Founded in 1284 and enlarged in 1541, Flintshire returned a knight of the shire and a burgess to Parliament from 1542.
In the last two Elizabethan parliaments Flintshire was represented by William Ravenscroft*, an Exchequer official whose family had considerable local influence: his eldest brother was custos rotulorum, and one of his aunts had been the first wife of lord keeper Sir Thomas Egerton†, whose main estates lay just across the Dee in Cheshire and Shropshire. It was doubtless at Egerton’s behest that Ravenscroft was accommodated at Old Sarum in 1604 and 1614, and it is likely that the return of Ravenscroft’s second cousin Roger Puleston for Flintshire in 1604, and his nephew Robert Ravenscroft in 1614, owed something to Egerton’s influence.
Never truly happy when away from north Wales, Mostyn probably only sought the knighthood of the shire to maintain his family’s prestige. In early December 1623, when the next Parliament was first mooted, his eldest son Sir Thomas, then in London, was encouraged to stand for the county seat by his father-in-law (Sir) James Whitelocke* and his uncle (Sir) Richard Wynn*. However, by Christmas, when his relatives’ letters of recommendation reached Flintshire, the gentry had already decided to return Sir John Hanmer. If Sir Roger Mostyn had wished, he might have been able to persuade Hanmer to stand aside, but he was determined that his eldest son should not be seduced by the delights of the capital, proclaiming ‘had I been a free man to dispose of the place at my pleasure, I would have been well advised before I would have conferred the same upon my son Thomas’. The election indenture eschewed the usual reference to the ‘unanimous assent and consent’ of the freeholders, ascribing Hanmer’s return to ‘maior[em] partem totius com.’ [the greater part of the whole county], which suggests that there was a contest. However, with Mostyn bereft of any local support, Hanmer presumably carried the day with ease.
Hanmer died on the penultimate day of the 1624 session. The subsequent by-election was held on 6 Dec., in anticipation of a fresh session scheduled for the New Year. It was presumably uncontested, as Sir Thomas Mostyn headed the list of those who returned Sir John Trevor II, a cousin of Hanmer’s widow. In 1621 Trevor had sat for Denbighshire, where his family’s main estates lay, but he was acceptable to the freeholders of Flintshire, as his father held property at Plas Têg in the south of the county.
Little is known about the background to the next election of 30 Jan. 1626, which was decided by a poll of the voters, who consisted of the supporters of John Salusbury of Bachegraig, head of the Flintshire branch of a powerful Denbighshire family, on the one side and the supporters of Sir Thomas Hanmer†, 2nd Bt., the 13-year old heir to the 1624 Member, on the other. Although the eventual contenders differed from those of 1625, the factional interests at work were largely unaltered. Hanmer was probably a last minute substitute for Sir John Trevor, who had presumably declared his intention to stand again when the Parliament was first summoned. However, whereas Trevor had easily rebuffed the earlier half-hearted challenge from the Mostyns, he now faced Salusbury, a much sterner prospect as an opponent. This was both because of lingering rivalry between the two families – arising from the Denbighshire election of 1601 – and also because Salusbury, unlike Mostyn, could call upon wider support. The Salusbury family’s main estates lay in Denbighshire, but their ally Sir Peter Mutton* was a substantial Flintshire landowner, and Salusbury presumably also obtained the voices of his wife’s family, the Ravenscrofts. Moreover, he would probably not have put himself forward without some indication of support from his immediate neighbours in the north of the shire, although the most important of these, the Mostyns, ultimately seem to have deserted him. While Trevor’s position was not as strong as it had been in 1625, it was hardly desperate, as he could call upon the support of his Hanmer relatives, including the tenants of John Hanmer, bishop of St. Asaph, and he must have hoped to garner voices from the other major families in the south of the county. However, he was open to the criticism that his main interests lay outside the shire, an accusation which could not be brought against Hanmer, the eventual candidate. Furthermore, if Trevor’s prospects looked doubtful, the last-minute substitution of a callow youth, too young to be a credible candidate for the shire seat, saved him from the personal disgrace of a defeat at Salusbury’s hands.
The election was clearly a disorderly affair. In what was possibly a reference to the Denbighshire election of 1601, Salusbury’s supporters were alleged to have said ‘that their master would have it by the sword if he could not otherwise have it’. Moreover, the sheriff, Thomas Evans, was reported to have excluded many freeholders (presumably Hanmer supporters) and boasted ‘that how many soever here, yet is the election in my power. I may choose whom I will’. Despite Evans’s partiality, the contest went to a poll, following which Salusbury was returned on 1 February. Sir Roger Mostyn was soon reported to be considering a protest, and Hanmer’s supporters ultimately complained to the committee for privileges. On 5 May 1626 William Coryton* reported the petition, and the House summoned Evans to explain his conduct, but his testimony seems not to have been heard before the dissolution on 15 June.
In the absence of an election indenture the Robert Jones who was returned in 1628 cannot be conclusively identified. It is possible that he was the local landowner who held just under 400 acres in the vicinity of Halkin, but as this man was rated at a mere 30s. in lands in the 1626 subsidy,
Number of voters: unknown
