Lancashire (UK Parliament constituency)

{{Short description|Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1801–1832}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2024}}

{{Infobox UK constituency

|name = Lancashire

|type = County

|parliament = uk

|image = File:Lancashire Administrative Map 1832.png

|caption = Map of the traditional (historic) county of Lancashire, showing ‘hundreds’.

|year = 1290

|abolished = 1832

|elects_howmany = two

|previous =

|next = North Lancashire and South Lancashire; Ashton-under-Lyne, Blackburn, Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, and Warrington.

}}

Lancashire was a county constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of England from 1290, then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800, and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1832. It was represented by two Members of Parliament, traditionally known as Knights of the Shire until 1832.

The ancient county of Lancashire covers a much larger area than the area now administered by Lancashire County Council. The county town of Lancaster is in the north of the county. The county boundary is further north beyond Carnforth and follows approximately the same boundary as the modern County Council area. The historic county of Lancashire also includes land on the opposite side of Morecambe Bay. Barrow and Furness and the area between Lake Windermere and the River Duddon, and the area west of the River Winster are considered parts of the historic county of Lancashire. Most of the modern district of Ribble Valley is within the boundaries of the historic county of Yorkshire. In the south, the traditional county extends to the River Mersey and Liverpool and follows the Mersey and the River Tame to Ashton-under-Lyne. Most of the southern area of the ancient county now forms the metropolitan counties of Merseyside and Greater Manchester.

The people of the ancient county of Lancashire had been represented in Parliament since at least the 13th Century. It was this period that saw the practice of returning two knights from the shire counties to Parliaments summoned by writ to meet. These were generally regarded as the first assemblies of representatives. At that time Westminster, within the county of Middlesex, had yet to become the permanent home of Parliament. It was the King who decided when and where a Parliament should assemble, and although Westminster was the usual venue, sometimes special circumstances in this period meant Parliaments were summoned to other cities. Early returns have not survived, but the first named representatives of Lancashire, Mattheus de Redman and Johannes de Ewyas are shown in the returns to the Parliament of England summoned to meet at Westminster on 27 November 1295 in the reign of Edward I.

In this early period of Parliamentary history not all Parliaments summoned just shire Knights. Some also required the presence of two representatives of each city and borough. In the 1295 Parliament the two county Members for Lancashire were joined by two Members from each of the four boroughs of Lancaster, Liverpool, Preston and Wigan.

Preston occasionally sent Members to subsequent Parliaments but it was not until the sixteenth century that all four boroughs regularly returned Members to Parliament. At this time Clitheroe and Newton-le-Willows also gained the status of Parliamentary boroughs with each returning two Members. Manchester was granted a town charter in 1301 but had no municipal authority and did not achieve the status of a Parliamentary borough. This was despite the parish of Manchester having a population larger than Liverpool parish by over 100,000 by 1831. Manchester appears in the returns once in the Parliament 1656. This was the second Protectorate Parliament that followed Oliver Cromwell's Instrument of Government that declared Cromwell Lord Protector. The Instrument was an attempt to redistribute seats on a more equitable basis and towns such as Leeds and Manchester gained representation as a result, but this ended following the Restoration.

Lancashire had a total of fourteen Members in the unreformed House of Commons, and this remained the pattern

The constituency was split into two two-member county divisions for Parliamentary purposes, in 1832, when Newton was merged back into the county and new borough constituencies were split out covering Ashton-under-Lyne, Blackburn, Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, and Warrington.

The county was then represented by the North Lancashire and South Lancashire constituencies : the latter representing the hundreds of Salford and West Derby, and the former the hundreds of Amounderness, Blackburn, Leyland and Lonsdale.

Boundaries

The constituency comprised the whole historic county of Lancashire, except for the Parliamentary boroughs of Clitheroe, Lancaster, Liverpool, Newton, Preston and Wigan.

