The borough of Saltash, on the west bank of the River Tamar and the edge of Plymouth Sound, was a town of some commercial and strategic importance, established by the duchy of Cornwall within the manor of Trematon in the thirteenth century.
The Short Parliament elections confirmed the supremacy of the Bullers. The duchy nominated the courtier Henry Wynn*, but the request was ignored and Sir Richard’s sons George Buller and Francis Buller I were returned instead.
The end of the war in the south west brought recruiter elections. As Hyde had been disabled to sit in Parliament in August 1642, and George Buller had died in 1646, on 12 August of the latter year the Commons ordered that a writ be issued to elect two new burgesses for Saltash.
There is very little evidence for the condition of Saltash after the regicide. In August 1650 the mayor and burgesses bought the fee-farm rents of their own town, which suggests a pragmatic reaction to recent events; but there remained a small number of royalists among the inhabitants, and one John Hunkins of Saltash was registered as a suspected person when he visited London in 1656.
In 1660-1 Saltash remained in the hands of the Bullers, with the MPs elected for the Convention and the Cavalier Parliament all being members of that family. The decline of Buller fortunes, with the successful prosecution of Francis Buller I for sedition in 1661, was followed by the ousting of John Buller as recorder of Saltash in August 1662, and the patronage of the borough had passed into other hands by the time that new elections were held in 1679.
Right of election: in the free burgesses and inhabitants
Number of voters: 21 in 1646 and 1659
