By the 1630s Devizes was struggling to maintain its pre-eminence among Wiltshire towns after the city of Salisbury. Although in a commanding position at the centre of the county, well-served by roads, it was on the edge of the cloth-making area, badly hit by depression. Unlike some other nearby towns, Devizes had not responded by diversification into the manufacture of medley broadcloth, while the serge and duffel production which was to consolidate its fortunes later in the century was only just being introduced.
The election in October 1630 of Robert Nicholas* to replace as town clerk the redoubtable and recently deceased John Kent†, who had also served as county clerk of the peace and an MP, marked no loss of momentum.
In the meantime, economic distress brought occasional violence in the area, but opposition to government policy was otherwise muted; there were signs of resentment and signs of compliance.
Whatever the balance of opinion in the borough on royal religious and fiscal policy, at the parliamentary election in spring 1640 there was a reassertion of local gentry interests, to the temporary exclusion of the more specifically urban figures characteristic of the later 1620s.
An indication that over the summer of 1640 there was at least some pro-government sentiment among the greater sort in Devizes is provided in the testimony of Thomas Webb, a local clothier, against others accused of speaking against Archbishop William Laud and the king.
In September 1642 the House was petitioned by a servant to the Wiltshire peer and former lord treasurer Francis Cottington, 1st Baron Cottington, who had been imprisoned by the mayor of Devizes ‘upon jealousy of being an intelligencer’ between his master and the north-western royalist James Stanley, Lord Strange.
Between late March 1643 and September 1645 Devizes was continuously under royalist control; its MPs stood indicted of high treason at Salisbury.
In May 1646, following a report from the Committee of the West by Sir John Evelyn of Wiltshire*, the Commons ordered the slighting of the castle and the employment of materials then stored within it for the repair of St John’s church and parsonage; demolition was undertaken mainly in 1648.
Bayntun was excluded at Pride’s Purge. Nicholas survived, but escaped involvement in the king’s trial and was thereafter only occasionally visible in the Commons, As a result a dispute among the heirs of Sir Peter Vanlore over the descent of what remained of Devizes castle and the surrounding park, into which local inhabitants were drawn, languished before the House without resolution.
There are indications that by this time Marlborough was vying to overtake Devizes in importance. In 1653 the former was ranked above the latter in orders of the council of state and correspondence of the county committee.
A rallying point for the militia and army, the town appears to have escaped the worst of the disturbances associated with the Penruddock rebellion, although there are signs of some difficulty filling borough offices.
The courts evidently continued at Devizes, but unofficially. They may have featured in a petition of 11 May 1658 from the mayor and burgesses to the council of state for yet another new charter.
Divisions in the corporation were reflected in a double return to the Convention, resolved in favour of the mayor’s choice even though John Norden* appeared to have ten more voices from the burgesses in a context of some 15 fewer voters.
Right of election: in burgesses
Number of voters: about 114 in 1640; 99 in July 1660
