Rye had obtained charters from its overlords, the Norman abbots of Fécamp, in the twelfth century, and by the reign of Henry III it had been added to the original Cinque Ports.
Protestants formed a majority in Rye long before the Elizabethan settlement, under which it became a stronghold of puritanism, though a traditionalist faction survived at least until the middle of the reign.
Following the accession of James I it was widely expected that a Parliament would be called immediately. In May 1603 the lord warden, Henry Brooke, 11th Lord Cobham, dispatched a note to Rye in which he curtly demanded ‘the nomination of one of your burgesses for the next Parliament’. In the event, however, no Parliament was summoned until 31 Jan. 1604, by which time Cobham had been replaced by Henry Howard, earl of Northampton. On 20 Feb. the corporation, having learned of the impending Parliament, sent two of its jurats to wait on Northampton, presumably to know the name of his nominee, but also to request his aid in the ‘repair of our decayed haven’,
Soon after Parliament assembled Hamon and Young sent the corporation a letter, which was read out at a meeting of the assembly on 2 April. Its contents are unknown, but it seems likely that the two Members proposed that the town should lobby vigorously for the repair of its harbour. On 21 Apr. the land chamberlain paid out 5s. to one Robert Burdet for engrossing ‘certain letters … sent to the nobility about our harbour’. The following day, at a meeting of the corporation, a petition addressed to the king and drafted by Hamon and Young was read out and approved, as were several other letters ‘sent by our lord warden and our burgesses to the Parliament … which letters do concern our harbour, for the amendment thereof’. On 23 Apr. the land chamberlain reimbursed one William Harvey the £6 which he had ‘laid out at London to Mr. Hamon by the appointment of Mr. Mayor’.
Hamon returned home early from the third session of Parliament, and died soon after submitting a request for the payment of his outstanding parliamentary wages. Shortly after learning of Hamon’s death, a local landowner, Sir William Twysden* (bt.), desired the mayor and his brethren to defer the subsequent by-election until he had consulted the lord warden. These consultations produced a letter from Northampton recommending Twysden’s brother-in-law Heneage Finch, who as a barrister of the Inner Temple would ‘ease you of that daily and large allowance which was before allotted to his predecessor’. Twysden himself pointed out that Finch would be ‘very willing and able to advise, as well as aid and plead for you, if need shall be’.
Following this failure Rye evidently tried to work with the marsh-drainers rather than against them. In October 1613 the local sewer commissioners declared that the salt marshes near Rye harbour might be drained without prejudice to the haven, while in November Rye’s mayor entered into an agreement with one of the drainers to recover 27 acres of marshland near the town.
By the time of the next general election neither Watson nor Henden seem to have been interested in serving again. Shortly after writs were dispatched the borough was contacted by the yeoman purveyor of fish for the royal Household, William Angell, who had been trading with the town in an official capacity since at least 1594.
By the time the 1621 Parliament met, Rye was once again desperately concerned at the state of its harbour. The earlier improvement in relations with the local marsh drainers had not halted the decline, and consequently, as Parliament was assembling, the mayor and jurats sent letters to the lord warden, to its newly elected Members and to William Angell asking them ‘to move for us the tonnage which was formerly granted unto Dover’.
By the time that a new Parliament met, in 1624, Rye’s authorities had evidently decided to leave the parliamentary campaign against trawl fishing to others and to concentrate instead on a bill to pay for the repair of the harbour. Rather than seek the right to lay a charge on shipping, as it had done in the past, however, Rye now sought to gain control of the duties paid by shipowners to Dungeness lighthouse, which was situated at the mouth of the harbour. This lighthouse had allegedly been the brainchild of one of Rye’s own freemen, but the right to erect it had been granted to the courtier Sir Edward Howard I*, who had subsequently sold his interest to another. A bill to transfer ownership of the lighthouse to the town would enable its authorities to pay for the repair of the harbour and restore the borough to its former prosperity.
Rye’s sudden interest in Dungeness lighthouse probably explains why Richard Tufton, the younger brother of Sir Nicholas Tufton*, owner of the land on which the lighthouse stood, applied to the borough for one of its parliamentary seats. Tufton urged the mayor ‘to signify unto the jurats of Rye how much I desire to do them service, and to give them assurance that I shall do my best endeavour to advance the good of the town’,
Following the opening of the Parliament, however, Conway elected to serve for Warwick, for which borough he had also been returned. On 24 Feb. Conway’s father sent an apology to Rye’s corporation, and explained that he had not intended that they should return his eldest son at all, but his youngest son Thomas. As a fresh election would now be held, he asked the town to elect Thomas instead. As an incentive for it to do so, he added that he had persuaded Buckingham to join him in speaking with the king on their behalf, ‘so that I doubt not but that you will have a good end of it to your liking’.
On 8 Mar. 1624 the town assembly resolved to send the bill to its Members for ‘the advice of their expert and skilful friends, who are well acquainted with the former method of bills of this nature’.
The failure to secure a hearing for the lighthouse bill in 1624 marked not only the end of Rye’s legislative ambitions during this period, but also of John Angell’s parliamentary career. Following the summons of a fresh Parliament in 1625, Angell was deserted by his father, who was clearly bitterly disappointed with his son. Angell himself admitted that his earlier performance had proved disappointing, but in a letter to the corporation applying for re-election he protested that ‘I did you as faithful and effectual a service as those times would give me leave’. His request was supported by his cousin and neighbour, John Halsey, who had recently donated premises to Rye for use as a house of correction and who claimed that Angell would prove to be much more useful in Parliament ‘than any man that has had no experience in that high court’.
The field was now wide open for other candidates, among them Emanuel Gifford, who now obtained a letter of recommendation from the lord treasurer, Sir James Ley*. In his letter to the corporation, Ley stated that Gifford should only be provided for after the new lord warden, the duke of Buckingham, had been satisfied. Buckingham characteristically sought to expand the lord warden’s interest by nominating two candidates, his steward Thomas Fotherley and Sir John Franklin*, ‘a deserving friend’ from Willesden, Middlesex. However, the duke’s admiralty secretary Edward Nicholas* made it clear that Fotherley, who was also brother-in-law of the lieutenant of Dover Castle, Sir John Hippisley*, was to be preferred, as ‘in very great esteem with his grace, beyond most of his grace’s servants’. Rye’s assembly, which had only granted Buckingham’s predecessor the privilege of naming the candidates to both seats in 1620 as a favour, was naturally reluctant to surrender its rights over the junior seat. Besides, the 4th earl of Dorset (Sir Edward Sackville*), the patron of Rye’s church, had also applied for a seat on behalf of his cousin, John Sackville, an officer in the Dutch army like Thomas Conway. Some of the townsmen were evidently sceptical that Sackville would prove any more active on their behalf than Conway had been, for it was the middle of the campaigning season and there was every likelihood that he would soon rejoin his unit in the Low Countries.
The outbreak of war with France found Rye virtually defenceless against the old enemy. Consequently, in March 1627 the corporation applied to Buckingham through Sackville for ordnance and (less successfully) for the return of the town gunner from London.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 50 in 1604; 29 or 30 bet. 1621 and 1628;
