Wootton Bassett (UK Parliament constituency) explained

Wootton Bassett
Type:Borough
Parliament:uk
Year:1447
Abolished:1832
Elects Howmany:Two

Wootton Bassett was a parliamentary borough in Wiltshire, which elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons from 1447 until 1832, when the rotten borough was abolished by the Great Reform Act.

History

The borough consisted of the town of Wootton Bassett, a market town in northern Wiltshire. Even when the borough was created by Henry VI it was a town of little consequence, with no significant industry or trade; by the 19th century it suffered from endemic unemployment, and the money to be gained by electoral corruption was probably one of its economic mainstays.

In 1831, the population of the borough was approximately 1,500, and contained 349 houses. The right to vote was exercised by all inhabitant householders paying scot and lot. At the last contested election, this amounted to 309 eligible voters, of whom 228 cast valid votes; in other words, only a comparatively small proportion of households were excluded from the franchise. The local landowners were generally recognised as "patrons" of the borough, and at most periods were able to exercise close control as they were the employers of the majority of the voters. However, they were occasionally vulnerable to the intervention of monied outsiders, since Wootton Bassett's voters had few scruples at selling their votes to the highest bidder.

At the end of the 17th century, the St John family of Lydiard Tregoze had the predominant influence in the borough, and could usually return their chosen candidates without difficulty, the main competing interest being that of the Hydes. After Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke fled abroad in 1715 following the Jacobite Rebellion the St John influence was weakened, and a wealthy local landowner and clothier, Robert Neale of Corsham, was able to secure election in 1741. Neale then began to strengthen his interest, hoping to gain control of the second seat in alliance with the Hydes, and this led to a vigorous contest for control of the borough in the 1750s.

Corruption was playing its part in Wootton Bassett elections at least from the late 17th century. In 1690, a candidate who petitioned against the election of Henry St John was found to have bribed the voters himself, reportedly purchasing votes at one-and-a-half guineas a head, and his agent was taken into custody by order of the House of Commons. Again in 1700, bribery was reported to the committee and the agent was committed to Newgate Prison.

At the election of 1754, Robert Neale attempted to win the support of the Mayor (who was ex officio returning officer) with a bribe of £500, and both sides spent lavishly. The St John candidates (John Probyn and Thomas Estcourt Cresswell) paid 30 guineas a head to voters, the total cost including treating at taverns coming to £6000, while Neale admitted spending £1800 and his co-candidate the Earl of Drumlanrig probably spent a similar amount. St John's candidates were successful, but Neale petitioned against the outcome and (as a supporter of the government) apparently expected a partisan decision to overturn the result in his favour. In the event, the Duke of Newcastle, then serving as the prime minister, refused to support the petition but Neale was compensated £1000 from secret government funds.

After another contested election in election of 1784, when George Tierney, backed by the Hydes, spent £2500 in an unsuccessful attempt to win a seat against the St John candidates, the two families reached an agreement to nominate one MP each at future elections. This lasted until the early years of the following century when a barrister, James Kibblewhite, began to acquire property in the town and secured both a majority on the Corporation and sufficient "influence" with the voters to have his candidates returned as MPs – the nature of the influence is indicated by reports that the price of a vote had risen to 45 guineas a man. When Benjamin Walsh, who was elected on this occasion, was shortly afterwards declared bankrupt it emerged on the investigation of his accounts that he had paid £4000 for his seat. Kibblewhite sold his interest in the borough to Joseph Pitt for £22,000, but Pitt was unable to retain control over the voters despite his domination of the corporation and the St Johns and Hydes once more resumed the patronage.

Perhaps surprisingly, the corruption at Wootton Bassett never led to a major scandal or to any attempts to disfranchise the borough – unlike nearby Cricklade, which was "thrown into the hundred" for its misdemeanours in the 1770s, or Hindon which nearly suffered the same fate. However, the town was far too small to justify separate representation after the Great Reform Act, and the constituency was abolished in 1832. The town was within the penally-expanded boundaries of Cricklade, which retained both its MPs, and was thereafter part of that borough constituency.

