Westbury, a centre of the north-west Wiltshire clothing industry since the later fifteenth century, was by 1600 home to several substantial clothier families, including the Whitakers, Phippses, Adlams and Benetts, who also accumulated property in the surrounding area. The borough had first sent representatives to Parliament in 1448, but it had never received a charter of incorporation. The parish, which was co-terminous with the hundred, contained about ten manors, all with burgage tenements. The holders of these seem to have been the ‘burgesses’ referred to in election returns along with the mayor, who first appeared in 1571. The number of these burgages and the usual number of voters is unclear, although there were 61 of the former in 1715 and 22 of the latter in 1678.
In the early seventeenth century the lord of the capital manor, James Ley, created earl of Marlborough, held a majority of the other manors and exercised a dominating influence in favour both of family members and of outsiders.
The cloth trade depression of the 1620s and the deeply-resented government commission of enquiry of the 1630s almost certainly contributed to the preference of voters on 2 April 1640 for John Ashe*. A prominent opponent of the policies of the personal rule of Charles I, by introducing new draperies he had done much to reverse unemployment in Wiltshire and his native Somerset. Mayor John Greenhill made the return in the presence of only two witnesses, but it seems likely that representatives of the clothier oligarchy – for example the Phippses, who held the manor of Westbury Mauduits – played a key part.
The indenture for the autumn election is no longer legible.
In Philip Hunton, instituted as vicar of Westbury in 1641, the MPs had a potential ally through the 1640s. Like them, the political theorist combined staunch Presbyterianism and commitment to making the parliamentary cause work with a readiness to negotiate peace.
Many of your worships being corn masters, you have contrary to our former just petition granted licence (by underhand mediating of subtle caterpillars) to such as have great means and other trades to live to make malt, by reason whereof we are constrained to certify ... you have (as we fear for your own ends) rather aggravated than exgenuated our miseries.
Their particular request was that Thomas Bennet, magistrate, clothier and at this point holder of the rectory, would ‘bind over the mayor, constables of the hundred, the ministers and the rest of the most sufficient’ to appear for examination. A number of signatories then hastened to repudiate their involvement, apologising for the ‘calumnies’ perpetrated, but unrest persisted.
As evident in a petition from 250 inhabitants in 1662, economic hardship was still an issue after the Restoration, but the 1650s appear to have ushered in a period of relative calm.
Like most other Wiltshire boroughs, Westbury was not represented again in Parliament until 1659. At the election, probably on 4 December 1658, mayor Henry Bolton and at least seven others returned the new lord of the manor, Sir John’s son-in-law Robert Danvers alias Villiers*, and William Eyre II*, a member of a notable county family who had experience in Parliament and local administration, and backing from central government.
Right of election: in the ‘mayor and burgesses’
