The cathedral city of Waterford, a county of itself situated on the navigable River Suir about 16 miles from the sea, could accommodate ships of ‘very large burden’, enabling it to export more agricultural produce than any other Irish port, mainly to England.
In the first place Mr. Alcock and his friends pledge themselves to support Sir John Newport for the representation of the city of Waterford during the lifetime of the said Sir John ... or for such time as Sir John shall consider himself capable of efficiently discharging the duties of that situation. At the expiration of either event Mr. Alcock to be supported by every exertion of the Newport family and their friends in the future representation ... in the promotion of which Mr. William Newport pledges himself that his sons shall concur ... And after the death of the said Harry Alcock ... the Newport family to nominate the next candidate for a period of five years, then the other contracting parties and their successors to nominate for the next five years and so on alternately for ever.
In 13 further clauses they agreed to share the nomination of aldermen, take turns at appointing the mayor, sheriffs and other officers, with the minor posts being classified ‘according to their respective value or annual income’, ‘withdraw’ as far as possible all offices and salaries from the Bolton family, reduce corporate expenditure and only admit freemen by ‘mutual consent’.
At the 1820 general election Newport was again returned unopposed as a supporter of Catholic emancipation and ‘promoter of Irish commerce’.
If we forget old friends it will injure us very much and when Sir John Newport could not afford a contest we ought not to be so displeased at his making any bargain for a seat for life; his not being in the House would be an injury to not only our cause but to Ireland.
NLI, Wyse mss 15023 (2), Galwey to Wyse, 7 Sept. 1826.
Petitions from the Protestants against Catholic claims were presented to the Lords, 26 Feb., and the Commons, 2 Mar. 1827.
the Catholics have announced themselves as candidates ... in case of a vacancy by Newport’s death, viz. Henry Winston Barron† [of Belmont House, Ballyneale, proprietor of the Waterford Chronicle] and Thomas Wyse ... These two will divide the Catholic interest and I think it very possible that a Protestant might be returned ... Barron has just made a communication ... offering his support to your ... family in the county provided you support him in the city. It appears to me more prudent for your ... family and their friends to remain unpledged, at least for the present. It is said that the corporation will remain neutral between the two Catholics.
Writing again at the end of that month, he reported that Newport had ‘no intention of resigning’.
There is ... likely to be a contest in the city. Newport will not, if opposed, stand ... If he be opposed I believe there will be three candidates, Wyse, John Doherty* [the Irish solicitor-general] and Barron. It should be considered how the family interest in the city can be used to the best advantage. Neutrality hitherto has been deemed most advisable, but I don’t think we shall gain much by this course.
Pack-Beresford mss A/149.
Next day the corporation, in which it was noted that there had ‘lately’ been ‘some falling out’, publicly abandoned the compact of 1818 with a series a ‘new rules’ disavowing any further involvement in the representation and encouraging claimants to the freeman franchise to come forward. The municipal corporations commissioners later commented that their actions had ‘opened’ up the corporation and ‘restored’ it to ‘a constitutional character’. The Waterford Mail, however, was sceptical: ‘Little Johnny [Newport] is an alderman and he is at the very bottom of ... these humbug new rules, flung out as a placebo to the citizens’, they asserted, adding, ‘For God’s sake will nobody oppose this nominee of the hocus pocus of the mayor ... Are we forever to have the corporation thrusting a representative upon us without any choice or will of our own?’
At the 1830 general election Newport duly offered again, citing his opposition to repeal of the Union. ‘Probably he will not be opposed’, predicted Meara, 3 July. Two days later 200 freemen announced their ‘determination’ to support ‘any new candidate’ who was not connected with the corporation, following which a meeting chaired by one John Firth was held at Delavy’s Tavern, at which the ‘decided sense’ was that the ‘habitual consent’ given to Newport’s return was ‘dangerous to the liberties and freedom of citizens’, 8 July. ‘Everything is quiet in the city as yet, although attempts are being made to raise opposition’, Meara reported two days later.
At the 1831 general election Newport duly offered again as a reformer, amidst reports that ‘an opposition, and a very powerful one too’ was expected. Unable to attend the nomination owing to ‘advanced age and infirm health’, he was again proposed by Wyse and seconded by Carew. After denouncing Newport as the ‘dictator’ of a ‘closed borough’, which had refused to admit its opponents as freemen, Counsellor Daly (oddly also a freeman) then proposed Christmas, who was seconded by one Richard Cower. A lengthy debate ensued in which Barron assisted Wyse in defending Newport. After a show of hands Christmas declined a poll, leaving Newport to be returned unopposed in absentia.
By the Irish Reform Act Waterford regained the second seat it had lost at the Union. The boundary commissioners were ‘not authorized to curtail’ the ‘limits connected with its elective franchise’ and estimated that 967 inhabitants would qualify as £10 householders and 50 as £10 leaseholders and that about 150 non-resident freemen would be disfranchised, so that with the remaining 753 resident freemen and 77 freeholders (seven qualified at above £20, 30 at £10, and 40 ‘reserved for life’ at 40s.), there would be a ‘probable’ reformed constituency of 1,847.
I felt myself bound ... to impress on my countrymen my conviction of the unjustifiable and perilous extent to which O’Connell and other agitators desire for their own depraved and selfish objects to commit the people of Ireland: nowhere has that spirit more actively displayed itself than in this city.
Lansdowne mss, Newport to Lansdowne, 30 Sept. 1832.
Ministers found it ‘difficult to say’ who would succeed at the 1832 general election, when Wyse stood with Newport’s backing as a Liberal against Christmas and the Repealers Barron and Hayes. They correctly surmised, however, that ‘Christmas, who is called a Conservative, is safe’ and that the contest would be between Wyse and Barron. With O’Connell’s assistance the latter was returned in equal first place after a contest in which 1,140 polled.
in the freemen and 40s. freeholders
See M. Kiely and W. Nolan, ‘Politics, land and rural conflict in county Waterford, c.1830-1845’, in Waterford Hist. and Society ed. W. Nolan and T. Power, 459-94.
Estimated voters: 1300 in 1831
Population: 28679 (1821); 28821 (1831)
