Baltimore | |
---|---|
Former borough constituency for the Irish House of Commons | |
County | County Cork |
Borough | Baltimore |
1614 | –1801|
Replaced by | Disfranchised |
Baltimore was a potwalloper constituency represented in the Irish House of Commons from 1614 to 1801.
This constituency was a parliamentary borough based in the town of Baltimore in County Cork.
A potwalloper (sometimes potwalloner or potwaller) is an archaic term referring to a borough constituency returning members to the British House of Commons before 1832 and the Reform Act created a uniform suffrage. Several potwalloper constituencies were also represented in the Irish House of Commons, prior to its abolition in 1801. A potwalloper borough was one in which a householder had the right to vote if he had, in his house, a hearth large enough to boil, or wallop, a cauldron, or pot. The electors for Baltimore were tenants at will of the Freke family. [1]
In the Patriot Parliament of 1689 summoned by King James II, Baltimore was represented with two members. [2]
Baltimore, Incorporated 25 March 1613.
Election | First member | First party | Second member | Second party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1689 Patriot Parliament | Daniel O'Donovan | Jeremiah O'Donovan | ||||
1692 | Thomas Beecher | Edward Richardson | ||||
1703 | Percy Freke | |||||
1707 | Edward Riggs | |||||
1709 | Francis Langston | |||||
1713 | Richard Barry | Michael Beecher | ||||
1715 | William Southwell | |||||
1721 | Sir Percy Freke, 2nd Bt | |||||
1727 | Richard Tonson | |||||
1728 | Sir John Freke, 3rd Bt [note 1] | |||||
1761 | William Clements | |||||
1768 | Sir John Evans-Freke, 1st Bt | |||||
1771 | Jocelyn Deane | |||||
1777 | William Evans | |||||
1781 | James Chatterton | |||||
1783 | Viscount Sudley | Richard Longfield | ||||
1790 | Sir John Evans-Freke, 2nd Bt | Richard Grace | ||||
1798 | George Evans-Freke | |||||
1801 | Disenfranchised |