Centrifugal and centripetal elements affected elections to Oxfordshire seats throughout this period. Although Oxford provided an unrivalled focus for judicial, administrative and ecclesiastical life in the county, and a critical point of access to riverborne communications with London, its position close to the border with Berkshire and its status as a university city always had potential to complicate public life in the area.
Notwithstanding such diversity, there was relatively widespread and general opposition in the 1630s to some central aspects of royal policy and (judging by subsequent events) a significant weight of opinion against the rule of William Laud as archbishop and vice-chancellor of the university. In economic decline and assessed only seventeenth among the counties of England for the purposes of levying Ship Money, Oxfordshire proved among the more recalcitrant areas when it came to collection.
By 1640 the increasingly dilapidated state of Oxford Castle may have prompted the removal of most county elections to the courtyard outside the city council chambers in St Aldate’s which also witnessed contests for Oxford borough seats.
Over the spring and summer of 1640 Oxfordshire continued to experience unrest. Sheriff Warcop claimed to have done his best to collect subsidies, but the task was dangerous and too often unproductive.
perceiving that Lord Wenman and Mr Fiennes were resolved to put all their interest upon this business and that Whitelocke opposing would increase the charge to all, and breed a division in the county, and unkindness betwixt him and them who were friends, and the issue [to] be doubtful, and the public business of danger
the lawyer took counsel of his friends. Finding that there was support for him but not (he recounted) for Waller, and yielding to persuasion from Judge George Croke†, he ‘thereupon gave over the competition and signified the same to his friends’. On the day, Waller duly garnered ‘only a few votes’, but Whitelocke’s ‘name was so cried up, that if he had appeared, he had carried it, as his friends testified’.
Both Fiennes and Wenman sat until excluded from the Commons on 6 December 1648. Although neither was consistently active in the early days of the Long Parliament, Fiennes moved for action against Ship Money in May 1641 and (according to Simonds D’Ewes*) presented the Oxfordshire petition against episcopacy that July.
Nominations to the Parliament of 1653 reflected an influx of personnel to three concentrations of power in the county – administrative, military and scholarly – in the aftermath of the surrender of Oxford in June 1646. William Draper*, son-in-law of the prominent minister Thomas Gataker, was a newcomer to the area who had rapidly come to dominate the county committee. With fellow activist Thomas Appletree he was also a visitor of the university and a sequestration commissioner, and he had served as governor of the Oxford garrison revived during the invasion scare of 1651. Newly installed on the commission of the peace, Dr Jonathan Goddard*, intruded warden of Merton College, represented the reformed university. He had also served as a physician to the army and attended Oliver Cromwell*. The young Sir Charles Wolseley*, a Staffordshire baronet, was rising in political circles at Westminster. He was also a son-in-law to Saye and Sele, who though absent like his eldest son from the public political stage, was still (as he had been since appointed by Parliament in August 1642) lord lieutenant, and may have been active behind the scenes.
In practice, however, the regime change had been and continued to be less thoroughgoing than might appear. Whatever the lobbying for inclusion of new men periodically exercised by activists like Appletree and Draper, alongside receiver Elisha Coles and army officers Richard Ingoldsby* and Thomas Kelsey*, familiar names recurred among assessment commissioners and on the commission of the peace.
Successful candidates for the county seats in July 1654 on the whole combined a traditional claim to voters’ attention with closeness to the protectorate government. James Fiennes was replaced by his next brother Nathaniel I*, who had returned to public life and joined the council of state in April, and this time lacked the option of sitting for Banbury. Similarly, Charles Fleetwood*, was both a councillor and an army grandee, but before choosing to sit for the county, he substituted for his royalist elder brother Sir William Fleetwood* at New Woodstock, just as he had succeeded to his other offices. Former and future Speaker William Lenthall* similarly represented continuity, while Robert Jenkinson had inherited a delinquent’s estate. Bulstrode Whitelocke, now commissioner of the great seal, had a choice of other seats but, 14 years after his previous disappointment, to his great satisfaction had sufficient influence to place his son James Whitelocke* as ‘one of the knights for that county’, through the ‘great kindness of the gentry and freeholders, and of the scholars and citizens of Oxford’.
There may well have been a core of enthusiasts for the protectorate in county administration who operated as something of a caucus. On 10 March 1655 an apparently self-selecting group of magistrates who described themselves as ‘commissioners (together with others)’ wrote to Cromwell to express their loyalty in times when some ‘hardened their hearts’ against further reformation; signatories to the letter included Draper, Appletree, John Nixon* of Oxford, and Richard* and ?Unton Croke I*.
In many respects the elections of 1656 proved little different from two years earlier. Once again Whitelocke was initially a candidate before pursuing a place elsewhere. He heard from ‘old Speaker Lenthall’ on 3 July that ‘many pitched’ him to be one of the knights of the shire.
In late 1658 the reduction of county seats to the traditional two may have made for fiercer competition, although this is as likely to have been due to the general political situation. A report in Mercurius Politicus dated 29 December referred to a contest the day before in which Viscount Falkland and Jenkinson stood for the senior place ‘and upon the poll Mr Jenkinson carried it by 13 votes’. Although the newsletter went on to say that the next contest ‘this day’ was between Falkland and Norreys ‘and it’s thought my Lord will carry it’, an indenture of 29 December named Jenkinson and Norreys as the overall victors. The document is damaged, but among more than 30 visible signatures are Appletree, Nixon, Richard Croke and several Oxford notables.
