The city of Limerick had been the dominant settlement of south-west Ireland since the middle ages. Its position, straddling the River Shannon between counties Limerick and Clare, and the strength of its walls and castle, gave it strategic, as well as commercial, importance. Granted its charter as a city by James I, thereafter it was governed by a mayor, two sheriffs and 12 aldermen, usually drawn from a small group of Old English families which had come to dominate its trade.
In the elections for the Irish Parliaments before 1641, Limerick continued to assert its independence, while Kilmallock had increasingly come under outside influences. Limerick returned its own Old English aldermen, Sir Geoffrey Galway and Sir Dominic White in 1634, and Dr Dominic White and Peter Creagh in 1640.
Once Limerick had been taken by Ireton, the city came under military rule and the corporation was dismantled. The mayoralty was vacant for four years after 1651, with power resting solely in the hands of the successive governors: Sir Hardress Waller* and (from the summer of 1652) Colonel Henry Ingoldsby*.
The elections for the protectorate Parliaments reflect the dominance of the Waller interest. Under the terms of the Instrument of Government, from 1654 Limerick and Kilmallock were joined into one constituency, returning one MP. The elections were to take place at Limerick, under the supervision of its governor, Henry Ingoldsby.
The 1650s had destroyed the corporate structures of Limerick and Kilmallock, but had not succeeded in putting anything permanent in its place. With the fall of Waller, and the confirmation of other local landowners (notably the Boyles) in County Limerick, there was a return to the relative stability of the pre-1641 period, but with a few changes. In the 1661 elections for the Irish Parliament, Kilmallock continued to be dominated by outsiders: the former Cromwellian (and ally of Broghill), John Bridges*, was elected for the first seat, to be replaced on his death by another Boyle relative, Morrogh Boyle; the other MP was Bridges’s son, Brooke Bridges.
Right of election: qualified inhabitants
Limerick city and Killmallock combined to return one Member, 1654-9
Number of voters: at least 13 in 1654
