Bodmin (a name derived from the Cornish for ‘dwelling under the hills’) originated as an Anglo-Saxon town serving the monastery founded by St Petrock, and had become a borough by the end of the twelfth century. In the middle ages its wealth was based on its dual role as monastic centre and entrepot of the tin trade, and it retained its importance in the county administration – hosting the quarter sessions and trained band musters, as well as an important weekly market – into the early seventeenth century.
In the elections for the Short Parliament of April 1640, Bodmin returned as its own candidate Richard Prideaux, who was from a local landowning family with interests in the borough (including the right of advowson over the parish church); and perhaps as a compliment to the duchy of Cornwall the corporation also elected the prince’s councillor, Sir Richard Wynne, who had been turned down as a candidate by Lostwithiel.
During the first civil war, Bodmin proved to be an important military and administrative base. In August 1642 the king’s supporters, led by Sir Bevill Grenvile*, mustered their men on the town’s race course, and at the end of September a rival meeting at the town, planned by Sir Richard Buller* and the parliamentarians, was only prevented by the arrival of Sir Ralph Hopton*.
The mayors’ accounts reflect this high level of royalist activity. On 25 September 1642 the borough sent a letter to its MP, John Arundel I, who had sided with the king, and two days later a barrel of gunpowder was purchased and the royalist leader, Sir Bevill Grenvile, entertained in style. At the end of October and the beginning of November 1642 Hopton, Grenvile and the leading royalists were kept well supplied with wine as they prepared their army to advance; and March 1643 saw another round of entertaining.
Bodmin’s status of a royalist stronghold naturally made it a prime target for the parliamentarians. In May 1643 Major-general Chudleigh made an opportunist raid against Bodmin, in the hope of capturing ‘the high sheriff and principal gentlemen of the country’, but his actions left Parliament’s western forces without adequate cavalry and contributed to the defeat at Stratton in the same month.
The electoral history of Bodmin after the first civil war is very confused. John Arundell I had been disabled in January 1644 and had died the following November, and a new writ was issued on 16 December 1646 but not acted upon.
During the late 1640s and 1650s Bodmin returned to normality. Officers and local dignatories (including John, 2nd Baron Robartes, of nearby Lanhydrock) were again entertained by the corporation from the spring of 1648.
In religion, Bodmin was deeply conservative, and it was no surprise that in the mid-1650s it was chosen as the headquarters of the ‘middle classis’ of the Cornish Presbyterian network.
Beneath the outward harmony of civic life, there are occasional signs of underlying discontent. It is interesting that as early as February 1647 there were stories of ‘the prophetess of Bodmin’ who foresaw the restoration of Charles I and upheld the ‘old form of prayer’.
The Perryman family may have been troublemakers, but they were not royalists, and it is unwise to see Bodmin’s conservatism as automatically leading to unconditional support of the Restoration in 1660. The mayor certainly paid out for lavish celebrations of the return of Charles II on three occasions: when the news was heard on 12 May, a bonfire with ‘wine biscuits, beer and tobacco’ was laid on, with gunpowder for the soldiers to fire volleys; when the king returned, on 29 May, beer, tobacco, cakes, wine and prunes were provided; and on the official thanksgiving day on 28 June another bonfire was burned, with similar food and drink and volleys of shot; but this was only a repeat of the threefold celebrations held by Bodmin on the defeat of the same king at Worcester in 1651.
Right of election: in the mayor and capital burgesses
Number of voters: 36
