Cirencester had flourished as a centre of the woollen industry under the firm control of the local Augustinian Abbey.
In 1604 Richard Martin, a rising young lawyer of Devon origin, was returned for the first seat, presumably on the interest of Lord Danvers. The second seat went to Arnold Oldisworth, who came from one of the local families and was then about to take up his reversionary interest in the clerkship of the Hanaper. When Martin chose to sit for a Hampshire borough, he was replaced by Edward Jones, a former colleague of Oldisworth in the service of the Dudley family and an experienced carpet-bagger, who was to spend much of his time working to secure a Crown grant for Danvers. Jones died in 1609, and his replacement, the Kentishman Sir Anthony Mayney, was closely connected to Danvers’ cousin the marchioness of Winchester and related to Oldisworth through the Arnold family.
Straunge did not seek re-election in 1620, although he continued to play a role in electoral politics as his name heads the signatories on the indenture.
In 1624 Henry Poole was accorded the first place as of right, ‘by most voices, without contradiction’,
Following this outcome Berkeley’s supporters in the town petitioned the Commons against ‘the sinister practice and procurement’ of the under-sheriff, who was thought to have favoured Master because he had previously returned Master’s friend, Estcourt, for the county.
In 1625 Poole again yielded precedence on the indenture to his social superior, Sir Miles Sandys, a young man who lived at Brimpsfield, eight miles away, but whose father had recently acquired an estate within Cirencester’s six-mile limit. According to one diarist, a petition was presented to the committee for privileges after the 1626 election,
in the burgage-holders 1604-21; in the inhabitant householders 1624-8
Number of voters: c.65 in 1604-21
