Londonderry, a ‘very grand’ and ‘extremely imposing’ city on the west bank of the Foyle, was a thriving port and expanding commercial centre, which had a lively populace and in this period boasted three newspapers, the Chronicle, Journal and Sentinel.
Londonderry’s two sheriffs, one of whom was usually a citizen and the other a country gentleman, acted jointly for the borough and the county, whose jurisdiction overlapped in this and other ways.
Although the Beresford interest was paramount, the borough was reckoned by Thomas Oldfield in 1816 to be ‘open to a strong contest’.
In the Commons, the merchants’ petition for an additional duty on the importation of foreign butter was brought up by Hill, 24 Apr., and a return was ordered of the papers relating to the government loan of 1814, 4 July 1822.
I cannot but think that a stir can be made by us in the city against him, if we think it prudent to do so, with the Ferguson, Lecky and other interests, and although we may not succeed, we might put him to a good deal of expense.
Add. 40353, f. 113; PRO NI, Stewart Bam mss D4137/B/2/5.
In early February 1823 Lord Wellesley, Talbot’s successor, received an address condemning the Dublin Orange theatre riot from the Catholic clergy, gentry and inhabitants of Derry, where a branch of the Catholic Association became firmly established that year.
As Hill reported to Peel, the home secretary, ‘the Roman rent once attempted here nothing could prevent a public meeting’. This city and county gathering took place on 10 Jan. 1825, when Ferguson, Thomas Scott of Willsborough (the son of the late Londonderry Member William Scott) and Hill junior secured resolutions condemning the Catholic Association, despite Horner’s attempt to move amendments in its favour.
The common council agreed an anti-Catholic petition, 2 Nov. 1826, and it and another from the freemen, freeholders and inhabitants were presented to the Commons, perhaps by Hill, 2 Mar. 1827.
Anti-Catholic petitions from the corporation and the Apprentice Boys were presented to the Commons by Hill, 16 Mar., and the Lords by the duke of Cumberland, 26 Mar. 1829. The Catholics, who met to criticize the exclusive Protestant character of the franchise on the 8th, had petitions for emancipation brought up in the Lords by Londonderry, 19 Mar., and the Commons by Dawson, 24 Mar.
The Beresfords, who in late 1829 were determined to retain the borough influence ‘all for us’, ruled out any possibility that Dawson, whose reputation was in tatters, might take refuge there at the following election.
the shopkeepers and traders of Derry stood with their mouths open unable to give a vote while the Member for Old Sarum [one of the Alexander brothers] and Sir Abraham Bradley King ... were both lending their ‘sweet voices’ to appoint the Member for Derry.
O’Connell Corresp. iv. 1746.
Despite having to surrender their records for inspection, the corporation came to an amicable accommodation with a deputation from the Irish Society later that month.
A petition in the names of Adam Schoales and three other merchants against Ferguson’s return was brought up in the Commons, 15 Nov. 1830. It alleged that Ferguson was still the legal mayor, that his successor had foiled a king’s bench judgment against him and that legal protests against the conduct of the election had been ignored. Complaints were also made that Horner had been refused permission to nominate a third candidate as an ally of Hart and that Hart’s supporters had had their votes rejected. Similar petitions from Hart were presented, 16, 22 Nov., but because of high costs, the recognizances were entered into only for the second of these three petitions.
Although Horner, a self-proclaimed ‘man of the people’, declared in March 1831 that he would offer once the reform bill had been passed, it was Captain Hart who stood as a reformer at the by-election on the 28th.
Lieutenant-Colonel Cairnes of Port Stewart declined a requisition to stand as an opponent of reform. Both Ferguson and Lecky refused to pledge themselves to oppose the bill, although Horner and the barrister Thomas Thornton Macklin, who did much to organize the reformers’ campaign, denounced Ferguson on the hustings for failing to commit himself to the details of the measure, 9 May 1831. After the platform had given way with a ‘frightful crash’, the poll was adjourned to the crown court and four days later Ferguson was again declared elected with a sizeable lead.
By 1831 it had become obvious that the corporation was heading for a financial crisis, with debts dating back to the 1790s which now amounted to about £80,000. The officers had clearly acted negligently, if not fraudulently - the municipal corporations report noted that £150,000 remained unaccounted for - and the affair called into question the whole management of the borough. In 1828 the Irish Society had brought proceedings to oblige the corporation to collect its monies, but the immediate problem arose when the new Irish secretary, Edward Smith Stanley, insisted on the repayment of the loan taken out in 1814 for the bridge, which in fact had still to be rebuilt. To meet the demands of its anxious creditors, the corporation was obliged to sell almost all its properties, with the result that its annual income fell from over £7,000 to almost nothing. The Society, whose attitude was largely unsympathetic, provided £750 in 1831 to cover essential administrative costs, but thereafter refused to bail out the corporation.
With 568 £10 occupiers (another 167 of the £10 houses being disqualified), ten £10 rent-payers and 97 reserved rights burgesses and freemen, the populous borough, which lay well within the largely rural liberties, was expected to have 675 electors under the Irish Reform Act.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 351 in 1830
Estimated voters: about 450
Population: 9313 (1821); 10130 (1831)
