In the sixteenth century the antiquary John Leland described Bridport, in west Dorset, as a ‘fair large town’.
The burgesses of Bridport occasionally made claims of poverty, although these may have been exaggerated. In 1436 the county of Dorset was found incapable of bearing its normal share of the burden of taxation as granted in the Parliament of the previous year, and a schedule was drawn up of ‘desolated, wasted, destructed and depopulated’ vills and boroughs to which rebate of tax was to be allowed. The list of ailing townships included Bridport, and the government decided that £1 0s. 5d. should be remitted to its inhabitants. Even so, Bridport was better placed than the county town of Dorchester and other of Dorset’s parliamentary boroughs.
There is no indication that the burgesses sought to expand their liberties in the fifteenth century; no charters or additional privileges were granted to them, and, perhaps through inertia, between 1379 and the accession of Henry VII they did not trouble to obtain formal confirmation of their charter of 1253.
The borough regularly paid fees to three legal officers. At the beginning of the century, John Tracy† received an annual fee of 20s. as ‘steward’ of Bridport, but by 1408 the ‘steward’ had assumed the title of ‘recorder’, one that was maintained throughout our period.
Comparatively little is recorded about payments to Bridport’s parliamentary representatives, for the cofferers’ accounts were entered in the borough’s registers only in an abbreviated form, and rarely specified such disbursements. It may be the case that Bridport favoured a lump sum payment to its Members for the whole term of a Parliament, whatever its duration, rather than paying them on a daily basis. Thus, in the accounting year 1423-4 Simon atte Ford received two payments ‘pro parliamento’, one being of £2 the other of two marks, and his fellow MP, Thomas Newton, was paid 20s. while staying in London for the parliamentary sessions. Yet, given that the accounts are incomplete, we cannot be certain that this was the total amount they received for their service.
Electoral returns for Bridport survive for 18 of the 22 Parliaments assembled between 1422 and 1460, although the name of one of the MPs at that of 1453 is now partly illegible. Although the return for the Parliament of 1433 is now lost, it was still extant in the seventeenth century, when the names of those elected were recorded by William Prynne†, and in addition, the borough’s own records supply the name of one of the Members of the Parliament of 1445, where there would otherwise be a gap. Thus, we know who occupied 38 out of the 44 available seats in Henry VI’s reign: they numbered 23 different individuals.
In the three and a half decades before 1422 it had rarely happened that Bridport elected to Parliament someone who was not resident in the town and had never participated in its government. Indeed, only one of those elected in that period was an outsider, and he, Thomas Lovell† (who lived at Clevedon in Somerset), evidently owed his return in 1410 to his father-in-law and former guardian John Roger†, the wealthy Bridport merchant.
This group of nine local men provided continuity in the borough’s representation in our period, with atte Ford sitting in seven Parliaments in a row from 1420 to 1426, Boweley in three from 1427 to 1431, and Bettiscombe in four from 1429 to 1433. Furthermore, Burgess was elected to at least six of the nine Parliaments summoned between 1435 and 1450. Continuity was further strengthened by the election of Boweley and Bettiscombe together in the consecutive Parliaments of 1429 and 1431. All nine were closely involved in the government of the town, and fully cognizant of its affairs; they were well qualified to represent the interests of their neighbours. Indeed, their record of local service was impressive. Boweley served as cofferer for four annual terms, Burgess for six and atte Ford for eight; while atte Ford occupied the bailiffship for six terms, Mountfort for seven, Boweley for eight and Oliver for as many as 18. Although the Welshman Hore apparently entered the Commons before he ever held an office in the locality, this was out of the ordinary as the rest had all served as cofferer or bailiff before their earliest elections to Parliament, and it would appear that competence in borough office was normally a prerequisite for selection as an MP. It sometimes happened that serving officials were sent to the Commons: current bailiffs were returned in 1423 (Newton), 1431 (Boweley), 1437 (Boweley and Hore together), 1442 (Oliver) and 1445 (Burgess); a cofferer (Boweley) was elected in 1427 and 1429; and one of the constables (Burgess) was sent to Westminster in 1435. Members of this group are also notable for being regular attestors of the indentures recording the borough’s choice of MPs. Boweley, atte Ford, Hore, Mountfort and Newton all verified the elections (indeed, Mountfort’s name appeared on as many as 14 electoral indentures), and Oliver twice stood surety for those returned. Bettiscombe stands apart from the rest of the group of nine local men, as he never held one of the borough offices or attested its parliamentary elections. Yet by providing the burgesses with legal counsel over many years he too became intimately involved in the affairs of Bridport.
