Marlborough had been built on the north bank of the river Kennet, within a large royal estate on the downs of north-east Wiltshire and at the junction of two important routes, from Bath to London and from Cirencester to Salisbury and on to the south coast. A market centre for the surrounding countryside, much of the town’s trade came by way of Bristol and Southampton. Yet even though Marlborough ranked third in size among the urban communities of Wiltshire, after Salisbury and Wilton (with a taxable population in 1377 of nearly 550), the town was not particularly wealthy, owing to a decline in the local cloth industry as its focus shifted to Salisbury and the south-west. Even so, in 1436 it was expected to advance £20 (a sum slightly more than its annual fee farm) towards a loan to the Crown for the equipment of an army to be sent to Calais, and it was the only place in the county, besides Salisbury, required to contribute.
As forming part of the royal demesne, the borough was customarily granted in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries to the queen as part of her dower. After the death of Queen Philippa in 1369, however, there was a change of practice: for a while the lordship of Marlborough pertained to successive constables of the castle, who were made responsible for the borough and the part of the manor known as ‘the barton’ which lay outside it. In 1399 Sir Walter Hungerford† was awarded custody of the castle by Henry IV, only for the King to rescind this grant in 1403 by transferring it to his own youngest son, Humphrey, later duke of Gloucester. In 1415 the latter was allowed to enfeoff Bishop Beaufort and others of the castle, town and lordship, to which by that date had also been added certain of the lands in the vicinity which Hungerford had previously held, including the nearby forest of Savernake.
By royal charter the borough enjoyed many liberties and possessed some institutions of its own, including a guild merchant which dated from 1163, a twice-weekly market, an annual eight-day fair and exemption from tolls (all granted in 1204), and two more fairs licensed subsequently. A further privilege of a general exemption from murage and quayage was conceded in 1408. Henry V confirmed all earlier charters to the mayor and burgesses, and in May 1425 Henry VI’s council followed suit.
The names of Marlborough’s MPs are known for only roughly two out of every three of the Parliaments summoned before 1386, and no more than 11 of the 21 summoned between then and 1411. Before this date there were several occasions when the borough was called upon to elect representatives but failed to do so. Yet, for reasons which may only be surmised, this state of affairs changed decisively from the very start of Henry V’s reign (during which there remain gaps for only two Parliaments, those of October 1416 and 1419),
Depending on the identity of that particular MP, the borough elected as many as 28 or 29 individuals to the 19 Parliaments of Henry VI’s reign for which returns survive. Three-quarters (20 or 21) of them apparently only ever sat for Marlborough once, and it is possible that in as many as six Parliaments of the reign the borough was represented entirely by novices.
Many of those elected for Marlborough were clearly eager to have a seat in the Commons, irrespective of the constituency they would nominally serve. No fewer than 12 of the group were also returned for other boroughs in Wiltshire;
Looking back at the 12 Parliaments for which Marlborough’s returns survive in the reigns of Henry IV and Henry V, it is clear that the representation of the borough had then been dominated by men residing in the locality, for only two of the 24 documented seats were taken by outsiders: Laurence Fitton† from Cheshire, a servant of the bishop of Salisbury (in May 1421), and John Giles*, the clerk of the peace in Wiltshire (in December the same year).
Three of the remaining four seats in the period 1422-37 were taken by men who although they came from elsewhere in Wiltshire were probably well known to the burgesses: Sturmy (of Axford), Erle (of Burbage and Wolf Hall) and Combe (of Amesbury). Only one complete outsider was returned: he, Joce (returned in 1433), was a lawyer from Gray’s Inn, who, probably a native of Gloucestershire (where he was later a j.p. of the quorum), seems to have usually lived in Southwark. Otherwise, the MPs elected before 1442 may for the most part be placed in the categories of professional administrators, lawyers and minor gentry possessed of land within a few miles of Marlborough. Most prominent in the group loosely classed as administrators was Bird, for over 33 years the steward, receiver and bailiff of the Wiltshire estates belonging to Henry IV’s queen, Joan of Navarre, and as such earning fees of as much as £10 p.a. Furbour was bailiff of the liberties of St. Swithin’s priory, Winchester, and of the hundred of Kinwardstone (which pertained to the earl of Stafford), and Woodford, briefly bailiff of Queen Joan’s liberties in Wiltshire before he sat in Parliament, was later to be employed as deputy receiver of the earl’s estates in the county. Besides the carpet-bagger Joce, the lawyers included Newman and Wotton (both of them active as attorneys at the Wiltshire assizes and in the central court of common pleas), and Collingbourne, who had been educated at Winchester College. As members of the gentry deriving annual incomes from their lands in Wiltshire thought to exceed £40, Wotton and Erle were later fined for refusing to take up knighthood, and the former increased his wealth by acquiring substantial holdings in other counties too, as also did Combe, who had inherited land worth at least £20 p.a. which he used for the production of wool.
A few of this group of MPs returned between 1422 and 1437 had gained experience of royal office before their elections in Henry VI’s reign. Bird had served two terms as escheator of Hampshire and Wiltshire, as well as on a number of ad hoc commissions, and Collingbourne had been an under sheriff in three other counties. Wotton, Combe and Keche had been given responsibility for the collection of parliamentary subsidies. Nevertheless, there is no evidence that the Crown took any direct interest in Marlborough’s representation in this period, and only slight hints that its lord the duke of Gloucester might have done so. Selwood (1429) may have been the ‘plumber’ (dealer in lead) who had been the duke’s bailiff and receiver at ‘Salley’ not long before, but even if so there is no sign that he was still in ducal employment; and although Bird stood surety for the duke on one occasion, his earliest return for the borough pre-dated Duke Humphrey’s connexion with it.
