Bramber (UK Parliament constituency)


Bramber was a parliamentary borough in Sussex, one of the most notorious of all the rotten boroughs. It elected two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons in 1295, and again from 1472 until 1832, when the constituency was abolished by the Great Reform Act.

History

The borough consisted of the former market town of Bramber on the River Adur, which by the 19th century had decayed to the size of a small village. Bramber was barely distinguishable from neighbouring Steyning, with which it shared a main street, and for a century and a half after 1295 they formed a single borough collectively returning MPs. From the reign of Edward IV, however, they returned two MPs each, even though one part of Bramber was in the centre of Steyning so that a single property could in theory give rise to a vote in both boroughs. They were never substantial enough towns to deserve enfranchisement on their own merits, and both probably owed their status to a royal desire to gratify the courtiers that owned them with a degree of influence in the House of Commons.
Bramber was a burgage borough – the vote was restricted to inhabitants of ancient houses in the borough, or those built on ancient foundations, who paid scot and lot. In 1816 this amounted to only 20 voters, although as in 1831 the borough contained 35 houses and a population of approximately 170, this was a much higher proportion of the residents than in most burgage boroughs.
Bramber was slightly unusual in that the vote was accorded to the occupier rather than the owner of the burgage tenements, but in practice the owners had total control over the votes of their tenants – by bribery if not by threats – and therefore of elections in the borough. In Tudor times, the Dukes of Norfolk seem to have held sway. By the first half of the 18th century Bramber was wholly owned by Sir Harry Gough, who leased it to Lord Archer; Lord Archer sold this right onwards in his turn, apparently being paid £1000 by the government to allow Lord Malpas to be elected in 1754. In 1768 the Duke of Rutland gained control, but Gough later regained power over one of the two seats and it was inherited by his descendants. These two families still shared the representation at the time of the Reform Act.
Bramber was abolished as a separate constituency with effect from the 1832 general election. However, the nearby borough of New Shoreham had already been expanded to include the whole of the Rape of Bramber as an antidote to its corruption, and survived the Reform Act with both its MPs intact. Bramber therefore formed part of the New Shoreham constituency from 1832.

Members of Parliament

before 1640

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1399Robert CoukJohn Farnfold
1510–1523No names known-
1529Henry SeeWilliam Roper
1536?-
1539?-
1542Sir John Clere?Richard Watkins
1545Sir John ClereJohn Gilmyn
1547Sir William SharingtonJohn Fylde
by 23 Jan 1552Chidiock PauletRichard Bunny
1553 George RitheLawrence Awen
1553 Sir John BakerThomas Timperley
1554 Sir Henry PalmerJohn Story
1554 Thomas ElringtonJohn Baker
1555Sir Thomas KnyvetJohn Baker or Thomas Baker
1558Henry MynnNicholas Mynn
1559Sir Henry GatesRobert Buxton
1562/3William BarkerRobert Balam
1571Bartholomew ClerkeRobert Wiseman
1572Hugh HareHenry Clerke
1584Nicholas BeaumontSampson Lennard
1586William TowseJohn Porter
1588James AlthamJohn Osborne
1593Samuel ThornhillEdward Michelborne
1597Nicholas TrottWilliam Comber
1601Sir Thomas Shirley, sat for Hastings
and replaced Nov 1601 by
Henry Lok
Henry Bowyer
1604Sir John ShurleyHenry Shelley
1614Sir John LeedesHenry ShelleySon of Member for 1604
1621 Thomas BowyerRobert Morley
1624 Thomas BowyerRobert Morley
1625Walter Barttelot Thomas Bowyer
1626Walter Barttelot Thomas Bowyer
1628–1629Sir Sackville Crowe Thomas Bowyer
1629–1640No Parliaments summoned No Parliaments summoned

1640–1832

Notes