Right of election

in the corporation

Background Information

Number of voters: 50 in 1714

Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
27 Jan. 1715 SIR GILBERT HEATHCOTE
SIDNEY GODOLPHIN
13 Apr. 1722 SIR ROBERT RAYMOND
WALTER CAREY
10 Mar. 1724 SIR CLEMENT WEARG vice Raymond, appointed to office
14 June 1725 CAREY re-elected after appointment to office
13 May 1726 EXTON SAYER vice Wearg, deceased
25 Aug. 1727 JOHN EVELYN
JOHN HARRIS
2 May 1734 JOHN EVELYN
JOHN HARRIS
29 May 1738 HARRIS re-elected after appointment to office
12 May 1741 FRANCIS GODOLPHIN
THOMAS WALKER
2 July 1747 FRANCIS GODOLPHIN
JOHN EVELYN
Main Article

No determination about the right of election at Helston existed, but it was assumed to be in the corporation, a close body, consisting of the mayor, four aldermen, and an unlimited number of freemen. The patrons were the Godolphin family, whose seat was five miles away and who had property in the town. From 1715 to 1741 inclusive, Francis, 2nd Earl of Godolphin, a member of Walpole’s Administration and recorder of Helston, returned both Members, most of them placemen nominated by the Government. In 1740 Thomas Pitt, the Prince of Wales’s Cornish election manager, described Helston as ‘at the absolute disposal of Lord Godolphin’.1Chatham mss. In 1747, however, he was successful in securing the return of a follower of the Prince, John Evelyn, who had formerly been returned for the borough as a government supporter. In the 2nd Lord Egmont’s electoral survey, c.1749-50, Helston is described as divided ‘between the Prince and Lord Godolphin’. After Frederick’s death in 1751 it reverted to the undisputed control of Lord Godolphin.

Author
Notes
  • 1. Chatham mss.