On the western edge of Hampshire at the confluence of the rivers Stour and Avon, Christchurch was a small and impoverished coastal town of very limited importance. In 1538 one commentator noted that it was ‘set in a desolate place, in a very barren country, out and far from all highways, in an angle or a corner, having no woods nor commodious country about it ... and slenderly inhabited’.
The town had never received a charter, and was a borough only by prescription. The administration consisted of a mayor, who was sworn in at the court leet by the steward of the manor, and the freemen, or burgesses, who were unelected.
Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour, who acquired the manor in 1601, exerted a significant influence on elections, and was occasionally able to secure the return of both Members.
The first evidence of such tension emerged in the mid-1630s and related to John Hildesley*, an attorney from outside the county who had undertaken legal work for the borough and had been admitted a burgess in 1633.
Divisions between the inhabitants and the lord of the manor may have affected the elections of the 1640s. On 16 December 1639 Baltimore informed the burgesses that, following the previous custom of accepting the lord’s recommendation for one of the places, ‘now I expect and desire that you would at my entreaty make choice of such a person as I shall shortly nominate unto you’.
Others also attempted to influence the elections. On 10 December 1639, Algernon Percy†, 4th earl of Northumberland, wrote to the burgesses invoking the customary ‘favour’ done by ‘other ports and seatowns of England ... heretofore’ to those who occupied the position of lord admiral ‘in giving them the nomination of one of the burgesses for those towns’, although the extension of this authority to Christchurch seems to have been unprecedented. Northumberland’s candidate was Edward Nicholas†, clerk of the council and a notable future royalist.
By late February 1640 the situation had changed. On 25 February Baltimore informed the burgesses that although many of them had consented to return Fenner and Hanham, the latter’s sickness had forced him to withdraw. In his place, Baltimore recommended John Hervey† of Ickworth in Suffolk, another future royalist. He also promised that both Fenner and Harvey would ‘give attendance at their own charge and discharge the said borough from all damage therein’.
These last-minute substitutions undermined Baltimore’s earlier success. On 10 March one of the burgesses, Edmund Nusham, informed the town’s mayor, Henry Rogers, that although he had promised his voice for Fenner and Hanham, the candidates now proposed by Baltimore were ‘strangers that I do not know’. As a result, he intended to deploy his votes for Sir George Hastings and Henry Tulse I*, a fellow burgess who resided nearby at Hinton Admiral.
The autumn elections of 1640 were complicated by rival attempts to exercise the influence of the lord of the manor. On 29 September Baltimore requested that the borough return Matthew Davies*, a lawyer from Shaftesbury, undertaking that ‘he shall put your borough to no charge for the said employment’.
This was met with some disdain within the borough. On 26 October the new mayor, John Kemp, a linen draper, informed Pembroke that ‘the major part of our corporation’ had already ‘engaged’ themselves to elect Tulse and Davies. Tulse, he pointed out, was a local man, and the sitting Member, while Davies was recommended by Lord Baltimore, whom the town conceived to be lord of the borough. Furthermore, ‘Mr William Arundel is altogether unknown to us, neither did we ever hear (till now) that he pretended any right to the manor of Christchurch’.
to beware lest you give way that any pretended whatsoever (especially the Lord Baltimore who is likeliest to be most bold though with least reason) should usurp the privilege of naming the burgesses belonging to your town, and I desire you by these to take notice that I have given my right and interest to the lord chamberlain [i.e. Pembroke].Christchurch Bor. Council, Old Letters, no. 38.
Notwithstanding this, Pembroke’s attempt to usurp the electoral patronage at Christchurch failed. On 26 October the town returned Henry Tulse and Matthew Davies.
During the first civil war Christchurch was seized by the royalists. They held the town until April 1644, when forces under Sir William Waller* came to its relief as part of a wider campaign in the region, taking between 2-400 prisoners and up to 100 horse.
On 25 October 1645 a writ was ordered for a recruiter election at Christchurch.
how I shall dispose of myself for the present, but if I should be far from hence, at the time of your election of burgesses for the Parliament, I hope you will not otherwise dispose of it until my friends have time to send to me, for gentlemen, there can be no man more willing to serve you than I.Christchurch Bor. Council, Old Letters, no. 39.
By the first week of November, however, Kemp had heard that John Lisle*, one of the most powerful and controversial parliamentarians in the county, had arrived with an election writ and, as Kemp informed Hildesley, ‘that he doth intend to propound another to you in my place’. Kemp trusted that he had his friend’s ‘affections so much already that I shall not need to put you in mind of your promise’, but explained that, while he was ‘not ambitious of the place’, he would ‘take it for the greatest dishonour that could be put upon me, to be undermined by him who is my professed enemy’. He invited Hildesley to recall how, ‘at the beginning of these unhappy times’ (probably when control of the town was contested between parliamentarians and royalists) Lisle ‘came into the town to procure voices against me even then when I was in arms amongst you and ready to venture my life for you’. The election at Christchurch, said Kemp
ought to be free and I am confident what persuasions or threats may be used by any man, you will discharge the hearts of honest men, if there be any that you have a mind to prefer that you think fitter and more worthy than myself, I should be willing to subscribe so it be not by Lisle means.Christchurch Bor. Council, Old Letters, no. 46.
In reply, Hildesley reassured Kemp that the town would not be persuaded to select another man, being resolved to ‘stand firm for you according to our former promises, and no persuasions or threats shall cause any alterations’.
The identity of the candidate proposed by John Lisle is unknown, but there was at least one other man who initially expressed an interest in securing one of the seats. On 10 November John Bulkeley* wrote to the mayor of Christchurch to say that he would not, after all, require a place, having been chosen for Newtown in the Isle of Wight. He recommended instead Colonel Richard Edwards*, a Bedfordshire man who was brother-in-law to Hampshire MP Richard Whithed I*, and who was a burgess of the town by July 1641. Bulkeley hoped that no ‘workings whatsoever’ would obstruct Edwards’ candidature, for ‘I am you cannot have an honester nor abler man’.
Even after Bulkeley’s withdrawal from the election, Kemp worried about his own prospects. On 12 November he informed the mayor and burgesses of ‘an unexpected occasion which forces me (very unwillingly) to go for London’, but assured them that his ‘stay (God willing) shall be very short’. If the election writ arrived in the meantime, he requested that they alert his ‘brother Bromfield in Southampton’, who had been lined up ‘to be at the election and to give you such entertainment as if I my self were there’.
Whatever the pressures applied by Lisle or others, Kemp and Edwards secured the two seats on 25 November, the day on which they had both requested the election to be held.
Christchurch was disenfranchised during the Nominated and first two protectorate Parliaments. It was restored as a parliamentary borough in 1659. On that occasion the town chose John Bulkeley, who had turned down the chance of representing the borough in 1645, and Henry Tulse II*, son of the man returned in 1640 and stepson of John Hildesley.
Right of election: in the corporation
Number of voters: eight in 1640
