The tenth-century foundation of New Romney was a response to the silting up of the original port of Old Romney, two miles to the east. From at least the 1200s, however, the sea was in retreat from New Romney as well. A storm of 1287 flooded the town and port with mud and shingle and permanently diverted the course of the river Rother, rerouting it to meet the sea at Rye, and by Henry VI’s reign New Romney had lost much of its former economic significance. Romney also lacked a strategic role in the period under review. It never faced the threat of French attack or had to adapt its rudimentary defences to accommodate gunpowder weaponry.
The business of the Cinque Ports was a continual expense for New Romney. The Brodhull regularly convened twice a year but there were also special ad hoc meetings at other times. Usually Romney sent four or five deputies to the Brodhull, but sometimes only two men attended. It is unlikely that these representatives received any payment for their attendance (and certainly none is recorded in the chamberlain’s accounts), but the meetings and related errands were still at times costly. The friendship of the warden of the Cinque Ports or his lieutenant, for example, might need soliciting, as in October 1450 when John Chenew received 14s. 5½d. for expenses incurred in riding to the duke of Buckingham.
The later medieval economic decline of Romney is evident from its financial records of the first half of the fifteenth century. The general maltolt brought in only some £7 in 1421-2 but no more than £4 10s. a decade later. By 1452-3 it stood at just over £3 and by 1460-1 at a mere 15s. 6½d.
Unlike Dover, late medieval New Romney was not a corporation, since it remained under the lordship of the archbishop of Canterbury until the end of the sixteenth century. The archbishop appointed its bailiff and the only elected officers were the 12 jurats, chosen on 25 Mar. each year. Originally, all of Romney’s barons participated in the elections of the jurats; after 1411, however, only those barons nominated by the existing jurats of each of the Port’s wards took part. In practice, the Portsmen enjoyed considerable powers of self-government, even though the bailiff was nominally Romney’s chief officer. The jurats governed the Port on a day-to-day basis, hearing civil pleas in the bailiff’s absence and retaining custody of the common seal. They also formally approved new bailiffs, who had to take an oath to uphold the town’s customs and privileges to gain admission to the Port.
The names have survived of 17 of the MPs for New Romney in Henry VI’s Parliaments, that is, all but those of 1455. The great majority resided in the Port, so presenting a similar picture to the three and a half decades immediately preceding 1422:
Even though they were predominantly local men resident at Romney, there is little evidence of family traditions of sitting in the Commons among the 17. Several of them did, however, certainly or probably possess family links with Parliament or came to form such connexions with it. Ellis, for example, was a son of Thomas Ellis†, a knight of the shire for Kent in the last Parliament of Henry V’s reign. John Adam’s father was probably the Stephen Adam† who sat for New Romney in 1376, and Richard Clitheroe was possibly the son of William Clitheroe†, a baron for the Port in at least six early fifteenth-century Parliaments, and certainly the father of another William Clitheroe*, an MP for Hythe in 1449-50, and of a daughter who married John Chenew, his fellow baron in the Parliament of 1447. Godelok and John Porter also became the sons-in-law of MPs before they themselves entered the Commons, the former marrying the daughter and heir of Richard Maidstone*, a knight of the shire for Middlesex, and Porter the daughter and heir of another of the 17, James Lowys.
As some of these relationships indicate, several of the MPs had interests and connexions beyond Romney. Two of the most prominent men among them, Clitheroe and Adam, were also figures of some importance in the wider county of Kent. A landowner of no little means, Clitheroe possessed connexions with important figures like John Darell* and Geoffrey Lowther*, and his brother became bishop of Bangor. He came to enjoy recognition as an ‘esquire’, as too did Adam (who became a significant landowner through his marriage to the coheiress of Lord Northwode) and Clement Overton. Overton stands out among the MPs in pursuing an extensive military career before representing Romney in Parliament, receiving grants of land in Normandy in Henry V’s reign and serving as captain of the castle of Montivilliers for well over a decade.
Another of the 17, Guy Ellis, was a ‘gentleman’ from an established minor Kentish landed family. He was also a lawyer – a profession whose members commonly enjoyed the status of ‘gentlemen’ – as was Chenew. Four others, Thomas Howlot, Lowys, Porter and Robert Scras, either probably or possibly received some sort of legal training, although Porter and Scras certainly engaged in trade, as did Clitheroe, who was a ship-owner as well as an esquire. Of those MPs who followed occupations more typical for townsmen, James Bamlond was a local merchant and ship-owner, Stephen Harry a butcher, William Piers a ‘barber’ and Thomas Smith a draper who also traded in wine. By contrast, Richard Stotard features as a mere ‘husbandman’ in a lawsuit heard in the court of common pleas in the early 1430s, although it is unlikely that the sobriquet accurately reflected his status.
There is no evidence for Stotard’s income or that of most of the other MPs, although one exception is that of Adam, probably the most substantial landowner among them. Late in Henry IV’s reign, he possessed lands in Kent valued at £40 p.a. for the purposes of the subsidy of 1412, as well as other holdings in Sussex, and the estates that came to him in marriage greatly enhanced these interests. Godelok also gained much through his wife, since a return for the subsidy of 1436 indicates that she was the heir to estates in Middlesex and Hertfordshire with an annual value of £36. As already indicated, Clitheroe was another of the more substantial landholders, as apparently were Ellis, Overton and Scras, but evidence for incomes that others of the MPs derived from trade or the law is totally lacking.
