Despite its small size – it had only 68 householders in the early 1660s – the borough of Corfe Castle was the most important settlement on the Isle of Purbeck, and the centre for the trade in local stone and marble.
The corporation had much to gain from the lordship of Sir John Bankes. In 1635 Bankes used his influence to make sure the Ship Money rate in Dorset fell much more heavily on commercial towns, such as Dorchester, while Corfe paid only £10.
The dispute over Ship Money was not symptomatic of widespread religious or political disaffection in Corfe during the 1630s, and the burgesses seem to have been happy to comply in other respects with the wishes of the Bankes family and the demands of the crown. In the elections for the Short Parliament of April 1640, the queen’s favourite, Henry Jermyn*, was returned with the Bankes’ local ally, Giles Grene. In the Long Parliament elections, Grene was again elected, this time with the secretary of state, Sir Francis Windebanke*.
During the first civil war the castle at Corfe was at first held for the king by Lady Bankes, wife of Sir John, but after his death in December 1644 she travelled to Oxford and then London, leaving her home to be garrisoned by regular royalist troops.
The overt royalism of the borough was no doubt influenced by the castle on its very doorstep. From the summer of 1645, however, Parliament’s imminent victory and the fate of local royalists at the hands of the Dorset sequestration committee seem to have brought a mass defection from the king’s cause – perhaps encouraged by the absence of the Bankes family from the castle. Thus John Dolling surrendered to Parliament in November 1645, ‘whilst his whole estate was under power of the king’s garrison’; and Robert Culliford defected on the strength of promises of indemnity from prosecution.
After the fall of the castle, the borough of Corfe came under the control of the local county committee. On 16 April 1646 the burgesses elected as their new MP the staunch committeeman, Francis Chettell, in the place of Borlase.
The Restoration saw the re-establishment of control over the borough by Sir Ralph Bankes and his family. In April 1660, ‘our beloved and trusty friends’ Bankes and Tregonwell were again elected by the borough.
Right of election: in freeholders and leaseholders paying scot and lot
