Clitheroe was one of northern England’s smallest and most isolated boroughs. Nestled in the Ribble Valley on the road from Preston into Yorkshire via the Craven Gap, it commanded (at that time) neither a crossing of the river nor a site of any great strategic importance.
A borough by prescription rather than incorporation, Clitheroe was governed by an ‘in-bailiff’ and ‘out-bailiff’, who were elected annually at an assembly of the burgesses (the owners of the town’s 102 burgage-tenements) and the freemen – that is, those who occupied burgages as tenants. The in-bailiff was chosen from among the in-burgesses – those residents who owned burgages – and the out-bailiff from the local gentry among the out-burgesses (non-residents who owned burgages). Assisting the work of the bailiffs were the ‘brethren’ – an informal body of 12 aldermen (i.e. former in-bailiffs), who were elected by the in-burgesses. The bailiffs held court leets twice a year and also presided over an annual court of inquiry. The jury of burgesses and freemen sworn at the court of inquiry exercised an important supervisory role over the town’s affairs, acting effectively as a common council.
Clitheroe had first sent Members to Parliament in 1559, having been granted the franchise probably through pressure from the duchy of Lancaster.
During the period 1604-29, Clitheroe generally accepted nominees of the chancellor of duchy of Lancaster for one of the town’s parliamentary seats and occasionally for both.
Assheton junior and Shuttleworthe senior had been adversaries in the 1628 election, their rivalry linked to a long-running dispute, involving a number of local gentlemen, over the management of Clitheroe grammar school.
The election at Clitheroe for the Long Parliament in the autumn of 1640 was certainly hotly contested. At least five candidates threw their hats in the ring – Shuttleworth, Assheton, Richard Lister, William White* and Guicciardini Ayloff. Lister was one of Clitheroe’s leading in-burgesses and had served as in-bailiff in 1638-9. White, who had married into the Talbot family of nearby Bashall, was a prominent out-burgess and had served alongside Lister in 1638-9. Ayloff was probably a government or duchy nominee (the two amounted to the same thing) and was certainly a carpet-bagger.
Both Assheton and Shuttleworth went on to side with Parliament in the civil war, and Clitheroe Castle was garrisoned by parliamentarian troops – apart from a brief period in 1644, when it was captured by royalists under Prince Rupert.
Because Clitheroe was disenfranchised under the Instrument of Government in 1653 and then omitted from the printed list of returns for Richard Cromwell’s Parliament of 1659, several authorities have assumed that the town did not regain its seats until 1660.
One of the central issues in the disputed return for Clitheroe to the 1660 Convention was the nature of the borough’s franchise. Both White and the man elected with him, Raphe (now 2nd bt.) Assheton, claimed that the franchise was vested in those of the burgesses and freemen who had been formally admitted by the borough jury – as distinct from the ‘freemen at large’ who had not been so admitted. The committee for elections, however, found in favour of White’s rival, who maintained that the franchise was limited to the burgage-holders.
Right of election: in the burgage-holders
Number of voters: 82 or 83 in 1640
