In common with the other three Berkshire parliamentary boroughs, Wallingford’s prosperity had always depended on its location on the Thames. It had been represented in Parliament since 1295. By the seventeenth century, however, it had long been outperformed by the neighbouring towns of Abingdon and Reading, and there was little doubt that it was now, by some margin, the least wealthy of the Berkshire boroughs.
The two men elected to the Short Parliament had both represented Wallingford previously. Dunch was the head of a local gentry family and Unton Croke I* was a prominent Oxford lawyer who had represented the constituency in 1626.
Once the fighting started between the king and Parliament, Howard unambiguously supported the king and in January 1644 he sat in the Oxford Parliament. He thereby became one of those MPs expelled from Parliament by order of the Commons on 22 January 1644.
Until then, royalist occupation had prevented the Commons from authorising ‘recruiter’ elections to fill the parliamentary vacancy at Wallingford. A new writ for an election to replace Howard was moved on 15 September 1646 and then issued on 5 November.
Wallingford was one of the two Berkshire boroughs that lost their right to elect MPs under the terms of the 1653 Instrument of Government.
The elections in 1660 and 1661 enabled Packer to return to Westminster for his old constituency and in the first of those elections he was elected along with Dunch’s son, Hungerford†. The 1661 election had the character of unfinished business from 1648 and the years in-between. Packer’s opponents attempted to purge the corporation of the beneficiaries of the 1648 purge, headed by Cooke who was now serving his third term as mayor. When that attempt failed, Packer was re-elected, but one of those opponents, George Fane*, gained the other seat.
Right of election: in the freemen.
Number of voters: not known.
