The Members for Malmesbury were returned on the recommendation of the high steward, elected annually by the corporation. In 1715 this office was held by Lord Wharton, who brought in his former secretary, Joseph Addison, with another Whig, Sir John Rushout. At the general election of 1722 it was held by his son, the Duke of Wharton, whose candidates, Rushout and Lord Hillsborough, were unseated on petition in favour of Giles Earle and John Fermor, both followers of the Duke of Argyll, high steward from 1722 to 1741. At each of the next three elections Earle and his son were returned unopposed. To secure this a standard tariff was fixed, under which each member of the corporation received £100 for a general election and £20 for a re-election on taking office, two of them pocketing £669 each between 1722 and 1742.‘An Account of Money’, Malmesbury borough recs. The election of 1727 was described as ‘the quietest and peaceablest election that ever was in this borough, not one person contradicting the other’; and in that of 1734 it was said that there was ‘no expense at public houses ... but every person minded his own business’.Remarks entered by an unknown hand in Malmesbury borough minute bk.

At the 1741 election of the high steward Earle replaced Argyll, now in opposition, till 1743, when he himself was ousted by Rushout, who polled eight votes to his three. At the general election of 1747 two Leicester House candidates sponsored by Rushout as high steward defeated the Earles.

Author
Right of election

in the corporation

Background Information

Number of voters: 13

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Constituency ID