Ludgershall (UK Parliament constituency)
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Ludgershall Borough constituency |
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Created: | 1295 |
Abolished: | 1832 |
Type: | House of Commons |
Members: | two |
Ludgershall was a parliamentary borough in Wiltshire, which elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons from 1295 until 1832, when the borough was abolished by the Great Reform Act.
Contents |
[edit] Members of Parliament
[edit] 1295–1640
- 1571–1581: James Colbrand
- 1589: Carew Raleigh
- 1604–1611: James Kirton
- 1604–1611: Henry Ludlow
- 1621–1622: Alexander Chorke
- 1621–1622: William Satwell
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
[edit] 1640–1832
Year | First member | First party | Second member | Second party | ||
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November 1640 | William Ashburnham [1] | Royalist | Sir John Evelyn | Parliamentarian | ||
1642 | Walter Long [2] | Parliamentarian | ||||
December 1648 | Long and Evelyn excluded in Pride's Purge – both seats vacant | |||||
1653 | Ludgershall was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate | |||||
January 1659 | James Davy | Richard Sherwyn | ||||
May 1659 | Ludgershall was not represented in the restored Rump | |||||
April 1660 | William Prynne | William Thomas | ||||
July 1660 | Silius Titus | |||||
March 1661 | William Ashburnham | Geoffrey Palmer | ||||
December 1661 | Sir Richard Browne | |||||
1669 | Thomas Grey | |||||
1673 | George Legge | |||||
February 1679 | Thomas Neale | John Smith | ||||
August 1679 | John Garrard | |||||
1681 | Sir John Talbot | |||||
1685 | Henry Clerke | |||||
1689 | John Smith | John Deane | ||||
1690 | Thomas Neale | |||||
1695 | Colonel John Richmond Webb | Tory | ||||
1698 | Walter Kent | |||||
1699 | Colonel John Richmond Webb | Tory | ||||
1701 | Edmund Richmond Webb | |||||
1705 | Thomas Powell | Walter Kent | ||||
1706 | Major-General John Richmond Webb [3] | Tory | ||||
1708 | Robert Bruce | |||||
1710 | Major-General Thomas Pearce | |||||
1713 | Robert Ferne | |||||
1714 | John Ward | |||||
1715 | General John Richmond Webb | Tory | John Ivory-Talbot | |||
1722 | Borlase Richmond Webb | |||||
1724 | Anthony Cornish | |||||
1727 | Charles Boone | |||||
1734 | Peter Delmé | Daniel Boone | ||||
1741 | Charles Selwyn | Thomas Hayward | ||||
1747 | Thomas Farrington | George Augustus Selwyn | ||||
1754 | Sir John Bland | Thomas Hayward | ||||
1755 | Henry Digby [4] | |||||
1761 | Thomas Whately | John Paterson | ||||
1768 | Lord Garlies | Sir Peniston Lamb [5] | ||||
January 1774 | Whitshed Keene | |||||
October 1774 | Lord George Gordon | |||||
1780 | George Augustus Selwyn | |||||
1784 | Nathaniel William Wraxall | |||||
1790 | Hon. William Assheton Harbord | |||||
1791 | Samuel Smith | |||||
1793 | Nathaniel Newnham | Tory | ||||
1796 | Earl of Dalkeith | Tory | Thomas Everett | Tory | ||
1804 | Magens Dorrien-Magens | Tory | ||||
1810 | Joseph Hague Everett | Tory | ||||
1812 | Sandford Graham | Whig | Joseph Birch | Whig | ||
1813 | Charles Nicholas Pallmer | Whig | ||||
1817 | The Earl of Carhampton | Tory | ||||
1818 | (Sir) Sandford Graham [6] | Whig | ||||
1821 | Earl of Brecknock | Tory | ||||
1826 | Edward Thomas Foley | Tory | George James Welbore Agar-Ellis | Whig | ||
1830 | Sir Sandford Graham | Whig | ||||
1832 | Constituency abolished |
- Notes
- ^ Expelled, December 1641
- ^ Long was disabled from sitting by an Order of the House on 27 January 1648, but re-instated on 8 June 1648
- ^ Webb was re-elected in 1713, but had also been elected for Newport (Isle of Wight), which he chose to represent, and did not sit for Ludgershall in this Parliament
- ^ Succeeded as The Lord Digby (in the Peerage of Ireland), 1757
- ^ Created The Lord Melbourne in June 1770, and The Viscount Melbourne in December 1781 (both titles being in the Peerage of Ireland)
- ^ Succeeded as baronet, April 1824
[edit] References
- Robert Beatson, A Chronological Register of Both Houses of Parliament (London: Longman, Hurst, Res & Orme, 1807) [1]
- Cobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808) [2]
- J E Neale, The Elizabethan House of Commons (London: Jonathan Cape, 1949)
- 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" (2nd edition, edited by FWS Craig – Chichester: Parliamentary Reference Publications, 1973)
- Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page