Wareham

The manor and borough of Wareham, which had been granted to three of Henry VIII’s Queens, remained in the hands of the Crown throughout Elizabeth’s reign. Governed by a mayor and council of burgesses, the town obtained certain liberties under a charter of 1587.Hutchins, Dorset, i. 81 seq.

Weymouth and Melcombe Regis

In both boroughs the most influential parliamentary patrons were the lord lieutenant of the county the 2nd Earl of Bedford, and the first two earls of Pembroke, stewards of the royal manor of Weymouth, of the encompassing manor of Wyke and of the manor of Portland. In the later years of this period Bedford’s son-in-law the Earl of Warwick, (Sir) Walter Ralegh and Viscount Bindon all exerted some influence.

Poole

Poole ‘with its suburbs’ had, in 1568, a constitution modelled on that of Southampton. It was ‘a county, separate from the county of Dorset’ and so, whereas the 1559 election indenture, for example, was made between the sheriff of Dorset and the corporation, the known election writs in this period from 1572 were directed to the sheriff of the town and the indenture made between the sheriff of the town and the corporation.CPR, 1566-9, pp. 166-8.

Shaftesbury

The borough of Shaftesbury, granted to William Herbert I, 1st Earl of Pembroke, in 1553, was governed by a mayor and council of burgesses. It did not receive a charter of incorporation until the early seventeenth century.Shaftesbury Recs.

Lyme Regis

Lyme Regis was incorporated in 1559, and a new charter obtained in 1591.Weinbaum, Charters, 30-31. The general pattern of elections was one outsider (named first of each pair in the above list until 1601) and one local man, though in 1563 both MPs were outsiders. Until his death in 1585 the patron was the 2nd Earl of Bedford, whose letterLyme Regis recs. N23/2/19. to his ‘very loving friends the mayor and his brethren of the town of Lyme’ nicely illustrates relations between a great man and a dependent borough at this time:

Dorchester

Dorchester, governed by two bailiffs, two constables and a council of burgesses and other officials, received a charter confirming its existing liberties in 1559.Weinbaum, Charters, 29; Hutchins, Dorset, ii. 345 seq.; Dorchester Recs.s The 2nd Earl of Bedford, who owned a small property in the borough, and later William Paulet, 3rd Marquess of Winchester, obtained nominations there, but Dorchester was less susceptible to patronage than some other west country boroughs.

Bridport

Bridport was governed by two bailiffs, two constables and a council of burgesses. It was not incorporated until 1619.Weinbaum, Charters, 28; Bridport mss. red bk. passim. The first seven elections of the reign were dominated almost entirely by the influence of the 2nd Earl of Bedford, whose estate at Berwick lay 4¼ miles south-east of the borough.G. S. Thomson, Family Background, 202. William Page (1559) and Hugh Vaughan (1581) were both Bedford’s servants.

Corfe Castle

Corfe Castle first sent Members to Parliament in 1572. Almost certainly, enfranchisement was requested by Christopher Hatton who in 1571 or thereabouts received a grant whereby he became lord of the manor of Corfe, constable of the castle and vice-admiral and lieutenant of the Isle of Purbeck. Hatton, who exercised his offices by deputy, never lived in Corfe and this presumably explains why his patronage at elections there did not become fully established until 1586.