New Romney (UK Parliament constituency)


New Romney was a parliamentary constituency in Kent, which elected two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons from 1371 until 1832, when it was abolished by the Great Reform Act.
New Romney was a Cinque Port, which made it technically of different status from a parliamentary borough, but the difference was purely a nominal one. The constituency consisted of the town of New Romney; it had once been a flourishing port but by the 19th century the harbour had been destroyed and there was no maritime trade, the main economic activity being grazing cattle on Romney Marsh. In 1831, the population of the constituency was 978, and the town contained 165 houses.
The right to vote was reserved to the Mayor and Common Council of the town; however, many of these were customs or excise officers, who were disqualified from voting by a change in the law in 1782, so that in the early 19th century there were only 8 voters. The high proportion of voters holding paid government posts before this change in the law meant that New Romney was sometimes considered to be a "treasury borough" ; but in practice the Dering family, local landowners, were even more influential and could sometimes defy government pressure.
The Dering influence in New Romney seems mainly to have been achieved by letting out property to voters and their relatives at easy rents and without leases. In 1761, for example, the despairing Whig MP, Rose Fuller, explained to Prime Minister Newcastle that he had no chance of re-election since Dering had turned against him, because "several of the governing men are graziers and the Deering and Furnese family have together a very great estate in the neighbouring marsh which is very profitable to and easy for tenants". The reduction in the number of voters naturally made this influence easier, or at least cheaper, to exert.
New Romney was abolished as a constituency by the Reform Act, the town being incorporated into the new Eastern Kent county division.

Members of Parliament

1371-1640

ParliamentFirst MemberSecond Member
1386 Simon LuncefordJohn Salerne
1388 William HolyngbrokeJohn Salerne
1388 William HolyngbrokeJohn Ellis
1390 John IveJames Tiece
1390 Edmund HuchounJames Tiece
1391 John EllisJohn Salerne II
1393 Andrew ColynRobert Geffe
1394-
1395 John GardenerWilliam Child
1397 John YonRobert Geffe
1397 -
1399 John GardenerJohn Talbot
1401 William ClitheroeJohn Gardener
1402 John LuncefordJohn Ive
1404 -
1404 -
1406 Robert GeffeThomas Rokeslee
1407 John RogerBrice Scherte
1410 John AdamJohn Lunceford
1411 William ClitheroeJames Lowys
1413 William ClitheroeJohn Adam
1413 William ClitheroeJames Lowys
1414 Richard ClitheroeJohn Lunceford
1414 William ClitheroeJohn Maffey
1415 Richard ClitheroeJames Lowys
1416 Richard ClitheroeJohn Adam
1416 Stephen HarryThomas Sparwe
1417 William ClitheroeJames Tiece
1419 Thomas RokesleeThomas Smith
1420 Richard ClitheroeStephen Harry
1421 Richard ClitheroeJames Lowys
1421 Thomas SparwePeter Newene
1510 John HollThomas Lambard
1512 Sir John ScottClement Baker
1515 Richard StuppenyClement Baker
1523 Robert Parisnot known
1529 Richard Gibson, died
and replaced 1535 by
John Marshall
John Bunting
1536 John Bunting?John Marshall
1539 William TadloweWilliam Garrard
1542 William TadloweWilliam Asnothe
1545not knownnot known
1547 John Dering, died
and replaced 1552 by
William Tadlowe
Peter Hayman
1553 Simon Padyhamnot known
1553 William Tadlowe?Sir John Guildford
by 1553John ChesemanJohn Cheseman
1554 John ChesemanRichard Bunting
1554 Gregory HoltonWilliam Oxendon
1555 Richard Baker John Herbert
1558 Simon Padyham ?Thomas Randolph
1559 John ChesemanWilliam Eppes
1562/3Sir Christopher AlleyneWilliam Eppes
1571 William EppesEdmund Morrante
1572 William Wilcocks, died
and replaced July 1574 by
William Eppes
Edward Wilcocks
1584 Richard WilliamsWilliam Southland
1586 William SouthlandRobert Thurbarne
1588 Reginald ScotWilliam Southland
1593 John MyngeRobert Bawle
1597 George Coppyn James Thurbarne
1601 Thomas LakeJohn Mynge
1604-1611Sir Robert RemingtonJohn Plommer
1614Sir Arthur IngramRobert Wilcock
1621-1622Sir Peter ManwoodFrancis Fetherston
1624Francis FetherstonRichard Godfrey
1625Sir Edmund VerneyRichard Godfrey
1626Richard GodfreyThomas Brett
1628Thomas GodfreyThomas Brett
1629-1640No Parliaments summonedNo Parliaments summoned

1640-1832

Notes