Members of Parliament

{{Expand list|date=August 2008}}

=1290–1653=

class="wikitable"
ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1294Mathew de Redman
1295Mathew de ?SechnanJohn de ?Evyas{{cite web | url = https://archive.org/stream/cu31924030494987/cu31924030494987_djvu.txt| title = The parliamentary representation of Lancashire| year = 1889| access-date = 2011-09-23}}
1297Henry de KeighleyHenry de Boteler
1298Henry de KeighleyJohn Denyas
1300Gilbert de SingletonEgbert de Haydock
1301Henry de KeighleyThomas Travers
1302William de CliftonGilbert de Singleton
1305William de CliftonWilliam Banastre
1307 (Jan)Gilbert de SingletonJohn Travers
1307 (Oct)Mathew de RedmanWilliam le Gentil
1311William le GentilThomas de Betham
1312Henry de TraffordSir Richard le Molyneux
1313 (Mar)William de BradshaighEdmund de Daere
1313 (Jul)Ralph de BickerstaffWilliam de Slene
1313 (Sep)Henry de ?VegherbyThomas de Thornton
1314Thomas BanastreWilliam de Slene
1316 (Jan)William de BradshaighAdam de Hoghton
1316 (Jun)John de LancasterWilliam de Walton
1316 (Jul)Sir Roger de PilkingtonSir John de Pilkington
1318 (Oct)Edmund de NevilleJohn de Hornby
1319William de WaltonWilliam de Slene
1320Gilbert de HaydockThomas de Thornton
1321John de HornbyGilbert de Haydock
1322Richard de HoghtonJohn de Lancaster
1324 (Jan)Edmund de NevillGilbert de Haydock
repl. by Thomas de Lathom
1324 (Oct)William de SleneNicholas de Norreys
1325William de BradshaighJohn de Hornby
1326Edmund de NevilleRichard de Hoghton
1327 (Sep)Michael de HaveringtonWilliam Lawrence
1328 (Feb)William de BradshaighEdmund de Neville
1328 (Apr)Thomas de ThorntonJohn de Hornby
1328 (Jul)William LawrenceThomas de Thornton
1328 (Oct)Nicholas de NorreysHenry de Haydock
1329 (Feb)Nicholas de NorreysHenry de Haydock
1329–30 (Mar)William de SapertonHenry de Haydock
1330William de BradshaighJohn de Lancaster
1331William de BradshaighOliver de Stansmeld
1332Robert de DaltonAdam de Banastre
1332 (Sep)John de Hornby, jnrRobert de Dalton
1332–3 (Jan)Edmund de NevilleJohn de Hornby, jnr
1333–4 (Feb)Edmund de NevillRobert de Dalton
1334Robert de RadcliffeHenry de Haydock
1335 (May)Robert de SherburneEdmund de Neville
1336 (Mar)John de SherburneHenry de Haydock
1336 (Sep)John de Hornby, jnrHenry de Haydock
1336–7 (Mar)Robert de IrelandSir Henry de Haydock
1337 (Sep)Richard de HoghtonEdmund de Neville
1337–8 (Feb)Robert de BillisthorpeRobert de Radcliffe
1338 (Jul)John de HornbyJohn de Clyderhow
1339Robert de ClyderhoweHenry de Bickerstaff
1339 (Oct)Nicholas de HulmeRobert de Prescot
1339–40 (Jan)John de RadcliffeRobert de Radcliffe
1340 (Mar)John de DaltonRobert de Dalton
1343 (Apr)John de HaveringtonJohn Ungoun
1344Nicholas le BotelerWilliam de Radcliffe
1346John de ClyderhowAdam de Bradkirk
1347–8 (Jan)Adam de HoghtonJohn Cockayne
1348 (Apr)Robert de PlesingtonRobert de Prescot
1351Otho de HalsallWilliam de Radcliffe
1351–2 (Jan)?
1352 (Aug)John de HaveringtonOne knight only summoned
1353William CablesOne knight only summoned
1354 (Apr)William CablesRichard Nowell
1355Robert de HornbyRoger de Farington
1357 (Apr)John de HaveringtonRobert de Singleton
1357–8 (Feb)Robert de FaringtonRobert de Hornby
1360William de HeskethRoger de Farington
1360–1 (Jan)William de RadcliffeRichard de Towneley
1362 (Oct)Edmund LawrenceMatthew de Rixton of Rixton Hall
colspan = "2"|Result set aside as unlawful
1363 (Oct)Adam de HoghtonRoger de Pilkington
1364–5 (Jan)Sir Adam de HoughtonSir Roger de Pilkington
1366 (May)Sir John le BotelerWilliam de Radcliffe
1368Sir Roger de PilkingtonRoger de Ratcliffe
1369 (Jun)Sir John de DaltonJohn de Ipres
1371John de IpresRichard de Towneley

