Sandwich was a chartered borough before Domesday. The easternmost of the Cinque Ports, its limbs included Deal, Fordwich, Ramsgate and even Brightlingsea in Essex. Its harbour decayed in Tudor times because of the growth of a sandbank across the entrance, preventing the entry of all but the smallest ships.
Elections were held at the ‘Court Hall’, to which voters were summoned by ‘the sound of the Common Horn’.
At the 1604 general election the earl of Northampton was still new to his office as lord warden, and so it was left to his lieutenant, Thomas Fane†, to nominate his own nephew and heir Sir George for the senior seat. The remaining place was bestowed upon the jurat Edward Peake, who was returned ‘according to the ancient custom of pricking’ to his eighth successive parliament and granted wages of 4s. a day.
By the 1620 general election Northampton was dead and Smythe’s brother, Sir Richard*, was engaged in a boundary dispute with the corporation. This quarrel may have suggested to Smythe’s principal business rival, Sir Edwin Sandys, the idea of supplanting Smythe at Sandwich. Sandys had been living at nearby Northbourne since 1602, and in 1608 had offered to cut a new channel for the haven.
As the second seat was now apparently unavailable, it became clear that Sandys and Hatton would have to fight over the senior burgess-ship. In the run-up to the election, however, Sandys was in London, engaged upon Virginia Company business. He did not write to Sandwich for the place, and even affected an air of casual indifference, saying that ‘he could have been for a town in Yorkshire’. However, he sent down Thomas Gookyn of Ripple Court, Kent, a man ‘very conversant in Sandwich and a great talker’ who ‘laboured all his acquaintance for Sir Edwin, even jurats as well as others’. Through Gookyn, Sandys resorted to the populist arguments that had enabled him to win control of the Virginia Company from Smythe. He announced that he held Sandwich in great affection, and was saddened that the townsmen had ‘lost some of their liberties’, which, he assured them, ‘would be recovered again’. So far as a new haven was concerned, he said ‘there was hope some good might be done for them by their good friends’. He also announced through Gookyn his opposition to the East India Company, which he described as ‘a pernicious matter to them and the whole kingdom’.
Sandys’s electioneering greatly alarmed the mayor, who wanted the senior seat to go to the lord warden’s candidate as custom required. Consequently, on the day of the election he altered the procedure, directing the voters ‘to choose one burgess first and not both together’. In this way he hoped that ‘my lord would be respected for Sir Robert to have the first place, or if not, yet that Jacob should have carried the place from Sir Edwin’. His decision was challenged by the previous mayor, Peake’s eldest son, who also objected that the word ‘commonalty’ had been omitted from the writ. These complaints were ignored by the mayor, who nominated Hatton, Sandys and Jacob for the first seat, but his plan backfired, as Sandys triumphed easily.
The mayor then turned his attention to the junior seat and announced that Jacob could not resubmit his name. Jacob himself ‘utterly disclaimed to stand again’, whereupon ‘some of the company would no further proceed’. Hatton, however, was again proposed in his absence, although he too had been defeated for the first seat. Also nominated were Smythe, Peyton (who may by now have been seriously ill),
These were not idle threats. On 3 Feb. 1621 the town clerk, Edward Kelk, wrote to Lord Zouche that a petition to the Commons (which he incorrectly described as a bill) had been set on foot by Borough’s supporters ‘to disannul our late choice of burgesses, which was done (as they say) both against our charters and the law, because they were not admitted to have any voice in the election’. Kelk had assisted the mayor at the election, and had been abused after the election for the second seat, being told by one member of the commonalty that ‘he deserved to have his ears nailed’ for ‘breaking their liberties’. Kelk was unrepentant, and sent Zouche a copy of the 1603 Council order, along with a judicial decision reported by Sir Edward Coke* approving the restriction of the franchise in corporations ‘for avoiding of popular disorder and confusion’.
Shortly after this election Sandwich joined the parliamentary clamour for free trade. On 23 Apr. the corporation ordered that a petition concerning restrictions on buying and selling cloth in Blackwell Hall and the prisage of wine should be followed in Parliament by its author, Arthur Rucke, a former mayor of the borough, assisted by Mr. Raworth of Dover. One week later Sandwich proposed that the Cinque Ports should apply to Parliament for statutory confirmation of their privileges, and use the services of Rucke and Raworth, ‘who are already both there employed about some affairs’. Most of the Ports agreed to help, and on 16 May Sir Edwin Sandys preferred one petition from the Cinque Ports in general complaining, inter alia, that the Merchant Adventurers excluded them from Blackwell Hall, and another from the mayor and jurats of Sandwich.
By the time of the 1624 general election, when Sandwich was in the midst of a smallpox epidemic,
At the first general election held after Buckingham became lord warden, the duke sought to capture both seats at Sandwich through the interest of his henchman Sandys, who stood for the county. On 8 Apr. 1625 he wrote to the corporation that he had been
entreated by Sir Edwin Sandys to desire you to elect his son a burgess to this Parliament to serve in the second place for the town (reserving still to me, as you have done to my predecessors, the nomination of the first). I have not been forward to yield to his request in regard you might [fear] that I purpose by this to gain too much ground on your liberty and freedom. … But being credibly informed how hopeful and likely his son is to merit your respect, and considering how well his father hath deserved of you, and his good neighbourhood and readiness at all times to further the good of your town, I thought I could do no less than desire you to add to the consideration of these reasons … the esteem I hold of them both.
His esteem was now shared by very few in Kent; Sandys was defeated in the county election, and the candidature of his son, who was still under age, so cautiously propounded, was hardly likely to be taken seriously in Sandwich, even though the way had been partially cleared by Drake’s decision to transfer to the newly enfranchised borough of Amersham, Buckinghamshire. Buckingham’s motive was to exclude Hatton, as servant of his enemy Archbishop Abbot, and consequently he nominated Lord Wotton’s Protestant half-brother, Sir Henry, for the senior seat. However, with the franchise reverting to the commonalty he could not prevent them from electing Hatton for the other.
By the next election Wotton had determined to take orders and it was rumoured, probably falsely, that Hatton would stand for the county. Buckingham nominated (Sir) John Suckling, the comptroller of the Household, who was elected ‘with great applause’, and Peter Peake, who had resigned the town clerkship, was chosen for the second place. When Suckling opted for Norwich, Norfolk, the duke complimented Sandwich for ‘the better measure of respect’ shown to him ‘than from most of the Cinque Ports’, and nominated Sir Henry Mildmay*, master of the Jewel House, instead. However, Mildmay was rejected in favour of Sir Edward Boys the younger, who lived nearby and owned property in the borough.
The 1628 election occurred against a backdrop of renewed tension between the corporation and commonalty. Although the commonalty had by now been restored to the franchise in both municipal and parliamentary elections, the corporation refused to allow them a say when the living of St. Peter’s, which was in their gift, fell vacant in November 1627. Secretary Conway and the dean of Rochester pressed them to appoint the former chaplain of Sir Henry Mervyn*, who was acceptable to the commonalty, but the corporation installed Thomas Warren, ‘a most seditious man’ who had given much trouble as town preacher at Rye.
in the common council 1603-20; in the freemen from 1621
Number of voters: 37 in 1620; c. 250 in 1640
