Despite its convenient location in the middle of Staffordshire and its status as a county town, Stafford was in decline for much of the seventeenth century. Unlike Lichfield, 15 miles to the south (and described in 1612 as ‘more large and of far greater fame’), Stafford did not lie on a major road and was too distant from the burgeoning Birmingham manufacturing zone to profit from the increased demand for foodstuffs.
Stafford’s economy was sustained by its role as the county’s administrative centre and the business generated by its markets for agricultural produce.
Stafford’s electoral affairs during the 1620s had been dominated by the corporation and by the town’s high steward (and Staffordshire’s lord lieutenant), the future parliamentarian general Robert Devereux, 3rd earl of Essex, whose residence at Chartley lay about nine miles from the borough.
Weston’s election presents no such mystery. His family had settled at Rugeley, about seven miles east of Stafford, and he was appointed the town’s recorder at some point early in 1640, when the corporation sent him and his father Sir Simon Weston†, one of the barons of the exchequer, a present of veal and mutton.
Both of Stafford’s MPs sided with the king at the outbreak of civil war – Sneyde receiving his commission of horse at the hands of the king himself.
Stafford, from the royalists’ perspective, was ‘the key of Yorkshire unto Oxford’.
With both of Stafford’s MPs having deserted Parliament, the corporation apparently relied on Brereton to advance the town’s interests at Westminster for much of the civil war.
The Stafford ‘recruiter’ election was held in the guildhall on 25 October 1645, and although Brereton himself was not present there was no shortage of officers, including Captain Stone, eager to oversee or interfere in what by rights was a purely municipal matter.
The Stafford recruiter election represented a mixed blessing in Brereton’s view – as he confided to the Independent grandees Edmund Prideaux I* and John Lisle*. Swynfen he thought a ‘very choice, able man, who will be very serviceable to the kingdom’. Leigh, however, would require careful handling once at Westminster
in regard he hath been all along mispossessed of a rotten faction and prejudiced against those faithful men that with much struggling have been a means to preserve the Parliament’s interest in that county [Staffordshire], and in regard he comes into power by those that are not best affected and may possibly be engaged in opposition to Mr Swynfen by those who may conceive displeasure at his carrying it [in the first poll] against Sir Charles Shirley ... I shall use my endeavour the more to gain Colonel Leigh to a right understanding, in regard I take him to be a religious gentleman; and, if he prosecute right courses, he will have a very respective assistant of [sic] his fellow burgess [Swynfen].Brereton Letter Bks. ii. 216.
Brereton thought that there might be grounds to question the election, ‘which had it been free and fairly carried, there had been brought in a most precious, excellent man [Skeffington]’. But in the end, he seems to have decided that the result could have been worse and took the matter no further.
Shirley’s supporters were less easily assuaged and petitioned the committee of privileges against Swynfen’s return. Their main charge was that Swynfen’s party had pressured the voters ‘by the influence of many gentlemen and the soldiery’ and by ‘threats, menaces and rewards’. They produced witnesses to testify that some of the freemen had switched their votes from Shirley to Swynfen because they felt intimidated by Foxall and Stone; that Swynfen’s party had treated the freemen with beer and tobacco; and that some of the freemen, having left the guildhall after the final shout on the assumption that Shirley and Leigh would be elected, had been refused re-admission by Foxall’s men when they had discovered that the election was still in progress. The committee of privileges was not convinced, however, and on 24 April 1646 it resolved that Swynfen was duly elected.
Both Swynfen and Leigh were excluded at Pride’s Purge in December 1648, leaving Stafford without formal representation in the Rump. The town retained one of its seats under the Instrument of Government of 1653, and in the elections to the first protectoral Parliament on 12 July 1654 it returned the judge who had presided at Charles I’s trial, John Bradshawe. Although a Cheshire man by birth, Bradshawe had close connections with Staffordshire and with Stafford. The corporation had retained him as its legal counsel in 1639-40, and the following year he had been appointed steward of Newcastle-under-Lyme, where (in the words of his patron Brereton) he was ‘esteemed amongst all the honest and sufficient men in the town’.
In the elections to the second protectoral Parliament, Stafford returned the wealthy London merchant and principal money-lender to the Cromwell family, Martin Noell, on 19 August 1656. Noell had been born in Stafford, and at some point during the 1650s he founded ‘a fair hospital’ and almshouses in the town – which doubtless did him no harm with the voters.
Stafford regained its two seats in the elections to Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament of 1659, and on 3 January the town returned Noell and William Jessop.
Stafford was represented in the 1660 Convention by Swynfen and the former Cromwellian grandee Sir Charles Wolseley*, and it was not until the elections to the Cavalier Parliament the following year that the voters returned men of clearly royalist sympathies.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: 141 in 1645
