Gloucestershire (UK Parliament constituency)

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Gloucestershire
Former county constituency
for the House of Commons
1290–1832
Seatstwo

The constituency of Gloucestershire was a UK Parliamentary constituency. After it was abolished under the 1832 Electoral Reform Act, two new constituencies, West Gloucestershire and East Gloucestershire, were created.

Gloucestershire was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of England, then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1832. It was represented by two Knights of the Shire.

The constituency consisted of the historic county of Gloucestershire, excluding the part of the city of Bristol in the geographical county. Bristol had the status of a county of itself after 1373. Although Gloucestershire contained a number of other parliamentary boroughs, each of which elected two MPs in its own right for part of the period when Gloucestershire was a constituency, these were not excluded from the county constituency. Owning property within such boroughs could confer a vote at the county election. This was not the case, though, for Bristol.[citation needed]

Members of Parliament

Roman numerals are used to differentiate MPs with the same name, who are not holders of a title with different succession numbers. It is not suggested that the people involved would have used Roman numerals in this way.

1290–1339

Richard de Croupes shield[1]

Constituency created (1290)

1340–1385

1386–1421

1422–1508

1509–1558

(Source: Bindoff (1982))[7]

Parliament of 1510–23 No names known No names known
Parliament of 1529 Sir William Kingston Sir John Brydges
Parliament of 1536 Not known Not known
Parliament of 1539 Sir William Kingston Anthony Kingston
Parliament of 1542 ?Sir Anthony Kingston Not known
Parliament of 1545 Sir Anthony Kingston Nicholas Arnold
Parliament of 1547 Sir Anthony Kingston Sir Nicholas Poyntz
Parliament of 1553 (Mar) Sir Anthony Kingston Sir Nicholas Arnold
Parliament of 1553 (Oct) Sir Edmund Brydges Sir Anthony Hungerford
Parliament of 1554 (Apr) Sir Giles Poole Nicholas Wykes
Parliament of 1554 (Nov) Arthur Porter William Rede
Parliament of 1555 Sir Anthony Kingston Sir Nicholas Arnold
Parliament of 1558 Sir Henry Jerningham Sir Walter Denys

1559–1639

1640–1832

ElectionFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
1640, April Sir Robert TracyRoyalist Sir Robert CookeParliamentarian
1640, November Nathaniel StephensParliamentarian John Dutton 1Royalist
c. 1644 Sir John Seymour 2Parliamentarian
Gloucestershire's representation was increased to 3 nominated MPs in Barebones Parliament
1653 John Crofts; William Neast; Robert Holmes
Gloucestershire's representation was increased to 5 elected MPs in the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate
1654 George Berkeley; Matthew Hale; John Howe; Christopher Guise; Sylvanus Wood
1656 George Berkeley; John Howe; John Crofts; Baynham Throckmorton; William Neast
Gloucestershire's representation was decreased to 2 MPs in the Third Parliament of the Protectorate and thereafter
1659, January John Grobham Howe I John Stephens
1659, May unknown unknown
1660, April 18 Edward Stephens Matthew Hale
17 April 1661 John Grobham Howe I Sir Baynham Throckmorton, 2nd Bt 3
21 December 1664 Sir Baynham Throckmorton, 3rd Bt
26 February 1679 Sir John Guise, 2nd Bt Sir Ralph Dutton, Bt
18 March 1685 Marquess of Worcester Sir Robert Atkyns
18 January 1689 Sir John Guise, 2nd BtWhig Sir Ralph Dutton, BtWhig
11 December 1695 Thomas Stephens IWhig
3 August 1698 John Grobham Howe IITory Sir Richard Cocks, BtWhig
3 December 1701 Maynard ColchesterWhig
6 August 1702 John Grobham Howe IITory
16 May 1705 Sir John Guise, 3rd BtWhig
12 May 1708 Matthew MoretonWhig
25 October 1710 John Symes BerkeleyTory
23 September 1713 Thomas Stephens IIWhig
9 February 1715 Matthew MoretonWhig
30 March 1720 Hon. Henry Berkeley
22 June 1720 Edmund Bray
28 March 1722 Kinard de la Bere
6 September 1727 Sir John Dutton, Bt
8 May 1734 Thomas ChesterTory Benjamin BathurstTory
12 May 1741 Norborne Berkeley
27 April 1763 Thomas Tracy
23 November 1763 Edward Southwell
6 August 1770 Sir William Guise, Bt
6 May 1776 William Bromley-ChesterTory 4
24 January 1781 James Dutton
28 April 1783 Hon. George Cranfield BerkeleyWhig 5
12 April 1784 Thomas MasterTory 5
2 June 1796 Marquess of WorcesterTory
14 November 1803 Lord Edward SomersetTory
18 May 1810 Viscount Dursley
7 February 1811 Sir Berkeley Guise, BtWhig
10 May 1831 Hon. Henry Reynolds-MoretonWhig
Constituency abolished (1832)

Notes:-

  • 1 Dutton was disabled from sitting for adhering to the King and joining the King's Oxford Parliament, c. 1644.
  • 2 Seymour was excluded from Parliament by the Army, c. 1648.
  • 3 Father of the Baynham Throckmorton elected in 1656 and 1664.
  • 4 Stooks Smith classifies Bromley-Chester as Tory in the 1776 by-election, but gives no label in subsequent elections.
  • 5 Stooks Smith classifies Berkeley as Whig in the 1776 by-election (which he lost), but gives no label in subsequent elections before the general election of 1790. Both Berkeley and Master are classified by party from 1790.

Elections

Gloucestershire by-election, May 1776 (1 seat) [8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Tory William Bromley-Chester 2,919 50.4 n/a
Whig George Cranfield Berkeley 2,873 49.6 n/a
Majority 46 0.8 n/a
Turnout 5,792 n/a
Registered electors

See also

Sources

References

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