In urging the Rump to establish a university at Durham, the county’s inhabitants extolled the virtues of its intended site: ‘the said city of Durham is pleasant, in a wholesome air, upon a sweet river [the Wear] that doth near surround the whole city … it is within seven miles of Sunderland – a navigable port at the mouth of the said river – within 12 miles of Newcastle [upon Tyne]… provisions of all sorts are plentiful and fire-fuel [coal] in abundance’.
By its charter of incorporation (granted by the bishop of Durham in 1602), the city’s government consisted of a mayor, 12 aldermen and 24 common councillors – the latter chosen annually from Durham’s 12 trading guilds.
In the elections to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654, Durham returned Anthony Smith of the civic parish of St Nicholas, who had recently been made an alderman. The election indenture has not survived, and there is no evidence of a contest. Smith probably owed his return to the influence of the corporation and to his status as a leading member of one of Durham’s wealthiest trading guilds, the mercers. His forwardness in the city’s campaign to reinvigorate its courts of justice, and in the cause of establishing a university at Durham, would also have done much to commend him to his fellow freemen.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: 838 in 1678
