Situated in the southern midlands and bounded by no fewer than nine other counties, Northamptonshire was described in the Restoration period as ‘of a fat and rich soil both for tillage and pasturage, bearing excellent grain and feeding great store of sheep and cattle ...[and] honoured with the seats of as many (if not more) of the nobility and gentry as any county in the kingdom, especially as to its extent’.
Since early Tudor times, Northamptonshire had tended to return one Member from the western and one from the eastern division. But this ‘ancient course’ had begun to break down in the early 1620s with the regular return of Members from the western division families of Spencer and Knightley. After 1621, only one knight of the shire – Sir John Pickering – had been drawn from the county’s eastern division.
The frontrunners in campaigning for the shire places in the elections to the Short Parliament early in 1640 were the godly grandees and, it seems, electoral partners, John Crewe I* and Sir Gilbert Pykeringe*. Crewe, who had sat for constituencies in Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Northamptonshire in the 1620s and had been a steadfast Ship-Money refuser, was destined to take the senior seat. But Pykeringe’s relative youth – he was still in his twenties – and lack of political experience, encouraged competition for at least one of the county places and vigorous campaigning by his own agents at the quarter sessions and other public occasions. The prominent Northamptonshire gentleman and future royalist, Sir Christopher Hatton*, was canvassing for votes by early March 1640, but then decided, or was persuaded, to withdraw from a contest in which he evidently enjoyed insufficient support, particularly among the county’s godly community. A more serious rival to Pykeringe was the court candidate Thomas Elmes: a Northamptonshire deputy lieutenant with strong links of his own to the region’s godly grandees (his daughter had married Sir Arthur Hesilrige*). Elmes drew most of his support from northern Northamptonshire, where he resided, and enjoyed the backing of some, probably the majority, of his fellow deputy lieutenants and of the earls of Peterborough, Northampton and Westmorland – the two latter being future royalists. Several of the county’s Laudian churchmen also canvassed on his behalf. For his part, Pykeringe relied heavily for campaign organisers on the Northampton godly, including Peter Whalley* and the town’s leading puritan cleric Thomas Ball. One of their tactics was to smear Elmes – indeed, to assert that he was ineligible to stand for election – by claiming that he was supported by papists and that, as a deputy lieutenant, he was involved in levying ‘unparliamentary’ military charges for the second bishops’ war. On election day, 19 March, it was clear that Crewe commanded sufficient support to take the senior place, but a fierce contest developed for the second place between Elmes and Pykeringe. After the sheriff had read out the writ, the earls of Northampton, Peterborough and Westmorland ‘with others, mounted their horses and ... rode between the companies [of freeholders], calling men to come to Mr Elmes’s company’.
Writing to the county’s lord lieutenant a few days after the election, several of his deputies informed him that ‘some turbulent spirits, by undue practices, caused great clamours amongst the multitude to be raised against the authority of the lieutenancy’.
been unusually and unsupportably charged, troubled and grieved in our consciences, persons and estates by innovation in religion, exactions in spiritual courts, molestations of our most godly and learned ministers, Ship Money, monopolies, undue impositions, army money [coat and conduct levies]... and enlarging the forest beyond the ancient bounds and the like.CJ ii. 5b; CSP Dom. 1640, p. 7; Aston’s Diary, 10.
Early in May, with Parliament on the point of being dissolved, Ball, Whalley and 11 of their confederates were summoned before the privy council to answer for their temerity at the Northamptonshire election. The council was particularly concerned that by using the rallying cry 'No deputy lieutenants', Pykeringe’s agents had ‘made an exception in the minds of the people, to the great hindrance of the levy of soldiers then in hand’ for the second bishops’ war.
In the elections to the Long Parliament, held on 29 October, Pykeringe was returned again – this time in first place – with his uncle, the godly Northamptonshire baronet Sir John Driden, taking the junior seat.
Both Pykeringe and Driden sided with Parliament at the outbreak of civil war, as did probably a majority of Northamptonshire’s inhabitants, although there were pockets of strong popular royalism in the south and east of the county. Despite being under parliamentarian control by early 1643, the county was subject to royalist raiding for most of the war.
Northamptonshire retained its two seats in the Nominated Parliament, for which the council of officers nominated Cromwell’s ally Pykeringe and the much more obscure figure of Thomas Brooke. The scion of a godly family, but not trusted with local office by Parliament before 1647, Brooke was one of 19, generally obscure, men who appear to have been nominated at a later stage than the majority of MPs, which may well indicate that they were chosen because some of the original nominees had been considered politically unreliable, or, more likely, because they had refused to sit.
Under the 1653 Instrument of Government the county’s representation was increased to six seats; and in the elections to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654 it returned Pykeringe, Crewe I, Sir John Norwich, John Cleypoole, Driden and Brooke – apparently in that order.
The county election for the second protectoral Parliament was held on Kettering heath on 20 August 1656 and was ‘ordered and managed’ – or so it was later alleged – by Major-general William Boteler*. According to an eighteenth-century chronicle of local affairs, after the sheriff read the writ, Boteler named the six gentlemen to be elected, beginning with Pykeringe, and then
took a party of his own and rode round the heath crying “A Pickering, a Pickering” till he came to the sheriff, and then he ordered the sheriff to set him [Pykeringe] down as duly chosen; and in like manner he did manage the same for the other five successively ... not taking notice of Colonel [Henry] Benson and his party, which were [sic] great and cried up [Richard] Knightley and other considerable persons of the county.Bodl. Top. Northants. c.9, p. 109.
Knightley and his neighbour Colonel Benson were leading members of the county’s Presbyterian interest and had doubtless been sidelined by Boteler as opponents of the rule of the major-generals.
