St Germans, on the River Tiddy in eastern Cornwall, had been a major ecclesiastical centre in the middle ages, thanks to the wealth and importance of its priory. The dissolution of the monasteries brought a rapid decline in the fortunes of the town, which was described by Richard Carew† in the early seventeenth century as having ‘many inhabitants and sundry ruins but little wealth, occasioned either through abandoning their fishing trade, as some conceive, or by their being abandoned of the religious people, as the great sort imagine’.
The death of Sir John Eliot in the Tower of London in 1632 encouraged the rival local families to reassert their position in St Germans. Eliot’s heir, John Eliot*, was a minor at the time of his father’s death, and even in later years did not enjoy the political clout that the family had commanded in the 1620s. The indentures for the Short Parliament elections in the spring of 1640 do not survive, but Eliot was himself returned, and alongside him William Scawen, a local gentleman with connections at court. The duchy of Cornwall, which had never had much influence in the borough, ventured to put forward its own nominee, Francis Palmes, but was ignored.
The election for the Long Parliament proved deeply divisive. The presiding portreeve was George Kekewich*, and in what seems to have been a chaotic contest three MPs were returned: Benjamin Valentine (an old ally of Sir John Eliot who had sat for the constituency in 1628), William Scawen, and the son of another local landowner, John Moyle I (who was probably backed by the Kekewiches and their allies, the Bullers).
I know not what Mr Scawen intends by his vain course of his. I am ashamed that a man that accounts himself a wit should on no matter prosecute a suit so foolishly in such a place. He says he had three or four scot and lot men more than my son. In what he means by it I know not, but think it a device of his own brain to put some colour on a bad business; for all the inhabitants against [i.e. next to] St Germans have time out of mind (that dwell in the king’s borough) had voices as well the poor as the rich and that only scot and lot men should have voices (and none but they) they never heard of, and yet if it were so, my son hath of them more than he.Antony House, Carew-Pole BC/24/2/60.
The Journal does not record the final decision, but it evidently went against Scawen as Moyle was active in the Commons after May 1641, and in June his father again thanked Francis Buller ‘for your great love showed unto me and my son’ - presumably in connection with the electoral dispute.
Benjamin Valentine and John Moyle I were not secluded at Pride’s Purge, and they continued as MPs for St Germans until their deaths in 1651 and 1652 respectively. No by-elections for the borough took place during the remainder of the Rump Parliament. St Germans was disenfranchised under the Instrument of Government in 1653, but reappeared as a constituency in the elections for Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament of 1659. The election indentures, dated 14 January 1659, suggest that the Eliot interest was now at a low ebb. The portreeve was John Moyle II (who seems to have increased his influence in the town), and the MPs returned were the serjeant-at-law and former royalist Sir John Glanville (who may have been backed by his friends, the Edgcumbes of Mount Edgcumbe) and the moderate parliamentarian (and possibly the Moyle candidate), John Seyntaubyn.
Right of election: in the inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: c.40 in 1659
