Situated on a rocky outcrop in the centre of Wiltshire, Devizes was described by Thomas Fuller in the mid-seventeenth century as ‘the best and biggest town for trading’ in the county next to Salisbury.
First styled a borough by charter in 1141, Devizes enjoyed the parliamentary franchise intermittently from 1295 and almost without a break from 1459.
Before 1606 the corporation enjoyed only a modest annual income of less than £100, most of which derived from rents.
Devizes’ new-found prosperity did not go unnoticed. In 1613 James I paid the first of three visits to the town, on which occasion the fees payable to the officers of the royal Household alone cost more than £20.
During this period the corporation generally returned one prominent townsman and one member of the local gentry to Parliament. In 1604 the corporation initially tried to keep both seats for its own members, just as it had in 1597, for on 25 Feb. it originally agreed to return both Robert Drewe and John Kent.
Members of the Kent and the Drewe families supplied all of the townsmen-MPs during this period. John Kent, who sat in 1597, 1621 and 1624 (and was almost elected in 1604), had trained as an attorney and often carried out legal work for the town. He held several key offices in the borough, most notably that of town clerk, which he held from 1592 until his death. His son and heir Thomas, chosen mayor in 1626, was elected in 1628. Like John Kent, Robert Drewe also enjoyed a legal training, and though never called to the bar he occupied chambers in the Middle Temple. He represented the borough in 1597-8, 1601 and 1604-10, and may have gone on to do so again in 1625. However, there is a strong possibility that the Member on this occasion was actually Drewe’s third son, also named Robert, who had just turned 21 and was then studying at the Middle Temple. Certainly the elder Robert Drewe’s second son, John, did a stint as the borough Member in 1626.
The senior seat was habitually reserved for prominent local landowners, the most conspicuous of whom were the Bayntuns, whose seat at Bromham lay four miles from Devizes. The family had long enjoyed ties with Devizes, an ancestor, Sir Edward Bayntun†, having been steward of the castle in the 1520s. In 1604, when he caused the corporation to abandon its original plan of returning John Kent, Sir Henry Bayntun seems to have been particularly keen to secure election, having been overlooked by the borough before the previous two parliaments. Following the Parliament he retained close links with the town, and in his will he left the corporation £30 as a stock to support several apprentices.
The temporary removal from the scene of Sir Edward Bayntun in December 1620 allowed (Sir) Henry Ley to establish an interest at Devizes. Although Ley had no property in the town, his father, Sir James Ley*, was a major Wiltshire landowner, whose seats at Westbury and Heywood lay about ten miles distant. It had been to Sir James that the borough had turned for legal advice in 1609 after Edward Wardour had secured a reversion to the lease of the profits arising from the town’s courts, markets and fairs.
Given the local economic and administrative importance of Devizes it is surprising that there were no parliamentary matters of direct concern to the town in this period. However, John Kent and both Bayntuns were named to committees concerned with the sale of gentlemen’s estates in the area.
in the burgesses
Number of voters: c.80-100
