Lying ‘in the centre and heart of the shire ... in a most rich, delicate and pleasant soil and delicious air (it wants only a navigable river)’, Leicester was ‘one of the ancientest and greatest towns’ belonging to the duchy of Lancaster and the only borough constituency in Leicestershire.
By its 1589 charter of incorporation, the town was governed by 24 aldermen – from whom a mayor was elected annually – and 48 councilmen. The aldermen were elected from among the councilmen; and the councilmen were elected by aldermen from among the freemen. A further charter in 1599 gave the aldermen the right to appoint a steward, recorder and other municipal officers, which until then had been duchy appointments.
Leicester’s municipal leaders had long been subject to the demands of influential patrons when it came to electing the borough’s MPs. Despite the charters of 1589 and 1599, the duchy of Lancaster continued to exercise a powerful electoral interest in the town – not least because several of the principal duchy offices in Leicestershire, including that of steward of the honour of Leicester, had customarily been held by members of the Hastings family, earls of Huntingdon, who exercised considerable influence in the affairs of both county and borough. Henry Hastings, 5th earl of Huntingdon was not only steward of the town and honour of Leicester, but also lord lieutenant of Leicestershire.
Shortly after the announcement in December 1639 of the summoning of a new Parliament, the chancellor of the duchy, Edward Barrett†, 1st Lord Barrett of Newburgh [I], recommended the Derbyshire gentleman Simon Every*, the duchy’s receiver-general, to the corporation.
At a common hall held on 27 March 1640, the corporation elected Smith and Every, in that order.
With the summoning of the Long Parliament in the autumn of 1640, Newburgh again wrote to the corporation on Every’s behalf – possibly seconded by Huntingdon – while the countess dowager of Devonshire renewed her nomination of Coke.
but it so falls out that neither your lordship’s expectation, nor our own – that be the ancients of the company – was any whit answered, being overswayed with the greater part of voices, which we humbly desire your lordship not to interpret as an act of disrespect to your lordship, whom so many obligations bind us to observe.Leics. RO, BRII/18/22, f. 16; Thompson, Leicester, 361.
This election was the first since the early years of James’s I’s reign in which no Hastings or duchy nominee had been returned for the borough.
Leicester was the scene during the summer of 1642 of a series of clashes between the king (who visited the town in July and August) and his adherents and Leicestershire’s nascent parliamentarian interest, headed by Stamford, for propaganda advantage and possession of the county magazine. That the parliamentarians generally had the better in this struggle and had succeeded by early 1643 in garrisoning Leicester, seems to have owed relatively little to Alderman William Stanley* and other puritans in the corporation. The predominant desire among the municipal officeholders, it seems, was to avoid having to choose sides for as long as conveniently possible. Hastings claimed in January 1643 that most of Leicester’s inhabitants were ‘well affected to the king’, and certainly popular parliamentarianism was not as marked in the town as it was in Northampton, Birmingham or Coventry.
Of the town’s two MPs, Grey of Groby became a staunch parliamentarian, while Coke emerged as a royalist and was disabled from sitting in January 1644. Leicester suffered heavily when it was stormed by the king’s army in May 1645, prompting a parliamentary ordinance, possibly drafted by Grey of Groby, to provide a public benevolence for the town’s relief.
Under the 1653 Instrument of Government, Leicester continued to send two representatives to Westminster. Although the municipal interest was now dominant and the same candidates would be returned to all three protectoral Parliaments, the fact that each election was contested suggests that a divide had emerged within the corporation – probably representing a split between a radical minority that supported Grey of Groby and a more conservative majority that favoured the oligarchical republicanism and puritan orthodoxy epitomised by the Leicestershire parliamentarian grandee Sir Arthur Hesilrige*. This division may have been informed by religious differences, for some of the leading inhabitants acknowledged in 1657 that they were ‘a poor divided people’ as a result of a perceived design to establish a gathered congregation in the town.
A lack of unanimity among the officeholders is also suggested by the fall in the number of voters during the 1650s – most notably in the election to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654. Six candidates contested this election: Hesilrige, Alderman William Stanley, Grey of Groby (who in 1649 had been appointed steward of the honour of Leicester), the Leicestershire soldier and regicide Francis Hacker*, the borough’s ambitious recorder James Winstanley, and Cornelius Burton, a lawyer from Oakham, Rutland.
Of the four candidates who contested the election at Leicester to the second protectoral Parliament in 1656, Hesilrige and Grey were known to be out of favour with the government. Nevertheless, in a poll on 20 August, 59 members of the corporation cast 53 votes for Hesilrige and 42 for Stanley, while Grey doubled his 1654 tally with 22 votes, although he still trailed in third place. That Winstanley received only one vote implies that he had been ‘put up’ by a friend without consultation.
In the elections to Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament of 1659, Hesilrige and Stanley were returned for the borough again, on 3 January 1659. On this occasion, 65 members of the corporation cast 55 votes for Stanley; 51 for Hesilrige; 21 for the Leicestershire Cromwellian, Thomas Pochin*; and just two for the town’s deputy mayor (the elected incumbent having died in office) and ‘senior justice’ Richard Ludlam, who had been an active committeeman during the civil war and had supported Hacker’s candidacy in 1654.
The republican element among the aldermen was strong enough in January 1660 to resist pressure for the corporation to join a group of the county gentry in petitioning General George Monck* for a free Parliament.
Right of election: in the corporation
Number of voters: 72 in 1640 (Oct.) and 1645; 46 in 1654; 59 in 1656; 65 in 1659
