On this day … 12 July 1679

On 12 July 1679, Edward Rigby was elected for a fourth time as one of Preston’s two MPs. He was a member of the Rigby clan that had dominated political life in seventeenth-century Preston since Edward’s father, Alexander Rigby, had established himself at Middleton Hall in Goosnargh early in the century.

Edward collected a string of public offices during his career, including being chosen as an elder of the Presbyterians in Preston before he had reached the age of twenty.

Such early promotion certainly owed much to the influence of his father, as did his (eventual) release from prison when jailed for debt when a young law student in London, shortly after being chosen as a Presbyterian elder:

‘Edward Rigby … fell into pecuniary difficulties, and was thrown into prison for debt, upon which on the 15th February 1646 his father, who said he had been his servant for three months, and was thereby exempt from imprisonment as being in the service of a Parliament man, sought to have him released. His creditors, however, who were not inclined to yield obedience to this not very creditable claim of parliamentary privilege, persisted in detaining him until the 18th January following, when they were stopped by an order of the House, which commanded both the judges and the counsel and solicitors concerned to yield obedience to the privilege claimed.’

Other sources say the father was successful at the first attempt. At the time, Alexander Rigby was an MP for Wigan and one of the military leaders in Lancashire, leading the forces battling the Royalists throughout the county.

The 17th-century Province of Lygonia in the USA
Map of the way the future state of Maine was parcelled out in the seventeenth century. The province of Lygonia, to which the Rigbys laid claim, is approximately the area inside the yellow boundary.
https://historyofdrakesisland.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/1620-Charter-for-Maine.jpg

Edward sat out the two Civil Wars and devoted much of his time to attempting to hold on to the family’s claim to a vast estate in America comprising some 1,600 square miles of the present state of Maine. The story is told in the book by Charles Banks that can be read on line or downloaded at the Internet Archive (see links below).

The title of the book captures the flavour of the Rigbys’ American adventure. In full it reads, ‘Colonel Alexander Rigby: a sketch of his career and connection with Maine as proprietor of the Plough Patent and president of the Province of Lygonia’.

Edward failed in his claim to the province, which if he had succeeded would have included the present city of Portland, then just a small settlement. What he nearly succeeded in was in becoming the Governor of the whole of New England, as Charles Banks noted:

‘Indeed it would seem that Edward Rigby himself had some intentions of crossing the Atlantic in an official capacity under the patronage of the Lord Protector Cromwell, for Roger Williams, under date of 15 February, 1654, wrote to John Winthrop, jun. Governor of Connecticut, that “we haue a sound of a Gen: Governor [of New England], & that Baron Rigby his son is the man”.’

At the Restoration, Edward was elected to his first term as MP for Preston, his being a member of a Cromwell-supporting family seemingly no obstacle to serving in Charles II’s first Parliament. He also settled into a number of public offices locally, including as steward of the court leet, the Preston borough court.

Although not an Anglican himself, he was no friend to other dissenters, especially Quakers, as the following makes clear:

‘Freckleton. 1676. Thomas Tomlinson, Henry Tomlinson and John Townson on Warrant by Edward Rigby of Preston had their goods distrained. Rigby who is described as ‘a persecuting justice’ is said to have declared that “he would root the Quakers out of the Hundred where he dwelt; that all the Laws yet made against them were too short; and that he would be the first that would move for a Law to have them tied to and dragged at either an Horse’s or Cart’s Tail”.’

In 1685 he was arrested and jailed at Chester Castle on the orders of the Earl of Derby, following Monmouth’s invasion. It could have been revenge on Derby’s part, for Edward’s father, Alexander Rigby, was the leader of the Parliamentary forces that besieged Derby family’s Lathom House during the Civil War.

Edward Rigby died of apoplexy in the following year.


Sources
Edward Rigby
https://openlibrary.org/works/OL5080751W/Colonel_Alexander_Rigby
https://historyofdrakesisland.co.uk/drakes-island-the-first-governor-sir-ferdinando-gorges-who-granted-the-land-patent-for-the-pilgrim-fathers
The Rise and Fall of the Province of Lygonia, 1643–1658: https://www.jstor.org/stable/25652031


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply