A reasonably prosperous market town, Reigate had only 90 tenements in 1622 but 124 households within the borough were recorded in 1664 as being chargeable for hearth tax, with a further 34 not chargeable.
Monson was already a controversial figure. His ostentatious wedding in 1625 at Reigate parish church to the countess of Nottingham had created a considerable stir locally: his bride, to whom he had once been page, was 15 years older than himself.
At the election in the spring of 1640, three candidates were returned to Parliament. Monson was either unsuccessful or decided not to stand at all. His interest seems to have been represented by Goodwin, although from the latter’s point of view possibly only as an insurance policy against failure elsewhere.
At the poll Bludder headed the list of voters for Thurland in an indenture without signatures but evidently naming leading burgesses, while occupations given for his own supporters in another included a baker, a butcher, a fuller, and a victualler.
Thurland, who made no recorded contribution to the spring Parliament, seems not to have sought re-election in the autumn. Goodwin concentrated successfully on canvassing at East Grinstead. Monson, on the other hand, put himself forward, perhaps confident that unlike fellow candidate Bludder, who was a gentleman of the privy chamber, he would be widely acceptable as an anti-court candidate. In a reassertion of the Howard interest, he was joined by his brother-in-law Sir Francis Howard†, who had sat for New Windsor 30 years earlier and held naval office before retiring to the life of a Surrey country gentleman.
Early in September 1645, the Commons ordered a new election at Reigate to replace Bludder, and the necessary writ was issued on 20 September.
Meanwhile, Monson’s local standing was again eroded. During the rebellion of Henry Rich†, 1st earl of Holland, in the summer of 1648 Reigate briefly experienced its worst fighting of the war. The Derby House Committee, concerned that new defences added by Monson to his residence in the ruined Reigate Castle might attract an enemy garrison, ordered him and the Surrey committee to disable them.
With the advent of the protectorate, Monson lost his offices and was swamped by his debts, so in a weak position to bid for a parliamentary seat and probably to influence elections.
On 7 September 1656 John Goodwyn* was returned to the second protectorate Parliament. In 1648 he had acquired an interest in half the manor of Reigate from his cousin Lord Monson’s stepson, Charles Howard, 3rd earl of Nottingham, and thus may have had a chance to build his profile locally.
On 2 December a writ was issued for a by-election. Six days later a poll was held with two (or two serious) candidates, Colonel Jerome Sankey*, a close associate of Charles Fleetwood* who was endorsed by Goodwyn, and Sir Thomas Pride*, who was also the sheriff. Two indentures were drawn up. One, in which the list of 24 ‘burrissers and ... divers other burgesses of the said borough qualified and prescribed in the government of England, Scotland and Ireland’ was headed by Goodwyn, and to which there were 22 signatories (including only one or two marks), returned Sankey. The other, naming 25 ‘burgesses and inhabitants’, and with identical signatories (a dozen making a mark), returned Pride. However, what seemed like a victory for Pride has the hallmarks of manipulation, perpetrated by himself. The bailiff, John Lyfe the younger, was party only to the Sankey indenture; one signatory to that indenture was not formally listed among the 24 ‘burrissers’ (hinting at economical counting) and there were two John Richardsons, senior and junior, to one of the name in the Pride indenture (hinting at duplication).
On 13 December Bulstrode Whitelocke* reported from the privileges committee that Sheriff Pride had refused to make a return and requested that he be chivvied. John Lambert* excused Pride on grounds of insufficient time – motivated perhaps by antipathy to parliamentary bullying, perhaps by factional considerations (although he employed Goodwyn as steward of his manorial courts).
In 1659 Goodwyn was returned for Bletchingley, where he was probably by then resident. Reigate was represented by John Hele*, who three years earlier had bought the manor of Flanchford from Sir Thomas Bludder and who had close links with crypto-royalists.
Right of election: in the freeholders; in the freeholders and inhabitants 1654 and 1656.