1372 (Nov)Sir Nicholas HaryngtonSir John le Boteler
1373 (Nov)William de AthertonJohn de Holcroft
1376 (Apr)Sir John le BotelerRoger de Brockholes
1376–7 (Jan)Sir John le BotelerRoger de Pilkington
1377 (Oct)Sir John le BotelerSir Nicholas Harrington
1378Ralph de YpresSir John le Boteler
1379Sir Nicholas HarringtonRobert Urswyk
1380 (Jan)Sir John le BotelerThomas Southworth
1380 (Nov)Sir John le BotelerThomas Southworth
1381 (Sep)Sir William de AthertonRobert Urswyk
1382 (May)Sir Roger de PilkingtonRobert de Clifton
1382 (Oct)Sir John de AsshetonRobert Urswyck
1382–3 (Feb)Sir Richard de HoghtonRobert Clifton
1383 (Oct)John de HolcroftSir Walter de Urswyk
1384 (Apr)Sir Roger PilkingtonThomas Gerard
1384 (Nov)Robert UrswykWilliam de Tunstall
1385Robert UrswykThomas de Radcliffe
1386 (Oct)Sir Nicholas HarringtonRobert Worsley{{cite web | url =http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/constituencies/lancashire| title = History of Parliament| access-date = 2011-08-30}}
1388 (Feb)Sir John le BotelerSir Thomas Gerard
1388 (Sep)Sir John AsshetonSir John Croft
1390 (Jan)Sir John AsshetonSir Ralph de Ypres
1390 (Nov)Sir Robert UrswykSir John Croft
1391Sir Robert UrswykRobert Worsley
1393Sir Robert UrswykSir Ralph de Ypres
1394Sir Robert UrswykSir Thomas Gerard
1395Sir Robert UrswykThomas Radcliffe
1397 (Jan)Sir Robert UrswykRichard Molyneux
1397 (Sep)Sir John le BotelerSir Ralph Radcliffe
1399Sir Robert UrswykSir Henry Hoghton
1401Sir Robert UrswykSir Nicholas Atherton
1402Sir Richard HoughtonSir Nicholas Harrington
1404 (Jan)Robert LaurenceSir Ralph Radcliffe
1404 (Oct)Sir James HaryngtonSir Ralph Stavely
1406Robert LaurenceSir William Boteler
1407Sir Henry HoghtonSir Ralph Stavely
1410
1411John de AshtonJohn Booth
1413 (Feb)
1413 (May)John de AshtonJohn Stanley{{cite web|title=Stanley, John (d.1437), of Knowsley and Lathom, Lancs., lord of the Isle of Man|url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/stanley-john-1437|publisher=History of Parliament|access-date=29 March 2018}}
1414 (Apr)Ralph RadcliffeNicholas Blundell
1414 (Nov)Robert LaurenceJohn Stanley
1415
1416 (Mar)John de AshtonJohn Morley
1416 (Oct)
1417
1419Nicholas le BotelerJohn Laurence
1420Richard ShirburneJohn Booth
1421 (May)Sir Thomas RadcliffeThomas Urswick
1421 (Dec)Richard ShirburneSir John Byron
1422 (Nov)Thomas UrswickJohn Gerard
1423 (Oct)Sir Thomas de RadcliffeRalph de Radcliffe
1425 (Apr)Ralph Fitz NicholasRichard de Radcliffe
1425–6 (Feb)Sir John BotelerNicholas Boteler
1427 (Oct)Ralph de RadcliffeThomas Stanley
1429 (Sep)Sir John ByronSir Robert Lawrence
1430–1 (Jan)John de MorleyWilliam Gernet
1432 (May)Sir William de AsshetonThomas de Harrington
1433 (Jul)Sir Thomas StanleySir Thomas Radcliffe
1435 (Oct)Henry de HalsallThomas Lawrence
1436–7 (Jan)Thomas de HarringtonHenry de Halsall
