Derby by the Restoration period was ‘a very large, populous, well-frequented and rich borough town – few inland towns equalising it’.
The electoral convention at Derby since the Elizabethan period had been for the townsmen to select one MP and the town’s high steward to nominate the other.
Allestrye and Hallowes stood for Derby again in the elections to the Long Parliament in the autumn of 1640, but on this occasion they faced stiff competition from two local gentry: Christopher Fulwoode and Thomas Gell*. Although Fulwoode and Gell would take opposite sides in the civil war – Fulwoode for the king, Gell for Parliament – both were lawyers and members of locally influential gentry networks.
In mid-December 1640, Allestrye informed Fulwoode that ‘he was so tender of the welfare of the town’ he would yield to any ‘indifferent motion’ in order to preserve the mayor and corporation from legal action and the censure of the House. Hallowes was less conciliatory, but agreed that he would yield to whatever the mayor and aldermen decided. Fulwoode suggested a compromise – he would withhold his allegations of illegal electoral practice and thereby save the mayor from likely imprisonment by the Commons, if Allestrye and Hallowes would not contest the case when it came before the committee of privileges. Fulwoode was hoping that if Allestrye and Hallowes offered no defence of their return the committee would simply endorse himself and Gell as the properly elected Members. What he wished to avoid was another election, fearing that he and Gell had lost ground among the freemen since November. Fulwoode’s patron, the Nottinghamshire peer and future royalist, Philip Stanhope, 1st earl of Chesterfield, sent his servants to the town in an effort to shore up his nominee’s support among the freemen. However, as Fulwoode informed Gell,
the mayor and others, as I hear, have gotten so many common burgesses to subscribe to choose townsmen if a new election happens that I profess we can with no safety promise any assurance to ourselves. Therefore our only course must be to draw it to a friendly conclusion if we can, or else to use all means to make our first election stand.Derbys. RO, D258/17/31/8.
The committee of privileges reported the case on 25 March 1641, whereupon the House resolved that a new election be held for the town.
The civil war divided the town’s MPs, with Allestrye ending up in the king’s camp and Hallowes emerging as a leading figure among the Derbyshire parliamentarians. Derby was garrisoned for Parliament by Sir John Gell in the autumn of 1642, and by the end of that year the townsmen had contributed or lent £1,351 in cash and £669 in plate to the parliamentarian war-effort.
The factional quarrel between Sir John Gell and Sanders that divided the county’s political and military leaders from 1644 would spill over into municipal affairs again the following year, during the recruiter election at Derby to replace Allestrye. The vacant seat was contested by Thomas Gell and one of the town’s aldermen, Robert Mellor. Though ‘a very cordial man to the Parliament’, Mellor was a long-standing opponent of the Gells.
The contest in the Derby recruiter election was triggered by a Commons order of 1 September 1645 for issuing a writ to elect a new Member in Allestrye’s place.
By the time the precept was sent down to the town again, in November 1645, the county sheriff was Sir George Gresley, a friend of the Gells, and the new mayor of Derby was Gervase Bennett*, a leading member of the anti-Gell faction among the Derbyshire parliamentarians.
The Derby recruiter election was held on 12 November 1645 – two months after the precept had been sent to the town. When Mayor Bennett arrived at the town hall that morning he was reportedly confronted by Sir John Gell and his followers – many of whom were ‘malignants’ according to Alderman John Dallton* – who broke into ‘tumultuous’ cries of ‘a Gell, a Gell’.
The poll was taken by the town’s steward together with one of Gell’s tenants and servants, Henry Buxton, and was a more than usually fractious affair.
At the conclusion of polling Gell had 170 votes and Mellor 149 – which, given the closeness of the result, is hard to reconcile with the claim that the election was decided by the ‘ruthless exercise of military power’.
After Gell’s departure, Bennett conferred with the committeemen and then ordered the names of some of Gell’s supporters struck out of the poll book on grounds of non-residence and other pretexts, and declared Mellor the winner.
The committee of privileges devoted many hours to the Derby election dispute during the second half of 1646, yet apparently failed to report its findings to the House.
Despite its status as a county capital, Derby lost one of its parliamentary seats under the Instrument of Government, and in the elections to both the first and second protectoral Parliaments it returned Bennett.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: 319 in 1645
