Boroughbridge (UK Parliament constituency)

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Boroughbridge
Former borough constituency
for the House of Commons
1553–1832
SeatsTwo

Boroughbridge was a parliamentary borough in Yorkshire from 1553 until 1832, when it was abolished under the Great Reform Act. Throughout its existence it was represented by two Members of Parliament in the House of Commons.

The constituency consisted of the market town of Boroughbridge in the parish of Aldborough (which was also a borough with two MPs of its own). By 1831 it contained only 154 houses, and had a population of 947.

Boroughbridge was a burgage borough, meaning that the right to vote was vested in the tenants of certain specified properties, of which there seem to have been about 65 by the time the borough was abolished. Since these properties could be freely bought and sold, the effective power of election rested with whoever owned the majority of the burgages (who, if necessary, could simply assign the tenancies to reliable placemen shortly before an election). For more than a century before the Reform Act, Boroughbridge was owned by the Dukes of Newcastle, who controlled around fifteen seats across the country; however, in the 1790s, they sold one of the seats for £4,000 to the banker Thomas Coutts, who used it to put his son-in-law, Francis Burdett, into Parliament.

1553–1640

  • Constituency created (1553)
ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1553 (Oct)William TancredChristopher Wray[1]
1554 (Apr)Ralph CholmleyChristopher Wray [1]
1554 (Nov)Christopher WrayJohn Holmes[1]
1555Christopher WrayRobert Kempe[1]
1558William FairfaxChristopher Wray [1]
1558–9Sir John YorkRichard Bunny[1]
1562–3John AstleyThomas Disney[1]
1571Cotton GargraveThomas Boynton[1]
1572 (Apr)Thomas Eynns (died 1578)Cotton Gargrave[1]
1584 (Oct)Henry ChekeNicholas Faunt[1]
1586 (Sep)George SavileRobert Briggs[1]
1588–9Sir Edward FittonFrancis Moore[1]
1593John BrograveVincent Skinner
1597 (Sep)Henry FanshaweThomas Crompton[1]
1601Richard WhalleyThomas Fairfax [1]
1604John FerneSir Henry Jenkins
1609Sir Thomas VavasourSir Henry Jenkins
1614Sir Ferdinando FairfaxGeorge Marshall
1621Sir Ferdinando FairfaxGeorge Wethered
1624Sir Ferdinando FairfaxChristopher Mainwaring
1625Sir Ferdinando FairfaxWilliam Mainwaring
1626Sir Ferdinando FairfaxPhilip Mainwaring
1628Sir Ferdinando FairfaxFrancis Neville
1629–1640No Parliaments summoned

1640–1832

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
April 1640 Ferdinando, Lord Fairfax Francis Neville
November 1640 Sir Philip Stapylton (d. September 1647)Parliamentarian Thomas MaulevererParliamentarian
1648 Henry Stapylton
December 1648 Stapylton excluded in Pride's Purge – seat vacant
1653 Boroughbridge not represented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate
January 1659 Colonel Laurence Parsons Robert Stapylton
May 1659 Not represented in the restored Rump as Thomas Mauleverer had died in the interim
1660 Conyers Darcy Sir Henry Stapylton
1661 Sir Richard Mauleverer, Bt Robert Long[2]
1673 Sir Henry Goodricke, Bt
1675 Sir Michael Warton
March 1679 Sir Thomas Mauleverer, Bt
August 1679 Sir John Brookes, Bt
1685 Sir Henry Goodricke, Bt
1689 Christopher Vane[3]Whig
1690 Sir Brian Stapylton
1695 Thomas Harrison
1698 Sir Brian Stapylton
1705 John Stapylton Craven Peyton
1708 Sir Brian Stapylton
1713 Edmund DunchWhig
1715 Thomas Wilkinson Sir Richard SteeleWhig
1718 Sir Wilfrid Lawson, Bt
March 1722 Conyers Darcy[4] James Tyrrell
October 1722 Joseph Danvers
1727 George Gregory
1742 William MurrayTory
1746 Earl of Dalkeith
1750 Hon. Lewis Monson Watson[5]
1754 John Fuller
1755 Sir Cecil Bisshopp, Bt
1756 Earl of Euston[6]Whig
1757 Thomas Thoroton
1761 Brice Fisher
1767 James West the younger
1768 Nathaniel Cholmley James West
1772 Major-General Henry Clinton
1774 Anthony Eyre Charles Mellish[7]
1775 Colonel William Phillips
1780 Charles Ambler, KC
1784 Sir Richard Sutton, Bt The Viscount Palmerston
1790 Morris Robinson
1796 Francis Burdett[8]Independent Radical Sir John ScottTory
1799 Hon. John ScottTory
1802 Edward Berkeley PortmanWhig
January 1806 Viscount CastlereaghTory
November 1806 Brigadier William Henry ClintonTory Henry DawkinsTory
1808 Henry ClintonTory
1818 Marmaduke LawsonWhig George MundyTory[9]
March 1820 Richard SpoonerRadical
June 1820 Captain George Mundy, RN[10]Tory[9] Lt Colonel Henry DawkinsTory[11]
1830 Sir Charles WetherellTory[12] Matthias AttwoodTory[13]
  • Constituency abolished (1832)

Elections

Notes

References

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