The borough of Bridgwater had been granted its earliest charter by King John in 1200, but the community was not formally incorporated until 1468. In 1318 and 1371 the burgesses had sued out letters of confirmation from Edward II and Edward III, but they saw no need to procure similar letters from Richard II or the first two Lancastrians. It may thus have been a sign of the political uncertainty arising from Henry VI’s minority that early in the new reign, just weeks into the first session of the Parliament of 1423, the burgesses acquired a confirmation of Edward III’s grant.
In Henry VI’s reign the feudal overlords of Bridgwater were Richard, duke of York, who inherited one third of the borough from his uncle Edmund, earl of March (d.1425), after the death of the latter’s widow in 1432, and William, Lord Zouche of Harringworth (d.1462), who held the other two thirds.
As an important commercial centre as well as a strategic crossing point over the Parret on the road from Taunton and the west to Glastonbury and Wells, Bridgwater experienced its share of the disorder that dogged England in Henry VI’s reign. In April 1436 there were disturbances in the town (possibly connected with a disagreement between the future chief justice John Hody* and Sir William Bonville*) during sessions of the peace conducted by William, Lord Botreaux, when Alexander Hody and his servants clashed with the retainers of Guy Bittellesgate, a local gentleman from Whitelackington. Later on the same day the rioters broke open the town gaol to which Botreaux had committed one of their number, threatened the borough officers and freed the prisoner.
Bridgwater had first returned MPs to the Commons in 1295, and was represented regularly thereafter. During Henry VI’s minority, the sheriff of Somerset and Dorset normally recorded the names of the MPs elected by the four boroughs in Somerset in a composite indenture counter-sealed by four representatives from each community. In addition, he listed the names of the knights of the shire and of the citizens and burgesses in a separate schedule, which also recorded the names of the Members’ sureties. After 1437 the separate indenture for Somerset’s urban constituencies was abandoned, and the names of the citizens and burgesses were certified only by the schedule until 1455, from when they were added to the end of the indenture recording the election of the knights, albeit apparently in a second procedural stage. The individual boroughs were nevertheless required to signify their choice, made locally, as is apparent from the wording of the precept issued to the Wells authorities by the sheriff in June 1455, which explicitly instructed them to do so.
The names of Bridgwater’s representatives are recorded for 19 of the 22 Parliaments of Henry VI’s reign; no Members are known for the assemblies of 1439, 1445 and 1459. Twenty-five men shared these 38 seats between them. In the case of 36 of the seats, the names of the MPs have been established beyond reasonable doubt, but the remaining two present some problems. In 1425, the sheriff’s indenture named John Gonne, who had previously represented Bridgwater in 1422, as the junior Member for the borough, but by the time that the indenture and its accompanying schedule had been placed on the Chancery files, Gonne’s name had been erased on the schedule and replaced with that of the seasoned parliamentarian John Pitt. The interpretation of these documents is further complicated by Pitt’s attestation of the indenture. By custom, here as elsewhere, the men elected did not witness the returns, and in the reign of Henry VI Pitt is recorded as doing so only three times, in 1422, 1425 and 1437, in every instance on the occasion of one of Gonne’s elections. The alteration of the schedule nevertheless appears to indicate that Pitt replaced Gonne as an MP, probably at a late stage in the electoral process, and that it was he who took the seat. Even more ambiguous is the return for 1455. In that year, the sheriff’s indenture named the Sussex esquire Thomas Lewknor, a man with no discernible ties with the borough or its feudal lords, as Bridgwater’s senior MP, while the accompanying schedule named in his stead Robert Cotys the younger, then one of the Somerset county coroners. Unlike in 1425, indenture and schedule show no evidence of open tampering which might shed light on the identity of the man who actually took the seat.
Bridgwater’s parliamentary representation in this period fell into two distinct phases. During the King’s minority, much as in the earlier years of the century, the burgesses evidently set considerable store on the candidates’ prior experience of the Commons. Nineteen of the 22 seats available between 1422 and 1437 were taken by men who had sat in Parliament before; on four occasions (allowing for Pitt’s return in 1425) one of the MPs was directly re-elected; and in 1429 the burgesses returned both of their representatives from the previous Parliament. By contrast, in the years of Henry VI’s majority the inhabitants of Bridgwater showed themselves rather less concerned about their representatives’ parliamentary credentials. On account of the loss of the returns for 1439, 1445 and 1459 the evidence is incomplete, but as far as it is possible to tell only six of the 16 seats for which the Members’ names have been discovered were taken by men who had previously served in the Commons, and in 1442, 1449 (Feb.) and 1450 Bridgwater returned two apparent novices. In is also worthy of remark that from the 1430s onwards several of Bridgwater’s MPs with prior parliamentary experience had gained this in the service of other boroughs, mostly in Dorset (Hody had previously sat for Shaftesbury, Cullyford and Halsewell for Lyme Regis, Dryffeld for Wareham and Ward for Bridport), but also in Wiltshire (Mone had represented Cricklade), or Somerset (Plush had been returned for Taunton). Thomas Burgoyne clearly had strong motives for wishing to sit in the Commons of 1447, since he accepted a Bridgwater seat after previously serving as a knight for Cambridgeshire and a citizen for London. The exact nature of his interests can only be guessed, for as a busy lawyer he served a number of important clients at any one time, and was indeed named as the abbot of Croyland’s proxy in that same Parliament, but it is plausible that connexions with the joint lord of Bridgwater, the duke of York (for whom he was officiating as bailiff in Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire by that autumn), allowed for his return for the Somerset borough.
