By the early seventeenth century Preston was already regarded as Lancashire’s centre for local government and administration, and a focal point of county society.
The borough’s parliamentary patronage had traditionally been shared between the earls of Derby and the chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster. In the early seventeenth century, however, the lack of interest shown in politics by the 6th earl of Derby allowed the Duchy to dominate the borough, taking the first seat in every election and even securing both places on several occasions. None of Preston’s Members in this period had strong local connections with the town, and the neighbouring gentry, such as the Houghtons of Hoghton, demonstrated very little concern either to represent the borough or promote their own candidates. In 1604 the Duchy returned for the first seat Sir Vincent Skinner, an Exchequer official and minor officeholder in his native Lincolnshire. As an outsider, Skinner was included among the ‘unlawfully’ elected Members in a list circulated after the opening of the session by Arthur Hall†.
In 1614 the Duchy gave the first seat to its recently appointed attorney-general Edward Mosley, but there is no sign that it played any part in the return of the second Member, Henry Banister. Mosley, like Holt, was the younger son of a Lancashire family, and as a successful lawyer spent most of his time in the capital. He appears in the Preston guild roll of 1622, but was probably made a freeman much earlier. Mosley’s long parliamentary service for Preston – he sat again in 1621 and 1624 – owed more to his position in the Duchy than to any local ties, for despite his inheritance of some property in Manchester he never resided there. Henry Banister, a London Goldsmith, was born in Preston and was an honorary freeman of the guild by 1622. He may have been related to Thomas Banister, a principal burgess of the town who served as a bailiff several times and as mayor in 1610, 1617 and 1625.
The Duchy nominated both Members in 1621, returning both Mosley and Sir William Poley, father-in-law of the new chancellor, (Sir) Humphrey May*. In this Parliament the Duchy exerted particular efforts to fill as many seats as it could with its own nominees to ensure support for a bill to confirm decrees relating to its customary estates, which was read on 1 Dec. but disappeared after being committed.
Hervey was re-elected to the first Caroline Parliament, this time for the first seat, along with another former Member, the elderly Henry Banister. Two outsiders were returned in 1626. The first Member, George Garrard, a courtier, had previously represented Wigan in 1621 and was perhaps a Court acquaintance of Sir Humphrey May. The second Member, Thomas Fanshawe II, an Exchequer official, was probably recommended by his uncles (Sir) Thomas and William Fanshawe, who through their ties with the Duchy had built up sufficient influence in Lancashire to represent various boroughs there in virtually every Parliament of the period.
So far as is known, Preston paid little attention to either parliaments or politics under the early Stuarts, the corporation being apparently content to return complete strangers as their representatives. Only those with personal ties to the region, namely Holt, Mosley, Banister and Kerr, became honorary freemen, and of these none were closely connected to the constituency. The ‘White Book’ records no payments of parliamentary wages or expenses in this period.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 24
