Penryn was a little port town at the head of Falmouth Harbour, with an anchorage protected by the twin castles of St Mawes and Pendennis. At the beginning of the seventeenth century it was less prosperous than its inland neighbour, Truro, and Richard Carew† described it as ‘rather passable than notable for wealth, buildings and inhabitants’.
The corporation was also tightly-knit. Under the charter of 1621, the borough was to be governed by a mayor, with 11 other aldermen and 12 ‘assistants’.
By 1640 the Killigrew influence had also declined, and this explains the confused nature of the two elections in that year. On 26 March 1640 the wealthy local landowner (and sometime courtier) Sir Richard Vyvyan was elected by 12 voters, probably on his own interest, and he was joined by Joseph Hall, son of the bishop of Exeter.
During the first civil war, Penryn sided with the king, although only a handful of the burgesses were active royalists.
The ruling elite of Penryn reacted to the regicide and interregnum with equanimity. Indeed, the survival of the status quo appears to have been their primary concern during the whole of the 1650s. This can perhaps be detected in sundry entries in the mayors’ accounts: in 1654 the serjeants’ cloaks were trimmed; in 1655 the pulpit cloth and other linen for the church were renewed; in October of the same year the serjeants’ cloaks were again refurbished; and in 1657-8 two shillings were spent on ‘cleansing the cucking pool’.
Penryn’s loyalty may have encouraged the authorities to continue its position as a parliamentary borough when other Cornish towns were disenfranchised. On the death of Bamfylde in April 1650, Penryn had been left without any representative in the Commons, but on 9 March 1653, when the Rump debated the form of future Parliaments, it was resolved that the borough should be allowed one MP despite the wholesale abolition of borough seats that was planned.
The collapse of the protectorate put the Penryn corporation in an extremely awkward position. Although John Fox was treated to a ‘welcoming home’ party in June 1659, the next month the corporation was just as keen to entertain Richard Lobb* – a local landowner and merchant with strong ties to the new commonwealth regime. In the spring of 1660 the mayor and aldermen were anxious to welcome the restored monarchy with suitable fervour, proclaiming Charles II no less than three times –in May and June and August.
Right of election: in the mayor, aldermen and (in the 1650s) inhabitants
Number of voters: 12 in Mar. 1640; 17 in July 1654
