Sited at the eastern end of the Menai straits, Beaumaris was the last of the Welsh fortresses to be founded by Edward I. Sacked and then captured by Owen Glynd?r in 1403-5, it was quickly repaired. By the sixteenth century the borough, which commanded ‘a fair, safe, and capacious haven and road’, had become the main port on the north coast of Wales, trading with Lancashire for grain, general merchandise from Chester and salt and wine from France, Ireland and Scotland.
Beaumaris was not enfranchised in 1536, as Newborough had been designated the county town under Henry VII. This arrangement was overturned by an Act of 1549, which awarded Beaumaris parliamentary representation, though Newborough remained a contributory borough.
Throughout the later Elizabethan and Jacobean periods, the borough was dominated by the local magnate, Sir Richard Bulkeley*, who was both constable of the castle and the owner of extensive property within the town. Several of his relatives were chief burgesses, and, perhaps most significantly, he leased over one-third of the town lands.
Jones sat for Beaumaris again in 1614, but declined to seek re-election in the autumn of 1620. On this occasion Sir Richard Wynn* offered him first refusal of the Caernarvonshire seat; Jones declined, and initially agreed to support to Wynn as knight for Caernarvonshire, but changed his mind when he learned that his first wife’s nephew, John Griffith III*, was a rival contender.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 24
