Lincoln’s first extant charter dates back to 1157, and the town first returned MPs to Parliament in 1265. The borough was governed by a mayor, 12 aldermen, and a common council varying in size from about 30 to 48.
In 1614 Grantham was re-elected in first place. On 9 Mar. two strangers bought the freedom of the borough, namely Sir Robert Monson, who owned property in north Lincolnshire but resided mainly in Yorkshire, and Edward Baeshe, the under-age stepson of the local magnate, Sir George Manners*.
By the early 1620s the English cloth trade remained in recession. The Fosse Dyke project was abandoned, and its promoters fell into dispute with the Merchant Staplers over Lincoln’s position as a staple town. However, none of this is reflected in the town’s elections, which continued to be dominated by the gentry. In 1624 Watson, having failed to obtain a seat in his native county was re-elected for Lincoln, together with Ayscough’s brother-in-law Thomas Hatcher, of Careby. Sir Thomas Grantham was re-elected as the senior Member in 1625, while the second seat went to John Monson, who lived just outside the town. The following year Grantham was returned again, with Monson’s uncle Sir Robert, who continued to reside in Yorkshire. In April 1626 a writ of quo warranto obliged the corporation to seek either a confirmation or a renewal of their charter, and they mortgaged various property to raise £200 for the purpose.
in the freemen
Number of voters: unknown
