Right of election

in inhabitant householders

Background Information

Number of voters: about 120

Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
25 Jan. 1715 GEORGE WADE
86
REYNOLDS CALTHORPE
68
George Wilcocks
58
Richard Lockwood
13
6 May 1720 JOHN PITT vice Calthorpe, deceased
24 Mar. 1722 HENRY LUDLOW COKER
ROBERT GRAY
16 Aug. 1727 GEORGE HEATHCOTE
62
TOWNSEND ANDREWS
62
George Fox
55
Henry Fox
55
Solomon Ashley
0
27 Apr. 1734 STEPHEN FOX
GEORGE FOX
28 Feb. 1735 HENRY FOX vice Stephen Fox, chose to sit for Shaftesbury
22 June 1737 HENRY FOX re-elected after appointment to office
4 May 1741 HENRY CALTHORPE
WILLIAM STEELE
27 June 1747 VALENS COMYN
BISSE RICHARDS
4 May 1751 FRANCIS BLAKE DELAVAL vice Comyn, deceased
Simon Fanshawe
Main Article

Hindon was a notoriously venal borough. The chief interest was that of the Calthorpes of Elvetham, who as lessees of the manor of Hindon from the bishop of Winchester nominated the returning officer. Until 1734 all Members were elected as supporters of the Administration.

The hardest and most violent contest was in 1727, when Henry and George Fox, standing as Tories, were narrowly defeated by George Heathcote and Townsend Andrews, who had the support of the returning officer. On petition Heathcote and Andrews were confirmed in their seats, though their opponents were ‘generally supposed to have the fairer right’.1CJ, xxi. 24; HMC Egmont Diary, i. 27. Before the next election Henry Fox had been brought over to the Government by Lord Hervey, who wrote to him, 13 Sept. 1733, that ‘in my last conference with Sir Robert I insisted on nothing but the returning officer [at Hindon] being secured to you’.2Ilchester, Lord Hervey and his Friends, 173. In the event Henry’s elder brother, Stephen, was returned unopposed with George Fox, but elected to sit for Shaftesbury, putting up Henry for the vacancy. An opposition was threatened by Lord Perceval, whose father, Lord Egmont, notes on 17 Feb. 1735 that

Lord Shaftesbury, Lord Weymouth, Mr. George Heathcote and Mr. [Philip] Bennet ... design to give him letters to the voters, who are 113 in all, and my son counts upon 70 of them.

But two days later he wrote:

My son being informed that Hindon is a more mercenary borough than he at first imagined and that the returning officer is under the direction of a government man, wisely resolved to quit his intention of standing there.3HMC Egmont Diary, ii. 150-1.

In 1745 William Beckford bought the nearby Fonthill estate and began to develop an interest in Hindon rivalling that of the Calthorpes. In the 2nd Lord Egmont’s electoral survey, c.1749-50, it is described as ‘to be bought’.

Author
Notes
  • 1. CJ, xxi. 24; HMC Egmont Diary, i. 27.
  • 2. Ilchester, Lord Hervey and his Friends, 173.
  • 3. HMC Egmont Diary, ii. 150-1.