Right of election

in the corporation of the salt springs

Background Information

Number of voters: between 14 and 40

Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
19 June 1790 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
EDWARD WINNINGTON
27 May 1796 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
SIR EDWARD WINNINGTON, Bt.
7 July 1802 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
SIR EDWARD WINNINGTON, Bt.
30 Jan. 1805 THOMAS FOLEY vice Winnington, deceased
3 Nov. 1806 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
THOMAS FOLEY
7 May 1807 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
SIR THOMAS EDWARD WINNINGTON, Bt.
8 Oct. 1812 HON. ANDREW FOLEY
SIR THOMAS EDWARD WINNINGTON, Bt.
2 Apr. 1816 WILLIAM PHILIP MOLYNEUX, EARL OF SEFTON [I], Earl of Sefton [I], vice Winnington, vacated his seat
19 June 1818 WILLIAM PHILIP MOLYNEUX, EARL OF SEFTON [I]
HON. ANDREW FOLEY
16 Feb. 1819 THOMAS FOLEY vice Foley, deceased
Main Article

Droitwich was a close borough which never gave any trouble to its patrons. There had been no contest since 1747 when the Foleys, who had long shared the nominations with the Winningtons, contrived to take both seats. Their intermarriage in 1776 led to another era of sharing. Thomas Foley, 2nd Baron Foley (d.1793) returned his brother Andrew and brother-in-law Winnington. On the latter’s death in 1805, Andrew Foley was joined by his son until 1807, when Winnington’s heir came in. The latter made way in 1816 for Lord Sefton, the 3rd Baron Foley’s first cousin and a Whig, like the Foleys and Winningtons.

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