A substantial medieval town, Wareham was important enough to begin sending representatives to Parliament in 1302. However, by the early seventeenth century it had long been superseded as a port by Poole, and was noted chiefly for ‘fair houses inhabited as much by gentlemen almost as by tradesmen’. The continuing existence of five parishes attested to its former prosperity, but these benefices now provided only a meagre living for most of the incumbents.
During the Elizabethan era, Wareham’s electoral patronage had lain primarily with the Rogers family of Bryanston, a major Dorset gentry line. However, their influence was declining by the turn of the century, and was not felt at all in the early Stuart period. In 1604 the borough returned two of the county’s best-known lawyers, Sir Robert Napper and Francis James, apparently without any local gentry intervention. Six years later, a group of townsmen purchased Wareham manor from the Crown, thereby removing any prospect of political pressure from the government. Nevertheless, new gentry patrons then emerged to dominate the borough’s elections for the remainder of this period.
William Pitt, who had acquired four of Wareham’s advowsons, sat for the borough in every Parliament from 1614 to 1625. On the first of these occasions he was partnered by his kinsman John Freke. He also unsuccessfully requested a seat in 1624 for his son Edward*. However, he squandered his influence in the town through a prolonged dispute with the inhabitants over his ecclesiastical patronage. Shortly after the 1625 election he appointed one of his own relatives to two of the livings, despite local pleas for some of these benefices to be amalgamated, and his family’s political interest was lost until after the Restoration.
Pitt’s colleague in 1621 was John Trenchard, who owned the manor of Bestwall, just outside the town. He retained his seat in the next two Parliaments, in 1624 benefiting from the canvassing of Sir Francis Ashley*.
in the burgesses and freeholders
Number of voters: at least 14 in 1620
