Located on the banks of the Avon in Wiltshire’s south-east corner, Downton was owned from Saxon times by the bishops of Winchester, who founded a settlement there in the early 1200s. With few medieval privileges, the town developed slowly. At the start of the seventeenth century, Downton was still only a borough by prescription, presided over by an alderman, a tithingman and a constable. Its market and fairs had apparently fallen into abeyance, and the local economy was almost entirely agricultural, with little discernible industry apart from the small-scale manufacture of leather goods.
Downton first returned Members to Parliament in 1275, but the borough was regularly represented in the Commons only from 1442. The franchise was vested in the burgage-holders. Their actual number in the early Stuart period is unclear, but 24 voters were listed on the 1620 election return.
Surprisingly, the earl’s influence was not greatly felt in the first three Jacobean elections. On each occasion, the senior seat was taken by a member of the Ralegh family, who owned the local rectory and a significant quantity of property within the borough.
In 1624 the borough’s senior Member was Sir William Dodington II, whose father was a major landowner at Breamore, three miles away across the Hampshire border. However, the second seat was awarded to Sir Clippesby Crewe, almost certainly the choice of Pembroke, who is known to have placed him at Callington, Cornwall in 1626.
in the burgage-holders
Number of voters: 24 in 1620
