Bridport was governed by two bailiffs, two constables and a council of burgesses. It was not incorporated until 1619.
Winchester died in 1598 and Ralegh’s influence cannot be discerned in the election of 1601. Sir Robert Napier, a lawyer of some influence in the county, was probably able to secure his own return in that year. His colleague, Richard Warburton, a gentleman pensioner and servant of the Queen, may well have owed his election to Viscount Bindon, who secured nominations from several Dorset boroughs and offered them to Sir Robert Cecil.
