Richmond was the northernmost of the Yorkshire constituencies, lying on the River Swale about 50 miles north-west of York and ten miles south of the border with County Durham.
Richmond had been enfranchised in 1576 and had returned Members to Parliament on a regular basis from 1584. Under the 1576 charter, the franchise was vested in the ‘burgesses’ – a term which was not defined until 1679, although it appears to have consisted of the municipal officeholders and the inhabitants of the borough paying scot and lot.
By 1640, the borough’s principal electoral patron was Christopher Wandesford†, an intimate associate of the president of the council of the north and lord deputy of Ireland, the earl of Strafford (Sir Thomas Wentworth†).
Both Pennyman and Danbie sided with the king during the civil war and were disabled from sitting by the Commons on 11 August and 6 September 1642 respectively.
Both Thorpe and Chaloner, in common with Northumberland and Wharton, were opposed to continuing Scottish intervention in England affairs – a fact that may have played well with the townspeople. Like many parts of the North Riding, the Richmond area was forced to play host to the ill-maintained Scottish army during the mid-1640s, and anti-Scots feeling was probably rife in the town by late 1645. The townspeople may also have blamed the Scots for an outbreak of the plague that struck Richmond in the summer of 1645 (soldiers, particularly those from other regions, were often held responsible for spreading the plague and other contagious diseases).
As one of the largest Yorkshire boroughs, Richmond retained one of its seats under the Instrument of Government of 1653, and on 12 July 1654 the voters returned John Wastell to the first protectoral Parliament. Wastell, besides being the borough’s recorder, was very much a local man, his seat at Scorton lying about five miles west of the town. Given that it had been almost ten years since the last election, it is not surprising to find that only 6 of the 40 or so signatories to the indenture had signed previous indentures, although a further seven had the same surnames as previous signatories.
In the elections to the second protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1656, the borough returned the town’s former schoolmaster John Bathurst MD of London, who was one of the protector’s physicians. Although a Kentishman by birth, Bathurst had married into a Richmondshire family and owned extensive property in the area.
Richmond regained its second seat in the elections to Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament of 1659, which saw the return of Bathurst and Sir Christopher Wyvill. Wyvill may have enjoyed some local influence by reason that his seat, at Constable Burton, lay about five miles south of Richmond. However, he probably owed his return largely to his brother-in-law, James Darcy†, who belonged to the most influential local family by the late 1650s, the Darcys of Sedbury Park.
Right of election: in the corporation and ‘burgesses’
Number of voters: c.300 in 1678
