A modest market town dominated by distributive and victualling trades, by the reign of Charles I Woodstock was overshadowed by the adjacent royal park.
Repeated proposals by the admiralty in 1636 and 1637 for digging saltpetre on the royal estate, which might have provided further local employment, appear to have come to nothing.
It is not clear whether an impetus afforded by economic grievances or the indulgence of Pembroke explains a return to traditional form in the spring election of 1640. On 12 March the recorder, William Lenthall*, who to his chagrin had been squeezed out in the later 1620s, was chosen with Sir William Fleetwood. The ‘wax to seal [the] indenture’ appears in the chamberlains’ accounts, but only the mayor’s signature is affixed to the document.
None the less, a partly illegible indenture of 23 October reveals at least 46 burgesses and freemen willing to return Fleetwood to the next Parliament, this time with Benjamin Merrick, a resident of and property owner in the town.
While Sir William Fleetwood remained a presence in the town throughout the next two decades, Lenthall’s and Pye’s constant attendance at Westminster kept them from their constituency even before the outbreak of war.
There was fighting around Woodstock in the summer of 1644 when Sir William Waller* took the king’s sheriff Sir Robert Jenkinson† prisoner, in February 1645 when Colonel Charles Fleetwood* (Sir William’s brother) made an assault, and in May 1645 when Lieutenant-general Oliver Cromwell* was briefly in the area.
It was to Woodstock that royalist propositions for negotiating the surrender of Oxford were initially directed.
Perhaps at the instigation of Fleetwood or Lenthall, it was proposed to exempt ‘the honour, manor and parks of Woodstock, with appurtenances’ from the act to secure arrears for soldiers out of royal lands, but this was defeated (13 July 1649).
Woodstock was not represented in the Nominated Parliament of 1653 or, in practice, in 1654. Charles Fleetwood, who had taken on his royalist brother’s rangership of Woodstock Park as he had also his office in the court of wards, was apparently returned for the borough to the first protectorate Parliament, but he opted to sit in one of the augmented county seats. Debate on the Instrument of Government produced a motion on 5 December 1654 that Woodstock ‘might not be dismembered’, but this was rejected. The next day the House accepted the committee recommendation that the burgess be transferred to more loyal and more populous Banbury.
Yet in the longer term this decision was ignored, perhaps out of deference to Fleetwood’s increasing importance. The proposed sale by the admiralty commissioners of growing timber in Woodstock Park was postponed in July 1655 until the lord deputy of Ireland could come to England and express his view, while he also became nominally major-general for the area.
On 12 January 1659 the mayor, Alexander Johnson, a mercer who had been on the 1656 commission of the peace, signed an indenture recording the election of Jerome Sankey* and Miles Fleetwood.
Elections to the Convention witnessed the temporary total eclipse of the Fleetwood family, but Sir William, who regained his post of park ranger, was elected again for the borough in 1661 with the support of his son Miles. The former’s influence persisted, albeit diminished from pre-war days and overshadowed by the resurgent Spencers, even after Miles had been purged from the corporation in 1662.
Right of election: in the freemen
Number of voters: about 80
