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Knaresborough
Borough
Available from Boydell and Brewer
Background Information
Right of Election:
in burgage holders
Number of voters:
about 100
Elections
Date | Candidate |
---|---|
4 Feb. 1715 | HENRY COOTE |
ROBERT HITCH | |
Henry Slingsby | |
Cyril Artlington | |
16 Apr. 1720 | RICHARD ARUNDELL vice Coote, deceased |
26 Mar. 1722 | RICHARD ARUNDELL |
HENRY SLINGSBY | |
28 Apr. 1726 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
19 Aug. 1727 | SIR HENRY SLINGSBY |
RICHARD ARUNDELL | |
17 May 1731 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
27 Apr. 1734 | SIR HENRY SLINGSBY |
RICHARD ARUNDELL | |
7 July 1737 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
8 May 1741 | SIR HENRY SLINGSBY |
RICHARD ARUNDELL | |
4 Jan. 1745 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
4 July 1746 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
30 June 1747 | SIR HENRY SLINGSBY |
RICHARD ARUNDELL | |
15 Dec. 1748 | ARUNDELL re-elected after appointment to office |
Main Article
The chief interests at Knaresborough were in two neighbouring landowners, Lord Burlington of Bolton Abbey, hereditary constable of Knaresborough castle, a Whig, who in 1715 appointed the steward of Knaresborough,1 and Sir Henry Slingsby of Scriven, a Tory, whose family had frequently sat for the borough. In 1715 Slingsby, having been returned at a by-election in 1714, stood unsuccessfully with another Tory against two Whigs, Henry Coote and Robert Hitch. The defeated candidates petitioned on the ground that they had a majority of legal votes, but that
John Flesher, pretending to be the bailiff [i.e. the returning officer], and having taken upon himself the execution of the precept for the said election, has returned the said Mr. Coote and Mr. Hitch ...; and the said Flesher, to serve the said Mr. Coote and Mr. Hitch, some time before the said election, took upon him, without authority, to impanel a jury of thirty burgesses, the greatest number he knew to be in the interest of the said Mr. Coote and Mr. Hitch,
i.e. that he had rigged his own election as bailiff. The petition was ultimately withdrawn.2 On Coote’s death in 1720 the vacancy was filled by Burlington’s friend, Richard Arundell, also a neighbouring landowner, who was thenceforth returned unopposed with his Tory kinsman, Slingsby.