Few counties saw more of royalty than Hertfordshire, especially during the reign of James I. Royston, amid the unenclosed downlands of the north, was James’s favourite centre for hunting and hawking, and to it he added Theobalds, by exchange with his chief minister the 1st earl of Salisbury (Robert Cecil†) in 1607, thereby acquiring a palace within easier access of Whitehall.
Patronage in Hertfordshire’s county elections was dominated by the Cecil earls of Salisbury.
Although Hertford was the assize town, the sheriff customarily summoned the county court wherever he chose. During the Tudor period parliamentary elections were held usually, but not exclusively, at Hertford, and occasionally at various alternative locations including Waltham Cross.
On 7 Dec. 1620 Sir Henry Carey I, by that time a privy councillor and courtier who had recently purchased a Scottish peerage, wrote to the 2nd earl of Salisbury (William Cecil*) announcing his intention to stand in the forthcoming election, and begging him to ‘afford me your defence and favour for the place, which I am determined to pursue’. He also canvassed his kinsman Lord Hunsdon, and wrote again to Salisbury on 11 Dec. that he had heard ‘some alarums … [that] Sir Richard Lucy†, (Sir) Henry Capell†, or some of the Botelers purposed to stand, though I do not much believe it, and your declaration of affection makes me the more secure’. In a postscript Carey confided that he had joined interests with Sir Charles Morrison, ‘and it is both our desires the country should not be troubled without cause’.
Morrison was re-elected, again at St. Albans, as the senior Member in 1624. He was joined by Lytton’s son William, who had Salisbury’s full support, and was knighted later in the year, albeit apparently ‘sore against his will’.
Hertfordshire was the first county to reply to demands for the Forced Loan, the commissioners (including both Botelers) writing to Secretary (Sir) John Coke* on 1 August that the unanimous answer from six Hundreds was that ‘they are all most willing to contribute for the defence of the kingdom and for the supply of His Majesty’s wants in that behalf by way of subsidy in a parliamentary manner even beyond their abilities’.
Number of voters: c. 900 in 1640