If any significant outside influence over Marlborough’s elections is to be discerned, it is that of the former Speaker and veteran of at least 12 Parliaments, Sir William Sturmy* (d.1427), the hereditary warden of Savernake forest (of which Marlborough was the administrative headquarters). Earlier, in Henry V’s reign, Sir William’s associates had taken 11 out of 18 documented seats for Marlborough, and this interest in the borough’s representation received fresh emphasis after 1421. Not only was Sturmy’s bastard son, John, returned for the borough in 1423, but two years later his nephew and right-hand man, Erle, took a seat. While these two were undeniably close to the knight, who in his old age depended heavily on Erle in particular, others of the Sturmy circle were also elected for Marlborough. They included Gower, Newman, Keche and Wotton, while Bird was closely associated with Sir William in an official capacity as the latter, as the chief steward of the queen’s estates, was his superior officer. Evidence of the ties binding together the members of this circle is further provided by the parliamentary returns themselves. Clearly, they were ready to offer each other support at sessions of the shire court. John Benger†, a feoffee of Sturmy’s estates, had stood surety for Gower’s attendance in the Commons in 1420 and did likewise for Newman in 1423; while Newman appeared on behalf of Gower when returns were made to the Parliament of 1421 (Dec.), Erle stood surety for his cousin John Sturmy in 1423, and Keche did so for Bird in 1426.
Marked changes to Marlborough’s representation may be noticed from 1442 onwards. Of the 15 men elected previously, only Combe was returned again; and only two of the 14 or 15 MPs returned to the Parliaments between 1442 and 1459 are known to have held property in the town (Ady and Richard Seymour). By contrast with the 1420s and 1430s, few of the MPs came from the immediate locality, and most of them had no recorded contact with the burgesses. Yet the majority did at least come from Wiltshire. They included Constantine Darell, a younger son of William Darell* and grandson of Thomas Calston† (both of them former knights of the shire), and Metford lived at Shalbourne, Onewyn at Horton, Pole in the south-west of the county, and Morgan and Wylly in Salisbury. To this group may perhaps also be added Howton, a Herefordshire man who seems to have occasionally resided at Boscombe, and Walrond who although he came from Childrey in Berkshire did possess property on the Wiltshire side of the county border. There is no doubt, however, that three of those elected in this period were outsiders to the county as well as to Marlborough itself: Thomas Brown (November 1449), Hardegrave (1453), who came from Dorset, and Vaughan (1455) a Welshman residing at Stepney in Middlesex.
As before, some of those elected in or after 1442 were professional administrators or trained in the law. Shortly after he sat for Marlborough in 1442, Morgan, a ‘gentleman’ or ‘esquire’, was appointed town clerk of Salisbury, and later in his career he served on the quorum of Wiltshire commissions and was admitted to Lincoln’s Inn. His fellow MP, Pole, similarly styled, may also have been a lawyer. Both men elected to the Parliament of 1449 (Feb.) were bailiffs of liberties pertaining to monastic houses, with Howton serving Cirencester abbey and Onewyn Amesbury priory, while Onewyn was also receiver of the Wiltshire estates of the King’s collegiate foundation in Cambridge. They too had received a legal training: Howton was later a fellow of Lincoln’s Inn, and Onewyn subsequently served on the quorum of the peace in Wiltshire. After his return for Marlborough in 1449 (Nov.), Walrond was made a j.p. of the quorum in Oxford and Berkshire and employed as an estates’ steward by St. George’s College, Windsor. The only MP for Marlborough known to have been engaged in trade was Wylly (1447), a cloth merchant, mercer and draper of Salisbury. Darell (1459), coming from the shire gentry, was later distrained for failing to take up knighthood.
For most of the MPs returned in the 1440s and 1450s their elections for Marlborough came early in their careers, when they had yet to make a mark; few had any previous experience of office by appointment of the Crown. One of the exceptions was Onewyn, who had been under sheriff not only in Wiltshire but also in Somerset and Dorset before his election; another was Darell, who was occupying a post in the customs service in Bishop’s Lynn when elected in 1459, but there is no evidence to suggest that their returns were due to any interference from the Lancastrian court. Yet the three outsiders almost certainly did owe their elections to their positions at the centre of government or in the royal household. The Thomas Brown returned in 1449 (Nov.) may have been either Thomas II, the former under treasurer and well-versed in the workings of the Exchequer, or Thomas III, the prothonotary of the common pleas, with many years’ experience of law-enforcement. Hardegrave, elected to the Commons of 1453 in the company of a significant number of other members of the Household, wore the King’s livery as the officer in charge of the otter-hunt; while Vaughan, returned in 1455, was currently master of the ordnance, and an esquire for the King’s body. In addition, the place Howton held in the service of the King’s carver, Sir Edmund Hungerford*, may well have been a significant factor in securing his election in 1449 (Feb.). As before, (Sir) John Seymour’s influence over Marlborough’s representation is noticeable: one of his servants, Ady, was elected in 1453, and in 1459 his younger son, Richard Seymour, took one of the seats, while the other went to a friend of the family, Darell, and these two accompanied to the Parliament at Coventry the knight’s elder son, John Seymour II*, then representing Wiltshire.
