Prior to James I’s accession in 1603, Northumberland’s history was dominated by its location on England’s northern border. Following centuries of intermittent war with Scotland, the county was run effectively as a military zone, divided into Marches, and exempted from national taxation so that local resources could be utilized for defence purposes. Under the early Stuarts, with peace now supposedly assured, serious efforts were made to develop a more conventional administrative framework. However, although James appointed a lord lieutenant, the earl of Cumberland, in the opening months of his reign, the local militia was not brought into line with the national model until the late 1620s, and the Crown relied on special Border commissions to enforce law and order until 1625.
Northumberland was also fragmented socially and economically. The sparse population of around 85,000 was unevenly distributed, the eastern lowland region being more densely inhabited, while the poorer highland zone was widely considered to be a hotbed of crime.
Northumberland’s elections were held at Alnwick, the official county town. The average number of voters is unclear, for the surviving indentures ordinarily just list the principal gentlemen present, then add a phrase such as ‘many other electors’. However, more than 300 people attended the first election of 1614, and the turnout was probably even higher at the second. On that occasion there was a serious attempt to record all the voters. Although the indenture has faded badly, nearly 200 names can still be identified, while those that are now illegible probably amounted to a similar total. This indenture is also untypical in that it was written in English, rather than the customary Latin.
During Elizabeth’s reign, Northumberland’s electors routinely awarded at least one seat to an outsider linked to the county’s military establishment or the Council in the North.
These rivalries continued in December 1620, when Widdrington was elected for a third time, but had to yield the senior seat to Grey’s son, Sir William, who was a baronet. Widdrington felt this indignity very strongly, and on 27 Apr. 1621 he pointedly complained in the House about people who achieved higher social status by purchasing honours.
Of the eight legitimate Members, only Widdrington proved to be an effective spokesman for his county. Appointed a commissioner for the Anglo-Scottish Union treaty in 1604, he campaigned successfully in the Commons in 1607 against the practice of remanding, whereby an Englishman accused of committing a crime in Scotland could be tried under Scottish law.
Number of voters: at least 324 in 1614
