Camelford, situated where the main road crossed the River Camel in north Cornwall, had been part of the duchy of Cornwall since the fourteenth century. It had declined in importance by the beginning of the seventeenth century, however, and was described as ‘a market and fair (but not fair) town’, and, despite its parliamentary privileges, ‘yet steppeth little before the meanest sort of borough for store of inhabitants, or the inhabitants’ store’.
The first civil war seems to have little impact on Camelford. The town was periodically occupied by the opposing armies as they marched through north Cornwall. It was, for example, the headquarters of the royalists for a few days in September 1642, and was held briefly by Lord Hopton (Sir Ralph Hopton*) in February 1646 before he retreated back to Truro, where his troops surrendered to Parliament.
With the dissolution of the Rump Parliament in April 1653, Camelford was disenfranchised, and it was not until the third protectorate Parliament in 1659 that the borough again held elections. The return was made on 15 January, with the ‘mayor and commonalty’, led by the new mayor, Benjamin Gayer, electing the serjeant-at-law, John Maynard, and the local administrator and militia commander, William Braddon. Both were safe candidates, expected to support the protectoral regime. Nearly half the signatories of the indenture had also signed the return in 1647, suggesting that the borough had experienced no further upsets during the interregnum.
Right of election: in the burgesses and freeholders or commonalty
Number of voters: 14 in Mar. 1640; 14 in April 1647; 11 in Jan. 1659
