By the seventeenth century Gatton, once ‘a famous town’, was ‘scarce a small village’.
Gatton had first returned Members to Parliament in 1452-3 through the constable of Reigate hundred and ‘with the assent of the whole borough’. The electorate was always small and in 1547 Sir Roger Copley was the only inhabitant and sole voter.
In 1632 Copley, one of whose brothers was a Jesuit operating in London, was pardoned for his recusancy and thus recovered control of some of his lands.
It is perhaps a sign of heightened political tension that matters were otherwise that autumn, although it took more than a year to resolve them. A double return at the election on 23 October 1640 re-opened old controversies. When on 3 November 1641 John Maynard* finally reported from the privileges committee, the return, yet again, of Owfeild was recognised as ‘settled’ – he had in fact appeared in the chamber at the very beginning of the session – but ‘doubts’ had been raised by indentures naming Edmund Saunders and Thomas Sands, a Middle Temple barrister who lived seven miles from Gatton at Randalls, Leatherhead.
All three men went on to support Parliament during the civil war. Owfeild had received a knighthood at the king’s hands, but died at Hull shortly before 4 May 1643 on his way to assist forces under Oliver Cromwell*.
Gatton was disenfranchised under the Instrument of Government. Following Copley’s death in 1643, the manor descended to his granddaughters and their husbands, John and George Weston. They too were recusants, and following the sequestration of their estates, between 1650 and 1654 they joined in selling Gatton to Thomas Turgis*, a very wealthy London merchant.
After elections for the third protectorate Parliament, in an indenture of 24 January 1659 ‘the inhabitants and burgesses of Gatton’, who included Edmund Shoe and constable Gabriel Ainscombe, returned Turgis with Edward Bysshe II*, Garter king of arms, who had previously sat for Bletchingley and Reigate.
The incident was seized on by Members of the House who wished to discredit the army – among them Richard Knightley*, William Bulkeley* and Sir Arthur Hesilrige.
Once Audley had withdrawn from the chamber, witness came forward to contradict his account. Facing Bysshe’s insults, Audley was alleged to have said that ‘he would right himself as a gentleman’, while ‘he had called Mr Turgis a base stinking fellow and a shit-breech’.
Oldfield returned to Westminster in February or March 1660 with other Members of the Long Parliament.
Right of election: in the inhabitant freeholders
Number of voters: c.14
