Bridport was continuously represented in Parliament from the first. The medieval borough consisted of the parish of
Bridport, a small port and market town, where the main economic interests were sailcloth and rope-making, as well as some fishing. (For some time in the 16th century, the town had a monopoly of making all cordage for the navy.) By 1831, the population of the borough was 4,242, and the town contained 678 houses. The right to vote was at one period reserved to the town corporation (consisting of two bailiffs and 13 "capital burgesses"), but from 1628 it was exercised by all inhabitant householders paying
scot and lot. This was a relatively liberal franchise for the period but nevertheless meant that only a fraction of the townsmen could vote: in
1806, the general election at which Bridport had the highest turnout in the last few years before the
Reform Act, a total of 260 residents voted. Bridport never reached the status of a
pocket borough with an openly recognised "patron": the voters retained their freedom of choice and generally expected to extort a price for their votes, so much so that Oldfield recorded of one election in the early 19th century that
"several candidates left them at the last election, in consequence of their demanding payment beforehand". Nevertheless, at various periods the borough came under the influence of local grandees and would usually return at least one of their nominees as MPs: the Russells (
Dukes of Bedford) in the
Elizabethan period and the Sturts in the latter half of the 18th century could normally rely on choosing one member. In 1572 the then
Earl of Bedford made use of this influence to have his oldest son elected in defiance of the convention that the heirs of peers could not be members of the House of Commons; the only previous instance had been that of the Earl himself, who had remained an MP when he became heir to the Earldom in 1555. By vote of the House, the young
Lord Russell was allowed to keep his seat for Bridport, and the precedent allowed other peers' heirs to sit from that point onwards. Bridport retained both its seats under the Reform Act, the boundaries being extended to give it the requisite population - parts of the neighbouring parishes of
Bradpole,
Allington and
Walditch, as well as Bridport Harbour, were brought in, increasing the population to about 6,000; in the
election of 1832, the first after Reform, the registered electorate was 425. However, the constituency was too small to survive for long. One of its members was removed after the
election of 1868 by the Second Reform Act; and the borough was abolished altogether in 1885, the town being incorporated into the
Western Dorset county division. == Members of Parliament ==