The small town of Eye was situated in the north of Suffolk, just off the London-Norwich road, in that part of the county known as High Suffolk. When Sir Philip Skippon† (son of Philip Skippon*) visited the area in 1669, he observed that ‘it consists chiefly of pasture which affords very good butter and indifferent cheese’.
From the early years of its enfranchisement, elections in the borough been open to influence by the crown. The town had regularly been represented by at least one court nominee and it was initially with the backing of the council of the prince of Wales that outsider Francis Finch† was successful in all four elections between 1624 and 1628. The basis for Sir Roger North’s unassailable interest in the borough, which had returned him in the senior place in four of the five elections of the 1620s, is less clear. The town must have had a more compelling reason for choosing him with such regularity than that he owned some estates more than ten miles to the south west. It was enough to ensure North’s election at Eye for a fifth and a sixth time in 1640.
One development in 1640 since the previous election in 1628 was that Sir Frederick Cornwallis*, whose estates at Brome lay just to the north of the town, had come of age. Quite apart from his personal interest in the town, Cornwallis was steward of the honor of Eye and therefore controlled what influence the queen could bring to bear.
Cornwallis soon emerged as one of Charles I’s strongest supporters and at an early stage of the civil war (23 Sept. 1642), after it became known that he was raising forces for the king in Holland, the Commons resolved to ban him from sitting among them as MP for Eye.
Eye was too insignificant to remain enfranchised after the overhaul of the electoral system implemented in 1654 under the 1653 Instrument of Government. It did not regain its two seats until the restoration of the old franchises in 1658. However, as a result of one important development during the 13-year gap between Barrowe’s election and the summoning of Richard Cromwell’s only Parliament, the 1659 election did not follow the traditional pattern. In 1650 the honor of Eye, together with the manor of Eye Hall, had gone on sale as part of Parliament’s disposal of the crown estates and been purchased by the serjeant-at-arms to the council of state, Edward Dendy*.
At the Restoration Dendy was excluded from the 1660 act of indemnity and his lands, at Eye and elsewhere, were confiscated by the crown. From the 1660 election onwards the Cornwallis family was able to reassert its former control, while the main challenge to them was provided by the Reeves of Thwaite, a local royalist family which hitherto had exercised little influence in the borough’s parliamentary elections.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: under 200
