ABSTRACT

Documentary evidence has been available since 1820 which suggests that some of the details within the Flagellum anecdote about the Cambridge elections were correct. In that year Cromwell’s great-great-grandson, who was also called Oliver Cromwell, published a defence of his family. Like many amateur historians, he had spent his retirement researching his ancestry.1 is Oliver Cromwell seems to have been the rst scholar to search the Cambridge corporation archives for information about his famous ancestor and he now published the entries about him from the corporation’s common day book. Among those entries was that for 7 January 1640 which recorded that Cromwell had been admitted as a freeman of the town. What this showed was that on that day Cromwell had received the freedom on the recommendation of the mayor and that his fees had been waived a er he had paid a token 1d. to the poor of Cambridge.2 Subsequent biographers have been fond of mentioning the quaint detail about the 1d.