Liverpool was a small but thriving port in the early seventeenth century, a main departure point for troops and trade to Ireland, whose overseas as well as coastal commerce was steadily increasing. According to Camden it was ‘very commodious for trade … but not as eminent for its being ancient as for being neat and populous’.
Liverpool made a series of concerted efforts throughout the period to secure a new charter of incorporation. The town’s earliest charter, granted by King John in 1207, and a further grant by Henry III in 1229, provided for a mayor and two bailiffs to be elected annually by the assembly of freemen. In 1604 an inspeximus was granted to confirm the town’s previous charters, but this was found to be invalid due to a scribal error that enrolled the date as ‘Anno 4 Jac.’, and the town’s pleas for reissue were ignored.
The borough’s electoral patronage had traditionally been shared between the duchy of Lancaster and the earls of Derby, each making a nomination for one of its two parliamentary seats. Under Elizabeth, the town had enlisted the 3rd earl’s support in order to counterbalance attempts by the Duchy to control both nominations, and a cordial relationship continued between Liverpool and the 6th earl, who served as mayor in 1603-4, gave occasional gifts such as venison to the town council, and funded the construction of a new pillory.
In 1604 the chancellor of the Duchy, Sir John Fortescue*, who was perhaps preoccupied with his own election campaign in Buckinghamshire, apparently declined to name a candidate for Liverpool. In the absence of nominations from either of the usual sources two townsmen were returned: Giles Brooke, a seasoned campaigner for Liverpool’s charter and independence from Chester, and Thomas Remchinge, a customs official. They are distinguished as the town’s only MPs during the period to whom payment of parliamentary expenses is recorded. After the dissolution in 1611 Brooke claimed £28 14s., of which 20 marks 4s. 5d. were deducted for various reasons, and Remchinge received £25, having agreed ‘willingly in respect of the town’s kind dealing with him’ to abate 40s. of his original claim for £27.
In 1614 the first seat went to a local lawyer, Thomas Ireland of Bewsey, who had assisted the corporation in the resolution of an internal dispute two years earlier; he was an honorary freeman, and had connections to both of the town’s patrons, having been an officer of the Duchy since 1603, and the earl of Derby’s trusted attorney for the previous 20 years.
The chancellor of the Duchy played a much less prominent role in the 1624 election, when two local gentlemen were returned. The first seat went to Sir Thomas Gerrard of Bryn, brother-in-law to the younger Sir Richard Molyneux. It seems likely that the corporation offered the nomination to Molyneux, who had inherited the lordship of Liverpool in 1623, in an attempt to establish better relations with him than they had enjoyed with his predecessor, while Gerrard, seeking protection from numerous creditors, may have been pressed upon the town by Molyneux, though he later claimed to have been elected against his will. The second Member, George Ireland, was the son and legal colleague of Thomas Ireland of Bewsey. When the Catholic Gerrard ignored the summons to take the oaths at the opening of the session, Ireland, whose wife was a recusant, helped him escape the censure of the House. Liverpool was severely criticized for its choice, and was served by only one Member in this session as a result of Gerrard’s aberrance; no writ for a replacement was issued.
The Duchy was denied any control over Liverpool’s election in 1625, for the town instead appealed to the Stanleys, returning 18 year-old James Stanley, Lord Strange, future 7th earl of Derby, as the first Member, together with Edward Moore, a senior alderman. The choice of these candidates bolstered the town’s renewed attempts to secure the charter in the first year of the new king’s reign. Stanley further assisted in this objective by serving as mayor the following year; nevertheless, like his father he demonstrated very little interest in Liverpool’s affairs thereafter. In 1626 the first seat was taken by Edward Bridgeman of Sankey Bridge, Warrington, brother of the bishop of Chester, after he failed to be elected for Wigan, which he represented in 1625 and 1628. The bishop, perhaps through the mediation of the chancellor of the Duchy, was presumably responsible for persuading Liverpool to return him.
Some, but not all, of the borough’s MPs were admitted to the freedom of Liverpool. Apart from Johnson, who was enrolled in his absence and free of charge at the time of his election, it is notable that most of the outsiders who were returned did not become freemen, nor did they receive wages. Notwithstanding the town’s rising income, it was not a wealthy borough, and the corporation was apparently content to accept the return of Members with no obvious connection to or interest in Liverpool, particularly after the new charter had been granted, so long as they were willing to meet their own expenses.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 338 in 1629
