Counties Kildare and Wicklow, to the east and south of Dublin, were very different in geographical and social character. Kildare was a fertile, low-lying county, watered by the upper reaches of the River Barrow, and had long been an integral part of the English Pale. The Fitzgerald family, seated at Maynooth, had dominated the county until the attainder of the 9th earl of Kildare following his rebellion of 1534; thereafter, the Old English gentry had extended their influence, with the Eustaces, Sherlocks and Berminghams becoming prominent.
The experience of the two counties during the Irish rebellion and wars of the 1640s and early 1650s also differed. Wicklow was one of the first southern counties to rebel, in early November 1641 under the leadership of Colonel Luke Byrne, and the mountains became a useful base for operations against Dublin throughout the 1640s. Violence struck Kildare in late November and December 1641, but it was only with the defection of the lords of the Pale in the new year of 1642 that the county was lost to the Dublin government. In a symbolic act of defiance, the castle at Maynooth, newly restored by the Protestant George Fitzgerald, 16th earl of Kildare, was burnt down by the Catholic forces.
During the protectorate, counties Kildare and Wicklow were combined to form a single constituency, returning two MPs. It was stipulated that the election would take place at Dublin, at the same time as those for the City and County of Dublin, and this gave the corporation, the army and the government an opportunity to influence the result.
The hold of the Old Protestant landed interest was strengthened in the 1656 elections by the sympathetic presence of the acting governor of Ireland, Henry Cromwell*, in Dublin Castle. Morgan was again returned, this time alongside Sir Hardress Waller, who, as an Old Protestant, an Independent and a senior army officer, may have been a candidate designed to please all interests. When Waller was also returned for counties Kerry, Limerick and Clare, he was replaced by Sir Paul Davies, a County Kildare landowner with close links with Henry Cromwell. In 1659 another member of a long-established local family, Dr Dudley Loftus, was returned with Henry Markham, an associate of Henry Cromwell and Lord Broghill (Roger Boyle*) who had recently acquired lands in County Kildare. There was no repeat of the 1654 dispute in the later elections. With the government and the Old Protestants increasingly in alliance, the Kildare and Wicklow elections proceeded smoothly.
The fall of the protectorate and the instability that followed the army coup of October 1659 did little to weaken Old Protestant influence over the two counties. The General Convention held in Dublin in the spring of 1660 saw Old Protestants returned for all the Kildare seats, with Sir Paul Davies and his relative, Sir John Hoey, representing the county. Of the four Members returned for Wicklow seats, at least three had local connections which pre-dated the 1641 rebellion.
Right of election: in freeholders
Kildare and Wicklow counties combined to return two Members, 1654-9
Number of voters: 88 in 1654