Bettiscombe apart, the local men who dominated the representation of Bridport until 1447 all made a living through trade. Sometimes this was on a large scale. For instance, Hore traded in wine through Southampton, and Mountfort, who specialized in the rope-trade and had been the principal supplier of cordage to Henry V’s navy, established wide mercantile connexions. Burgess, styled variously as a husbandman, chapman, grocer and mercer, is known to have employed several apprentices, and as a consequence may been seen as a likely supporter of a bill in the Commons of 1445-6 which resulted in a new Statute of Labourers. Following his attendance at the Parliament the town clerk copied the Act into Bridport’s ‘Red Book’. The statute of weights and measures confirmed in the Parliament of 1429-30 had also been copied into the book. For the merchants of Bridport its importance lay in the stipulation that a common balance should be maintained in every town, with a set national scale of weighing charges, for the prevention of fraud.
As already noted, Bettiscombe, Boweley’s companion in 1429 and 1431, was a man of law, and his returns to four consecutive Parliaments from 1429 to 1433 probably reflect a conscious change of policy on the part of the burgesses with regard to their representation in the Commons. In the earlier years of the century, lawyers in receipt of fees from Bridport had only represented the borough in Parliament on a very few occasions: thus, John Stampe had done so in April 1414 and 1420, and Walter Tracy, the town clerk, in 1419. By contrast, the 1420s and 1430s saw not only the regular return of the borough’s feed legal counsellor Bettiscombe, but also, for the first time, the election of lawyers who were outsiders to the community. Thus, in 1427 and 1433 the burgesses returned Robert Hillary, one of the leading lawyers of the region and by 1433 a member of the quorum on the county bench; in 1432 they paired Bettiscombe with Philip Leweston, a filacer of the court of common pleas; and in 1435 they elected William Boef, who had recently been a governor of Lincoln’s Inn and later rose to the rank of serjeant-at-law. This means that in every Parliament from 1427 to 1435 inclusive (six in all) Bridport was represented by a man of law, and in 1432 both MPs were members of this profession. The reason for this change in representation is obscure, for no pressing business of the borough requiring the presence in the Commons of lawyers rather than merchants has been identified. There is a strong possibility that the lawyers who were not formally retained by the town were at least known to the townspeople who elected them. Hillary and Leweston lived not far away, at Sherborne and Dorchester, respectively, and although Boef resided in Devon his kinship to the borough’s long-serving recorder, John Boef, suggests that he too was personally acquainted with the burgesses.
In the period 1422 to 1445 it nearly always happened that Bridport was represented by at least one person with previous parliamentary experience; and in seven of the 12 Parliaments for which complete returns survive both men had sat in the Commons before. Such experience might have been obtained in the service of other boroughs rather than for Bridport itself (Hillary had previously represented Weymouth, Bettiscombe Lyme and Leweston Melcombe), but this is a further indication of the premium placed by the electorate on knowledge of the workings of the Commons. Only in the Parliament of 1435 does it seem that two novices were elected together.
By contrast, from 1447 onwards the pattern of Bridport’s representation changed significantly. In the seven Parliaments for which returns survive from that date until 1460 only one townsman, John Burgess, was returned (although he did sit on three consecutive occasions). With that exception, the borough was represented entirely by outsiders. The reasons for this change are uncertain. Perhaps the burgesses, seeking to avoid expense, welcomed the approaches of outsiders who, keen to have a seat in the Commons for their own personal reasons, offered to serve the borough at little or no cost. Alternatively, external influence, brought to bear by the Crown or by powerful local landowners may have been a factor. The group of ten individuals under consideration here differed from each other with regard to their backgrounds and origins. Only one of them, John Calowe, came from Dorset, albeit from the east of the county, not from anywhere near Bridport. Of the rest, two lived in neighbouring Somerset (John Jewe at Ilchester; Ward at Bridgwater), John Pury came from Berkshire, John Ingram from Buckinghamshire, George Heton from Lincolnshire and Andrew Kebell from Kent; while three of the MPs (Thomas Skargill, a Yorkshireman, Robert Spencer and John Torell), all lived in Essex. Clearly, none of these ten men fulfilled the statutory qualification of residence in the constituency which returned them to Parliament. Indeed, these breaches of statute are emphasized by the facts that Pury had received a royal licence to crenellate his mansion at Chamberhouse in Berkshire only shortly before his return for Bridport to the Parliament of 1447, and that Skargill was stated to be living in Essex when he attested the elections for that shire to the same Parliament of February 1449 to which he was elected by the Dorset borough. Although a few of the ten outsiders had sat in the Commons before their elections for Bridport (Kebell had served other Dorset boroughs – Lyme Regis and Melcombe Regis – and Skargill had previously represented Great Bedwyn in Wiltshire), in this second part of the period under review it happened more often than previously that Bridport was represented by novices. Perhaps two such newcomers sat in the Parliaments of 1447, 1453 and 1460, and of the 14 recorded seats between 1447 and 1460 only five are known to have been filled by men with previous parliamentary experience.
