The county of the borough of Carmarthen (Caerfyrddyn) was a well-built county town, administrative centre and inland port situated on the north-west bank of the River Towy, nine miles directly north of Carmarthen Bay on the Bristol Channel and 17 miles west by road from Llanelli. Formerly the Roman capital of Wales and the seat of the South Wales princes, its boundaries were coextensive with those of the parish of St. Peter (5,155 acres), and until eclipsed by Swansea in the early nineteenth century it was the region’s largest town. The dominant issues and families were those locally important in South-West Wales.
No party could be certain of its hold on the borough, but the corporation had been dominated by the Blues since the last charter was granted in 1764. Carmarthen’s mayor and six peers (among them the sheriffs who acted as returning officers) were elected annually and its 20 common councillors for life. Council meetings were always conducted in private and members had to take an oath of secrecy. They could pass local Acts by majority votes and were empowered to make persons paying scot and lot on property assessed at £10 and above ex gratia burgesses. De jure burgesses were required to have held freehold property in the borough worth £4 a year for at least three years prior to qualification. Eligibility was also conferred by serving a seven-year apprenticeship in Carmarthen, but of these there were ‘very few’. There was no set interval between a burgess’s admission and his swearing-in at the mayor’s fortnightly court, and a partisan mayor could keep those whose votes were not required unsworn. Nine-hundred-and-fifty-two were admitted, 1800-31, and in December 1831 there were 723 sworn and 132 unsworn burgesses. Admission fees of £1 3s. 6d. were levied, together with stamp duties and a 1s. registration fee, and the cost of burgesses creation was generally met by party leaders - West Wales squires and professional men who coveted the prestige attached to having town houses and votes in Carmarthen. Exploiting the £4 freehold qualification, multiple leases and releases were granted regularly to and by them before elections, and many subsequently withdrawn. The ability thus to evade the residence qualification imposed in 1764 (reversing the 1728 Commons ruling) and to marshal interests and tenantries on either side was resented by the borough’s growing middle class, who in the early nineteenth century frequently contemplated corrective legislation.
Professor O’Gorman has classified Carmarthen as a constituency where ‘a new set of party distinctions was to emerge, superimposed upon the old conflicts between oligarchy and independence and focusing upon the conflict of parties at Westminster’.
The county petition for reforms in the administration of justice in Wales owed much to Jones and Carmarthen, and an angry Campbell spoke against it, 25 May 1820.
Campbell’s succession to his father’s peerage in June 1821 caused a by-election for which the Reds, who in Jones already had a candidate, were the better prepared. On 15 June John Bowen, William Morgan, the Morris brothers, R.M. Philipps, John George Philipps, George Thomas, John Williams, Dr. Williams and Williams of Horeb met privately and sent for the 77-year-old Paxton, who had made his fortune in India, represented Carmarthen, 1803-6, and fought three expensive contests in the county which had returned him for a single Parliament in 1806. His ‘personal exertion’ was not required: ‘his once appearing at Carmarthen will answer every purpose’. William Hughes of Tregib, Herbert Evans and John George Philipps of Cwmgwili, a naval captain whose father and grandfather had represented the borough, were held in reserve, but there was also support for the borough recorder, George Pryce Watkins of Tenby.
When the king passed through Carmarthen in September 1821 on his way to Ireland, the corporation prepared a loyal address, but George IV only had time to stop briefly at Dynevor.
The Commons received petitions from Carmarthen for repeal of the Insolvent Debtors Act, 20 Feb., and the salt and leather duties, 30 Apr. 1822, a cause Jones espoused, so earning the nickname ‘Jones yr Halen’ (Jones the Salt).
In 1827 and 1828 Carmarthen’s churches and chapels petitioned steadily for repeal of the Test Acts, and Jones’s support for the cause was acknowledged in Seren Gomer, which was now printed in the town. It actively promoted their repeal, the spring guns bill, and the abolition of slavery and, like the Tory Carmarthen Journal, came out against Catholic relief.
By the autumn of 1829 Carmarthen’s main political concern was the law commission’s report recommending abolition of the separate Welsh courts and assimilation of the Welsh counties into the English assize system. Carmarthen’s assize town status was never at risk and, as Cawdor had suggested in 1828 in an open letter to lord chancellor Lyndhurst, it had been designated the sole assize town for Carmarthenshire, Pembrokeshire and south Cardiganshire. Submissions to the commissioners from Jones and fellow Reds favoured retaining and improving the Welsh courts. The Carmarthen Journal backed the reformers and the Cambrian the abolitionists, but all shades of opinion were reported in both.
Carmarthen’s Independents, Welsh Calvinistic and Wesleyan Methodists supported the 1831-2 campaign for the abolition of colonial slavery and suspected that Jones’s support for abolition was not genuine, although he presented and endorsed their petitions. His vote with the administration when they were brought down on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830, and stance on parliamentary reform caused further unease.
Jones thought that notwithstanding his majority vote for Gascoyne’s wrecking amendment, 19 Apr. 1831, he had moved far enough on reform to satisfy his constituents, and he did not anticipate opposition in Carmarthen at the ensuing general election. His declared opponent, sanctioned by Cawdor, was John George Philipps.
This place is particularly stupid at present, not even the Blues perform any exploits to enliven us. Between 40 or 50 of the Blues and Reds have been summoned to London on Captain Philipps’s petition. It is to be hoped that the Reds will have a little more justice done them there than they have had here. Everything is now carried by the mob. I hope I shall be from here when the election for this borough takes place.
Carmarthen Jnl. 10, 24 June, 8 July 1831; Dolaucothi mss V21/40; Yr Efangylydd, i (1831), 191-4.
On 10 Aug., the day the Commons resolved to add Llanelli to the Carmarthen constituency, the election committee reported that the special return made on 30 Apr. had not been justified and a greater effort should have been made to keep the poll open. The defence of the sheriffs was deemed neither frivolous nor vexatious and a new writ was issued.
Capitalizing on the continued unpopularity of the Reds, at the corporation elections Philipps stood for the mayoralty against Daniel Prytherch and Hughes of Tregib challenged Philipps’s brother Grismond (a loyal Red) for a seat on the common council. John George Philipps failed by 208-175 and Hughes by 191-180, but the mob was behind them and rioters were again detained. Few volunteers for the constabulary could be found.
in the ‘burgesses’, i.e. freemen
Number of voters: 593 in 1821
Estimated voters: 723 in December 1831
Population: 8902 (1821); 9955 (1831)
