A parliamentary borough since the middle ages, Helston owed its prosperity to its dual role as market town for the Lizard peninsula and entrepôt for the tin trade of western Cornwall. In 1642 it had a population of perhaps 1,000, and 20 years later it could boast 17 houses with five or more hearths.
During the first civil war, Helston was necessarily brought into the royalist fold, but there was an underlying lack of enthusiasm for the cause, despite the devotion to the king displayed by the Godolphins. A significant number of the inhabitants were ardent supporters of the crown, including George Collins, who fought for the king in 1644-5, and Francis and Thomas Robinson, who were officers in the Scilly garrison under Francis Godolphin I.
The second civil war of May 1648 saw a royalist uprising in western Cornwall, centred on neighbouring Penzance. The ‘Gear rout’ (as it became known) threw Helston into confusion, as, according to one townsman, ‘we were suddenly in great fears and dangers’, and ‘our cavaliers had vapoured most terribly’, and threatened to rise up and take the town. It was said that the ringleaders included ‘John Pierce, who was sergeant under [George] Collins, [who] had warned all the rogues to be ready at an hour’s call, and had listed 40’.
During the 1650s Helston seems to have returned to its quiet pursuit of profit. The town remained a centre for local government, with the county sequestrations committee meeting there in July 1650, and the pressing officers operating from there in the summer of 1653.
During the Restoration period the borough’s parliamentary patronage dissolved into chaos. In the elections for the Convention in April 1660 a resurgent Killigrew interest, supported by George Monck*, was challenged by the existing patrons, represented by Anthony Rous and the former parliamentarian townsman, Alexander Penhellick, in a double return so complicated that the election was declared void. In July, when the resultant by-election was held, Francis Godolphin I increased the confusion by re-emerging as a third force in the borough. Later in the 1660s the Godolphins were able to regain their dominance over Helston, and this set the electoral pattern for the rest of the century.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: c.28 in 1659
