Newark was a thriving market town on the Trent, 18 miles north-east of Nottingham and close to the border with Lincolnshire. Its staple industries of brewing and malting were supplemented in this period by recently introduced cotton manufacturing.
At the general election of 1820, the appearance of William Bryant of London (whose son stood against Newcastle’s nominees at Aldborough) in a bid to revive the Blue interest came to nothing. The sitting Members, Newcastle’s kinsman General Clinton and Middleton’s cousin Henry Willoughby, were returned unopposed.
In the spring of 1826 some potential challengers were named in the local press, including Gordon’s friend Benjamin Handley, a banker of Sleaford and uncle of William Farnworth Handley.
A week after the election Newcastle discussed his future strategy with Godfrey and Clinton. Though disheartened by the apparent lack of commitment of Middleton and Gordon to the united interest, he resolved to preserve their alliance, but at the same time to urge the need for ‘a clear understanding that the votes of one shall be reciprocally given to the other’. He also directed that ‘a correct list is to be made out of all the voters and a report made of the state of the votes. I shall then know what I may depend upon and may then form my plans for the future with greater precision’.
conceived it would be the best policy, if all the members of the united interest acted together, to permit no tenants to remain on the estates but those who voted wholly Red; but that of course ... he would not individually act on this principle, nor remove those who voted for Sir William Clinton and Mr. Bristowe unless ... [Middleton] removed those who voted for Mr. Willoughby and Mr. Bristowe.
Tallents mss.
Tallents, now a convert to Newcastle’s hard line on evictions, saw the need to make an example of all the dissident tenants, provided Middleton followed suit: otherwise, ‘a general impression may run through the tenantry that they are not expected to do more than give one vote for their landlord, and are quite at liberty to support a third candidate with the other’.
On full consideration I am sure that the straightforward course will be best and that no song no supper, or no votes no houses, shall be the distinguishing rule ... We have now gone so far that we cannot recede and the case stands thus with my tenants: those who voted for Bristowe plumpers will receive notices, the same to those who voted Willoughby and Bristowe, and the fate of those who voted Clinton and Bristowe will be decided by the conclusive opinion of the leading interests.
Ibid. Newcastle to Tallents, 17, 22, 25 Sept., reply, 29 Sept. 1826.
Before Middleton’s decision was made known the situation was further complicated by Gordon’s surprise decision to sell some of his Newark property. Newcastle and Tallents were eager to buy in order to keep it ‘out of enemy hands’, but Gordon had already offered first refusal to his tenants, with the reversion to William Handley. In the end Newcastle had to console himself with Handley’s purchase of the lion’s share (20-30 houses) and the reflection that the property had not fallen into ‘adverse hands’.
thinks that the evil which has occurred is so limited in its extent, that it may be corrected without resorting to extreme measures, as by the expression of extreme disappointment ... and a strong expectation that a firm reliance might be placed on the several parties upon all future occasions. Lord Middleton hopes the united interest may never be disturbed, but thinks it more judicial in the present instance to endeavour to preserve or restore it by milder measures, than incur the risk of that irritation which the stronger might excite.
Ibid. Martin to Tallents, 7 Oct., Tallents to Newcastle, 9 Oct. 1826.
Middleton’s appeasement and Gordon’s irresolution annoyed Newcastle, who determined to adopt a more independent line in order to consolidate his interest:
My allies, it appears, are not at all willing to be led by me, but I am in all instances led by them. As I engaged to act as my allies should act towards the splitting tenants so it must be for this turn, but it is the last. In future I shall take my own line and I am sure that we shall do better and occupy a more commanding situation, for it is a sneaking and pitiful thing to be led by the nose on every occasion and always to be a follower and not a leader ... What you have done about notices is quite right - the arrears must be paid up ... To the tenants who voted Clinton and Bristowe and to those who are suspicious, I should wish you to take special opportunity of declaring to them openly that tenants must always vote with their landlord, that I am highly displeased with their conduct and that nothing has saved them from being turned out but the novelty of the circumstances and the possible ignorance in supposing that if they gave one vote to their landlord, they might dispose of the other as they pleased. Assure them positively that a stop is now put to such proceedings by their eyes being opened, and by my firm determination.
Ibid. Newcastle to Tallents, 12 Oct. 1826.
