For administrative purposes Lincolnshire was parcelled into three sub-divisions; Lindsey to the north, Kesteven to the south-west, and Holland, the area of coastal marshlands surrounding the Wash, in the south-east. Although each had separate commissions of the peace, this does not appear to have produced any regular pattern in the geographical distribution of knights of the shire during the early Stuart period. Elections were held at Lincoln Castle. By the beginning of the seventeenth century the wool trade, which had dominated the local economy during the Middle Ages, was in decline, and the county frequently complained of poverty.
In 1604, at the first general election of the new reign, the county’s two previous knights of the shire, Lincoln’s son Thomas, styled Lord Clinton during his father’s lifetime, and John Sheffield, son of the 3rd Lord Sheffield, were returned at a well-attended county court, with some 65 freeholders named on the indenture.
In 1614 the county election was contested by the 6th earl of Rutland’s younger brother, Sir George Manners, the courtier Sir Thomas Monson, who had represented the county in 1597, and Sir Peregrine Bertie, a younger son of Lord Willoughby.
For the first Caroline Parliament in 1625 another wealthy puritan gentleman, Sir John Wray, 2nd bt., took the senior county seat, while the second went to Sir Nicholas Saunderson, 1st bt., a social climber who had connected himself by marriage with both the Manners and Bertie families. The following year, Sir William Armyne, 1st bt., a puritan who probably enjoyed Lincoln’s support, was returned in first place, together with Monson’s son, John. The earl of Lincoln led widespread opposition to the Forced Loan in the county; indeed the newsmonger Sir John Scudamore, 1st bt.*, received reports that ‘Lincolnshire refuseth in general, some two only excepted, and with such a fury, that my lord of Rutland was in danger to have the house where he was pulled over his ears’.
Number of voters: at least 65 in 1604
