeley Dering, Bt | Tory | ||||
1710 | Jonathan Elford | |||||
1711 | Sir William Carew | |||||
1713 | William Shippen | Tory | ||||
1715 | Shilston Calmady | John Francis Buller | ||||
1722 | Thomas Swanton | Edward Hughes | ||||
1723 | Philip Lloyd | |||||
1727 | Lord Glenorchy | |||||
1734 | Thomas Corbett | |||||
1741 | John Clevland | |||||
1743 | Stamp Brooksbank | |||||
July 1747 | Edward Boscawen | |||||
December 1747 | Stamp Brooksbank | |||||
1751 | George Brydges Rodney | |||||
1754 | Viscount Duncannon | George Clinton | ||||
1756 | Charles Townshend | Whig | ||||
1761 | John Clevland | George Adams | Whig | |||
1763 | Hon. Augustus John Hervey | |||||
1768 | Martin Bladen Hawke | Thomas Bradshaw | ||||
1772 | John Williams | |||||
1772 | Thomas Bradshaw | |||||
1774 | Grey Cooper | |||||
1775 | Sir Charles Whitworth | |||||
1778 | Henry Strachey | |||||
1780 | Charles Jenkinson | |||||
1784 | Charles Ambler | |||||
1786 | The Earl of Mornington | |||||
1787 | John Lemon | |||||
1790 | Edward Bearcroft | Viscount Garlies | ||||
1795 | William Stewart | Tory | ||||
May 1796 | The Lord Macdonald | |||||
December 1796 | Charles Smith | |||||
1802 | Matthew Russell | Robert Deverell | ||||
1806 | Arthur Champernowne | |||||
February 1807 | Hon. Richard Griffin | Whig | William Henry Fremantle | |||
May 1807 | Matthew Russell | John Pedley | ||||
1809 | Michael George Prendergast | |||||
1818 | James Blair | |||||
March 1820 | Michael George Prendergast | |||||
June 1820 | John Fleming | |||||
1822 | William Russell | Whig | ||||
June 1826 | Andrew Spottiswoode | Henry Monteith | ||||
December 1826 | Colin Macaulay | |||||
1830 | Earl of Darlington | John Gregson | ||||
February 1831 | Philip Cecil Crampton | |||||
May 1831 | Frederick Villiers | Whig | Bethell Walrond | |||
1832 | Constituency abolished |
References
Sources
- D Brunton & D H Pennington, “Members of the Long Parliament” (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954)
- Cobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808)
- Maija Jansson (ed.), Proceedings in Parliament, 1614 (House of Commons) (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1988)
- Lewis Namier, "The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III" (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)
- J Holladay Philbin, "Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
- Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ... London. p. 1.
- Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs – Constituencies beginning with "S" (part 2)