In 1715 the chief interests at Scarborough were in John Hungerford, a Tory lawyer, and William Thompson, a Whig country gentleman, who shared the representation of the borough without opposition from 1702 to 1722. The Government had a considerable influence from the customs and the ordnance.
In 1722 and 1727 Hungerford was again returned, but Thompson stood down in favour of another Whig, William Strickland, till 1730, when he was re-elected on Hungerford’s death. The first contest occurred on Strickland’s death in 1735, when the corporation were divided between two rival pro-Administration Whigs, Lord Dupplin, standing on the interest of his first cousin the Duke of Leeds, who had been asked by some of the corporation to name a candidate,
On Thompson’s death in 1744, Savage Mostyn, connected politically with Lords Winchilsea and Granville, was put up by Lord Carlisle,
in the corporation
Number of voters: 44
