Shaftesbury received its first charter in 1252, and sent two Members to the Model Parliament. A survey of 1615 described the borough as lying between ‘a deep country full of pasture, yielding plenty of well-fed beeves, muttons, and milch-kine, and … a high champion country, yielding store of corn, sheep, and wool; so the town is made a great vent for the commodities on either part’. Another contemporary observer, Thomas Gerard, noted it as ‘a fair thoroughfare, much frequented by travellers to and from London; governed by a mayor, well inhabited, and accommodated with a plentiful market on the Saturday’. Gerard lamented the total disappearance of the abbey, once the richest nunnery in England, which left ‘a fair turreted house’ of the 1st Lord Arundell of Wardour as the town’s ‘greatest ornament’.
Shaftesbury was the normal venue for Dorset’s summer quarter sessions, and three resident lawyers, John Boden, Thomas Sheppard and William Whitaker, represented the borough during this period.
Shaftesbury’s principal electoral patron was the 3rd earl of Pembroke, the lord of the manor, at whose court leet the mayor had to be sworn in.
In 1614 the borough returned three outsiders. The junior seat was awarded to Henry Croke, whose brother, Sir John*, had married the heiress of Payne’s Place, Motcombe, around two miles north of Shaftesbury. The first choice as senior Member, Sir Miles Sandys, 1st bt., was a Cambridgeshire man, and when he opted to sit for Cambridge University, he was replaced by Sir Simeon Steward, another landowner from the same county. They were probably both recommended by the 1st earl of Suffolk, who was lord lieutenant of Cambridgeshire as well as Dorset.
At the 1620 election patronage was probably shared between Pembroke and Arundell. The latter presumably helped secure the first seat for the local lawyer Thomas Sheppard, who was later described by Simonds D’Ewes† as a ‘base, jesuited papist’. The junior place was taken by the diplomat William Beecher, whose extensive connections at Court may well have included Pembroke. However, Beecher then opted to sit for Leominster, while Sheppard was expelled from the Commons for ridiculing a bill on Sabbath observance. At the ensuing election, Pembroke doubtless nominated his cousin Percy Herbert, and probably also Robert Hopton’s son, Ralph.
At this juncture a long-standing dispute between Pembroke and the borough over market dues came to a head. Although a new charter, drafted by the earl in 1620 to strengthen his influence, failed to pass the great seal, the corporation was technically dissolved at Michaelmas 1621, when his steward refused to swear in the newly elected mayor. The corporation, now £200 in debt, appealed to Arundell for assistance, but eventually had to come to terms with Pembroke, who enjoyed unquestioned patronage over one parliamentary seat for the rest of the decade.
in the burgesses and inhabitants
Number of voters: at least 13 in 1625
