Counties Sligo, Leitrim and Roscommon, which formed the northern and eastern part of the province of Connaught, stretching from the River Shannon to the Atlantic, were geographically remote and economically backward in the early modern period. Much of Roscommon was inhospitable - projectors earlier in the century found that even Scottish settlers refused to rent land in some parts of the county.
Politically, the three counties were deeply divided. In the early seventeenth century Leitrim ‘was left for the most part to the power and greatness of the chief of the O'Rourkes’.
Despite their differences, the three counties shared a similar fate during the wars of the 1640s and early 1650s. The Irish rebellion, which had started in Ulster in late October 1641, had spread south and west into Leitrim, Sligo and Roscommon by mid-November.
Connaught was the last of the four provinces to fall to the Cromwellians in the early 1650s. A combined operation between the New Model army and the Old Protestant forces overran the eastern area in the spring of 1652, while Sir Charles Coote, advancing from the north, quickly recaptured Sligo town and the Roscommon garrisons before pushing on to besiege Galway.
The parliamentary elections, held at Jamestown, reflect this unequal division of influence in the region.
The death of Sir Robert King in 1657 altered the situation once again. In the election for Richard Cromwell’s Parliament*, held at Jamestown on 13 January 1659, the ‘freeholders of the several counties’ elected the Leitrim landowner, Robert Parke, and a carpet-bagger, Thomas Waller of Gray’s Inn. Parke had served in Sir Charles Coote’s regiment of foot in the 1640s and early 1650s, and his return was presumably on the Coote interest. Waller’s election was more problematic. The second seat appears to have been in the gift of Sir John King, who had originally put forward ‘a friend of his’; but on the intervention of Lord Broghill (Roger Boyle*) he had been persuaded to arrange the election Waller instead. Broghill had been acting on the recommendation of Secretary John Thurloe*, who was keen to secure seats from government supporters.
Right of election: with the ‘freeholders’ of the counties (1659)
Silgo, Leitrim and Roscommon counties combined to return two Members 1654-9
Number of voters: at least 11 in 1654
