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Revision as of 21:08, 26 May 2013

Milborne Port
Former borough constituency
for the House of Commons
CountySomerset
Major settlementsMilborne Port
1628–1832
SeatsTwo

Milborne Port is a former parliamentary borough located in Somerset. It elected two members to the unreformed House of Commons between 1298 and 1307 and again from 1628, but was disenfranchised in the Reform Act 1832 as a rotten borough.

Members of Parliament

Milborne Port re-franchised in 1628

Year 1st Member 1st Party 2nd Member 2nd Party
1628 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Philip Digby style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Sir Nathaniel Napier
No Parliament summoned 1629-1640

MPs 1640–1832

Year 1st Member 1st Party 2nd Member 2nd Party
April 1640 rowspan="3" style="background-color: Template:Cavalier/meta/color" | Edward Kyrton Royalist style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Erle
November 1640 style="background-color: Template:Cavalier/meta/color" | Lord Digby [1] Royalist
1640 (?) style="background-color: Template:Cavalier/meta/color" | John Digby Royalist
August 1642 Kyrton and Digby disabled from sitting – both seats vacant
1645 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Carent style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Grove
December 1648 Grove excluded in Pride's Purge – seat vacant
1653 Milborne Port was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament
1654,1656 Milborne Port was unrepresented in the First and Second Protectorate Parliaments
January 1659 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Carent style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Robert Hunt
May 1659 Not represented in the restored Rump
April 1660 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Milborne rowspan="3" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Michael Malet
August 1660 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Francis Wyndham
1677 rowspan="4" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | John Hunt
February 1679 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Lacy
August 1679 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Henry Bull
1689 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Saunders
1690 rowspan="7" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Sir Thomas Travell style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Sir Charles Carteret
January 1701 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Sir Richard Newman
December 1701 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Henry Thynne
1702 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | John Hunt
1705 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Medlycott [2]
1709 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Smith
1710 rowspan="4" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | James Medlycott
1715 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | John Cox
June 1717 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Michael Harvey [3]
July 1717 [3] style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Charles Stanhope
1722 rowspan="3" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Michael Harvey style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | George Speke
1727 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Medlycott
1734 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Medlycott, junior
1741 rowspan="4" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Jeffrey French
1742 by-election rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Michael Harvey
1747[4]
1748 by-election rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Medlycott, junior
1754 rowspan="5" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Edward Walter
1763 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Hutchings-Medlycott
1770 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Robert Knight, 1st Earl of Catherlough
April 1772 by-election [5] style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Richard Combe [6]
May 1772 [5] style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | George Prescott
1774 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Hon. Temple Luttrell style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Captain Charles Wolseley
1780 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | John Townson style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Thomas Hutchings-Medlycott
1781 by-election rowspan="5" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | John Pennington[7]
1787 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Popham
1790 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | William Coles Medlycott
1791 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Richard Johnson
1794 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Colonel Mark Wood
1796 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Lord Paget style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Sir Robert Ainslie
1802 rowspan="5" style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Hugh Leycester
1804 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Captain Charles Paget
1806 style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Lord Paget
January 1810 by-election style="background-color: Template:/meta/color" | Viscount Lewisham
December 1810 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | Hon. Sir Edward Paget Tory
1812 style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | Robert Matthew Casberd Tory
1820 style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | Hon. Berkeley Paget Tory rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | Thomas North Graves Tory
1826 rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Whig (British political party)/meta/color" | Arthur Chichester Whig
1827 by-election style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | John Henry North Tory
1830 style="background-color: Template:Whig (British political party)/meta/color" | George Stevens Byng Whig rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Tory (British political party)/meta/color" | William Sturges-Bourne Tory
4 March 1831 by-election rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Whig (British political party)/meta/color" | Richard Lalor Sheil Whig
14 March 1831 by-election rowspan="2" style="background-color: Template:Whig (British political party)/meta/color" | Captain George Stevens Byng Whig
July 1831 by-election style="background-color: Template:Whig (British political party)/meta/color" | Philip Cecil Crampton Whig
1832 Constituency abolished

Notes

  1. ^ Lord Digby was also elected for Dorset, which he chose to represent, and never sat for Milborne Port
  2. ^ Medlycott was re-elected at the general election of 1708, but had also been elected for Westminster, and did not sit for Milborne Port in that Parliament
  3. ^ a b At the by-election of 1717, Harvey was initially declared elected by 27 votes to 22, but after considering a petition alleging gross bribery the House of Commons overturned the result and declared his opponent, Stanhope, to have been elected instead
  4. ^ At the 1747 general election, there was a double return for Milborne Port: Jeffrey French, Michael Harvey, Charles Churchill and Thomas Medlycott, junior were all returned (see "No. 8660". The London Gazette. 21 July 1747.). The first two (i.e. French, Harvey) were seated (see Stooks Smith, page 535)
  5. ^ a b The result of the 1772 by-election was overturned on petition in May 1772, and Richard Combe was unseated in favour of George Prescott (Stooks Smith, p. 535)
  6. ^ At the by-election of 1772, Combe was initially declared elected but on petition the result was overturned and his opponent, Prescott, was seated
  7. ^ Created The Lord Muncaster (in the Peerage of Ireland), 1783

References

  • Robert Beatson, A Chronological Register of Both Houses of Parliament (London: Longman, Hurst, Res & Orme, 1807) [1]
  • D Brunton & D H Pennington, Members of the Long Parliament (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954)
  • Cobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808) [2]
  • J Holladay Philbin, Parliamentary Representation 1832 – England and Wales (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
  • Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847, Volume 3 (London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1850) [3]
  • Browne Willis, Notitia Parliamentaria (London, 1750) [4]

See also