Leominster, a market town on the River Lug, 13 miles north of Hereford and 11 miles south of the Shropshire borough of Ludlow, lay in the hundred of Wolphy in Herefordshire’s golden vale. Its trades were mainly agricultural, but glove making, organized under a putting-out system employing female labour, afforded considerable employment and the town teemed with attorneys.
The corporation marked the death of George III with a service of mourning, 6 Feb. 1820, proclaimed George IV on the 8th, and retired to the council chamber to drink his health, after providing two hogsheads of cider for the populace.
Parts of Leominster were illuminated when news arrived in November 1820 that the case against Queen Caroline had been abandoned. Neither Member supported the queen’s cause, and the inhabitants’ petition protesting at her prosecution and urging her inclusion in the liturgy and inquiry into the Milan commission was entrusted to the Whig Member for Herefordshire Robert Price, 1 Feb. 1821.
It was reported early in June 1826 that Hotham was to come in for one of the duke of Newcastle’s seats, ‘leaving the field to Sir John Lubbock and Mr. Bish’; but it was Lubbock who retired, having first transferred his interest to another London banker, Rowland Stephenson of Marshalls, near Romford. Remmington, Stephenson and Company, in which Stephenson was a partner, now took over from Lubbock’s as agents for the Leominster and Herefordshire bank of Woodhouse and Company.
Any uncertainty concerning Hotham’s position was removed on the first day of the new Parliament, 21 Nov. 1826, when the House ruled that ‘the return was not to be deemed a double return, so far as it related to him’. Bish and Stephenson petitioned against each other’s return the following day. Bish claimed that Woodhouse had been wrong to include Stephenson on the return. Stephenson stressed Bish’s ineligibility and attributed his ‘colourable majority’ to Woodhouse’s erroneous decision to accept votes in his favour. A petition received on 5 Dec. 1826 from Bish’s supporters Samuel Coates, Rudge and the keeper of the brandy vaults Joseph Henry Seward asked for Stephenson’s return be ‘taken off the file’, and for Bish to be returned with Hotham or a new writ issued. Seward’s recognizance caused problems, but the petitions were eventually considered by a committee appointed, 13 Feb. 1827, chaired by Frank Sotheron, with the anti-Catholic Tory Edward Knatchbull as counsel for Stephenson and the Whig John Nicholas Fazakerley, a friend of Robert Price, for Bish. It found in Stephenson’s favour, 16 Feb. 1827
I had the good fortune to get on the Leominster committee which lasted only three days. You will see that our second decision, seating Mr. Stephenson, is attacked in the papers, as I hear it by the law authorities. As a quondam judge I am happy to say we divided on this second point and I was in the minority.
Keele Univ. Lib. Sneyd mss SC12/78.
Mortified, Bish, who had reputedly spent £10,000 in Leominster, complained that Stephenson had found his way into Parliament ‘by the ingenuity of his legal advocates’.
The Leominster Association for the Apprehension of Felons instigated protectionist petitions to both Houses against changing the corn laws, and Hotham voted against the corn bill, 2 Apr. 1827.
Chancery ruled that the creditors of Coleman and Wellings had priority over those of Coleman and Morris, 11 Feb. 1828, and this left many in dire financial straits, including the churchwardens, who were unable to present their accounts in October.
took me to a Mr. Secretan, who is the managing agent of a large assurance company (I forget which) and I infer from the responsibility of his office a respectable man ... The seat is ... about to be vacant in a month or two, at the expiration of the term at which Rowland Stephenson’s outlawry will be complete. His, Mr. Secretan’s, family has great local interest and a near relation of his is the returning officer. He and the party to which he belongs have returned the Member for 40 years. An election without a contest to cost £3,000 or £3,500 and with a contest £5,000!! The expenses consist mainly of a five guinea bribe to each voter. It is stated that there is no chance of a contest on the present occasion ... [I said] this did not quite accord with my recollection of what occurred on the last occasion. This statement was met by an assurance that Mr. Bish ... had not now one shilling and could therefore give no trouble. But the same party which espoused his cause then might support another candidate now, and the whole thing seemed to me so unpromising that I should have rejected it at once if Mr. Secretan had not said that Sir John Lubbock was the person whom his family contributed to return for several years. Now George [Russell, their brother] is intimate with Sir J. Lubbock’s son, and I thought there could be no harm in getting from him what information I could. George has seen the son who will speak to the father.
Bodl. MS Eng. lett. c. 160, f. 83.
Russell desisted, but John Halcomb† tried to get up a subscription, Drummond Harley Rodney, the recorder’s son and the 11th duke of Somerset’s son Lord Archibald Seymour†, who was almost of age, were mentioned and speculation concerning Bish, Cuthbert and the ‘popular party’ continued to the last, although John Ward of Holwood House, Kent had ‘tied up his election’ before the writ was ordered, 4 Feb. 1830.
