Saltash (UK Parliament constituency)

Saltash (UK Parliament constituency)

UK former constituency infobox
Name = Saltash
Type = Borough
Year = 1552
Abolition = 1832
members = two

Saltash, sometimes called Essa, was a "rotten borough" in Cornwall which returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons in the English and later British Parliament from 1552 to 1832, when it was abolished by the Great Reform Act.

History

The borough consisted of the town of Saltash, a market town facing Plymouth and Devonport across the Tamar estuary, and the inhabitants by 1831 were mainly fishermen or Devonport dockworkers. Like most of the Cornish boroughs enfranchised or re-enfranchised during the Tudor period, it was a rotten borough from the start.

Saltash was a burgage borough, meaning that the right to vote rested with the tenants of certain specified properties. For a long period in the 18th century, there was a contest for control of the borough between the government and the Buller family of Morval, depending partly on legal uncertainties over the precise number and identity of the burgage properties to which votes were attached. In the 1760s it was considered an entirely secure Admiralty borough, where the naval influence could sway all the voters, but by 1831 the Bullers owned all the tenancies and considered themselves the patrons.

In 1831, the borough had a population of 1,637, and 245 houses.

Members of Parliament

1552-1660

* 1628-1629: Francis Cottington

Long Parliament
* 1640-1642: Edward Hyde (Royalist) - "disabled to sit, August 1642"
* 1640-1646: George Parry (Royalist) - "died, December 1646"
* 1645(?)-1648: John Thynne - "excluded in Pride's Purge, December 1648"
* 1647(?)-1648: Henry Wills - "excluded in Pride's Purge, December 1648"

"Saltash was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate

Third Protectorate Parliament
* 1659: ?"'Long Parliament (restored)
* 1659-1660: ?

1660-1832

Notes

References

*D Brunton & D H Pennington, “Members of the Long Parliament” (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954)
*Lewis Namier, "The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III" (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)
*J Holladay Philbin, "Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
*Rayment


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