Lincolnshire

Background Information

Number of voters: about 5000

Number of seats
2
Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
20 Apr. 1754 ROBERT VYNER
THOMAS WHICHCOT
1 Apr. 1761 LORD BROWNLOW BERTIE
THOMAS WHICHCOT
23 Mar. 1768 LORD BROWNLOW BERTIE
THOMAS WHICHCOT
26 Oct. 1774 LORD BROWNLOW BERTIE
CHARLES ANDERSON PELHAM
15 Dec. 1779 SIR JOHN THOROLD vice Bertie, called to the Upper House
20 Sept. 1780 SIR JOHN THOROLD
CHARLES ANDERSON PELHAM
12 Apr. 1784 SIR JOHN THOROLD
CHARLES ANDERSON PELHAM
Main Article

<p>The leading family in Lincolnshire was the Berties, who could generally command one seat. There was no contest between 1724 and 1807. Whichcot served until 1774, when he declined on account of age and asthma, having sat for thirty-four years.<a class='fnlink' id='t1' href='#fn1'>1<span><em>Lincoln, Rutland &amp; Stamford, Merc.</em> 6 Oct. 1774.</span></a> His successor, Charles Anderson Pelham, sat for twenty years.</p><p>Before the general election of 1761, Sir John Thorold and Robert Vyner, with Tory support and that of a number of gentlemen in the militia, declared themselves candidates against Thomas Whichcot and Lord Brownlow Bertie. Newcastle was concerned at ‘this extraordinary behaviour of the Tory gentlemen’, and wrote to Lord Hardwicke on 3 Oct. 1760:<a class='fnlink' id='t2' href='#fn2'>2<span>Add. 32912, f. 326.</span></a></p><blockquote><p style="text-align: left;">This spirit of dictating from that species of gentlemen will spread; and we shall soon feel the effects of this militia in many shapes. This impudent behaviour in these gentlemen ... has raised such a spirit in the Whigs of Lincolnshire that I hope it will turn upon the gentlemen and their friends.</p></blockquote><p>But the Whigs were able to mobilize such support that Thorold and Vyner declined two months before the poll. The only other occasion during the period when a contest threatened was in 1779, after Bertie had succeeded to the dukedom of Ancaster. At the county meeting in August Charles Monson and Sir John Thorold were nominated, but Thorold’s election in December was unopposed.<a class='fnlink' id='t3' href='#fn3'>3<span><em>HMC Foljambe</em>, 150; <em>Lincoln, Rutland &amp; Stamford Merc.</em> 16 Dec. 1779.</span></a></p>

Author
Notes
  • 1. Lincoln, Rutland & Stamford, Merc. 6 Oct. 1774.
  • 2. Add. 32912, f. 326.
  • 3. HMC Foljambe, 150; Lincoln, Rutland & Stamford Merc. 16 Dec. 1779.