Preston was described in the 1670s as ‘a great, fair and well inhabited and frequented borough town’.
Preston was governed by a corporation comprising a mayor, two bailiffs and a common council consisting of 12 ‘principal burgesses’ (or aldermen) and 12 other ‘capital burgesses’. The mayor and one of bailiffs were elected annually by 24 of ‘the more worthy and discreet inhabitants’, who were themselves elected by two inhabitants who had been chosen by the mayor and capital burgesses. The new mayor appointed the second bailiff, who also served on an annual basis. Although not stipulated in the town’s charters, the convention by the early seventeenth century was apparently for the mayor to be ‘elected’ on a seniority basis from among the aldermen.
The corporation’s officers were responsible for governing the town’s ‘guild merchant’ – that is, the institution regulating admission to the freeman body. Every 20 years there would be a guild festival lasting several days at which all freemen were enrolled as guild members.
The borough’s principal electoral patron during the Jacobean and early Caroline Parliaments had been the chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, who had sometimes nominated carpetbaggers to both seats.
Shuttleworthe and Standish were returned for the borough again in the elections to the Long Parliament in the autumn of 1640, but the indenture has been lost. Standish died in October 1642, and Shuttleworthe emerged as one of Lancashire’s leading parliamentarians. Preston itself changed hands on numerous occasions during the civil war. Garrisoned for the king by the earl of Derby and Sir Gilbert Hoghton* late in 1642, it was captured by the parliamentarians in February 1643, retaken by the royalists in March, seized for a second time by the parliamentarians in April and then briefly held by Prince Rupert in June 1644.
On 14 October 1645, the Commons ordered that a writ be issued to elect a Member for Preston in place of the deceased Thomas Standish.
Preston lost one of its parliamentary seats under the Instrument of Government, and in the elections to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654 it returned Shuttleworthe. The indenture has not survived. In the elections to the second protectoral Parliament, the town again returned Shuttleworthe; the indenture – dated 27 August 1656 – was signed by about 20 of the burgesses.
In the elections to the 1660 Convention, the borough returned Standish and another puritan, only to have the freemen petition the Commons against the result on the grounds that the mayor had refused a poll. The return was duly quashed, and the borough then returned two men who were keen to ingratiate themselves with Lancashire’s leading royalist, Charles Stanley, 8th earl of Derby. In response to a petition from the town’s anti-puritan faction, the crown purged the corporation in 1661 and issued the borough with a new charter. Following a double return for Preston in the elections to the Cavalier Parliament, the Commons resolved that all the town’s inhabitants ‘had voices in the election’; and although the corporation took this to refer to the resident in-burgesses and not to the inhabitants generally, its exclusive exercise of the franchise was broken.
Right of election: in the corporation.
Number of voters: 25
