Guildford, situated on the River Wey 30 miles south of London, received its first recorded charter in 1257. This confirmed it as the county town and as the location of assizes.
In the seventeenth century Guildford was described as ‘a market town well-frequented and full of fair inns’.
The borough had been represented regularly in Parliament since 1295, although the extent of the franchise remained fluid.
By early 1640 Poynings More*, who had been one of the borough’s MPs in 1628, was experiencing financial difficulties and living outside the area; his sights were set, if anywhere, on election at Haslemere.
Parkhurst made little visible contribution to the ensuing parliamentary session, and Abbott none. Nonetheless, attachment to their families was sufficient to see both again returned at the poll on 19 October. Once again, Abbott was an apparently inactive Member. By spring 1641 his whole family faced financial ruin and his attention was elsewhere. On 11 June, when it was noted that he had ‘absented himself these two months’ from Parliament, Surrey grandee Sir Richard Onslow* moved that he should be ‘put forth’ unless he attended the following day.
While Abbott appears to have skulked at the margins of the Commons for four more years, Parkhurst became quite active in Irish affairs in the first few years of the Parliament and was added in March 1642 to the committee for the supply of gunpowder, of which (the now knighted) Sir John Evelyn of Surrey* was chair, and in which Guildford constituents had an interest.
Parkhurst seems largely to have absented himself from Parliament after clashing with radicals in the House on 8 September 1643; excused attendance because of illness in 1647 and in 1648, he did not sit at all after Pride’s Purge.
Stoughton’s death early in March 1648 led to a second by-election, probably also affected by continuing local dissensions and taking place in the context of royalist insurrection in the county. The writ was ordered on 6 May.
The election dispute may have been one catalyst for the decision by the corporation on 4 September to seek clarification of the qualifications for admission to the ranks of freemen. On 2 October eligibility was defined in terms of those who had served apprenticeships, the eldest sons of freemen, and certain people who had paid fines. However, it seems to have taken until January 1655 to specify formally who the individuals concerned might be.
By this time the freemen had already exercised their rights at another election, on 14 July 1654, for one seat in the first protectorate Parliament. Their preoccupations were apparent in a petition of 5 April from the mayor, John How, and 26 others – most identifiable as leading members of the corporation – which appealed to the protector to guarantee the observation of clauses in the Wey navigation act of 1651. According to the signatories, contrary to the act, the ‘undertakers’ of the project had diverted the construction of wharves away from the borough itself to nearby Stoke, to the potential impoverishment of the former.
By the time of the next election in 1656, Guildford leaders may have been hoping for a more powerful representative. Before early February 1655, the contractor for saltpetre in the counties of the south east complained that he had encountered obstruction from the borough, suggesting that there were wider concerns to protect local commercial interests.
The election for the third protectorate Parliament, as elsewhere, saw the re-emergence of more traditional representatives. The senior seat was taken by Carew Ralegh*, who lived a few miles away at Horsley and who had previously sat for Haslemere; his junior partner was Robert Parkhurst*, son of Sir Robert, taking up again the family interest. Both were probably covert royalists, but while Parkhurst made no visible contribution to proceedings, in Ralegh – for this brief session – Guildford almost certainly had its most energetic and able MP during this period.
With the re-assembly of the Rump in May 1659, Ralegh once again sat for Haslemere. Sir Robert Parkhurst was dead and there is no evidence as to whether or not Henry Weston resumed his seat when excluded Members of the Long Parliament came back to Westminster in February 1660.
Right of election: in the freemen and inhabitants
Number of voters: 29 in 1654
