A small market town on the east bank of the River Nene, Higham Ferrers received a charter in 1556 which vested government of the town in a corporation consisting of a mayor, seven aldermen and 13 ‘capital burgesses’; it also conferred upon the borough the right to send one Member to Parliament.
Sir Goddard Pemberton, whose family owned the nearby estate of Rushden, was a kinsman by marriage of the steward of the manor of Higham Ferrers, Sir John Stanhope I*. Following his election to James’s first Parliament, Pemberton may have helped the borough to obtain a new charter, which passed the seal on 6 July 1604.
In the next three elections the Northamptonshire magnate, Sir Edward Montagu*, secured the return of his brother and London agent, Sir Charles, ‘by common assent and consent’. Following the latter’s death, in 1626 Lord Montagu (as Sir Edward had now become) requested the seat for his nephew, Sir George Sondes, but he failed to give the corporation sufficient notice.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 21
