Right of election

in the freemen

Background Information

Number of voters: about 100

Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
31 Jan. 1715 SIR EDWARD ERNLE
SIR CHARLES WAGER
7 Apr. 1715 WAGER re-elected after appointment to office
28 Mar. 1718 WAGER re-elected after appointment to office
24 Mar. 1722 SIR JOHN NORRIS
SIR CHARLES WAGER
19 Aug. 1727 SIR JOHN NORRIS
SIR CHARLES WAGER
24 Apr. 1734 THOMAS LEWIS
PHILIP CAVENDISH
10 Feb. 1737 CHARLES STEWART vice Lewis, deceased
21 Feb. 1741 EDWARD VERNON vice Stewart, deceased
6 May 1741 PHILIP CAVENDISH
60
MARTIN BLADEN
54
Edward Vernon
9
23 Mar. 1742 CAVENDISH re-elected after appointment to office
14 Dec. 1743 SIR CHARLES HARDY vice Cavendish, deceased
28 Dec. 1744 ISAAC TOWNSEND vice Hardy, deceased
3 Mar. 1746 THOMAS GORE vice Bladen, deceased
1 July 1747 ISAAC TOWNSEND
THOMAS GORE
15 Dec. 1747 EDWARD LEGGE vice Gore, chose to sit for Bedford
28 Dec. 1747 SIR EDWARD HAWKE
Main Article

An Admiralty borough, Portsmouth was managed by channelling local patronage through the corporation, who controlled the representation by their power to create freemen. Soon after George I’s accession its governor, Lord North and Grey, an extreme Tory, was informed by his agent there that Sir Charles Wager had come down, caused 59 new freemen to be admitted, and deprived the agent of his receivership of the land tax. Next month Lord North was dismissed.1John Mellish to North, 11 Sept. 1714, North to Duke of Marlborough, 17 Oct. 1714, Bodl. North mss c.9, f. 88, and b. 2, f. 141. Thenceforth government nominees were returned unopposed. Before the general election of 1734 Wager told Walpole: ‘whoever is recommended by you will, I think, undoubtedly be chosen’, as in fact they were.28 Dec. 1732, Cholmondeley (Houghton) mss. In 1741 Wager wrote to Vernon, then in the West Indies, that at a by-election for Portsmouth he had recommended Vernon to the corporation, who had chosen him unanimously and would have done so at the general election, but that, finding that Vernon was already being put up for half a dozen other places, he had decided to replace him by Martin Bladen, ‘having no other sea officer proper to setup’. A copy of the poll shows, however, that Vernon was nominated.3Original Letters to an Honest Seaman (1746), 39, 47; Portsmouth archives, PE 2/5c. When in 1747 Edward Legge was considered for a vacancy at Portsmouth, his brother, Henry Legge, wrote to the Duke of Bedford, then first lord:

The wishes of the town to be represented by a sea officer will be gratified, and properly gratified, by that officer’s being entirely of your own nomination, and not having resided to make interest for himself independent of the Admiralty.44 Aug. 1747, Bedford mss.

The first of several attempts to break the Admiralty interest by creating a large number of freemen was led in October 1750 by John Carter, a prominent local merchant and Dissenter.5Ex inf. N. W. Surry and J. H. Thomas.

Author
Notes
  • 1. John Mellish to North, 11 Sept. 1714, North to Duke of Marlborough, 17 Oct. 1714, Bodl. North mss c.9, f. 88, and b. 2, f. 141.
  • 2. 8 Dec. 1732, Cholmondeley (Houghton) mss.
  • 3. Original Letters to an Honest Seaman (1746), 39, 47; Portsmouth archives, PE 2/5c.
  • 4. 4 Aug. 1747, Bedford mss.
  • 5. Ex inf. N. W. Surry and J. H. Thomas.