One of the original five members of the Cinque Ports, the ancient coastal town of Hastings can trace its history back to the early tenth century. By the early modern period the town consisted of two parallel streets that met at the upper end. A stream, known as the Bourne, divided the two roads, which were connected by several small lanes.
Hastings first received a charter in about 1155, and in 1589 it was incorporated.
Outsiders chosen to sit were normally expected to take the oath of a freeman. In so doing, they promised to bear ‘faith and truth … to the mayor, jurats and commonalty of the town and port of Hastings’ and to uphold ‘the charters, liberties and franchises and customs and usages’ of the Cinque Ports, and ‘specially of the said town of Hastings’. However, as strangers chosen by the borough were rarely willing to travel to Hastings take their oath, it was not unusual for the corporation to make arrangements for them to do so in London. In 1625 the mayor travelled to London for the express purpose of administering the oath to Sackville Crowe, while in 1620 authority to tender the oath to Samuel More was granted to More’s fellow Member, the London resident James Lasher II, and to the lieutenant of Dover Castle, Sir Henry Mainwaring*. In addition to taking the oath of a freeman, all Members chosen by the borough were issued with a commission under the common seal of the town whereby they were assigned ‘full power and authority … to do and consent unto such things and matters as at the said Parliament (by God’s permission) shall happen to be ordained’. However, the granting of such a commission was made conditional on the taking of the oath of a freeman.
For the first election of the period the newly appointed lord warden, Lord Henry Howard, soon to be created earl of Northampton, recommended the queen’s vice-chamberlain, Sir George Carew. However, at a meeting of the corporation on 14 Feb. some of those present, mindful of the recent Proclamation for the election of residents (and also of a similar decree issued by the Brotherhood of the Cinque Ports), and resentful of Howard’s minatory tone, jibbed at the nomination. ‘We paused to proceed to any such election’, the corporation’s minute book records, ‘till we might understand how other places of the Ports resolve to do’. Faced with this threat to the lord warden’s patronage, the lieutenant of Dover Castle, Sir Thomas Fane†, wrote to the corporation at the end of February. After insisting that there was no need to heed either the Proclamation or the decree of the Brotherhood, Fane warned of the inconveniences that might follow unless the borough complied with Howard’s request. An identical letter addressed to the corporation of New Romney, which like Hastings had also threatened to break ranks, succeeded in its objective on 29 Feb., and the following day Hastings, too, yielded, ‘being in some sort persuaded that his lordship rather requested than challenged de jure’. Four days later Northampton sent a letter of thanks.
Carew’s colleague was the septuagenarian townsman Richard Lyffe, who had a long record of municipal and parliamentary service. At the time of the 1604 election he was serving as mayor for the second time. After the first session he asked to be paid parliamentary wages, which he had received in 1597 and 1601. Affronted by this request, the corporation declared that Lyffe ‘ought not to have challenged any fee or wages … but to have served gratis’. However, in return for agreeing to waive his rights, Lyffe was allowed £5 as a present, of which sum 20s. was to be levied on nearby Pevensey and 10s. on neighbouring Seaford (both towns being ‘members’ of Hastings).
Shortly before the next session a double by-election was caused by the elevation of Carew to the Lords (May 1605) and the death of Lyffe (August 1605). The lord warden recommended Sir Edward Hales, a Kent gentleman, who was chosen ‘sed non jure’, while Lyffe was replaced by James Lasher, a prominent jurat. Hales and Lasher were re-elected in 1614, and the corporation ordered that Lasher was to be paid both wages (at 7s. 6d. per day) and riding expenses (at 5s. per day).
At the next general election the corporation broke with tradition by failing to return a townsman. Instead, its choice for the second seat settled upon Lasher’s eldest son. An amateur soldier with a stake in the Sussex iron industry, the younger James Lasher had retained his links with Hastings despite living in London, and consequently was now captain of the town’s militia. The first seat was bestowed upon Samuel More, the servant and kinsman of the new lord warden, Lord Zouche. In his letter of nomination to the borough, Zouche praised More’s ‘honesty and soundness in religion’.
It is not clear why Hastings failed to return a townsman to the 1621 Parliament, but the answer almost certainly lies in the state of the borough’s finances. From at least 1611 the corporation had been trying to repair the town’s pier, upon which the continued prosperity of the port depended but which periodically suffered destruction by the sea.
Shortly before the 1621 Parliament opened, the corporation succeeded in obtaining letters patent from the king authorizing it to raise money for the pier by means of a collection. These evidently proved so successful that repairs began later that year, and though the corporation was forced to petition the Privy Council in February 1622 after the collectors held back half the money raised, work continued into the summer of 1622.
Eversfield was re-elected to all the remaining parliaments of this period, but More lost his interest on Zouche’s resignation as lord warden in the autumn of 1624. Shortly before death of the king, an irritated corporation learned ‘by common report, not by writ or other ordinary course anciently used’, that the duke of Buckingham had succeeded as lord warden. Nevertheless, at the next election, which was held at the end of April or beginning of May 1625, it accepted without demur Buckingham’s nomination of Sackville Crowe, a member of his household of Sussex origin. It also returned Buckingham’s choice in 1626, this being the vice-chamberlain of the king’s Household, (Sir) Dudley Carleton. However, during the course of the Parliament Carleton was raised to the Upper House to avert the wrath of the Commons. On 22 May, the day before a new writ was issued, Buckingham thereupon wrote to the corporation, nominating Walter Montagu, who had been unsuccessful at New Romney, and may have relied on the local influence of John Ashburnham.
in the freemen
Number of voters: c. 40
