The town of Bury St. Edmunds, having grown up around a Benedictine abbey founded before the Conquest, not only survived but flourished after the Dissolution of the Monasteries, retaining its position as the venue of assizes and quarter sessions and the capital of West Suffolk.
Several of Bury’s demands, for example for a coroner, and its own court of quarter sessions, had not been met by the first charter; the corporation, headed by Bright, therefore continued to lobby for further privileges, petitioning King James, lord chancellor Ellesmere (Thomas Egerton†) and lord treasurer Dorset (Thomas Sackville†), and sending delegations to attend the king at London and Royston.
Ahead of the next general election, on 7 Jan. 1624, Prince Charles’s Council wrote to the corporation, nominating Sir Francis Cottington* for a seat at Bury, on the grounds that a small amount of property and some rent-charges in the borough were parcel of the duchy of Cornwall. The town clerk, John Mallowes, replied on behalf of the corporation that while they would be willing to elect Cottington on condition he take the freeman’s oath, they had already promised the first seat to Jermyn. The prince’s Council wrote again on 14 Jan. to accept these terms, but took the precaution of also nominating Cottington at three other boroughs.
The duchy of Cornwall interest vanished with the accession of Charles I, and at the general election in 1625 Jermyn was joined by the puritan Sir William Spring, of Pakenham, five miles east of the town. The elections in the following year took place in two stages, with Jermyn’s re-election confirmed on 6 Jan. 1626, followed by the return of Emmanuel Giffard, a minor courtier presumably nominated by Jermyn, five days later.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 37
