Described by Thomas Fuller in the early 1660s as ‘but the suburbs at large of London’, Middlesex was a small county, ‘scarce extending east and west to eighteen miles in length, and not exceeding twelve north and south in the breadth thereof’. Except near the Thames, where livings were made either by ferrying or fishing, the county’s inhabitants were mainly farmers for, despite its size, Middlesex boasted some of the most fertile soil anywhere in the country. Writing in 1592, the surveyor John Norden commented not only on the abundance and excellence of its wheat (which Fuller later reckoned to be ‘the best in England’) but also on the plentiful dairy produce, poultry ‘and a thousand other country drugs’. The fruits of Middlesex’s bountiful harvests found a ready market among London’s large and rapidly expanding population, but such easy pickings undoubtedly bred contempt for improved farming methods. ‘Things are more confounded by ignorance and evil husbandry in this shire than in any other shire that I know’, wrote Norden, a lament which was to be echoed many times over the following three centuries.
The abundance of its harvests and its proximity to London naturally made Middlesex a prime source of foodstuffs and fuel for the purveyors of the royal Household. During the 1589 Parliament the Middlesex Member Sir Robert Wroth I joined the chorus of objections to the abuses perpetrated by purveyors and cart-takers, but in the 1590s the county resisted entering into a general agreement for composition with the board of Green Cloth, preferring instead to compound for wheat alone. Returned once again for Middlesex in 1604, Wroth raised the issue of purveyance in the Commons, probably with the encouragement of his patron, Lord Cecil (Robert Cecil†), who hoped to sell this fiscal prerogative in return for a fixed annual revenue rather than extend the county compositions. Nothing came of this intervention, and on 18 Mar. 1606 Sir Oliver St. John, a commissioner of the Verge and Member for Bedfordshire, suggested that Middlesex should enter a general agreement for composition. However, it was probably not until after the failure of the Great Contract that Middlesex’s justices finally consented to broadening the existing arrangements for composition.
On the face of it, the new agreement, which entitled the justices to appoint undertakers for the composition, gave the Middlesex bench considerable scope for curtailing the abuses of purveyors, as these were now their employees. In April 1613 a committee of magistrates dismissed the undertakers for having raised their rates and stripped the county bare to provide foodstuffs for other shires which had compounded. However, in the following September the board of Green Cloth responded by insisting that one of the undertakers, Thomas Gawen, remain in post. The composition scheme was further undermined by the exemptions claimed by many of Middlesex’s inhabitants, and by Green Cloth’s dithering over whether it wished to receive payment in money or in kind. By October 1614 the county’s magistrates were so irritated by the Board’s indecision that they threatened to terminate the composition arrangements altogether.
There was no settled venue for the county’s parliamentary elections, which were held at Uxbridge in 1614, at Brentford in 1624, and at Hickes’ Hall, the recently acquired sessions’ house of the Middlesex bench at Clerkenwell, in 1625.
It has been argued that the 1620 election ‘was the last sign of Council intervention in Middlesex’. However, in 1624 the privy councillor Sir John Suckling secured the county’s second seat, albeit only after a hotly contested election. Suckling was a client of Middlesex’s new lord lieutenant, the duke of Buckingham, and it is therefore ironic that his nearest rival was evidently his fellow Buckingham client Sir John Hippisley. Though recently admitted to the Middlesex bench and the rangership of Bushey Park, Hippisley was an outsider, who used his influence in the royal stables, where he was an equerry, and with the lieutenant of the Tower, Sir Allen Apsley (another Buckingham supporter), to pack the assembled voters with ‘stable and Mint men’, who were not freeholders. At first it seemed that Hippisley had carried the seat, but on closer inspection Hippisley’s ploy was discovered, and after a count of the legitimate voters it was found that Hippisley came short of Suckling ‘ten or twelve voices’. Suckling’s challengers also included the youthful Sir John Franklin who, though permanently resident at Willesden, had not yet obtained admission to the Middlesex bench. A petition by several of the county’s freeholders drawn up on Franklin’s behalf later claimed that Suckling had been ‘unduly returned in his stead’, and was submitted to the Commons by Franklin’s uncle Edward Roberts, Member for Penryn. However, it was subsequently withdrawn by the petitioners, who declared that they were ‘better informed and advised now than when their petition was first preferred’. In view of this change of heart, the committee for privileges and returns cleared Suckling of any suspicion of fraud. Suckling’s fellow knight of the shire was Sir Gilbert Gerard who, though he took the first seat with ease,
Undeterred by the defeat he had suffered in 1624, Sir John Franklin resolved to stand for the senior knighthood of the shire in 1625. However, he also secured Buckingham’s nomination for a place at Rye, whose jurats were assured by the duke that Franklin was his ‘deserving friend’.
Neither Suckling nor any other government minister appears to have put his head above the parapet in 1626. That year Gerard was again returned, alongside a newcomer to the county, (Sir) Edward Spencer, who had recently married a widow from Middlesex. No government ministers are certainly known to have stood in 1628 either, an election which, like so many others that year, was dominated by hostility to the Forced Loan. At least one of the successful candidates, (Sir) Henry Spiller, had been summoned before the Privy Council in 1627 as a Loan defaulter. Spiller’s supporters undoubtedly included the ‘plain countryman’ who, on being asked by Sir Thomas Edmondes who he would support, declared that he would vote ‘for those who have suffered for their country’.
Several of Middlesex’s Members were attuned to the concerns of their constituents. Apart from raising the issue of purveyance in 1604, Sir Robert Wroth I was probably responsible for introducing a bill to ban the use of barges on the River Lea. His hostility to the 1571 Lea Navigation Act, which threatened the livelihood of the carters of Enfield, where he lived, is well-documented, and in all likelihood he was in the House on the day that the bill was introduced (14 May 1604) as he was subsequently named to two committees.
Number of voters: unknown