Following their unsuccessful attempt to convene a public meeting to call for inquiry into the administration of the charity estates, the Blues decided to challenge the Reds’ monopoly and ‘disgraceful partiality’ in local government. During the winter and early spring of 1826-7 the Nottingham and Newark Mercury serialized the Rev. Bernard Wilson’s critique of the management of the municipal estate, first published in 1768. Well in advance of the Easter elections of churchwardens, an independent public meeting resolved to put up alternative candidates to Newcastle’s nominees. Tallents sponsored these men as usual, but called on the Reds to indemnify them from expense in the event of a contest. The authorities barricaded the church and swore in a large number of special constables. The Blues’ connection with the various charities entrusted to them enabled them to control the outlay of considerable sums of money among friendly tradesmen, but they could not match their opponents’ bribery, and they capitulated with only 155 votes to 898. Tallents ignored the recriminations published by the anti-corporation party. In 1828 the Reds were again victorious, by 281 to 118, though almost 1,600 electors remained unpolled.
On 13 Feb. 1829 Clinton, lieutenant-general of the ordnance since 1825, told Newcastle of his intention to resign if the duke insisted on opposition to the Wellington ministry’s concession of Catholic emancipation. Newcastle, who was incensed by their apostacy, immediately proposed to bring in Lord Encombe*, but after consultation with his grandfather Lord Eldon decided to nominate ‘someone of more experience’. He selected the Leeds linen merchant Michael Sadler, a prominent Evangelical Protestant and an anti-Malthusian pamphleteer.
The churchwardens’ elections in April 1829 gave the Blues a chance to test their strength, but they were defeated by 628-371.
As I respect the liberty of others, so must I demand that others shall not attempt to interfere with that freedom and independence which is my right as well as theirs ... Is it presumed, then, that I am not to do what I will with my own, or that I am to surrender my property and the inherent rights belonging to it into the hands of those who desire to deprive me of it? This is the simple question - to which I answer, that whilst the laws of England exist and are respected, I shall permit neither clamour nor threats nor even force itself to deter me from doing as I may think fit with my property.
The Times, 28 Sept.; Tallents mss, Newcastle to Bristowe, 27 Sept. 1829.
The meeting, 5 Oct., which was reported at first hand in the London press, was attended by Wilde, Bristowe, Pearson and Kelk. James Hitchins, an auctioneer, read Newcastle’s letter to Bristowe (thus ensuring the public notoriety of the phrase ‘to do what I will with my own’) and exposed the extent of his influence derived from possession of the locally extensive crown lands. Wilde recommended a petition to the Commons, continued his attack on Newcastle’s doctrine of inherent right at the ensuing dinner and, having undertaken a full canvass, addressed a Blue gathering, 13 Oct., and spoke of his ambition to become their true representative by turning out Newcastle’s nominee.
Pre-empting Willoughby’s intention to distribute coals at Christmas 1829, Tallents wished to limit the allocation to proven loyal Reds, but Willoughby was alleged to want to extend it to all those tenants who had received coals in 1826. Tallents, aware that this would include many who had never voted for either Red candidate and who had plumped for Wilde at the by-election, urged that all such should be considered as ‘decided enemies to the united interest’. On the other hand, Willoughby’s agent was reluctant to alienate them, as the contest in 1826 had been too brief in duration to test all allegiances. Middleton was too ill to take an active part in the discussions and left the final decision to his agent and Handley, neither of whom would adopt Tallents’s preferred policy of punishing all the 600 who had voted for Wilde, except those of them who had voted for Willoughby in 1826. Anticipating Newcastle’s reaction, Tallents suggested that it would be inexpedient to abandon the electoral union, which
if cordially sustained, would defy all attempts to bring in a Blue candidate, and the dissolution of which I really think would be much more prejudicial to your ... interest under existing circumstances, than its continuance even under the unfavourable circumstances which have on several occasions of late years given it more the aspect of a hollow truce than a system of secure and cordial cooperation.
A compromise acceptable to Tallents was agreed by the joint committee, but Handley, who presumably had an eye to the revival of the Yellow interest in his own favour, proved awkward. To avoid further conflict Middleton ignored his advice and acquiesced in the committee’s resolution, though it was clear that Willoughby was still anxious that the distribution of coals should not be restricted. For Newcastle, who was determined to maintain the united interest by every means ‘except the concession of principle’, this was an important victory, since Tallents had induced the Yellows to adopt a course which was ‘peculiarly our own’.
