Lyme Regis (UK Parliament constituency)

Lyme Regis
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
1295–1868
Number of members two (1295–1832); one (1832–1868)

Lyme Regis was a parliamentary borough in Dorset, which elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons from 1295 until 1832, and then one member from 1832 until 1868, when the borough was abolished.

Members of Parliament

1295–1629

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1386 Walter TropenellRobert Membury[1]
1388 (Feb) Walter Tropenell Robert Membury[1]
1388 (Sep)Walter TropenellJohn Dorset[1]
1390 (Jan)Walter Tropenell John Dorset[1]
1390 (Nov)
1391 Walter TropenellJohn Dorset[1]
1393Robert MemburyRoger Crogge[1]
1394 Robert MemburyJohn Stikelane[1]
1395John DorsetJohn Wade[1]
1397 (Jan)Thomas Bathe Hugh Sampford[1]
1397 (Sep)John StikelaneJohn Crone[1]
1399 Roger CroggeJohn Stikelane[1]
1401
1402 Roger CroggeRalph Stikelane[1]
1404 (Jan)
1404 (Oct)
1406 Roger Crogge Ralph Stikelane[1]
1407 Peter RichmanJohn Baker III[1]
1410 Thomas Haseley[1]
1411
1413 (Feb)
1413 (May)Thomas WalsinghamRoger Crogge[1]
1414 (Apr)John Tynham Thomas Stikelane[1]
1414 (Nov) John TynhamRoger Crogge[1]
1415
1416 (Mar)
1416 (Oct)
1417Thomas EstWilliam Taverner[1]
1419 Thomas Stikelane[1]
1420Edward CukkfordJohn Richman[1]
1421 (May)Thoms LondNicholas Radford[1]
1421 (Dec)Thomas RichmanRichard Parker[1]
1491 John Burgh[2]
1510–1523No names known
1529 John Pyne, died
and repl. after 1532 by
?John Tudoll
Thomas Burgh
1536 ?
1539 ?
1542 ?
1545 John FryWilliam Pole
1547 Sir Francis FlemingHenry Leke[3]
1553 (Mar) ?
1553 (Oct) Thomas Goodwin John Mallock
Parliament of 1554
Parliament of 1554–1555
Parliament of 1555 John Strowbridge Jasper Poyntz
Parliament of 1558 Jasper Poyntz[4] John Popham[5]
Parliament of 1559 Nicholas Throckmorton John Mallock
Parliament of 1563–1567 Francis Walsingham William Butler (or Boteler?)
Parliament of 1571 John Astley William Ellesdon
Parliament of 1572–1581 George Ellesdon
Parliament of 1584–1585 Edward Drew John Hassard
Parliament of 1586–1587 Thomas Hughes
Parliament of 1588–1589 Hamden Paulet Robert Hassard
Parliament of 1593 Zachariah Bethel
Parliament of 1597–1598 Richard Tichborne Christopher Ellesdon
Parliament of 1601 John FitzJames Nicholas Throckmorton, later Nicholas Carew
Parliament of 1604–1611 Sir George Somers died 1610
By-election Sir Francis Russell
John Hassard too ill to continue sitting 1610[6]
By-election George Jeffreys
Addled Parliament (1614) Sir Edward Seymour George Browne
Parliament of 1621–1622 John Poulett Robert Hassard
Happy Parliament (1624–1625) Sir John Drake William Wynn
Useless Parliament (1625) John Drake Thomas Paramour
Parliament of 1625–1626 Sir Walter Erle
Parliament of 1628–1629 Christopher Erle
No Parliament summoned 1629–1640

1640–1832

Year1st Member1st Party2nd Member2nd Party
April 1640[7] Sir Walter ErleParliamentarian Richard Rose Parliamentarian
November 1640 Edmund PrideauxParliamentarian
December 1648 Rose not recorded as sitting after Pride's Purge
1653 Lyme Regis was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament
1654 Sir Edmund Prideaux[8] Lyme Regis had only one seat in the First and
Second Parliaments of the Protectorate
1656
January 1659 Henry Henley
May 1659 One seat vacant
April 1660 Walter Yonge Thomas Moore (sat for Heytesbury)
June 1660 Henry Hyde, later Earl of Clarendon
1661 Sir John Shaw Henry Henley
1679 Sir George Strode
1679 Thomas Moore
1685 John Pole Sir Winston Churchill
1689 John Burridge
1690 Henry Henley
1695 Robert Henley
1701 Joseph Paice
1701 John Burridge
1702 Henry Henley
1705 Thomas Freke
1710 Henry Henley John Burridge, junior
1715 John Henley
1722 Henry Holt Henley
1727 Henry Drax
1728 Henry Holt Henley[9]
1734 John Scrope
1748 Robert Henley
1753 Thomas Fane, later Earl of Westmorland Tory
1754 Francis Fane Tory
1757 Henry Fane Tory
1762 Lord Burghersh, later Earl of Westmorland Tory
1772 Hon. Henry Fane Tory
1777 Francis Fane Tory
1780[10] David Robert Michel Tory
1784 Hon. Thomas Fane Tory
1802 Henry Fane Tory
1806 Lord Burghersh, later Earl of Westmorland Tory
1816 John Thomas Fane Tory
1818 Vere Fane Tory
1826 Hon. Henry Sutton Fane Tory
1832 Representation reduced to one member

1832–1868

ElectionMemberParty
1832 William Pinney Whig
1842[11] Thomas Hussey Conservative
1847 Sir Thomas Neville Abdy Whig
1852 William Pinney Whig
1865 John Wright Treeby Conservative
1868 Constituency abolished

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 "History of Parliament". History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
  2. The English Parliaments of Henry VII. Retrieved 17 March 2012.
  3. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/leke-henry-1526-58-or-later
  4. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/constituencies/lyme-regis
  5. This may be the future Speaker of the House of Commons, John Popham (1531–1607), but his entry in the Dictionary of National Biography judges this identification as "uncertain".
  6. In 1607, Sir George Somers reported to the Commons that his colleague, Hassard, was too ill from gout to continue serving, and attempted to have him dismissed from his seat. However, the House resolved "That he shall still serve, and that he shall not be removed". But in 1610 Sir John Jeffreys offered a petition on behalf of the borough to allow Hassard to be replaced, and a committee on investigation found that the 69-year-old MP was bed-ridden and incurable, and a new writ was ordered to replace him. (Oldfield, Vol I, p 372).
  7. Browne Willis gives three names for Lyme Regis in the Short Parliament, those of Erle, Rose and Prideaux. Other sources do not suggest that Prideaux sat in that Parliament (whereas Erle certainly did), and it is probably his name that is in error.
  8. Prideaux took his seat in the restored Rump, but died 1659
  9. Burridge was re-elected at the general election of 1727 but was subsequently judged to be ineligible since he was Mayor of the borough at the time of the election, and his defeated opponent Henley was declared elected in his place
  10. In 1780 there was a double return: on petition, the election was declared void and a new election held with the same candidates: Fane and Michel were elected in preference to Henry Harford and Lionel Darell, junior.
  11. Pinney was initially declared re-elected at the general election of 1841, but on petition his election was declared void and Hussey declared elected in his place after scrutiny of the votes

Election results

References

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