1439 (Nov)Thomas StanleyThomas de Harrington
1442 (Jan)Thomas StanleyThomas de Harrington
1447Thomas StanleyThomas de Harrington
1448Thomas StanleyThomas de Harrington
1450Thomas StanleyThomas de Harrington
1455Thomas StanleyAlexander Radcliffe
1459Sir Richard HarringtonHenry Halsall
1460Sir Richard HarringtonHenry Halsall
1463 (Apr)?
1467 (Jun)Sir James HarringtonSir William Harrington
1472 (Oct)Robert HarringtonJohn Assheton (grandson of MP of 1413)
1477–8 (Jan)Sir George StanleySir James Harrington
1482–3 (Jan)?
1483-1523colspan = "2"|Not known {{cite web | url =http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/constituencies/lancashire| title = History of Parliament| access-date = 2011-08-30}}
1503Sir Thomas ButlerSir John Booth {{cite book |title = The English Parliaments of Henry VII 1485-1504|last = Cavill}}
1529Henry FaringtonAndrew Barton
1536?
1539?
1542?
1545Sir Thomas HolcroftJohn Kitchen
1547Thurstan TyldesleyJohn Kitchen
1553 (Mar)Sir Richard Houghton sick 1553
and replaced by
Sir Robert Worsley
Thomas Butler
1553 (Oct)Sir Richard SherbornJohn Rigmayden
1554 (Apr)Sir Thomas StanleySir Thomas Langton
1554 (Nov)Sir Thomas StanleySir John Holcroft
1555Sir Thomas StanleySir William Stanley
1558Sir Thomas TalbotSir John Holcroft
1559 (Jan)Sir John AthertonSir Robert Worsley{{cite web | url =http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/constituencies/lancashire| title = History of Parliament| access-date = 2011-08-30}}
1562–1563Sir Thomas Gerard of BrynSir John Southworth
1571John RatcliffeThomas Butler
1572John RatcliffeEdmund Trafford
1584 (Nov)Gilbert Gerard made Master of the Rolls
and replaced Jan 1585 by
Richard Bold {{cite book | chapter-url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/gerard-sir-gilbert-1593 |chapter=Gerard, Sir Gilbert (d.1593), of Ince, Lancs. and Gerrard's Bromley, Staffs. |title= History of Parliament|access-date=22 October 2013}}
Richard Molyneux
1586John AthertonRichard Holland
1588 (Oct)Thomas Gerard, sat for Staffs
and repl. by
?)
Thomas Walmsley
1593Sir Richard MolyneuxSir Thomas Gerard
1597 (Nov)Sir Thomas GerardRobert Hesketh
1601Sir Richard HoghtonThomas Hesketh
1604Sir Richard MolyneuxSir Richard Hoghton
1614Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st BaronetSir Cuthbert Halsall
1621-1622Sir John RatcliffeSir Gilbert Hoghton
1624Sir John RatcliffeSir Thomas Walmsley
1625Sir Richard Molyneux, BtSir John Ratcliffe
1626Robert StanleySir Gilbert Hoghton
1628-1629Sir Richard MolyneuxSir Alexander Radcliffe
1629–1640colspan = "2"| No Parliaments summoned
1640 (Apr)Sir Gilbert Hoghton, 2nd BaronetWilliam Farrington
1640 (Nov)Ralph AsshetonRoger Kirkby, disabled August 1642
1645Ralph AsshetonSir Richard Hoghton, 3rd Baronet
1648Ralph AsshetonSir Richard Hoghton, 3rd Baronet