On 1 Mar. 1830 the Whig Charles Poulett Thomson presented to the Commons the petition of ‘several Newark inhabitants’ detailing Newcastle’s abuse of his powers as lessee of the crown lands. With the ultimate intention of addressing the king to refuse a renewal of the leases, he moved for inquiry. Tallents had briefed Clinton Fynes Clinton, Newcastle’s Member for Aldborough, with carefully doctored statistics which glossed over the more incriminating aspects of the case and understated the total number of evictions.
In early May 1830 Tallents contacted Sadler in anticipation of the king’s death, and on the 27th he and Fynes Clinton settled the final arrangements for the general election with Newcastle, who recorded that
I shall do everything through Mr. Sadler, who will give all directions and orders for the election and Mr. Tallents is to [be] clear too of all agency and directions. We are to have a host of lawyers, but I have desired that the expenses may be kept down to the utmost.
Tallents mss, Sadler to Tallents, 16 May; Newcastle mss Ne 2 F3/1/228.
By 7 July Newcastle was satisfied with the state of affairs at Newark, where both Members had canvassed before the dissolution.
Newcastle’s assumption that Wilde would ‘hardly be fool enough to come again’ was a delusion, but, with his leadership of the united interest now unassailable, he was more resolved than ever to purge his tenantry of all dissidents. Eviction notices wee served not only on those who had plumped for Wilde, but also on those who had only plumped for Sadler. According the The Times, these reprisals fomented a revolutionary spirit, but the duke and Tallents disregarded press attacks and made ‘no exception’ in the issue of about 70 evictions. Tallents reported that the Nottingham and Newark Mercury’s campaign in defence of the rebel tenants had failed miserably: ‘A few ragged rascals carried a large flag about with a death’s head ... upon it, which they stood with before my house for a very short time; and then after parading about the town they quietly shrank into the alehouses’. A political union was established at about this time, but it had lapsed by the following spring.
I shall be mortified at seeing Serjeant Wilde after all the money spent in keeping him out, succeed ... but I see not who can oppose him with any chance of success, and your Grace may perhaps use the present occasion for strengthening your own interest and placing it out of the reach of danger.
Tallents warned that any attempt to impose a second Member would curb Newcastle’s freedom to deal with rebel tenants and consolidate his interest, and that in any case it would be unwise not to evict tenants who had plumped. Sutton soon took fright at the prospect of spending £5,000, a contest with Wilde which would ‘nearly kill him and harass his wife to death’ and a strong feeling in support of Handley. Although there was an unsubstantiated report that Middleton would ‘throw the influence of his property into ... [his] scale’, Sutton withdrew on 7 Feb.
Soon after the introduction of the Grey ministry’s reform scheme, 1 Mar. 1831, Newcastle asked Tallents to assess its consequences for Newark (which was scheduled to retain both seats) should the ‘revolutionary bill’ become law. Tallents replied that there appeared to be no immediate cause for anxiety, as the proposed £10 householder franchise would eventually reduce the electorate from about 1,600 to between 500 and no more than 600, which would still leave the Reds with a secure majority (as at present) of about 140. Taking this contraction into account, there would be ‘a more decisive and conclusive majority against the Blues’, and it seemed ‘strange that the Blues should (as it is said) be friendly to the measure’. Even so, the duke was eager to encourage the corporation to petition against the bill.
I grieve to state that many respectable Reds upon whom we have been accustomed to depend say they cannot vote for anyone who opposed the reform bill and the workmen of some of our best supporters are likely to give Serjeant Wilde one vote and (if not a plumper) the other to Mr. Handley ... The maddening fever of reform seems to run through the land like a pestilence infecting the bulk of its inhabitants. On my telling one of the violent Blues that in 20 years or less the operation of the bill would destroy three-fourths of the votes of the labouring class here, he said I was mistaken, for a reformed Parliament would restore them and give them vote by ballot ... This is the way they reconcile themselves to the disfranchising clause.
Tallents mss.
Despite Wilde’s attempt to discredit Handley for his equivocation over reform, it was soon obvious that Handley rather than Gresley would receive the split votes of the ‘Red reformers’. As the canvass progressed Handley became increasingly discomfited by his association with Gresley, and Tallents, uneasily aware of the growing strain on the alliance, particularly when it became clear that Handley’s anti-reform vote was a temporary aberration, justified the coalition on the ground of expediency alone:
We had the choice of evils and I am satisfied we selected the least of them in uniting with Mr. Handley, for incongruous and discordant as it is with reference to the great question which exclusively occupies public attention, a contrary course would have brought on a junction of Mr. Handley and the Serjeant, a splitting of many of our old Reds and a certainty of defeat.
