Chartered by the Crown as Kingston-upon-Hull in 1299, the borough regularly returned MPs thereafter. A charter of incorporation in 1440 conferred jurisdiction independent of the East Riding.
Early Stuart Hull had one of the highest export trades of any outport, shipping upwards of 40,000 northern cloths and 2,000 fothers of lead to the Baltic, the Low Countries and France each year. The town also maintained a vigorous coastal trade, particularly with London for manufactures and Tyneside for coal.
Hull’s complaints were reciprocated by its rivals, who attacked its privileges in the law courts and Parliament, and lobbied the Council in the North and the Privy Council. Such threats were countered by an influential network of supporters. From 1584 the town selected a privy councillor as its high steward, and in 1596 it chose Sir Robert Cecil†, who was distantly related to two aldermen. In 1594 Peter Proby† was appointed solicitor for the town’s business at Court: he rendered invaluable service during the charter renewal of 1608-11, and was succeeded by (Sir) William Beecher*, clerk to the Privy Council, in 1629. However, most lobbying was done by the aldermen, who were regularly sent to York and London both in and out of parliamentary sessions.
Under its 1598 charter, Hull was run by a corporation comprising a mayor and 12 aldermen, assisted by a sheriff and two chamberlains. There was no common council, although prominent burgesses were occasionally asked to endorse important decisions, especially those involving expensive lawsuits. During the early Stuart period the recordership was held successively by two local lawyers, William Gee* and William Dalton, both of whom were sons of Hull aldermen. Almost two-thirds of the 58 aldermen who served between 1585 and 1645 were merchants, some of whom probably earned their living from retailing or property rental; the remainder included a handful of drapers and mariners.
Although for much of the period the town disregarded the legal requirement that Members should be resident in the constituencies for which they served, it paid lip-service to the requirement that all borough Members should be freemen: John Edmondes was admitted two weeks before his election; and after (Sir) John Suckling was returned in 1624, the corporation arranged to swear him in at Westminster, and undertook ‘that Mr. Sheriff should be kept harmless’ for returning a stranger.
At the 1604 general election the corporation presumably supported Lord Sheffield’s nominee John Edmondes, but intended the other seat for a townsman. Recorder William Gee*, who had represented the town in 1589, may have had designs upon this place, as three days before the election he sent the corporation the deeds of the almshouse his father had recently bequeathed to the town. In the event this approach proved unnecessary, however, as he was returned for Beverley on the same day, but it may help to explain why his cousin alderman Anthony Cole, who had recently been out of favour with the corporation, subsequently defeated John Lister† at the hustings. During the 1604 session Cole was named to the committee for the bill restricting the processing of spices to London garblers (30 May 1604), but there is no evidence that he attempted to win exemption for Hull’s spice imports from the Low Countries.
In 1606 the survival of two of his letters to the corporation demonstrate that Cole undertook several projects in the Commons. The most important of these was a bill to allow the merchants of York, Newcastle and Hull the discount on the customs duty on cloth which had been granted to all northern merchants in 1592, but which the customs farmers now refused to accept. The burgesses for the northern towns presumably drafted the bill, which was reported on 5 Mar. by the York Member Christopher Brooke.
hath been twice read, committed and now engrossed, and if time will serve I do mean to call tomorrow [for it] to be put to the question [for the third reading] … I do hear the clothiers have made a petition which we mean to show to the Parliament House.
Hull RO, L.159. The petition was perhaps Hatfield House, Petition 2048.
The bill was one of several dispatched to the Lords on 13 March. Cole later sent a list of the Lords’ committee to Hull, assuring the mayor that ‘as yet we can do no more if our lives did [re]ly of [sic] it’. Although not a cloth merchant himself, Cole may have attended the committee, as Lord Treasurer Dorset (Thomas Sackville†) was instructed to invite ‘such merchants or others as his lordship shall think meet to be heard concerning this bill’. Objections from the customers or other ports probably overwhelmed the bill, which was never reported, but undaunted the northern corporations sent a joint petition to Cecil, now 1st earl of Salisbury, who had the former discount restored.
