The town of Wisbech was one of the two centres of population within the Isle of Ely, the other being Ely itself. Located on the River Nene, on the border between Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, Wisbech was a port with good access to the sea; Samuel Pepys† thought it ‘a pretty town’.
Wisbech fell within the liberty of Ely, the semi-autonomous jurisdiction which had been ruled by the bishops of Ely, who had also been the most important landowners in the area. The town had thus formed part of the new county constituency of the Isle of Ely, created by the Instrument of Government in 1653. The two elections held for the Ely seats in 1654 and 1656 had taken place at Wisbech. On both occasions, one of the successful candidates was the secretary of state, John Thurloe*, perhaps the most notable resident in the town’s history. The Thurloe family had probably originated at Landbeach, a village between Cambridge and Ely, near enough for Thurloe to claim a tenuous link with the area. The disposal of the lands of the bishops of Ely in 1649 brought the manor of Wisbech Barton onto the market and Thurloe bought it from its two initial purchasers.
The Wisbech election writ sent to the sheriff of Cambridgeshire in December 1658, together with a passing reference in the corporation records, provide the only information on why the town was represented in the 1659 Parliament. According to the writ, its burgesses had been granted the right to elect one MP to all future Parliaments by letters patent issued by Oliver Cromwell* under the great seal on 29 July 1658.
The election authorised by this writ was held at Wisbech on 6 January 1659. The corporation had earlier instructed the town bailiff to summon the burgesses to the town hall on that day between 8 and 11am for the election meeting.
The whole exercise turned out to be pointless. Thurloe had already been elected for both Huntingdon borough and Cambridge University, and, when the new Parliament met, he informed the Commons that he had decided to sit for the university. It was immediately ordered that a new writ be issued for Huntingdon.
Right of election: probably in the householders.
Number of voters: at least 29.