As four of the ten outsiders were servants of the Crown, the possibility of interference in Bridport’s choice of representatives from the centre should not be discounted. Most significant in this respect was the election of Heton and Pury to the Parliament summoned to assemble at Bury St. Edmunds in 1447, for this Parliament was notable for the large number of courtiers in the Commons – men who might have been expected to lend their support to the King’s ministers. Heton, an official in the Household, was also currently employed as receiver of the estates of the late duke of Bedford; while Pury, the royal avener who enjoyed personal access to the King, moved in the circle of the powerful duke of Suffolk. Other royal servants emulated them by securing election for Bridport on later occasions. When returned to the first Parliament of 1449, Skargill was a yeoman of the royal chamber of at least 14 years standing, and by Henry VI’s grant currently occupied the posts of keeper of the park at Havering, rider in Waltham forest and troner and pesager in Ipswich. Spencer, elected in 1453, had served for more than 20 years as a yeoman of the King’s hall and was currently bailiff of Havering.
The other six do not fit into quite the same category of royal servants, although one of them, Kebell (elected in 1455) had only recently left his office as comptroller of the pipe at the Exchequer which he had occupied for 14 years. No convincing explanation has been found for the election in the autumn of 1449 of John Torell, a young man who had inherited estates in Essex worth £150 a year, although his close kinship with the MPs for that county, (Sir) Thomas Tyrell* and his brother William Tyrell II*, gave him influential contacts at the centre of government. William Ward (elected in 1450), later a customs official at Bridgwater and Poole, may have been a merchant, although the evidence is lacking. The remaining three were all trained in the law: when returned in 1455 John Ingram of Aylesbury, then under sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, was clerk of the essoins in the court of common pleas; Jewe (elected in 1460) had similarly been a sheriff’s officer, in his case in Somerset and Dorset; and Calowe (Jewe’s companion in 1460), was later appointed to the Dorset bench as one of the quorum.
Yet while there is always a possibility that the outsiders returned for Bridport in Henry VI’s reign owed their elections to external influences, this can only be a matter for speculation. There are hints that members of leading gentry families of Dorset, such as the wealthy Staffords of Hooke or the Newburghs of Lulworth, took an interest in the borough’s representation. The lawyer Hillary was long an associate of John Stafford, bishop of Bath and Wells (chancellor when Hillary was returned in 1433); and Jewe was a servant of Humphrey Stafford IV*, MP for Somerset in the same Parliament of 1460 in which he represented Bridport. It is also intriguing to note that Calowe was one of several of the representatives of Dorset boroughs in this particular Parliament who were linked with one of the knights of the shire, John Newburgh II*, a prominent lawyer and leading landowner of the county who was currently retained by Bridport as its recorder.
The returns for Bridport were listed on the schedule sent to Chancery by the sheriff of Somerset and Dorset. In addition, for 30 years from 1407 to 1437 the sheriff returned for each Parliament a composite indenture testifying the outcome of the elections for the seven Dorset boroughs. Nineteen such indentures survive, although some are in too damaged a state to be fully legible. Each indenture was drawn up as between the sheriff and four men from each of the seven towns, and dated on the same day and at the same place (Dorchester) as the shire elections were held. Nevertheless, it is clear that the Bridport elections were held locally and independently from the shire elections, for three precepts, sent by the sheriff to the bailiffs in 1305, 1422 and 1553, yet survive in the borough records. In each case the sheriff informed the bailiffs of the forthcoming Parliament and directed them to conduct elections in their town. Thus, on 12 Oct. 1422 the sheriff, Robert Hill†, wrote to advise the bailiffs about the writ of summons to Henry VI’s first Parliament, instructing them to hold elections of two burgesses of the better sort, who were to be indifferently and freely chosen, and to inform him of the names of those picked within 16 days. Strangely enough, the county court met on the very same day the sheriff dispatched this precept, and the indenture of return for the boroughs, including Bridport, bore the identical date.
