The smallest of the ancient counties of England by some margin, Rutland was also dwarfed in terms of population and wealth by the adjoining shires of Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire. The county’s economy was based overwhelmingly upon arable farming, the rearing of sheep and cattle and the trade generated by its two modestly proportioned and ‘indifferently’ provisioned market towns, Oakham and Uppingham.
Rutland’s parliamentary representation had been dominated during the 1620s by Sir William Bulstrode of Uppingham – a kinsman of the county’s largest landowners, the Haringtons of Exton and Ridlington – and another Harington supporter, Sir Guy Palmes.
Noel and Palmes were re-elected for Rutland to the Long Parliament, again apparently without serious opposition.
That summer, Noel and his father and Palmes and his eldest son Brian Palmes* were named to the Rutland commission of array while Harington’s father, Sir Edward Harington, secured the Oakham magazine for Parliament.
the commission of array being directed to men of great power in the county, and the innovating [i.e. Laudian] clergy being very forward to publish the books that come from his Majesty and not those from Parliament, we fear the business may receive great prejudice.HMC Portland, i. 43.
In December 1642, Rutland was constituted part of the Midland Association under the command of Thomas Lord Grey of Groby*.
Parliament’s tenuous hold on Rutland after 1643 was weakened by a bitter dispute between Colonel Thomas Waite, the county’s senior parliamentarian officer, and certain members of the county committee, which came to a head in the summer of 1644 and would continue for another two years. This in-fighting was largely, it seems, the result of a local power struggle over military command and resources, but it may also have had a national political dimension. Certainly Waite was a close ally of Grey of Groby, who was himself aligned with the earl of Essex’s interest at Westminster and was a prominent opponent of the war-party grandee Sir Arthur Hesilrige.
On 30 September 1645, the Commons ordered that a writ be issued for holding new elections in Rutland to replace Noel and Palmes.
The Rutland ‘recruiter’ election, held at Oakham on 2 July 1646, was heavily influenced not only by the feud between Waite and the county committee, but also, it seems, by the largely personal rivalry between Waite and Harington – both of whom would emerge as prominent Independents at Westminster. The election was contested by four of the county’s leading county committeemen – Waite, Harington, Harington’s brother-in-law Christopher Browne, and Evers Armyn – and a fifth candidate, Richard Halford, who would be added to the committee in 1648. The contest went to a poll in which Harington emerged the clear winner with 241 votes; but a dispute between Waite and Browne regarding who had polled in second place led to a double return.
The sole representative for Rutland in the Nominated Parliament of 1653 was Edward Horsman, who almost certainly owed his selection to his links with Oliver Cromwell* and his Northamptonshire kinsman Sir Gilbert Pykeringe*.
In the elections to the second protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1656, the Rutland landowner and magistrate Abel Barker stood as a candidate, possibly in partnership with Christopher Browne. Shortly before the election, Browne warned Barker that Major-general William Boteler* was claiming that he could ‘allege that against you which will frustrate you and your friends’ designs in the election’.
Number of voters: 288 in 1646
