St Ives was a small port on the north coast of Cornwall, protected from the Atlantic by the peninsula known as Pendinas or St Ives Head.
In 1639 the recorder, Sir Francis Bassett, obtained a new charter of the borough, which confirmed its ruling hierarchy, with a mayor, town clerk and corporation of 12 aldermen and 24 burgesses.
St Ives played little part in the early years of the first civil war, and the focus of the town remained very local. In the autumn of 1642, when the Cornish posse comitatus was raised by the sheriff, it was reported that ‘all the west part came out except St Ives (who petitioned for themselves for fear of Ireland)’.
Parliament’s victory appears to have had little impact on St Ives. On 9 February 1647 the Commons ordered that a writ be issued for a new election at the borough to replace Edmund Waller, who had been disabled as a royalist in 1643.
St Ives had lost its right to return MPs under the Instrument of Government of 1653, but with the return of the old franchise under the Humble Petition and Advice, the borough was allowed to elect two Members for Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament. The surviving indentures, dated 31 December 1658, were signed by the mayor, Thomas Sprigge, and nine of the 12 ‘capital burgesses’, and elected Peter Ceely and another local Presbyterian, John Seyntaubyn of Clowance.
Right of election: mayor and capital burgesses
Number of voters: 10 in 1659
