Digges’s family was originally from Kent, but in the early sixteenth century settled in Pirton, just outside Marlborough; Digges himself was distantly related to Sir Dudley Digges*.
Digges’s involvement with Marlborough’s administration explains his election for the borough to nine successive Parliaments. He received wages on an ad hoc basis to cover his parliamentary expenses and extra services he performed whilst in London, for example securing the renewal of the town’s charter in 1609.
In the third session, which was dominated by debates concerning the proposed Union with Scotland, Digges was named to prepare for a conference with the Lords touching the repeal of the hostile laws between the two kingdoms and the implications of the Union for commerce (11 Dec. 1606). He had already been involved behind the scenes following a committee of the whole House chaired by his colleague, Lawrence Hyde I, on 1 Dec.; Hyde’s report of 5 Dec. on Anglo-Scottish shipping was supplemented four days later by Digges, who provided a detailed survey of existing shipping legislation and its implications for the Union.
During the 1614 Parliament Digges’ only recorded activity, on 17 May, was to propose the establishment of county repositories for the records of clerks of the peace, a measure in which he had a professional interest.
Digges remained Marlborough’s recorder and continued to represent the borough in the first three Parliaments of Charles’s reign, but is mentioned only briefly in the parliamentary records. On 21 June 1625 he was one of four Members appointed to draw up a bill against pressing soldiers, and in 1629 he successfully claimed parliamentary privilege in a suit brought against him by (Sir) Arnold Herbert* (24, 27, 30 January).
