Right of election

in inhabitants paying scot and lot

Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
20 Jan. 1715 RICHARD SUTTON
419
CONYERS DARCY
325
Richard Newdigate
327
27 Dec. 1715 DARCY re-elected after appointment to office
Richard Newdigate
2 Feb. 1720 DARCY re-elected after appointment to office
26 Mar. 1722 RICHARD SUTTON
JAMES PELHAM
21 Apr. 1724 SUTTON re-elected after appointment to office
21 Aug. 1727 RICHARD SUTTON
273
JAMES PELHAM
272
Alexander Holden
235
Sir Charles Sedley
153
23 Apr. 1734 RICHARD SUTTON
378
JAMES PELHAM
340
Alexander Holden
219
31 Jan. 1738 LORD WILLIAM MANNERS vice Sutton, deceased
5 May 1741 LORD WILLIAM MANNERS
JOB STAUNTON CHARLTON
Alexander Holden
27 June 1747 LORD WILLIAM MANNERS
JOB STAUNTON CHARLTON
1 Apr. 1751 CHARLTON re-elected after appointment to office
280
Robert Cracroft
276
Main Article

In 1715 the Whigs at Newark were headed by the Duke of Newcastle, the lord of the manor of Newark; the Tories by Robert Sutton, the last Lord Lexington, who owned the neighbouring estate of Kelham, and Sir Thomas Willoughby, 1st Lord Middleton, who had recently purchased the local property of Sir Matthew Jenison, formerly M.P. for the borough. On Lord Lexington’s death in 1723 his interest passed to his son-in-law, the 3rd Duke of Rutland, whose wife inherited Kelham. After 1736 the vicar of Newark, Dr. Barnard Wilson, having succeeded in obscure, if not shady, circumstances to the bulk of the property of Sir George Markham, former M.P. for Newark, used his fortune to build up a fourth interest.2Dickinson, Newark, 211-18, 308. Wilson originally supported Newcastle but was converted into an opponent by the Duke’s failure to fulfil repeated promises of preferment.3Wilson to Newcastle, 2 Nov. 1734, Add. 32696, f. 379.

From 1715 Newcastle shared the representation of Newark with the Manners-Sutton family, each returning one Member, usually after a contest with a Tory. In 1741 he came to terms with the 2nd Lord Middleton, by nominating a common friend, J. S. Charlton, a Whig, on which Wilson, who as a clergyman could not stand himself, but had announced his intention of putting up a candidate, gave up. However, fearing that ‘the mob would fall upon his house for deserting them’, he first tried to ‘secure himself’ by having ‘all stones and rubble removed from his yards’; then by ordering his steward to treat everyone in the interest of a local man, Alexander Holden, who refused to stand, having already promised to vote for the ducal candidates; and finally, an hour before the poll, by getting someone to put up Holden, who, Newcastle’s agent reported,

voted for Lord William [Manners] and Mr. Charlton and after he had polled 70 and Lord William and Mr. Charlton about 170 gave it up. Thus was the mob diverted from falling upon Dr. Wilson’s house.4R. Twells to Newcastle, 6 May 1741, Add. 32696, f. 476.

There was no contest in 1747 when Wilson was engaged as defendant in an expensive breach of promise action,5Gent. Mag. 1747, p. 293. The plaintiff asked for £10,000 and was awarded £7,000 damages. but at a by-election in 1751, caused by Charlton’s acceptance of an office of profit, Wilson put up his nephew, who nearly won the seat. According to an analysis supplied to Newcastle, about 160 of the nephew’s poll consisted of persons who were ‘sure to be in opposition to the standing interest’. Another source of Wilson’s votes was ‘the thirty sons of thirty voters ... to whom he yearly gives a cap and coat and their schooling’. Eleven of these voted for Charlton and ‘consequently were turned off’, but Newcastle’s friends had subscribed to make it up to them. The balance represented Wilson’s property in the borough.6R. Heron to Newcastle, 29 Apr., 4 May 1751, Add. 32724, ff. 266-7, 274.

Author
Notes
  • 1. R. Twells to P. Forbes, 20 Apr. 1734, Add. 32689, f. 204; J. S. Charlton to Newcastle, 27 Mar. 1754, Add. 32734, f. 373.
  • 2. Dickinson, Newark, 211-18, 308.
  • 3. Wilson to Newcastle, 2 Nov. 1734, Add. 32696, f. 379.
  • 4. R. Twells to Newcastle, 6 May 1741, Add. 32696, f. 476.
  • 5. Gent. Mag. 1747, p. 293. The plaintiff asked for £10,000 and was awarded £7,000 damages.
  • 6. R. Heron to Newcastle, 29 Apr., 4 May 1751, Add. 32724, ff. 266-7, 274.