Positioned high on an escarpment above the vale of Blackmore in north Dorset, and a major staging-post on the main western road from London to Cornwall, Shaftesbury was a borough of some strategic importance.
After the dissolution, Shaftesbury came under the seigneurial influence of the Herberts, earls of Pembroke, who purchased the abbey lands and the lordship of the manor in 1553.
The franchise at Shaftesbury lay in the mayor, burgesses and commonalty.
Shaftesbury’s role in the civil war was determined by its position on the main road between London and the west, and the unfortified town was repeatedly taken and re-taken by the rival sides. In 1644 Shaftesbury was held by royalists in August, became Sir William Waller’s* headquarters in September, and reoccupied by the king in October.
Parliament’s victory brought further problems for the town, as the ill-disciplined brigade of Major-general Edward Massie* was quartered in the area during the summer of 1646. On 3 July 1646 William Whitaker joined a prominent Shaftesbury burgess, William Hussey, in presenting a complaint to the quarter sessions about the conduct of Massie’s troops.
George Starre’s death in October 1647 precipitated a new election after barely a year, and at a time when the role of the New Model army in politics had polarized opinion nationally.
During the late 1640s and the 1650s, the religious and political polarity of Shaftesbury lent the town a reputation for disorder and even disloyalty. After the expulsion of the Rump in April 1653, the council of state was suspicious of the influence of both radical sectaries and crypto-royalists in the town. Unrest was reported in August 1653, when Major-general John Disbrowe* wrote from Shaftesbury that he feared an insurrection in Somerset and Dorset led by one ‘Major Fry’ – possibly the former MP, John Fry.
After years of exclusion under the Instrument of Government, Shaftesbury regained its franchise in the elections for Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament in 1659. In Dorset the moderate Presbyterian party led by Ashley Cooper and Fitzjames targeted support in boroughs such as Shaftesbury. Fitzjames solicited the support of James Baker, William Chaldecott, the recorder Henry Whitaker* and a ‘Mr Hurman’ of Shaftesbury in the county election in December 1658.
Right of election: mayor, burgesses and commonalty
