This place returned Members to Parliament between 1295 and 1306, but then the franchise lapsed until it was restored in 1628. Located 12 miles north west of Hereford, it was a small market centre, no more than a village, which had no corporation. It consisted of one single street. Some 37 names appeared on a rent roll of Humphrey Tomkins in 1630; and in 1663, 42 men and women were rated for contributions towards the militia. The hearth tax returns of 1664 suggest a parish of 126 properties.
In 1640, the Tomkins family seemed set fair to perpetuate its grip on the two seats. The appearance of Arthur Jones in the second election of that year, on 24 October, superficially appears a break with the pattern.
Thomas Tomkins went to the royalist Oxford Parliament, and on 22 January 1644 was disabled from sitting at Westminster. Jones suffered the same fate two weeks later. From the summer of 1646, there was political manoeuvring in the expectation that writs would soon be issued for seats in Herefordshire. The focus of attention seems to have been the seats for the city of Hereford and the county, with no mention of a contest at Weobley.
One of the electors at Weobley was Miles Hill, of a family which held property in the parish. Hill, who had failed in business at Leominster, where he had been a member of the corporation, became treasurer of the county military revenues in 1645 on the authority of Edward Harley* and others.
Weobley was disenfranchised under the protectorate of Oliver Cromwell*. Early in 1659, elections were held in the traditional form, and so Weobley again returned two Members.
Right of election: in the ratepayers
Number of voters: 11 in Oct. 1640, 15 in 1641