The alliance foundered in acrimony son after the nomination, 28 Apr. Middleton could not be persuaded to bolster Newcastle’s interest: he signified his wish for one vote to be given to Handley, but left the disposal of the other to the discretion of his tenants. During the early stages of the election Handley pledged neither to influence the casting of second votes nor to prevent their allocation to Wilde, or so Godrey told Tallents, commenting that such a declaration was ‘utterly inconsistent’ with the principle of their joint canvass. The coalition was at an end, to the ‘disappointment’ and ‘mortification’ of Newcastle, who told Tallents:
My friends have deserted me, and left me in a condition in which I never expected to see myself at Newark. I am highly incensed at their conduct and pained beyond all power of expression by so much treachery, ingratitude and lukewarmness... Of anything more base and perfidious [than ‘Handley’s conduct’] I never before heard. I am released and violently driven from my engagements... My object is to seat ... Gresley, do it how you can ... [and] poll the last vote ... If Sir R.G. be beaten, I will never cease to disturb the peace of the town on every occasion on which I can annoy and oppose those Members who may be seated. They shall not enjoy their seats in quiet ... and many other things which I will do, if I am beaten, and which nothing on earth shall determe from doing, I will communicate to you when we meet.
Ibid. Godfrey to Tallents [23, 29], reply [29 Apr.], Newcastle to Tallents, 30 Apr.; Lincoln and Newark Times, 4 May 1831; Newcastle mss NeC 4529, 4533.
On the fourth day of polling, when Gresley trailed Wilde by 174 and Handley by 74, Newcastle exhorted Tallents to try to get up all Gresley’s unpolled votes and seduce ‘nearly 50’ from Handley’s remaining unpolled 70: ‘Wonders were performed at Crecy and Agincourt, wonders may be wrought on the hustings at Newark.
Wilde claimed with justification that his success afforded ‘the strongest evidence of the progress of the cause of reform in the minds of the people’, while the Nottingham Review attributed it not only to the general enthusiasm for reform and the presence of a impartial assessor, but to the Blues’ intrusion into local government, hitherto the preserve of Reds. At a celebratory dinner for Wilde, 21 May 1831, the emphasis was on conciliation, and Kelk was ‘checked’ for launching into an attack on administration of the charity estate.
I shall not try Newark again upon speculation or to spend money. If they solicit me, I will send somebody, but I will be guaranteed against expense. In the meantime I shall raise my rents to the double and see how they like that ... Gresley ... confirms what I suspected, that little was done at first to secure success; on the contrary, the want of preparation invited and entailed defeat.
Newcastle mss Ne 2 F4/1/23; Tallents mss, Newcastle to Tallents, 4 May 1831.
Gresley tried to impress on Newcastle ‘the expediency of a conciliatory rather than vindictive course in future’, but the duke was soon under fire from the Newark Times for evicting tenants, although some concessions were made in consequence of the ‘strange events of the last election’.
In September 1831 unfounded rumours that Wilde was to be appointed solicitor-general raised the prospect of a by-election. Gresley was the obvious Red candidate to oppose him, but while Newcastle said he would ‘unhesitantly’ assist him he refused to promise financial support. This episode forced the duke to consider the notion that his interest could only be revived by compromise; and in early December Tallents told him:
I shall certainly be sorry to see the Serjeant walk over the course, and had some little hope that it might have been thought worth the while of a candidate to have fought one losing battle with so good a chance of success in the second encounter when a general election shall take place; for the first fight would have given him an increased claim to support in a second, and it would have inculcated a pretty strong belief that the Newarkers in the old Red interest will not rest till they succeed in sending a Member to Parliament and so eventually drive one of their opponents from the field.
Tallents mss, Newcastle to Mrs. Tallents, 13 Sept., Gresley to same, 19 Sept., Tallents to Newcastle, 27 Nov., 3 Dec. 1831.
The mayor and some inhabitants petitioned the Lords in favour of the reform bill, 3 Oct. 1831.
The boundary commissioners recommended no change to the constituency. At the 1832 general election, when the borough had a registered electorate of 1,575, Newcastle’s nominee William Ewart Gladstone unexpectedly topped the poll, with Handley, standing as a Conservative, in second place, 72 ahead of Wilde. A compromise in 1835 allowed Wilde to come in with Gladstone, and Newcastle’s control over one seat continued until his death in 1851.
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: 1494 in 1831
Estimated voters: about 1,700
Population: 8084 (1821); 9957 (1831)
