Walter Erle
{{Short description|English landowner and politician}}
{{for|the courtier and servant of the Royal Household|Walter Erle (died 1581)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2013}}
File:ErleArms.png (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.481; Sir William Pole (d.1635) of Shute, Devon, author of this work, was the uncle of Col. Sir Walter Erle (1586-1665) of Charborough, the son of his sister Dorothy Pole]]
Sir Walter Erle or Earle (22 November 1586 – 1 September 1665) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1614 and 1648. He was a vigorous opponent of King Charles I in the Parliamentary cause both before and during the English Civil War.
Early life
Erle was the son of Thomas Erle of Charborough in Dorset and his wife Dorothy Pole, daughter of William Pole of Columpton, Devon.[https://books.google.com/books?id=KikAAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA207 John Burke A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain, Volume 4] He inherited the estate Charborough at the age of 11 on the death of his father. He matriculated at Queen's College, Oxford on 22 January 1602 aged 15. In 1604 he became a student of Inner Temple.[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=117057 'Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1714: Eade-Eyton', Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714: Abannan-Kyte (1891), pp. 440-479. Retrieved 9 December 2011]
In 1614, Erle was elected Member of Parliament for Poole.[http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/erle-sir-walter-1586-1665 History of Parliament Online – Erle, Walter] He was knighted on 4 May 1616, and in 1618 served as High Sheriff of Dorset. Like many of the other leading citizens of Dorset, he was an early investor in projects to colonise New England. He and his brother Christopher were both shareholders in the Virginia Company in 1620, and he attended the meeting of that company on 21 May 1621. He was a friend of John White and became a founder member of the Dorchester Company, being described as "Governor of the New England Plantation".[http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~fordingtondorset/Files/SirWalterErle.html Michael Russell Sir Walter Erle]
Parliament and imprisonment
In 1621 Erle was re-elected MP for Poole and was elected again in 1624 and 1625. He was also one of the Justices of Peace for Dorset. In 1625, he was elected MP for Lyme Regis. Parliament was dissolved without voting subsidies to the Crown, and the King attempted to shore up the governmental finances by imposing forced loans on the gentry. Erle was one of the four men in Dorset who refused to pay and as a result he was summoned before the Council, and imprisoned for almost a year in the Fleet Prison before he was able to obtain a writ of habeas corpus. On hearing the case, the judges upheld the prisoners' right to be released, setting a major legal precedent in the restriction of the Crown's autocratic powers. His brother Christopher took his seat at Lyme Regis in 1628.
Short and Long parliaments
After King Charles ruled without parliament for eleven years, Erle was elected MP for Lyme Regis in the Short Parliament in April 1640. On the day after the dissolution of Parliament, he was one of the six men arrested on the King's orders under suspicion of treasonable correspondence with the Scots, with whom England was by this time at war. In November 1640, Erle was returned as MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis for the Long Parliament, and was appointed one of the managers of the prosecution in the impeachment of Strafford, but entrusted with proving the charge that Strafford had plotted to bring over the Irish army to suppress unrest in England he bungled his case so that the hearing was at first adjourned on the grounds that the "evidence was not ready" and then the article was in effect dropped altogether. This failure may have contributed significantly to the decision to abandon legal process and proceed against Strafford by Act of Attainder.
Civil War
On the outbreak of the Civil War, Erle became a Colonel in the Parliamentary army. He succeeded John Pym as Lieutenant of the Ordnance in 1643, and was also appointed military governor of Dorchester. However, when he led his forces to besiege Corfe Castle in 1643 he was repulsed after six weeks having lost a hundred men, and he fled Dorchester by sea at the approach of a superior Royal army under Lord Carnarvon. In 1645 he received the thanks of the Commons for deciphering some intercepted letters, and the following year was one of the four commissioners sent to negotiate peace with the King. He continued to sit in Parliament until 1648, when he was excluded in Pride's Purge.
