Poole ‘with its suburbs’ had, in 1568, a constitution modelled on that of Southampton. It was ‘a county, separate from the county of Dorset’ and so, whereas the 1559 election indenture, for example, was made between the sheriff of Dorset and the corporation, the known election writs in this period from 1572 were directed to the sheriff of the town and the indenture made between the sheriff of the town and the corporation.
As with a number of Dorset boroughs the 2nd Earl of Bedford was the dominating influence over elections until his death in 1585. Both 1559 MPs were his candidates, Walter Haddon, a master of requests in good odour with the Queen, and Humphry Michell, either then or soon to become a servant of Bedford. Next time Mitchell was returned again, with a Poole burgess. In 1571 Bedford’s man was the puritan George Carleton, the local man a Poole merchant. The two 1572 men were the mayor of Poole, William Green, and John Hastings, a country gentleman resident nearby who had connexions with Bedford. In 1584 the Earl of Leicester obtained the nomination of a burgess,
