Gatton was among the smallest of the boroughs represented in Parliament in this period, and even at the close of the nineteenth century scarcely more than 200 inhabitants were recorded there. Yet like that of Reigate, its close neighbour, the site of Gatton had been occupied for many centuries before the borough began to send representatives to Parliament. Since the Roman period Gatton had been connected with the other settlements at the foot of the North Downs by the principal east-west road which ran along the Holmesdale valley. A church was founded there around the time of the Conquest, and its parish came to cover an area of some 1,200 acres on the crest and southern slopes of the Downs.
The manor of Gatton, covering a similar area to the parish, had by the early fourteenth century come into the hands of Simon Northwode†, in the right of his wife, and it continued to be held by the Northwodes until 1364. Then conveyed to Richard Fitzalan, earl of Arundel, it was among the properties seized by the Crown on the attainder and execution of his successor in 1397, and restored to Earl Thomas following the deposition of Richard II. When the latter died without issue in 1415 Gatton formed part of the share of the Fitalan estates assigned to his sister and coheiress, Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Mowbray, duke of Norfolk,
Gatton possessed no administration independent from that of its lord. In 1453, the sheriff’s electoral indenture was counter-sealed by the borough’s constable, Richard Stonor, whose office is thought to have been made by appointment during the sheriff’s tourn at Sandridge.
Returns survive for four of the five Parliaments held between 1450 and 1460, yielding a total of eight names. Four of those elected (Dauntsey, Framlingham, Holman and Umfray) were returned to Parliament on just one occasion, while three (Huls, Mille and Stodeley), had each been returned previously, respectively for East Grinstead, New Shoreham and Reigate. Indeed, if it was Robert Bentham I*, rather than an otherwise unidentified Thomas Bentham, who was returned in 1450 (as seems possible), both Gatton Members of that year had also sat in the preceding Parliament, for Robert had sat for Heytesbury in Wiltshire. Alone of Gatton’s representatives, Huls went on to be re-elected to the next Parliament, securing a seat for Midhurst in Sussex on this third successive occasion.
In 1536, Thomas Howard, duke of Norfolk, was to consider Gatton one of the boroughs where, so he wistfully observed, ‘in times past [he] could have made burgesses of the Parliament’, but as far as Henry VI’s reign was concerned, this statement contained only an element of truth.
Yet otherwise Gatton’s representation was more often than not determined by successive sheriffs of Surrey and Sussex and links with the King’s household. Gatton owed its enfranchisement in 1450 to the initiative of just such a sheriff, the courtier and esquire for the King’s body, John Penycoke*. Beyond reasonable doubt, Hugh Huls, who came from Cheshire and made a name for himself in Wales, owed his election in 1450 to his kinship with the keeper of the privy seal, Andrew Huls, and it is possible that the other Gatton Member, whose name, Thomas Bentham, was inserted into the official record over an erasure, was in fact Robert Bentham I, a yeoman of the Crown who had represented Wiltshire boroughs in the two Parliaments of 1449. Similarly, in 1453 and 1459 yeomen of the King’s chamber (Dauntsey and Umfray) were returned. In 1460, Parliament was summoned in Henry VI’s name, but at the command of the Yorkist victors of the battle of Northampton. The sheriff of Surrey and Sussex charged with holding the election was, however, a Lancastrian loyalist, Robert Fiennes, at one time an esquire for the King’s body, who had been appointed to office during the court’s ascendancy in the previous autumn. Alongside the duke of Norfolk’s retainer Stodeley, Fiennes was thus able to return in Hugh Mille a member of another family with longstanding commitments to the house of Lancaster.