Later parliamentary career
Erle was returned as MP for Dorset in 1654 for the First Protectorate Parliament and in 1659 for the Second Protectorate Parliament. In April 1660, he was elected again as MP for Poole in the Convention Parliament.
Erle died at the age of 78.
Family
Erle married Ann Dymoke daughter of Francis Dymoke, and sister of Sir Henry Dymoke, and through her acquired the manors of Erckington and Pipe, Warwickshire, which he sold to Sir Walter Devereux, Bt. Their son Thomas was also an MP in the Long Parliament with his father, and the latter's son, also called Thomas was a distinguished general.
References
{{Reflist}}
- First Earl of Birkenhead, "The trial of Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford" in Famous Trials (London: Hutchinson & Co, no date)
- C.V. Wedgwood, The King's Peace, 1637-1641 (London: Collins Fontana, 1971)
External links
- [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~fordingtondorset/Files/SirWalterErle.html Biography of Sir Walter Erle at freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com]
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{{succession box
| title=Member of Parliament for Poole
| before= Thomas Robarts
| before2= Edward Mann
| with= Sir Thomas Walsingham, junior 1614
| with2= Sir George Hussey 1621–1622
| with3= Edward Pitt 1624
| years=1614–1624
| after= John Pyne
| after2= Sir John Cooper, 1st Baronet
}}
{{succession box
| title=Member of Parliament for Dorset
| before= Sir George Hussey
| before2 = John Strangways
| with= Sir Nathaniel Napier
| years= 1625
| after= Sir George Morton, 1st Baronet
| after2 = Sir Thomas Freke
}}
{{succession box
| title=Member of Parliament for Lyme Regis
| before= John Drake
| before2= Thomas Paramour
| with= Thomas Paramour
| years=1626
| after= Thomas Paramour
| after2= Christopher Erle
}}
|-
{{s-non| reason= Parliament suspended since 1629}}
{{s-ttl
| title=Member of Parliament for Lyme Regis
| with= Richard Rose
| years=1640
}}
{{s-aft
| after= Richard Rose
| after2= Edmund Prideaux
}}
{{succession box
| title=Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis
| before= John Strangways
| before2= Giles Strangways
| before3 = Richard King
| before4= Thomas Gyard
| with= John Strangways 1640–1642
| with2= Richard King 1640–1643
| with3= Sir Gerrard Napier, 1st Baronet 1640–1644
| with4= William Sydenham 1645–1653
| with5= John Bond 1645–1648
| with6= Matthew Allen 1645–1648
| years=1640–1648
| after= William Sydenham
}}
{{succession box
| title=Member of Parliament for Dorset
| before= William Sydenham
| with= John Bingham
| with2= |William Sydenham
| with3= John Bingham
| with4= John Fitzjames
| with5= John Trenchard
| with6= Henry Henley
| years= 1654
| after= William Sydenham
| after2= John Bingham
| after3= Robert Coker
| after4= John Fitzjames
| after5= John Trenchard
| after6= James Dewey
}}
{{s-bef
| before= William Sydenham
| before2= John Bingham
| before3= Robert Coker
| before4= John Fitzjames
| before5= John Trenchard
| before6= James Dewey
}}
{{s-ttl
| title=Member of Parliament for Dorset
| with= John Bingham
| years= 1659
}}
{{s-non| reason= Not represented in Restored Rump
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Category:Military personnel from Dorset
Category:High sheriffs of Dorset
Category:Inmates of Fleet Prison
Category:Politicians from Dorset
Category:English MPs 1621–1622
Category:English MPs 1624–1625
Category:English MPs 1640 (April)
Category:English MPs 1640–1648
Category:English MPs 1654–1655
Category:Members of the Parliament of England for Dorset
Category:Members of the Parliament of England for Poole
Category:Members of the Parliament of England (pre-1707) for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis
Category:Members of the Parliament of England (pre-1707) for Lyme Regis