Formally, the visitation (which was the first out of three by 1660) was a commission of both houses of Parliament. It was controlled by a large parliamentary committee (the "London Committee"). To begin with, this consisted of 48 members of the House of Commons, tasked with the "reform" of the university. By the ordinance implemented 1 May 1647, it was replaced by 26 peers and 52 MPs. This group (and any five from them) were to oversee 26 Visitors. Of those, ten were
Puritan clergy, who included the seven preachers sent to Oxford (in September).
Edward Corbet,
Henry Cornish (then of
St Giles in the Fields, after the visitation a canon of Christ Church),
Robert Harris,
Henry Langley,
Edward Reynolds, and
Henry Wilkinson. In 1650 the London Committee was still transacting much of the business of the visitation.
Francis Rous, initially appointed to the appeals committee, had by then assumed a leadership role. Staff on the ground in Oxford included
Ralph Austen, who became registrar, and
Elisha Coles who acted for him, both Calvinist writers. The Register was published in 1881, edited by
Montagu Burrows. ==Heads of Houses==