=1653–1659=

class="wikitable"

! scope="col" | Parliament

! scope="col" | First member

! scope="col" | Second member

! scope="col" | Third member (1653–1659)

! scope="col" | Fourth member (1654–1659)

scope="row" | 1653

| William West

| John Sawry

| Robert Cunliffe

| {{N/A}}

scope="row" | 1654

| rowspan="2" | Richard Holland

| rowspan="2" | Gilbert Ireland

| rowspan="2" | Richard Standish

| William Ashurst

scope="row" | 1656

| Sir Richard Hoghton, 3rd Baronet

scope="row" | 1659

| Sir George Booth, Bt

| Alexander Rigby

| {{N/A}}

| {{N/A}}

=1660–1832=

class="wikitable"
Electioncolspan="2"|First member {{Rayment-hc|l|1|date=March 2012}}

!First party

!colspan="2"|Second member

!Second party

1660

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir Robert Bindlosse, 1st Baronet

|

|rowspan="3" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="3"| Roger Bradshaigh

|rowspan="3"|

1661

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Hon. Edward Stanley

|

1665

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Thomas Preston

|

1679 (Feb)

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Viscount Brandon

|

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| Peter Bold

|rowspan="2"|

1679 (Sep)

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir Charles Hoghton, 4th Baronet

|

1681

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Viscount Brandon

|

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir Charles Hoghton, 4th Baronet

|

1685

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| James Holt

|

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Roger Bradshaigh

|

1689

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| Viscount Brandon

|rowspan="2"|

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir Charles Hoghton, 4th Baronet

|

1690

|rowspan="4" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="4"| Hon. James Stanley

|rowspan="4"|

1694

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Ralph Assheton

|

1698

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Hon. Fitton Gerard

|

1701 (Feb)

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |

|rowspan="2"| Richard Bold

|rowspan="2"| Tory

1703

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| Richard Assheton

|rowspan="2"|

1704

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Richard Fleetwood

|

1705

|style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Whigs (British political party)}}" |

| Hon. Charles Zedenno Stanley

| Whig

|rowspan="5" style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |

|rowspan="5"| Richard Shuttleworth

|rowspan="5"| Tory

1713

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir John Bland

|

1727

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Sir Edward Stanley

|

1736

|style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |

| Peter Bold

| Tory

1741

|rowspan="4" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="4"| Lord Strange

|rowspan="4"|

1750

|style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |

| Peter Bold

| Tory

1761

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| James Shuttleworth

|

1768

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| Lord Archibald Hamilton

|rowspan="2"|

1771

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| The Earl of Sefton

|rowspan="2"|

1772

|rowspan="4" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="4"| Sir Thomas Egerton

|rowspan="4"|

1774

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Lord Stanley

|

1776

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Thomas Stanley

|

1780

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| Thomas Stanley

|rowspan="2"|

1784

|rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="2"| John Blackburne

|rowspan="2"|

1812

|rowspan="3" style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

|rowspan="3"| Lord Stanley

|rowspan="3"|

1830

|style="color:inherit;background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |

| John Wilson-Patten

| Tory

1831

|style="color:inherit;background-color: white" |

| Benjamin Heywood

|

  • Constituency abolished (1832)

Elections

The county franchise, from 1430, was held by the adult male owners of freehold land valued at 40 shillings or more. Each elector had as many votes as there were seats to be filled. Votes had to be cast by a spoken declaration, in public, at the hustings, which took place in the county town of Lancaster. The expense and difficulty of voting at only one location in the county, together with the lack of a secret ballot contributed to the corruption and intimidation of electors, which was widespread in the unreformed British political system.

The expense, to candidates, of contested elections encouraged the leading families of the county to agree on the candidates to be returned unopposed whenever possible. Contested county elections were therefore unusual. The Stanleys, led by the Earl of Derby dominated the county. One seat was nearly always held by a Stanley relative, the second, by one of the other leading families.

See also

References