Herefordshire, according to Sir Robert Harley, was the most ‘clownish’, meaning rustic, county in England.
for the quiet of the country and reconcilement of the competitors ... to avoid heart burning, whereof inconveniencies will grow amongst yourselves, a hurt to the country perhaps for many years, as it hath done in former times.Hereford City Lib. Pengelly and Scudamore Pprs. 109.
At the first election of 1640, this preference for harmony still prevailed. The two unopposed candidates corresponded with one another, Sir Walter Pye reporting to Sir Robert Harley in February 1640 the opinion of Sir William Croft† that there would be no opposition to them unless a hidden competitor disclosed his hand on election day. By 28 February it was regarded as settled that these would be returned as knights of the shire, but for reasons of prudence, Harley was advised to bring along his freeholders to prevent any subterfuges.
Herefordshire county elections were usually held on Lugg Meadow, Hereford, and entertainment was laid on for those visiting the city in order to vote. Sir Robert Harley gained experience in organising hospitality in the elections of the 1620s, and was asked to make similar arrangements in 1640, not just in the interests of his own candidacy, but in these conditions of unanimity, on behalf of all involved.
On 30 October 1641, Coningsby was expelled the House as a beneficiary of a monopoly. The ensuing by-election suggests that even at this stage, the consensual element in Herefordshire politics had still not been dispelled. Brilliana Harley naturally hoped for ‘a good one’ to appear as a candidate, but the Harleys’ own interest was not mobilised through a want of clear instruction by Sir Robert in London to his wife at Brampton Bryan.
By March 1642, the tensions which had been building in Herefordshire between the minority puritan group led by Harley – which was closely linked through him to the group in the Commons in opposition to the king – and most of the leading gentry were evident. On 5 March, the Nine Worthies wrote to Harley and Coningsby, to report that the Protestation had been administered at Hereford, Leominster and Weobley. The justices had encouraged it as a voluntary and not unlawful act, but the writers doubted its validity and whether Parliament had the authority to impose an oath on the country that it was claiming for itself. They hoped for a continuing purge from the cathedrals of popery, the suppression of sectaries and a bill for more orderly elections.
Humphrey Coningsby was disabled for royalism on 8 May 1643, but not until 1646 was Parliament fully in control of the county and thus able to issue the writ for a by-election. Early in June, John Flackett*, a stalwart of the sequestration committee of the county, confided to Edward Harley* that John Birch* was building up a party of his own, both in Hereford and the county, with the aim of promoting candidates of his own in parliamentary elections. Flackett was sure that only ‘private ends’, rather than the public good, motivated Birch, but the resentments of the Herefordshire men, including the Harleys, towards Birch, derived from jealousy at the success of an outsider.
On 6 October, Edward Harley, his ally Ambrose Elton and others, wrote to Sir Robert Harley and Walter Kyrle at Westminster, enclosing a grand jury petition calling for the postponement of by-elections in Herefordshire until the military presence in the county had been significantly reduced. This was an obvious attempt to stifle the electoral ambitions of John Birch, even if the other elements of the petition, in favour of the ministry, the establishment of schools and an attack on ‘the cankerworm of usury’ were aspects of a wider project of the Herefordshire godly.
In the week beginning 4 November, the London press reported Birch as likely to take the seat.
The interest that Wroth Rogers had built up as governor of Hereford accounts for the selection of Rogers and John Herring for the Nominated Assembly in 1653. After he had settled in Hereford, Rogers retained military rank as garrison commander, but it was the sectarian godly church, Independent and millenarian in character, of which Rogers and Herring were members, that recommended them to the council of state as representatives of the county. Two more Herefordshire men, John James and Robert Holmes, served for the neighbouring counties of Worcestershire and Gloucestershire respectively. Although a modern authority cautions against exaggerating the impact of nominations by churches, this is probably a case in which the council took heed of a congregation’s wishes, no doubt because of the seniority of Rogers in the army.
The 1654 election saw an effort to reassert an older pattern of representation. The four places allocated the county under the Instrument of Government were taken by minor gentry. Only John Flackett might have been challenged on the grounds of his social standing, as he was a former pillar of the sequestration committee. This background, although controversial, cannot be taken as evidence of a persistent religious radicalism among the county’s Members. Puritan Flackett may have been, but he was a Presbyterian of the Harleys’ stamp, rather than a co-religionist of the Independent, sometime Quaker-sympathising Rogers. Richard Reed was a cousin of Edward Harley’s, Pateshall had flirted with radical religion, but proved as comfortable with the Cromwellian state church arrangements as with the heyday of millenarianism in the early 1650s. He, Reed and John Scudamore of Kentchurch were identifiably representative of traditional gentry interests. The election took place at Lugg Meadow, and it was only afterwards that complaints were addressed to the lord protector’s council. These addressed the setback to the godly project that the petitioners perceived as a consequence of the return of the four Herefordshire men.
Some shoring up of the radicals’ strength was achieved by the imposition of the major-generals’ regime in 1655-6. Major-general James Berry recruited from among the more Presbyterian-inclined activists of the interregnum, such as John Flackett, as well as from the Independent sympathisers represented by Rogers, to his body of commissioners for securing the peace of the commonwealth. If this expedient was intended to unite the godly under the lord protector, it failed. The second election under the Instrument of Government, held at Lugg Meadow on 20 August 1656, was turbulent. The major-general himself was a candidate. The sheriff was Wroth Rogers, who on the day first encouraged electors to cry up their choices ‘promiscuously’. When this achieved no clear outcome, he directed the electors to form into two companies, so he could judge which one was the greater. Those voting for Edward Harley, John Scudamore and Richard Reed – a group representing the long-established county gentry – drew off a little way. Rogers stayed put, and some electors voting for Berry, John James and Benjamin Mason surrounded him and cried up their names. When Rogers said that he only heard those voices, William Gregory† rode up and demanded the poll, asserting that the majority were in the other camp. Gregory said he was acting for Harley, Scudamore and Reed. Harley then joined in to seek a poll and was declared elected, even though those surrounding the sheriff did not vote for him. Harley demanded the poll for Reed as against Mason, and Scudamore as against Berry, as clear an indication as was possible of the sides being taken for and against the military.
The poll at this election was also demanded by Captains Taylor and French, among others, suggesting that army officers as well as gentry were being mobilized. There were challenges of some electors on grounds of eligibility, two supporters of Mason confessing to owning estates worth less than £200. The presence of John Birch at the contest was not a revival of his ambitions for a county seat, but an expression of support for the world-view of the Harleys. The indenture recorded the signatures of more than 32 electors, and the result was a balanced return: two Presbyterian county gentry figures, Harley and his close ally Bennet Hoskins on the one hand, and the soldiers Berry and Mason on the other. Among the electors who were willing to sign the indenture were at least two clergymen, the Baptist John Skinner, of Weston-under-Penyard, and Walter Tringham, vicar of Marden, who had been appointed on the recommendation of Wroth Rogers and John Tombes, the Baptist minister who had returned to Leominster.
No direct evidence has survived to illuminate the events surrounding the Herefordshire election of 1659. It was conducted on the franchise as it was before 1653, and each of those returned, Hoskins and Wroth Rogers, was an epitome of the interests which had jostled for local supremacy during the 1650s: the traditional county gentry on the one hand and the settled, garrison-based military representatives on the other.