Cole died in January 1607, and was replaced at a by-election on 9 March. Salisbury recommended Sir Edward Michelborne† for the vacancy, but sheriff Richard Burgis put forward the names of two aldermen, Joseph Field and Robert Tailler instead. Burgis eventually agreed to include Michelborne in the poll, and the corporation tried to dissuade the freemen from choosing Field who, they claimed, ‘was altogether unwilling to take it upon him’. However, the freemen would not hear of Michelborne and chose Field regardless. This, at any rate, was the version of events related to Salisbury by the corporation, whose members may secretly have welcomed Michelborne’s rejection; they certainly felt no animosity towards Burgis, who was elected alderman four months later.
Having apparently protested at his election that parliamentary service would interfere with ‘his own private affairs in trade of merchandise’, Field left no trace on the records of the sessions in which he sat, and was replaced by Burgis in 1614. However, during his sojourn at Westminster, Field was ‘employed about the confirmation of the charters and liberties’, negotiations for which were begun by Peter Proby and John Lister in 1608-9. The corporation lobbied on a lavish scale, spending £500 ‘about their charter and charges at the Parliament’. Field was probably responsible for obtaining the confirmation of the ‘Hull bought and sold’ privilege and the charter of the Hull Merchants’ Company which were granted by letters patent on 21 June 1610. He also helped to secure the town charter of March 1611, delivering Salisbury a timely gift of lead three weeks before it passed the Great Seal.
While the new charter solved many of Hull’s municipal problems, another dispute was brewing over whaling rights. Undaunted by the Danes, Hull ships continued to fish off Norway, and in 1611 a consortium of Hull and York merchants (including Richard Burgis) sent an expedition to ‘Greenland’ (Spitzbergen), which rescued the crew of a Muscovy Company whaler. The rivals returned to the islands in 1612, and in the following year nearly 30 ships from London, Hull, France, Spain and the Low Countries competed for the catch.
Hull’s trade was disrupted by two separate disputes over staple rights between 1614 and 1619. The first was the closure of the Eastland Company’s staple at Elbing in the summer of 1614 which, when combined with a Polish embargo on the city’s trade in 1616, forced English merchants to seek new markets. Most switched their business to Danzig or Riga, but others, such as Field, shifted their trade to Amsterdam.
Lister’s championship of the Hull merchants’ cause recommended him as the ideal replacement for the recently deceased Richard Burgis at the parliamentary election of December 1620. Lister was Hull’s keenest advocate at Westminster: in 1625 he promised the corporation that, although ‘never so weary of London in all my life, yet my conscience and affection to my country will not give [me] leave to come away till I see things brought to some perfection’. Resolving to stay for debates on the Tunnage and Poundage bill, he criticized MPs who had fled the plague: ‘if all men do as some do, what might become of these things if none but the courtiers were remaining?’.
Lister naturally participated in the Commons’ attack on the Merchant Adventurers in 1621: on 13 Mar., when deputy governor William Towerson* defended the Company’s imposition of a lead duty to help recoup the £60,000 paid to secure its 1617 charter, Lister insisted, ‘that the said eight pence on a fother of lead is not paid by consent; or if it be, it is a compulsory consent, and by such as are not of the said company of merchants’. Two months later, Lister (probably unjustly) blamed the Adventurers for a brief slump in Hull’s cloth trade, claiming ‘that 40,000 kersies heretofore transported [from Hull] and now there is but few’.
Although Hull’s dispute with the Muscovy Company was raised in Parliament in 1621, most of the important decisions on this issue were made by the Privy Council. In 1617, when two Hull mariners were summoned before the Council upon charges of interloping, the corporation claimed ‘that the Hollanders and other nations do freely fish the whale there … which liberty His Majesty’s subjects here [at Hull] hope they might exercise as well as strangers’. The Council proved immune to this argument, but accepted Hull’s claim to the fishing around Trinity Island (Jan Meyen Land), allegedly discovered by a Hull mariner in 1611. The town’s whalers thereafter confined themselves to this area, although Lister unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow their rivals’ monopoly with a motion to add the Spitzbergen whaling grounds to the bill for free fishing in 1621.
As the Hull whalers reached an accommodation with their London rivals, the town suffered a serious reversal at the hands of the York merchants. Relations had soured in 1619, when the York Merchant Adventurers attempted to withhold payment for lead tolls at Hull. Another attack was clearly expected in 1621, when Lister was sent to Westminster with documentation which would have allowed him to defend the town’s rights. Having raised the matter with the York MP (Sir) Robert Askwith*, Lister recommended that James Watkinson*, weighmaster of Hull, negotiate with a group of York merchants. A compromise proved elusive, but when Lister received a draft of ‘a bill intended for lead’ which was presumably meant to confirm Hull’s rights, he advised the mayor that ‘there is little to do us good in parliamentary courses’. Consequently, the issue was only settled after arbitration by Sir Arthur Ingram in the autumn of 1623.
