Lying some eight miles north of Hull and the Humber estuary, Beverley was the principal market town of the East Riding. A thriving inland port and centre for the wool trade in the medieval period, it was ‘much decayed’ by 1640, and its economy rested mainly on the processing of agricultural products and the trade generated by its fairs and markets.
By a royal charter, granted in 1573, Beverley was governed by a corporation consisting of a mayor, 12 aldermen or ‘governors’, and 13 ‘select burgesses’. The governors, who held office for life, and the burgesses annually elected one of the governors to serve as mayor; and the mayor and governors elected new governors, named the candidates from whom the freemen elected the select burgesses and appointed the town recorder and other municipal officers.
Following the summoning late in 1639 of a new Parliament, Algernon Percy†, 4th earl of Northumberland – lord high admiral of England and a court ally of Thomas Wentworth, 1st earl of Strafford (Sir Thomas Wentworth†) – wrote to Beverley corporation to the effect ‘that his ancestors formerly used to nominate one of their burgesses, and he expects the like courtesy’.
The competitors in both places [Beverley and Hull] are divers. And the two contrary passions of love and fear are like to meet, in opposition. Our old and long continued burgesses [Sir John Hotham* and Sir William Alford†]... under whose tuition many of our people are in respect of country government, on the one side, and a potent landlord [Sir Michael Warton] in respect of private and particular interest on the other, prevail much for fear. What friends the other [?Vane] will find I know not, but will make the most and best I can.Alnwick, Y.V.1d, bundle 1: Thorpe to Melton, 24 Dec. 1639.
Beverley corporation would offer little support, however – as Thorpe informed Melton early in January 1640.
This mayor [of Beverley] hath in observance thereto [to Melton’s letters to the corporation] called a Chamber, but no satisfaction can be obtained therein either to encouragement or discouragement in the business. They say they will be very ready to observe his lordship in all due respects, but must reserve themselves in this till the election, and then they must do their duties.Alnwick, MS Y.V.1d, bundle 1: Thorpe to Melton, 3 Jan. 1640.
Thorpe was also dismayed at what he termed ‘the unexpected opposition of Sir Michael Warton for his son’ Michael Warton*. Sir Michael, he explained,
is lord of the town, an universal landlord to our burgesses, and I find his party strong among the inferior sort, whose voices yet are equal with the best. Sir William Alford, a former burgess and near neighbour [of the town] and powerful among the better sort; Sir John Hotham, a former burgess, a near neighbour and very well meriting from the town and cried up by all – and in truth, not be denied ... Touching Sir Michael Warton: I looked not for his opposition. Touching Sir William Alford: my hope was turned into assurance I should take him off by persuasion if Sir Michael Warton had not comed [sic] in, and so my lord’s desire might have been satisfied without difficulty. But as the case now stands ... I am more then doubtful and therein much afflicted that I cannot perform that service to my lord ... I intended and much desired.Alnwick, MS Y.V.1d, bundle 1: Thorpe to Melton, 3 Jan. 1640.
Thorpe’s analysis of the town’s electoral affairs suggests that the feelings of the freemen and ‘inferior sort’ exerted considerable influence upon the borough’s choice of MPs.
In the event, the town returned Hotham, who had represented Beverley since 1625, and Michael Warton, the leaseholder of the manor of Beverley ‘with the park, borough and water towns thereto belonging’.
To what extent the leading inhabitants supported Hotham’s defiance of Strafford and the king is not known, although most of them appear to have looked to him for political guidance during the early 1640s. On 19 May 1641, the mayor, 11 governors and eight burgesses took the Protestation ‘according to order and direction from Sir John Hotham’, and they also lent him money and plate ‘for the use of the public’.
Having sided with Parliament at the outbreak of civil war, Hotham and Warton subsequently defected to the king and were disabled from sitting by the Commons in September 1643 and January 1644 respectively.
The identity of John Nelthorpe, on the other hand, is more difficult to establish. The MP may have been James’s other elder brother, who had been admitted at Gray’s Inn in 1634. But there is very little in the parliamentary careers of James and John Nelthorpe to suggest that they were fraternally connected. The two men do not seem to have worked together at Westminster, and whereas James survived Pride’s Purge and was active in the Rump, John was secluded in 1648. The Lords’ nomination in 1647 of John Nelthorpe MP as steward of the manors of Barton and Barrow in Lincolnshire in place of the recently deceased John Broxolme* is strong – albeit not conclusive – evidence that he was in fact James’s cousin, who was a scion of the senior branch of the family, the Nelthorpes of Glanford Brigg, Lincolnshire. This family not only retained considerable property in Beverley, giving them a strong proprietorial interest in the town, but also lands in Barton and Barrow, some of which they leased from Broxolme. John Nelthorpe of the Glanford Brigg branch of the family was also admitted to Gray’s Inn in 1634 and may well have been the man of that named who became a barrister there in 1641 – a legal and metropolitan connection that would probably have increased his appeal to Beverley corporation.
In the event, the town seems to have made relatively few demands on its MPs. The corporation looked to the Nelthorpes to secure an ordinance for uniting the town’s two parishes in order to provide additional maintenance for Beverley minister, but the required legislation was never passed.
Under the Instrument of Government, Beverley was reduced to a single parliamentary seat, and in the elections to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654 the corporation returned Thorpe – James Nelthorpe having moved to Windsor and resigned as one of the town’s governors. The indenture returning Thorpe was signed and sealed by the mayor and at least 50 of the townsmen.
The town regained its two seats in the elections to Richard Cromwell’s Parliament of 1659, which saw the beginnings of a revival of local gentry influence with the return of John Anlaby and Thomas Strickland. Anlaby, a former Rumper, was one the area’s foremost parliamentarian gentlemen; and Strickland was returned on the interest of his father, the East Riding grandee Sir William Strickland*.
Beverley was represented in the restored Rump by James Nelthorpe and – following the admission of the secluded Members on 21 February 1660 – by both James and his cousin John Nelthorpe in the last few weeks of the Long Parliament. In the elections to the 1660 Convention, the ‘major part’ of the governors and select burgesses returned Hotham’s grandson Sir John Hotham, 2nd bt. and the parliamentarian officer Colonel Hugh Bethell.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: 24 in 1640
