Hurleston was a lawyer employed by the council in the north, whose president, the 3rd Earl of Huntingdon, returned him for Aldborough. What moved Hurleston to enter Parliament so late in life was his religion, for he was one of the small group of extremists (Peter Wentworth, Anthony Cope, Edward Lewknor and Robert Bainbridge were the others) who formed a sort of parliamentary caucus of the puritan movement outside the House, intent on overthrowing the Elizabethan Church settlement and establishing presbyterianism. Hurleston himself spoke in support of Cope’s ‘bill and book’, 27 Feb. 1587, for which he was sent to the Tower, 2 Mar. The others were released after the end of the Parliament, but Hurleston probably died there, for he is not heard of again.
biography text
Volume
Parliamentarian
53521
