Crewe’s Act broke the government interest at Winchelsea and placed the borough securely in the control of local patrons. Jackman, the Whig agent sent down to investigate the Cinque Ports in 1790, reported that there were only six qualified voters and Oldfield claimed in 1794 that there were only three, and in 1816, seven.
Nesbitt’s sale of property in the borough to Barwell and Darlington was complicated, as a bill had already been filed in Chancery for the sale of his estates. From the somewhat garbled tale related by Oldfield it would appear that at the re-sale conducted by Chancery, Barwell alone purchased the Nesbitt estate.
in the resident freemen paying scot and lot
Number of voters: less than 10