Most of the 17 would nevertheless have been relatively wealthy in local terms, and the fact that service as a jurat of New Romney was generally a prerequisite for election to the Commons is a further indication that they were of greater substance than most of the town’s residents. Only the two outsiders, Ellis and Godelok, and the soldier Overton were never jurats. Of the 14 who did become jurats, all held the office in conjunction with that of MP in one or more Parliaments, and all but one of them became a jurat before (albeit in some cases only immediately before) their first or only election to the Commons. The exception was John Chenew, who entered his first Parliament in 1439 just months after attaining the freedom of New Romney and did not join the jurats until a couple of years after the dissolution of that assembly. One possible explanation for his delay in doing so is the continued survival of his putative father, William Chenew, who, active in the local government of New Romney for several decades, was still a serving jurat in 1438-9.
The MPs for New Romney were more involved as holders of office directly under the Crown – whether in their own Port, the wider county of Kent or beyond – than their counterparts from the poorer and relatively insignificant Hythe, although not to the same extent as those of the two other Kentish Cinque Ports, Dover and Sandwich. Five of them served as ad hoc commissioners, although only Ellis certainly already possessed such experience before he became an MP. Just one of the 17, the outsider Godelok, had an association with the centre of power, having taken up office as a spigurnel of the Chancery some three years or more before his first election for Romney in 1445. He received the King’s livery at the great wardrobe for this office, the appointment to which he probably owed to the then chancellor, his patron John Stafford, archbishop of Canterbury. It was Stafford who appointed him bailiff of New Romney and who was almost certainly instrumental in securing his subsequent election to the Commons.
To a greater or lesser extent, the other bailiffs among the 17 who had little or no known prior connexion with Romney before taking up the office may also have had the archbishop’s patronage to thank for their seats in the Commons. Otherwise, there is next to no evidence of links between the MPs and great magnates, whether religious or secular. Adam did procure letters of attorney prior to sailing to France with Thomas, duke of Clarence, in 1417 but, owing to Clarence’s death at the battle of Baugé in March 1421, he cannot have owed anything to that lord for his parliamentary career during the period under review.
In sitting in more than one Parliament, Adam was in a clear majority among the MPs. He was also one of those who first represented Romney before 1422, as did Clitheroe, Harry, Lowys and Smith. Clitheroe stands out in attending no fewer than 14 Parliaments from that of April 1414 to that of 1447. Lowys was a Member of nine, both Adam and Scras of seven and Chenew of five, although four of Scras’s Parliaments met after the period under review. Godelok was also a Member of seven Parliaments but only three of them as a baron for Romney. Of the remaining MPs, four represented Romney in more than one Parliament, if not in every case solely within the period under review, and only seven appear to have sat just once. While none of these figures is definitive, owing to the loss of the return of 1455, it is quite evident that the electors of Romney valued previous parliamentary experience and continuity of representation, just as they had in the three and a half decades from 1386 to 1421.
As in the other Cinque Ports, the barons of New Romney held their elections to Parliament upon receiving a precept from the clerk of Dover castle, to whom they sent back the results to include in the composite return he made for all the Ports. There is little sign that events outside the Ports greatly influenced Romney’s electoral politics. Aside from the possible occasional intervention by the archbishop of Canterbury, the great men of the wider county of Kent appear not to have interfered in its parliamentary elections in the way that James Fiennes*, Lord Saye and Sele, did at Hythe in 1449. In any case, there is no evidence that the Portsmen considered the election of the archbishop’s servants an unwelcome occurrence.
Given the economic decline of New Romney, it is no surprise to find that the wages of its MPs often fell into arrears. Most notably, the settlement of Ellis’s wages for the long Parliament of 1453-4 prompted a long and acrimonious dispute that ended in litigation in the court of King’s bench, a quarrel perhaps intensified by his failure to establish personal contacts within the Port. In the first decade of Henry VI’s reign, Romney’s practice of sharing parliamentary representation with Dover, the Port with which it also alternately supplied bailiffs for the Yarmouth herring fair, helped to offset the burden of supporting its barons in the Commons. In 1426, for instance, after the early return of Smith and Harry from Leicester, where the Parliament of that year met, one of the barons for Dover, John Byngley*, continued to represent New Romney and received 30s. for 18 days’ attendance.
Apart from attending the Commons, the MPs for Romney took the opportunity to transact business on behalf of the Cinque Ports in general during their time at Parliaments. The municipal records also show that its jurats sometimes sought documents relating to parliamentary proceedings. In 1429, for example, they paid Thomas atte Crowche*, then one of the Members for Dover, for bringing to Romney copies of the ‘articles’ of the Parliament of that year. They also paid the clerk of the Parliaments 3s. 4d. for copies of the Acts passed in the Parliament of 1432, documents that one might assume, for want of evidence to the contrary, that Romney’s own MPs in that assembly carried home with them.
