Background Information
Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
10 Jan. 1559 SIR THOMAS PALMER
THOMAS STOUGHTON
1562/63 THOMAS BROMLEY 1OR (1878) app. xxxv.
JOHN AUSTEN 2Ibid.
1571 PETER OSBORNE
HENRY KNOLLYS I
1572 WILLIAM MORE I
THOMAS STOUGHTON
14 Jan. 1581 LAURENCE STOUGHTON vice Thomas Stoughton, deceased3C219/282.
26 Oct. 1584 GEORGE MORE
LAURENCE STOUGHTON
1586 GEORGE MORE
LAURENCE STOUGHTON
23 Oct. 1588 SIR WILLIAM MORE I
GEORGE MORE
1593 GEORGE MORE
LAURENCE STOUGHTON
4 Oct. 1597 SIR WILLIAM MORE I
SIR ROBERT SOUTHWELL
17 Oct. 1601 ROBERT MORE
WILLIAM JACKSON
Main Article

Guildford had been incorporated in the middle ages and was governed by a mayor, ‘approved men’, and the guild of merchants. In 1559 Henry, 12th Earl of Arundel, held the office of high steward. On his death in 1580, Edward Clinton, 1st Earl of Lincoln, was elected but died within five years. The corporation then chose Charles Howard I, Lord Howard of Effingham. Among the gentry living near Guildford, the most prominent was (Sir) William More I, of Loseley, who took an active interest in the borough’s affairs.

Both 1559 MPs owed their returns for Guildford to the 12th Earl of Arundel. Sir Thomas Palmer of Parham, Sussex, was a follower of Arundel and Thomas Stoughton of Stoughton, Surrey, was comptroller of Arundel’s household. Thomas Bromley, the London lawyer, also owed his return for Guildford in 1563 to Arundel. By 1571 Arundel was in prison and by 1581 he was dead. Nevertheless Stoughton, having already sat once for the borough, was of sufficient status to secure his own return in 1572. He died just after the 1576 session and was replaced for that of 1581 by his son Laurence, who was also returned in 1584, 1586 and 1593. After Arundel’s death only one MP for Guildford was nominated by a high steward: Sir Robert Southwell (1597), a marriage relation of Charles Howard I.

From 1571 onwards the Mores of Loseley dominated the returns at Guildford. At least one member of the family was returned to every Parliament from 1572 until the end of the reign. William More I was also responsible for the returns of both Members in 1571, Peter Osborne, an Exchequer official, and Henry Knollys I, a personal friend. Of the remaining two MPs, one, John Austen (1563) was recorder, the other, William Jackson (1601) remains unidentified.4Hist. Guildford (1801), pp. 4-5; HMC 7th Rep. 618, 622, 628, 630.

Author
Notes
  • 1. OR (1878) app. xxxv.
  • 2. Ibid.
  • 3. C219/282.
  • 4. Hist. Guildford (1801), pp. 4-5; HMC 7th Rep. 618, 622, 628, 630.