Lying at the head of the Medina estuary, adjacent to Carisbrooke Castle, where the captain of the Isle of Wight resided, Newport was the most populous and prosperous of the three island boroughs.
In 1604 an obscure lawyer, John Astell, was returned for the junior seat, perhaps at the behest of the then captain, the 3rd earl of Southampton. The senior seat was taken by a townsman, Richard James, who had represented the borough in the previous two parliaments. In 1608 the borough was incorporated at the insistence of Southampton and Sir Thomas Fleming I*, a native of the town and now lord chief justice, but against the wishes of the principal gentlemen of the Isle, such as Sir John Oglander*, who resented the growing independence of the townsmen.
In 1614 Sir Richard Worsley stood for election, perhaps with the backing of the earl of Southampton. On 19 Mar. 1614 the corporation unanimously resolved to grant him the freedom. There may initially have been disagreement over the choice of the faithless Searle as his colleague; but 11 days later it was decided that he should ‘absolutely stand burgess’, and he was returned with Worsley ‘with a general consent’.
Shortly after the end of the first sitting, on 26 June 1621, Worsley died of smallpox, and on 13 Nov., ahead of Parliament’s recall, Newport held an assembly to decide whether to replace him with Fleming’s brother Philip, a town resident, or with an outsider. ‘A general answer was made by the whole company above-named that they thought no man so fit as Mr. Fleming’, and he was duly returned.
Southampton died later in the year, and was immediately succeeded as captain by Conway, although the appointment was not ratified until 8 Dec. 1625. Conway had no previous ties with the island, and his management of electoral patronage there proved inept. On 14 Apr. 1625 Newport voted him ‘the courtesy of a choice of a burgess for the Parliament for this present’.
On hearing ahead of the 1625 Parliament that the corporation intended to renew its charter, probably to enable it to replace Astell, Oglander drafted a furious letter berating the townsmen for neglecting to consult him, and adding ‘I have been persuaded to write unto my Lord [Conway] to cause a stop therein till his Lordship or some of us his officers may know and be made acquainted with your intentions’.
The Isle of Wight was heavily burdened with the billeting of soldiers during the summer of 1627, leaving the inhabitants less inclined than ever to defer to the captain’s wishes at the next election.
Conway may have hoped that Yelverton’s enforced absence abroad would necessitate a fresh election. He bore Yelverton no grudge, and soon afterwards helped him to secure a post in Queen Henrietta Maria’s Household.
in the freemen 1604; in the corporation 1608
Number of voters: 24 in 1608
