Andover’s importance in the early modern period stemmed largely from its location on one of the main routes from London to the West, at the point where it crossed the River Anton, and to a lesser extent from its role as a centre of cloth manufacture.
According to a new charter of 1599, replacing that of 1175, power in the borough was vested in a corporation consisting of a bailiff, who served as the returning officer, a recorder (or steward), and other minor officers (coroner, escheator, clerk of the market, justices, chamberlains, constables, serjeants at mace), who were drawn from the ten ‘approved men’ and the 12 ‘burgesses’; in 1640 the total number was deemed to be 24.
By the spring of 1640 Robert Wallop’s re-election to Parliament probably seemed a foregone conclusion. Returned alongside him to the senior seat on 12 March was Sir Richard Wynn* of Gwydir, treasurer and receiver general to Queen Henrietta Maria, evidently a court nominee.
Discontents arising from the local effects of military campaigning in the north of England over the summer may have enabled Wallop to take the first seat in the autumn election on 19 October. The second place went to Sir Henry Rainsforde*, a Gloucestershire gentleman with a reversionary interest through marriage in Hampshire lands at Faccombe, a few miles to the north.
Whatever Rainsforde’s stance, it soon became irrelevant. He died in the spring of 1641, and a new writ was ordered for the election of his replacement on 31 March.
After numerous postponements, Herbert finally reported on the case on 3 May 1642.
During the first civil war Andover’s location and manufacturing capacity gave it strategic importance to both sides, in a region which was fiercely contested.
In January 1648 Sir William Waller was disabled from sitting in the Commons, having been one of the ‘Eleven Members’ impeached by the army the previous summer. On 14 March the Commons ordered that an election be held for his replacement, and the writ was issued on 27 March. But no election was held before 8 June, when Waller was restored to his place.
Under the protectorate Wallop was three times elected to sit for his county, leaving the way open for others at Andover. The 1654 election presents something of a puzzle in that the surviving list of votes cast on 6 July by 24 members of the corporation is difficult to interpret. In a three-way contest, it seems likely that 11 votes went to John Dunch*, grandson of John More, steward of Andover from 1599 to 1620, son-in-law of Richard Maijor* and brother-in-law of the town’s new high steward, Richard Cromwell*. Local gentleman John Bulkeley*, who had been a recuiter MP for Newtown but secluded at Pride’s Purge, received seven, while John Shuter†, one of the capital burgesses and recorder from 1620 to 1648, received none.
At the 1659 election there were once again two seats available at Andover. The corporation, which had been quick to proclaim their support for their high steward Richard Cromwell on his succession to the protectorate in September 1658, unsurprisingly chose at least one courtier.
The Restoration brought imprisonment for Robert Wallop, while the focus of his family’s involvement in Parliament switched to Whitchurch. However, the tradition of electing gentlemen with local bases or interests was perpetuated.
Right of election: in the corporation
Number of voters: 24 in 1640
