The ancient and heavily wooded parish of Downton was situated a few miles to the south-east of the city of Salisbury; much of its own boundary to the south formed the Wiltshire/Hampshire border close to the New Forest.
In the later 1620s the influence of William Herbert, 3rd earl of Pembroke, had been especially evident in the election for Downton of his kinsman Edward Herbert I* (1625, 1626, 1628) and his friend and trustee Sir Benjamin Rudyerd*.
Neither Griffyn nor Eyre made any discernible contribution to proceedings at Westminster. None the less, Griffyn was again chosen in the autumn, which tends to reinforce the possibility that it was to oblige Pembroke. The latter’s younger son William Herbert II*, still a minor and travelling abroad, took the senior place at Downton in an election on 20 October. Following his return to England, however, on 20 November he opted to sit for Monmouthshire, prompting by-elections at both Downton and New Woodstock.
For the time being, Griffyn remained as Downton’s representative, as inconspicuous as before. But perhaps as early as the summer of 1642 he adhered to the king; having attended the Oxford Parliament, he was finally disabled on 4 February 1644.
Directly affected by the confiscation of episcopal lands, those with an interest in Downton seem to have experienced some disadvantages from a lack of representation in Parliament. In February 1647 a William Eyre (plausibly William Eyre II*, whose military career put him in an advantageous position) bought the lease of the mills for £257 5s – a probable indicator of the area’s considerable potential.
Members were not summoned from Downton to the Parliaments of 1653, 1654 and 1656. Damage to the indenture obscures the circumstances surrounding the election to the 1659 Parliament of William Coles and his erstwhile brother-in-law Thomas Fitzjames*, although it appears that a majority of eligible voters signed.
Following the restoration of the Long Parliament, on 7 January 1660 Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper’s 1640 election was finally upheld, whereupon he was called to the House and took his seat; his rival Richard Gorges was by this time 2nd Baron of Dundalk.
Right of election: in the burgage-holders
Number of voters: about 20