Hull’s defeat in the dispute with York probably cost Lister his seat at the 1624 general election. His replacement, the comptroller of the Household, Sir John Suckling, was selected for ‘divers considerations’, foremost among which was the need to acquire new allies at Court. The junior seat was bestowed upon Archbishop Abbot’s brother, even though no nomination had been received at the time of the election. Suckling, however, opted to sit for Middlesex, and ‘refused to write his letters for any other to have that place’. Instead, perhaps with Lister in mind, he merely suggested that the town replace him with an inhabitant. He was later persuaded to back lord admiral Buckingham’s nominee, Emmanuel Giffard, while letters were also received from Ingram and Middlesex on behalf of Sir William Constable*. However, as Ingram and Cranfield had previously supported the York merchants, their candidate received short shrift from the corporation. As was probably always the intention, the corporation therefore turned to Lister once more, using Suckling’s first letter to justify its decision.
By the time Lister arrived at Westminster at the end of March 1624, the Commons had already moved the king to break off negotiations for a Spanish Match. Lister had supported the Palatine cause in 1621, when he had lamented that ‘I can write no good news from Bohemia, both Morosia [Moravia] and Silesia … being revolted [from the Elector Palatine] to the Emperor’, and sent the corporation a digest of official speeches which revealed the failure of diplomatic attempts to settle ‘the bleeding business [of the] Palatinate’.
The outbreak of war with Spain in the autumn of 1625 allowed the Dunkirkers to prey on English shipping, which reduced Hull’s trade by a third. Thus while Lister commended plans for a privateering company to wage war against Spain in the West Indies in March 1626, security remained uppermost in his mind. He informed the Hull Trinity House that the question of trade protection ‘hath been moved in Parliament, and divers of the lords of the Council have been acquainted with the Dunkirkers their spoils on our coasts, but as yet nothing is done either for the restraining of them, or securing our commerce’. He voiced his frustration in the Commons three days later, moving ‘that a natural and genuine cause of the stopping of trade [is] the want of wafters and convoy for merchants’ ships’, and asking for consideration of the safety of the ports.
Hull’s dependence on naval protection during the war years denied the corporation the luxury of dissent from the Crown’s demands. The town lodged and transported 2,000 recruits to the Low Countries in 1625, but apparently balked at the £6,000 worth of Privy Seal loans demanded from the county at the same time: its MPs joined a deputation which successfully lobbied the Privy Council for a 60 per cent reduction in April 1626. These reduced Privy Seals were promptly collected by Lister, who delivered 90 per cent of the town’s quota of just over £200 to the Exchequer on 16 August. The levy was eventually replaced by the Forced Loan, which Hull collected with a minimal number of defaulters and only one refuser, who was certified to the Privy Council.
During the 1628 parliamentary session, Lister brokered a fresh settlement of the long-running whaling dispute. The 1623 agreement over quotas and markets had broken down by 1626, when the Hull and London whalers attacked each other. The Council, mindful that northern merchants were ‘almost wholly barred from foreign trade elsewhere’, permitted them to send 600 tons of shipping to the Arctic in 1627, but the Hull whalers provocatively sent out one ship more than their quota allowed.
While the whalers had cause to celebrate, Hull’s MPs failed to implement any of the written instructions they received from the corporation in 1628 and 1629. They were ordered to arrange for the shipment of guns for the town defences, which had been authorized by the Privy Council in 1627, or if these were not available, to buy others. However, it was not until the summer of 1629, when Lister recruited the support of Sir William Beecher, the town’s new solicitor, that a licence was granted for the purchase of 12 sakers for the castle and blockhouses.
While Lister was added to the committee investigating the seizure of the goods of the merchant John Rolle* on 3 Feb. 1629, he played no recorded part in the furore stirred up over the issue by (Sir) John Eliot*. It is possible that Edmond Cooper of Hull, summoned before the Privy Council on 10 Apr.,
in the freemen
This article has been written with assistance from Prof. Donald Woodward, Geoffrey Oxley and Sarah McCrow.
Number of voters: c.750-1000
