Brackley (UK Parliament constituency)


Brackley was a parliamentary borough in Northamptonshire, which elected two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons from 1547 until 1832, when the constituency was abolished by the Great Reform Act.

History

The borough consisted of the town of Brackley, a market town where the main economic interests were making lace and footwear. In 1831, the population of the borough was 2,107, and the town contained 378 houses. While this by no means put it among the smallest of the rotten boroughs, it was barely the half the size which was eventually required to retain representation after 1832.
Brackley was a corporation borough, the right to vote having been restricted to the Mayor, 6 aldermen and 26 "burgesses", a total electorate of 33, in the reign of James II. The Mayor was appointed by the Lord of the Manor, and the major local landowners or "patrons" had total control over the election of MPs. In the mid 18th century the Duke of Bridgewater was able to nominate both MPs; by the time of the Reform Act, the Earl of Bridgewater nominated to one seat and the Marquess of Stafford to the other.
Brackley lost both its MPs under the provisions of the Reform Act.

Members of Parliament

1547–1640

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1547Henry SidneyFrancis Saunders
1553 Robert Saunders?Francis Saunders
1553 Thomas FermorRobert Saunders
1554 Thomas OnleyRichard Ardern
1554 George FerrersThomas Onley
1555George FerrersThomas Boughton
1558Robert SaundersDrew Saunders
1558/9Sir Thomas KnyvetRobert Saunders
1562/3Christopher YelvertonRichard Lucy, died
and replaced 1566 by
Edward Onley
1571Thomas CatesbyMatthew Mantell
1572Matthew MantellThomas Onley
1584 James CroftGeorge Whitton
1586 James CroftGeorge Whitton
1588 Humphrey DavenportJerome Fermor
1593Richard BowleSidney Montagu
1597 Robert SpencerRanulph Crewe
1601 Edward Montagu, 1st Baron Montagu of BoughtonJohn Donne
1604Sir Richard SpencerWilliam Lisle
1614Sir William SpencerArthur Terringham
1621Sir Thomas WenmanEdward Spencer
1624Sir Thomas WenmanEdward Spencer
1625Sir Thomas WenmanEdward Spencer
1626Sir John HobartJohn Crew
1628Sir Thomas WenmanJohn Curzon
1629–1640No Parliaments summonedNo Parliaments summoned

1640–1832