In the longer term, a number of Bridgwater’s representatives built distinguished parliamentary careers. Although perhaps as many as nine of the MPs sat in the Commons only once, a further five (Cullyford, Gosse, Mauncell, Mone and Ward) were elected twice, and seven (Burgoyne, Cave, Dryffeld, William Gascoigne II, Jacob, Plush and possibly Gonne) sat three times. More notable were Halsewell and Lewknor, who respectively sat four and five times (provided that the latter took his Bridgwater seat), while Pitt (allowing for his return in 1425) was returned on eight occasions between 1421 and 1435 (being directly re-elected on up to four of them), Hody sat at least 11 times between 1429 and 1459, and William Gascoigne I had the distinction of representing his borough on at least 12 occasions between 1406 and 1422, and probably even more frequently, as he was directly re-elected on every documented occasion and no Bridgwater returns survive for a further five of Henry IV’s and Henry V’s Parliaments.
Burgoyne’s return in 1447 was not the only instance in which high politics ostensibly affected Bridgwater’s representation. Although the borough’s lords did not normally interfere in its internal affairs and choice of parliamentary representatives, it seems clear that the return to the Parliament of November 1449 of Reynold Sowdeley, a Shropshire man with no known ties in the south-west, and probably also of his colleague, Thomas Dryffeld, who may have hailed from Yorkshire, was the result of the direct intervention of the duke of York, who was then emerging as the government’s principal critic. Equally, there may have been a political background to an amendment of the schedule of 1453, which had originally named a Thomas Ward* (probably the royal household official of that name) as one of the Members for Bridgwater. At some stage, the Member’s Christian name was struck out and ‘William’ inserted in its stead: certainly, it was William who was later paid for his services by the borough.
Crucially, such returns of outsiders and political nominees remained the exception rather than the rule. No fewer than 12 of the 26 MPs lived in the town, while nine others came from elsewhere in Somerset: Cullyford from Hinton St. George, Dodesham and Plush from Cannington, Jacob and Mauncell from North Petherton and Mone from Corscombe; William Gascoigne II divided his time between his principal residence at Brockley and the cathedral city of Wells, while the precise addresses of Halsewell and Andrew within the county have not been identified. In at least six of Henry VI’s Parliaments (those of 1422, 1426, 1432, 1435, 1450 and 1460) Bridgwater thus returned two local men, while in a further eight (1423, 1425, 1427, 1429, 1437, 1447, 1449 (Feb.) and 1453),
Among those of the MPs whose trade or profession can be established, lawyers predominated. Of particular prominence in the profession were Burgoyne, who was currently serving as one of the under sheriffs of London, and Hody, a fellow of the Middle Temple whose expertise was periodically called upon in the drafting of acts of Parliament; but Mone was educated in canon law and Robert Cotys II and Cullyford, who officiated as county coroners, and Dodesham, Halsewell, Jacob and the two Gascoignes had all also received some legal training. Yet even in the 1450s and 1460s Bridgwater continued to return men with mercantile interests: Baker, Hill and Ward were general merchants, Croppe was a skinner and Gonne a mercer, while Pitt may have had interests in shipping.
Only a few of Bridgwater’s MPs established or continued family traditions of parliamentary service. Burgoyne, Robert Cotys II, Gosse and Lewknor all followed their fathers into the Commons, and William Gascoigne II was the nephew of the distinguished parliamentarian William Gascoigne I. Apparently more of a concern than family traditions in informing the burgesses’ choice of MPs was affordability. It is not clear when Bridgwater last paid its MPs at the customary rate of 2s. per day (always supposing the borough ever did so), but by Henry VI’s reign the practice had clearly been abandoned in favour of a token lump-sum payment negotiated on an individual basis. Thus, in 1431 Hody and Cullyford each received just one mark for their services over almost ten weeks, and even for the far longer Parliaments of 1449 (Nov.) and 1453 the borough’s representatives were each paid no more than 20s.
It is not possible to demonstrate a direct link between the prior tenure of borough office and election to Parliament, although several of the MPs were drawn from the same pool of local leaders who participated in the town’s administration. This meant that eight or nine of the 22 seats available during Henry VI’s minority went to men who had previously held office in Bridgwater,
If office-holding under the Crown held any sway with the Bridgwater electorate, the posts concerned with the collection of the King’s revenue in the port apparently carried particular weight. To five of the Parliaments of Henry VI’s minority the borough returned officials currently engaged in the customs service: Gonne was collector of customs and subsidies at Bridgwater when he was elected for the borough in 1422;
With regard to other Crown offices in the locality, it should be noted that when returned in 1431 Cullyford was not only controller of tronage and pesage in Bridgwater, but also both coroner and clerk of the peace in the wider county of Somerset, and experienced as a former under sheriff in that county and Dorset. Similarly, if he did take a seat in 1455, Robert Cotys II was then serving as a coroner of Somerset. Otherwise, only Hody and Baker had any experience of Crown office in the region at the time of their elections for Bridgwater, in 1433 and 1435, respectively – Hody as a royal commissioner and Baker as a collector of taxes.
