Record revealed
Request for compensation for the Boston Tea Party
Series
Catalogue reference: C 219
C 219
This series contains nearly all parliamentary writs to secure the election of Members of the House of Commons, and the returns made on them.The format of writs and returns has evolved over time towards greater simplicity. From 1407 attestation of...
C 219
1275-2000
This series contains nearly all parliamentary writs to secure the election of Members of the House of Commons, and the returns made on them.
The format of writs and returns has evolved over time towards greater simplicity. From 1407 attestation of the return by electors began, in addition to the sheriff or returning officer. By the early eighteenth century there might be as many as 150 signatures, with their seals. In the twentieth century the indentures of return disappear: all that remains is a printed form serving as a writ, and the returning officer's endorsement of receipt and certification of the Member returned.
Returns refer directly to neither contests nor parties. Records of election of Scottish representative peers, 1900-1959, are also included.
The general election returns are usually arranged alphabetically by county. Returns from Wales, Scotland and Ireland, when made, follow those from England.
By-elections are usually kept separate in the modern era.
Public Record(s)
English and Latin
428 bundles, files and volumes
Open
The records for the years 1275 to 1477 were kept in the Tower of London until their transfer to the Public Record Office in 1856. Returns are largely missing for the period 1477-1542; thereafter they were sent to the clerk of the Crown in Chancery who deposited them in the Petty Bag Office. Until 1660 the records were subsequently stored in the Rolls Chapel, from where they were transferred to the Public Record Office in 1858. After 1660 the records were retained by the Petty Bag Office even when the clerk of the Crown had finished with them: from 1696 it was his statutory duty to compile an official return of MPs. In 1859 the returns from 1661 to 1837 were transferred to the Public Record Office, joining the two other collections.
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Records created, acquired, and inherited by Chancery, and also of the Wardrobe, Royal...
Chancery and Lord Chancellor's Office: Petty Bag Office and Crown Office: Parliamentary Election Writs and Returns
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