Westmorland had long been free from Scottish incursions before the Union of the Crowns in 1603, by which time ‘the old breed of northern magnates who saw their tenants as armed retainers rather than mere entries on a rent roll’ was practically extinct.
In 1604 Sir Thomas Strickland of Sizergh, three miles south of Kendal, who had served in Elizabeth’s last Parliament, was returned as the senior knight of the shire, with Sir Richard Musgrave of Hartley, on the north Yorkshire border, as his colleague. At the next general election in 1614 the 4th earl of Cumberland (Francis Clifford*), as sheriff, returned his own son, Henry, Lord Clifford, and nephew Sir Thomas Wharton, in first and second places respectively. Both were from the northern half of the shire. Wharton and his father had recently won a significant victory in a Chancery case concerning agreements with 279 tenants on six manors that set a precedent against tenant-right.
The next election took place against a backdrop of insurrection over tenures, led by Crown tenants in the barony of Kendal. A Remonstrance was drawn up by the vicar of Kirkby Stephen and read in Staveley chapel on 2 Jan. 1621 to a gathering described by the landlords as a ‘riotous assembly’.
In 1625 and 1626 Lowther was re-elected, along with Sir Henry Bellingham, whose estates lay to the south of Kendal; the latter took the opportunity while in London to appear as a plaintiff in the Star Chamber tenant-right case. The tenants, who had engaged Sir Heneage Finch* as legal counsel, finally emerged triumphant from prolonged litigation with a ruling confirming their inheritance of their estates; the Bellinghams and other landlords were ordered to set agreed rates of fines.
Perhaps because of the tradition of border service, there seems to have been no serious opposition either to the Forced Loan or to the pressing and billeting of soldiers in Westmorland.
Number of voters: unknown
