Basically Milborne Port was a scot and lot borough, but the choice of returning officers was the result of a complicated procedure which invited contention. There were nine capital burgesses or bailiffs, the holders of ancient tenements, two of whom in rotation appointed returning officers. In 1754 four of these tenements were owned by Thomas Medlycott and five by Edward Walter: together, therefore, they controlled the returning officers, and since each owned a good deal of property in the borough, in effect they controlled its representation. It seems to have been understood that each patron was to recommend to one seat; and though between 1754 and there was no poll, there was a good deal of skirmishing at election times.
In any case everything depended on close collaboration between the patrons, and in 1772 this broke down. Each patron offered a candidate, and Medlycott’s man, defeated on the poll, was seated on petition. This was a dress rehearsal for the bitter contest of 1774, when each patron proposed two candidates. The election took place just at the time when one pair of returning officers was due to hand over to another: there were in consequence four possible returning officers, two of whom acted together, and three polls were taken. To ensure the validity of their return, Medlycott and his men broke into the town hall one night to secure possession of the borough seal. Though the struggle was primarily for control of the borough, Luttrell and Wolseley, Medlycott’s candidates, took their stand on political principles. They attacked the Government’s American policy, ‘which may bring on a civil war in America’, and denounced the Quebec Act, which they asserted ‘empowered the Catholics to persecute’ and was ‘shocking to the feelings of humanity’.
In 1779 Lord North intervened at Milborne Port, apparently with the aim of getting rid of Luttrell, a most persistent opponent of Administration. North employed Maurice Lloyd to buy Walter’s borough property, which was then offered to Medlycott on condition of his accepting Government candidates at the forthcoming general election. The transaction was distinctly shady: Lloyd apparently posed as a principal, and Walter later declared he would never have sold his property had he known it was to go to Medlycott. Luttrell secured a parliamentary inquiry, but his charge of corruption against North was declared ill-founded.
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: about 120
