The borough of Bridport was situated near Lyme Regis in west Dorset, at the confluence of three small rivers, the Brit, the Simene and the Asker, which enter the English Channel at West Bay, two miles to the south of the town. Bridport owed its early prosperity to its importance as a centre for rope manufacture, a trade which had flourished since the early thirteenth century; but from the sixteenth century the town was in decline, with the harbour silted up and the rope trade undermined by rules limiting the right of manufacture to guild members.
The religious inclinations of Bridport’s dominant mercantile families no doubt encouraged the corporation to court the political patronage of the ‘godly’ gentry of the neighbourhood. The town’s first recorder (appointed under the charter of 1619) was the local grandee, Sir John Strode†. Strode was retained as counsel for the town, and received numerous gifts and rewards from the borough during his 21-year tenure of the post.
With the religious views of its leading citizens and principal political patrons, Bridport’s opposition to the crown in 1642 comes as no surprise. From the spring of that year, the bailiffs were monitoring the growing national crisis, collecting proclamations about popery, the defence of Hull, and other matters.
In fact, Bridport’s lowland site, lack of walls and small harbour rendered the town of little military value during the civil wars. Bridport was occupied by both sides, depending on the ebb and flow of the war, but did not suffer the destruction caused by sieges and skirmishes at Poole, Wareham, Weymouth or Lyme Regis.
The political views of the ordinary townsmen during this period are less easily discerned. Despite pockets of royalist sympathy in the borough in the early 1640s, and a brief visit to the town by Charles Stuart, during his flight from Worcester in 1651, Bridport seems to have conformed to successive regimes readily enough.
Right of election: in the bailiffs and burgesses, Apr. and Nov.1640; in the bailiffs, burgesses and commonalty, 1645 and 1659
Number of voters: 15 in 1640
