Right of election

in burgage holders

Background Information

Number of voters: about 70

Number of seats
2
Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
19 Apr. 1754 WILLIAM GERARD HAMILTON
WILLIAM BECKFORD
9 Dec. 1754 SIR JOHN PHILIPPS vice Beckford, chose to sit for London
29 Apr. 1756 HAMILTON re-elected after appointment to office
1 Apr. 1761 JOHN JOLLIFFE
RICHARD PENNANT
17 Dec. 1767 RICHARD CROFTES vice Pennant, vacated his seat
22 Mar. 1768 WILLIAM JOLLIFFE
WELBORE ELLIS
8 Feb. 1770 ELLIS re-elected after appointment to office
15 Feb. 1772 JOLLIFFE re-elected after appointment to office
7 Oct. 1774 WILLIAM JOLLIFFE
55
SIR ABRAHAM HUME
52
John Luttrell
17
6 Sept. 1780 WILLIAM JOLLIFFE
THOMAS SAMUEL JOLLIFFE
15 Apr. 1783 WILLIAM JOLLIFFE re-elected after appointment to office
31 Mar. 1784 WILLIAM JOLLIFFE
THOMAS SAMUEL JOLLIFFE
9 Feb. 1787 JOHN CHRISTOPHER BURTON DAWNAY, Visct. Downe, vice Thomas Samuel Jolliffe, vacated his seat
Main Article

John Jolliffe inherited from his first wife a number of burgages at Petersfield, and in 1736 established his hold on the borough by acquiring from Edward Gibbon sen. the manor and further burgages. So long as the Jolliffes’ title to them was valid, their hold on the borough was complete. On the two occasions 1754-90 when it was unsuccessfully challenged, the point at issue was a legal technicality concerning the burgages: in 1761 Edward Gibbon jun. stood against Jolliffe’s interest ‘upon the supposition he could not transfer any of his votes, having settled them upon his wife’; and John Luttrell after his defeat in 1774 questioned in a petition to the House of Commons Jolliffe’s right to convey the burgages.

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