Minehead probably derived its name either from a Celtic phrase meaning ‘the haven under the hill’ or from the Anglo-Saxon for ‘main head’, which alluded to its location on one of Somerset’s most prominent coastal headlands. Following the Norman Conquest, the settlement enjoyed manorial status, and became part of the honour of Dunster. Although well placed for trade with Wales and Ireland, Minehead played only a limited role as an outport.
Before the mid-sixteenth century Minehead’s trading position was never substantial enough for the town to establish itself as an independent political unit, and it therefore remained in the shadow of the Luttrell family, who had been lords of the manor of Minehead since the end of the fourteenth century. Based at Dunster Castle, three miles south of the town, the Luttrells were the dominant landowners in north-west Somerset. However, the town resented their domination, and in 1559 its inhabitants obtained a charter of incorporation, which created a new municipal government comprising a portreeve, 12 principal burgesses and a steward.
George Luttrell now embarked on the building of a new harbour at his own cost.
Although not explicitly enfranchised by the charter of 1559, Minehead first sent Members to Parliament at the next available opportunity, in 1563. The revocation of the charter in the summer of 1604 occurred too late to effect the election held that same year, and therefore two Members were returned in the manner which had become usual since 1563, that is to say in the name of ‘the portreeve and burgesses with the consent of the commons’.
In December 1620 Minehead again elected two Members, somehow outmanoeuvring Luttrell, who promptly tried to get the return declared void. On 20 Feb. 1621 he presented a petition to the Commons arguing that the election should be quashed as the franchise had depended on the charter, which was now forfeit.
The town was never able to find evidence that it had returned Members to Parliament before 1563. However, it was determined not to give up the fight without a struggle, and it therefore fell back on the argument that the records of parliamentary returns were simply not adequate to determine the issue either way. Lloyd pointed out that ‘from Ed. IV till 33 Henry VIII no records of this kept; and from 33 Henry VIII ill kept’. He concluded that it was only in 1563 itself that the keeping of records became reliable.
Nothing more was heard of the franchise dispute thereafter. From 1624 the town’s parliamentary indentures assumed a settled form which differed in some respects from those which had been used before 1604. They were now made out between the sheriff of Somerset on the one hand and the constables, burgesses and inhabitants of Minehead on the other. Each indenture was witnessed by at least ten ‘burgesses and inhabitants’, and the election was said to have been carried out in ‘public and open assembly in the presence of divers others the burgesses and inhabitants of the said borough with a free and voluntary consent’.
In view of the long-running dispute between George Luttrell and the town over the charter, it is not surprising that Luttrell apparently exercised no influence in the borough’s parliamentary election of 1604. Sir Ambrose Turvile, who took the senior seat, was a Buckinghamshire gentleman who undoubtedly owed his election not to Luttrell but to the prominent Somerset lawyer Sir Edward Phelips, whose marriage into another Buckinghamshire family meant that he was a close neighbour and friend of Turvile’s mother. Sir Maurice Berkeley, who obtained the junior seat, was a prominent parliamentarian who had recently been one of Somerset’s knights of the shire and was probably elected for Minehead at his own request. Appointed to the committee for the Minehead harbour bill, he played no active part in managing it so far as is known. There is no clue as to the identity of the men whom the town claimed it had elected in 1614, but both they and the Members chosen in 1620 would obviously have been chosen without Luttrell’s approval. Of the latter, Francis Peirce was a prominent Minehead resident who had advanced money to help the town a few years earlier. He was the only townsman to be elected in this period. His presence at Westminster was undoubtedly necessitated by the need to defend the franchise against Luttrell. Peirce’s fellow Member, Sir Robert Lloyd, is not known to have had a personal connection with the town. His election should perhaps be seen as part of a bargain, whereby he agreed to help defend the franchise in return for an opportunity to defend a cause of his own in Parliament. This other cause involved a patent for the sole engrossing of wills, which he enjoyed. In this personal battle he proved unsuccessful, and on 21 Mar. 1621 he was expelled as a monopolist.
The election of 1624 appears to have been held without a confrontation between Luttrell and the town, but even so the candidates returned seem not have owed their seats to the squire of Dunster Castle. It is true that Arthur Duck was loosely connected with Luttrell, as his father-in-law was tenant of a manor held by Luttrell, but Duck’s electoral patron was undoubtedly his employer, the bishop of Bath and Wells. Duck was chancellor of the diocese, and was entrusted with guiding through the Commons the bill to confirm the foundation of Wadham College, Oxford, in which the bishop had an interest as the college’s ecclesiastical visitor. The bishop’s influence in this election is underlined by the identity of Duck’s fellow Member, the bishop’s nephew and namesake, Sir Arthur Lake.
It was only from 1625 that Luttrell’s influence can be clearly perceived as the determining force in Minehead elections. The completion of the new harbour not only gave Luttrell control of the town’s major trading facility, but also enabled the trade expansion of the 1620s. Many of Luttrell’s former enemies among Minehead’s citizens may have been grateful to him for their new-found prosperity, but even if they were not they could now scarcely afford to ignore his views. The 1625 election saw the return of Thomas Luttrell, the heir to Dunster and the first member of the family to sit in the Commons since 1589. He was accompanied by Edmund Wyndham, who also sat in 1628. A relative and neighbouring landowner, Wyndham was a close associate of the Luttrells. Wyndham’s father was overseer to Thomas Luttrell’s marriage settlement in 1621, and Luttrell’s father performed the same service for Wyndham in 1623.
in the inhabitant householders
Number of voters: at least 19 in 1628
