Suffolk (UK Parliament constituency)


Suffolk was a county constituency of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons from 1290 until 1832, when it was split into two divisions.

History

Boundaries and franchise

The constituency consisted of the historic county of Suffolk.
As in other county constituencies the franchise between 1430 and 1832 was defined by the Forty Shilling Freeholder Act, which gave the right to vote to every man who possessed freehold property within the county valued at £2 or more per year for the purposes of land tax; it was not necessary for the freeholder to occupy his land, nor even in later years to be resident in the county at all.
Except during the period of the Commonwealth, Suffolk had two MPs elected by the bloc vote method, under which each voter had two votes.

Political character

Elections were held at a single polling place, Ipswich, and voters from the rest of the county had to travel to the county town to exercise their franchise, which made elections almost prohibitively expensive in a county as big as Suffolk. The inconvenience of holding the elections in Ipswich, situated in one corner of the county, is emphasised by the fact that for almost all other county purposes, including the Assizes, Suffolk was divided into two sections with proceedings held at Bury St Edmunds as well as Ipswich; the arrangement must certainly have worked to the benefit of candidates whose voting strength was in East Suffolk rather than West Suffolk. It was normal for voters to expect the candidates for whom they voted to meet their expenses in travelling to the poll, and to "entertain" them – in other words provide free food and alcoholic drink – when they arrived.
Peter Jupp includes in his collection of documents relating to elections round the turn of the 19th century a contemporary account of the Suffolk election of 1790, one of the rare contested elections, which well illustrates the arrangements for treating the voters on such occasions. A committee set up to support the candidacies of Sir Charles Bunbury and Sir John Rous, "for the better regulating of the expense of maintaining the freeholders upon the days of election" issued printed tickets with the names of public houses upon them, entitling the bearer to a fixed amount of provision and maintenance – black tickets worth five shillings for the day, and red tickets worth seven shillings and sixpence for a man and horse for the night. After the election, the innkeepers presented their bills for providing this hospitality, which amounted to £3,500 for a two-day election; and the Committee, much dissatisfied by the scale of these charges, declined to pay in full so that several of the publicans afterwards sued the two candidates.
Partly as a result of the expense, contested elections were rare in Suffolk, and even when they took place were often only token contests. There was no dominant aristocratic interest in Suffolk, though it would probably have been impossible to defy the county's wealthier peers had they stood together, since no competing interest could hope to match them in an out-and-out spending contest.
In practice, the choice of members usually lay with the country squires, with matters generally settled more or less amicably by a test of strength at the county meeting with no need for the expense of a formal poll; when there was a contest, in 1784, the weakest of the three quickly withdrew when it was clear after the first day of voting that he could not win. Nevertheless, the freeholders were not necessarily entirely deferential and manipulable by the gentry: Cannon cites the work of Professor J H Plumb, who showed in his study of Suffolk pollbooks from the reign of Queen Anne that the voters could act independently in a seriously contested election, while their humiliating rejection of their long-standing MP Thomas Sherlock Gooch in favour of a Reform Bill supporter at the tumultuous election of 1830 demonstrates similar intractability more than a century later.

Abolition

By the time of the Great Reform Act in 1832, Suffolk had a population of approximately 300,000, It was assumed to have around 5,000 qualified voters, but since no full-blooded contest had taken place in living memory this could only be an estimate.. The Great Reform Act raised Suffolk's entitlement from two to four county MPs, while abolishing three of its seven boroughs. The single county constituency was abolished, being split into two divisions, East Suffolk and West Suffolk. At the first election after Reform, with a somewhat extended franchise, the electorates of these two new divisions totalled about 7,500.

Members of Parliament

1290–1640

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1376Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1377 Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1378Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1381Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1382 Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1382 Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1383 Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1383 Sir Richard Waldegrave-
1386Sir Richard WaldegraveSir William Wingfield
1388 Sir Richard WaldegraveSir William Burgate
1388 Sir Richard WaldegraveSir William Burgate
1390 Sir Richard WaldegraveSir William Wingfield
1390 Sir William WingfieldSir William Burgate
1391Sir Roger DrurySir William Bardwell
1393Sir William ElmhamSir William Argentine
1394Sir William ElmhamRobert Bukton
1395Sir William ArgentineSir William Burgate
1397 Sir William ElmhamRobert Bukton
1397 Sir William BardwellRobert Bukton
1399Sir William ArgentineSir John Heveningham
1401Sir Roger DruryRobert Bukton
1402Ralph RamseyGilbert Debenham
1404 Sir John StrangeSir John Ingoldisthorpe
1404 Sir Andrew ButlerSir John Strange
1406Sir John StrangeSir William Bardwell
1407Sir Roger DruryJohn Lancaster
1410Sir Andrew ButlerJohn Lancaster
1411John SpencerJohn Lancaster
1413 -
1413 John SpencerJohn Lancaster
1414 Sir William PhelipSir Robert Corbet
1414 Sir William PhelipSir Robert Corbet
1415-
1416 -
1416 -
1417Sir John BrahamWilliam Rookwood
1419William HanningfieldWilliam Rookwood
1420Richard SterysacreThomas Hethe
1421 Sir Andrew ButlerWilliam Rookwood
1421 James AndrewWilliam Rookwood
1422John WodehouseJohn Howard
1427Sir Robert Wingfield-
1431Sir Robert WingfieldSir Thomas Tuddenham
1432-1436Sir Robert Wingfield-
Nov 1450Sir Roger ChamberlainSir Edmund Mulsho
1491Sir Robert Drury-
1495Sir Robert Drury-
1510Sir Robert Drury?
1512?-
1515?-
1523?-
1529Sir Anthony WingfieldSir Thomas Wentworth I
1536Sir Anthony Wingfield-
1539Sir Anthony WingfieldSir Arthur Hopton
1542?Sir Anthony WingfieldSir Arthur Hopton
1545Sir William WaldegraveAnthony Rous
1547Sir Anthony WingfieldThomas Wentworth, ennobled
and repl. by 23 Jan 1552 by
Sir Thomas Cornwallis
1553 Sir William DrurySir Henry Bedingfield
1553 Sir William DrurySir Henry Jerningham
1554 Sir William DrurySir Henry Jerningham
1554 Sir William DrurySir Henry Jerningham
1555Sir Henry JerninghamSir William Drury
1558Thomas CornwallisSir William Cordell
1558/9Sir Owen HoptonWilliam Cavendish I
1562/3Sir Robert WingfieldWilliam Waldegrave
1571 Sir Owen HoptonThomas Seckford
1572 Nicholas BaconSir Robert Wingfield
1584Sir William DrurySir Robert Jermyn
1586 Sir Robert JermynSir John Heigham
1588/9Anthony WingfieldArthur Hopton
1593Edward BaconSir Clement Heigham
1597 Sir Thomas WaldegraveHenry Warner
1601Sir Henry GlemhamCalthrop Parker
1604–1611Sir John HeighamSir Robert Drury
1614Sir Thomas JermynSir Robert Gardener
1621–1622Robert CraneThomas Clench
1624Sir William Spring of PakenhamSir Roger North
1625Sir Edmund Bacon, 2nd BaronetThomas Cornwallis
1626Robert NauntonSir Robert Crane
1628Sir William Spring of PakenhamSir Nathaniel Barnardiston
1629–1640No Parliament convenedNo Parliament convened

1640–1832

Notes