Members of Parliament

1447–1640

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1449–1450
1510–1523No names known [1]
1529Richard Tracy[2] Walter Winston
1536?
1539?
1542?
1545Edmund BrydgesHugh Westwood
1547John SeymourRobert Huick
1553 (Mar)Gabriel PleydellWilliam Garrard
1553 (Oct)Henry PooleJohn Throckmorton
1554 (Apr)John TullGiles Payne
1554 (Nov)Giles PayneWilliam Hampshire
1555Edmund PlowdenRichard Bruning
1558Richard BruningHumphrey Moseley
1559Christopher DysmarsHumphrey Moseley[3]
1562–3John Hippisley, sat for Wells
replaced Jan 1563 by
Matthew Poyntz
Gabriel Pleydell
1571Henry KnyvetJohn Winchcombe
1572Henry KnyvetEdmund Dunch
1584Thomas VavasourJohn Hungerford
1586Thomas VavasourJohn Hungerford
1589Sir Henry KnyvetJohn Hungerford
1593John Hungerford
1597Henry DacreJohn Lowe
1601John WentworthJohn Rice
1604–1611Henry MartinAlexander Tutt
1614Sir William WilloughbyEdward Hungerford
1621Richard HarrisonJohn Wrenham
1624Sir Roland EgertonJohn Bankes
1625Robert HydeSir Walter Tichborne
1626Sir Thomas Lake
1628Anthony Rous
1629–1640No Parliaments summoned

1640–1832

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
April 1640Thomas WindebankeEdward Hyde
November 1640William PleydellEdward Poole
February 1644Pleydell disabled from sitting – seat vacant
1645Edward Massie[4]
December 1648Massie and Poole excluded in Pride's Purge – both seats vacant
1653Unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate
Henry St JohnRobert Stevens
May 1659Not represented in the restored Rump
April 1660John Pleydell<-- party -->Lord Herbert of Raglan
June 1660Sir Baynham Throckmorton
1661Sir Walter St John
February 1679Laurence Hyde<-- party -->
August 1679Henry St John<-- party -->
1681John Pleydell
1689John Wildman
1695Thomas JacobHenry Pinnell<-- party -->
1698Henry St John
January 1701Henry St John<-- party -->
November 1701Thomas Jacob
1702Henry Pinnell
1705John Morton Pleydell
1706Francis Popham<-- party -->
1708Robert Cecil
October 1710Henry St John[5] Richard Goddard<-- party -->
December 1710Edmund Pleydell<-- party -->
1713Richard Cresswell
1715Sir James LongWilliam Northey
1722Colonel Robert MurrayWilliam Chetwynd
1727John St JohnJohn Crosse
1734Sir Robert LongCaptain Nicholas Robinson
1741Robert Neale<-- party -->John Harvey-Thursby
1747Martin Madan
1754John ProbynThomas Estcourt Cresswell<-- party -->
1761Major the Hon. Henry St John[6] <-- party -->
1774Robert Scott
1780William Strahan
1784Hon. George NorthHon. Robert Seymour Conway
1790John Thomas StanleyThe Viscount Downe
1796John DenisonEdward Clarke
July 1802General the Hon. Henry St JohnRobert Williams<-- party -->
December 1802Peter William BakerTory
1806Robert KnightWhig
1807Sir John MurrayToryJohn Cheesment[7] Tory
1808Benjamin Walsh[8] <-- party -->
1811Robert KnightWhig
March 1812John AttersollWhig
October 1812James KibblewhiteWhig
March 1813Richard Ellison<-- party -->
April 1813Robert Rickards
1816William Taylor Money
1820Horace TwissTorySir George Philips BtWhig
1830Viscount MahonToryThomas Hyde VilliersWhig
1831Viscount PorchesterTory
1832Constituency abolished

Notes

  1. Web site: History of Parliament. History of Parliament Trust. 2011-10-29.
  2. [:s: Tracy, Richard (DNB00)]
  3. Web site: History of Parliament. History of Parliament Trust. 2011-10-29.
  4. Massie was disabled from sitting in January 1648 but the order was revoked in June 1648
  5. St John was also elected for Berkshire, which he chose to represent, and did not sit again for Wootton Bassett
  6. Lieutenant Colonel 1762, Colonel 1776, Major General 1779, General 1797
  7. Later adopted the surname Severn
  8. Expelled from the House, 5 March 1812, after conviction for attempting to defraud the Solicitor-General, Sir Thomas Plumer

References