Cornwall, ‘being cast out into the sea, with the shape of a horn’, was one of the most remote counties in England, sharing a land border only with Devon.
During the 1630s the Cornish gentry remained more or less united. Support for puritanism was confined to a few clergymen, a handful of families such as the Bullers, Robartes, Rouses and Boscawens, and to isolated towns such as Launceston, and was prevented from becoming politically dangerous by the sympathetic attitude of the bishop of Exeter, Dr Joseph Hall.
The king’s commission of array of June 1642 brought matters to a head, and the Cornish gentry divided almost equally into two factions, which struggled to implement the commission of array and the parliamentarian Militia Ordinance respectively.
With both Grenvile and Carew dead, in September 1646 Parliament issued a warrant for fresh elections for knights of the shire, and on 21 December two Presbyterians, Hugh Boscawen and Nicholas Trefusis, were returned.
The dominance of the radicals was not to last. The protectorate, created in December 1653, promised to be a more moderate government, and one eager to broaden its support in the localities. This encouraged former Presbyterians to re-enter the local administration as the decade continued. It is telling that the most active magistrates in mid-1650s included former Presbyterians like Antony Nicoll and Thomas Gewen as well as Robert Bennett and his ally Richard Lobb* and the Cromwellian governor of Pendennis Castle, Captain John Fox*.
Under the Instrument of Government, Cornwall was allowed to return eight MPs, and this allowed different interests to be represented, apparently by prior agreement. In 1654 this meant the election of local administrators like James Launce, Thomas Ceely, Richard Carter and Anthony Rous alongside Nicoll and Gewen, who at this stage were staunch critics of the protectorate. The remaining two seats went to relatives of men who refused to countenance the new regime: Walter Moyle, son of John Moyle I, and Charles Boscawen, brother of Hugh. The indenture, signed on 12 July, named only a handful of minor gentlemen as electors, suggesting that this was a deal between the different interests, rather than an election that received the support of the leading Cornish families.
In 1656 there was an attempt to manage the elections by the major-generals across the country, but John Disbrowe*, who oversaw Cornwall, was less zealous than most of his colleagues, and the county representation remained very similar to that in 1654. No indenture survives, but from other sources it is apparent that five of the 1654 MPs were returned in 1656: Carter, Ceely, Nicoll, Moyle and Anthony Rous. Four of these five were acceptable to the state: Nicoll was now a supporter of the protectorate, Carter would become a kingling, Ceely and Rous were local office holders. Only Moyle was to be excluded from sitting by the council of state. The new MPs were two active local supporters of the regime, William Braddon and John Seyntaubyn, and the veteran MP and former speaker, Francis Rous, who was also a member of the protectoral council. The elections for the third protectorate Parliament of January 1659, under Richard Cromwell’s* protectorate, reverted to their traditional form, without the option of the council excluding those of whom it disapproved, and the two knights of the shire returned were the former county MP Hugh Boscawen and Francis Buller II*, son of Francis Buller I*. The choice reflected not only the need for members of established families to represent the county, but also the dominance of the Presbyterian interest.
The collapse of the protectorate saw the re-emergence of commonwealthsmen like Bennett and Lobb, but locally, at least, they were content to push for traditional policies, with both men using their influence at Westminster to remove the tax on pilchards and the new customs on the tinners, as well as the settlement of the stannaries, during the summer of 1659.
