By 1100 Old Sarum, which had ancient origins as a hill-fort, boasted a castle, a cathedral and a mint. By about 1130 it had a market and a charter. The latter was renewed in 1229, but the town had already begun an inexorable decline. Nine years earlier the bishop had moved his seat to Salisbury, where water was easier to come by. In the sixteenth century no vestiges of the cathedral or episcopal palace remained and the castle was in ruins, while the town walls were demolished in the early seventeenth century.
Even as the settlement contracted, it became established as a parliamentary borough, returning Members intermittently from 1295 and regularly from the early fifteenth century. The franchise came to be held by the owners of freehold burgage tenements in the old city. Although there were briefly 10 or 11 voters in the mid-1620s, there averaged a mere handful for most of the seventeenth century, including during this period when, excepting in 1658, all signed the election indenture. The number of residents was negligible and the borough already notorious for inappropriate enfranchisement.
In the later sixteenth century the dominant electoral patrons had been the Herbert earls of Pembroke, seated three miles away at Wilton House. Their hegemony was undermined, however, following the grant of the freehold of the castle and grounds to Robert Cecil†, 1st earl of Salisbury in 1606. Since this also conveyed the right to nominate the borough bailiff, who in the absence of any other borough officers acted as returning officer, the Cecils acquired a significant influence on elections. In the 1610s and 1620s relations between William Herbert, 3rd earl of Pembroke, and William Cecil*, 2nd earl of Salisbury, deteriorated as they both sought to court the burgesses, especially the puritan lawyer Henry Sherfield†, recorder of Salisbury. At some elections Pembroke managed to get two candidates returned; at others, including in 1628, he only secured one of his nominees.
The three burgesses who signed on 23 March 1640 the indenture returning MPs to the Short Parliament – John Bowles, John Young and John Orchard – appear to have accepted a compromise.
A similar balance of interests was apparent in the autumn. On 1 October the same trio of voters as in the spring, with three others, again chose Herbert, but this time with Salisbury’s second son, Robert Cecil*, who had failed to gain a seat in the family’s heartland of Hertfordshire.
Pembroke’s interest at Old Sarum disappeared with Savile. An order for a writ of election to replace him, issued on 30 September 1645, registered that he was disabled from sitting, although he had actually died early in 1644.
Like many Wiltshire boroughs, Old Sarum did not send Members to Parliament again until January 1659. On that occasion the electors and their choice reflected the considerable shifts in landownership and political influence that had taken place in the area over the previous decade. One signatory to the indenture, William Bowles, belonged to a family which had voted in every election during this period; the other five were newcomers. The successful candidates were Richard Hill*, a member of the Salisbury corporation who had acquired first the lease and then the freehold of Stratford Dean manor, former dean and chapter land adjacent to Old Sarum castle, and William Ludlowe*, cousin of the regicide Edmund Ludlowe II*, who lived at nearby Clarendon Park, a former royal estate. Both had been active in the militia or army and in local government; both were likely to have had support from the protectorate regime. Hill reached London only to die there. A by-election was announced on 12 February, but no conclusive action appears to have been taken before the Parliament was dissolved.
Right of election: in the burgesses
Number of voters: 3 to 6
