Situated at the west end of the Marlborough downs on the London-Bristol road, Calne was one of the leading north Wiltshire clothing towns, although it ranked behind nearby Chippenham and Devizes in administrative importance.
The trade depression of the 1620s created unemployment in Calne as elsewhere in the area.
The pattern of early seventeenth century elections had been that one seat went to an outsider and one to a candidate promoted by the holder of one of the two manors.
Among developments over the summer and autumn which may have affected the election on 27 October 1640 was the report in June by the controversial commission which had investigated the state of cloth industry. Calne was among the Wiltshire towns where an industrial corporation was proposed.
Although entries in the stewards’ book testify to the burden of taxation and gaps there to the disruption to normal administration, during the civil wars Calne was subject to passing raids rather than – as more strategically-important north Wiltshire towns – to prolonged occupation.
Calne was not represented in the 1654 and 1656 Parliaments. The 1655 accounts reveal that the borough took the opportunity to renew its charter in the meantime.
Right of election: in the burgesses
Number of voters: about 20 in March 1640
