A staple town, Northampton received its first charter in 1189, and sent Members to Parliament in 1283.
In 1604 Yelverton and the former mayor Edward Mercer were elected ‘by and with the whole consent and assent of the said assembly’. However, the usual requirement that they should pay their own expenses was omitted, perhaps out of particular regard for Mercer, a draper, and the only townsman elected during this period.
The corporation refused to pay the aid for Princess Elizabeth in 1613, during Mercer’s third term as mayor, until it was informed of the reason for the levy.
There was evidently a contest in 1620, though it may not have been carried to a poll. It was incorrectly reported that Yelverton had been re-elected, despite his incarceration in the Tower on a trumped-up charge of corruption after he had offended the marquess of Buckingham.
Northampton again resisted pressure to yield a Benevolence for the Palatinate in 1622, protesting to the Privy Council that ‘the decay of the town prevents the general contribution from being good’.
Quarter sessions had hitherto been held at Northampton, the county capital, but after protests from gentry in the east of Northamptonshire (including the custos rotulorum the 6th earl of Rutland) the Privy Council ruled in 1624 that the sessions should be re-located to Kettering. This had not been effected a year later, when it was again ordered that the post-Christmas quarter sessions should be held at Kettering.
in the corporation
Number of voters: c. 63