A Mr. Ward from some place near London, a perfect stranger here has been canvassing and obtained ... a sufficient number of votes to ensure his return, not however on account of his being preferred to another man, but because no other person has thought proper to offer himself. Had ... Gresley therefore made his application sooner, he would have stood the same chance as Mr. Ward. ... Lord Hotham is now the only Member and Mr. Thomkis and Messrs. Pearce are his agents, so that of course they are not at liberty to assist any other gentleman. At a contested election £8,000 or £10,000 may be easily spent here.
Derbys. RO, Gresley of Drakelow mss box 36, bdle. 7, D77/36/7.
The barrister John Mirehouse, a candidate for Marlborough in July 1830, had arrived that day with letters of recommendation from the Whig lawyer Thomas Denman* and the London alderman Matthew Wood*; but, finding most voters already pledged, he left, declaring that the election had been illegally proclaimed and that he would petition and stand again.
According to Thomas Gladstone*, who was offered Leominster twice - by William Huskisson* about 3 July, and by Stratford Canning* on the 6th - Lord Melbourne had informed Huskisson that Leominster was ‘to be had’ on the Coleman interest, which claimed to have returned a Member ‘for the last 60 years’
for five thousand ... no cure, no pay and success certain, except the personal expenses incurred in the town on the canvass, 200 probably ... Sometimes there is no contest, and according to his account, with that you have nothing to do in a pecuniary point of view; about 700 voters.
When Gladstone and his counsel Henry Merewether ‘met the parties’
it turned out that Huskisson had a mistaken account of the place. The terms were with success £5,000 (and possibly they said £4,500) and £1,000, if not more (for they did not undertake to guarantee that limit though that of the other sum they did) on failure, which they professed [to] consider impossible ... Merewether decidedly and strongly urged my abandoning it altogether. He thought I should have all the turmoil and anxiety of a regular contest, success not so certain as was stated, and a considerable pecuniary risk. I agreed with him and we then put an end to the negotiation ... That the price was a full one, without the power of transfer and dependent on the life of the king, guided me very much in this new state of things.
St. Deiniol’s Lib. Glynne-Gladstone mss 195, T. to J. Gladstone [3-5 July 1830].
Being in poor heath, Hotham hoped for an unopposed return at minimal cost without an arduous canvass. Ward’s intentions were unclear until 20 July, when he announced his retirement and urged his supporters to vote for another Whig, William Marshall of Pattersdale. He was the son of the Yorkshire Member, John Marshall, whose political conduct was closely monitored by Hotham’s Yorkshire agent John Hall and had been brought in for Petersfield on the Jolliffe interest in 1826.
You are sufficiently acquainted with the state of party feeling at Leominster to know that nothing that could be by any means tortured into a deviation, however slight, in favour of one party would pass without its comment by the other. With this feeling, and yet unwilling to appear needlessly ungracious towards Lord Hotham, W. Pateshall and myself thought it most advisable to send no answer, rather than what must have been a refusal, thinking that the writ might, by its arrival on any other day than Sunday, render any other answer than compliance with your request unnecessary; and satisfied, that in any event Lord Hotham, or you at least, would understand and feel the prudence, if not the propriety of our silence, proposing at all events to explain matters when we meet.
Herefs. RO, Pateshall mss A95/V/W/C/382-94; The Times, 13, 21 July; Hereford Jnl. 4, 11 Aug. 1830.
Marshall took over Ward’s obligations at the August 1830 races, which were stewarded by Hotham and ‘more numerously attended’ than previously.
Leominster contributed to the 1830-1 petitioning campaign against colonial slavery and adopted a petition for parliamentary reform before the details of the Grey ministry’s bill, which proposed making it a single Member constituency, were announced, 1 Mar. 1831. Immediately afterwards, a reform committee was established in the town.
The Members divided steadily for the reintroduced reform bill, and the inhabitants petitioned the Lords to pass it, 26 Sept. 1831, and celebrated Meath’s elevation to the British peerage (as Baron Chaworth of Eaton) at the coronation that month.
The electors ... have been on the qui vive, expecting a bit of opposition as a matter of course, and they have not been disappointed. Lord Hotham, who so often represented the borough, Mr. Fraser, who is said to have Mr. Brayen’s interest in his favour, and Thomas Bish, Esq., an old acquaintance of the electors of Leominster, appeared as candidates and have been occupied in canvassing the town. On Monday the tug of war commenced, when only Mr. Fraser and Lord Hotham proceeded to the poll.
Hereford Jnl. 16, 23 Nov.; Cambrian, 24 Dec. 1831.
The by-election coincided with a disastrous slump in the glove trade and Bish, who had announced in July that he would stand at the first post-reform election, decided against bringing his candidature forward.
If many, or but a few of the circumstances asserted can be brought home to his lordship’s agents on a petition to the House, it is possible that the noble lord may find his transient success a little too dearly purchased and his paean of ‘reaction’ sung a few weeks too soon.
Hereford Jnl. 28 Dec.; The Times, 28 Dec.; Worcester Jnl. 29 Dec.; Worcester Herald, 31 Dec. 1831.
Allegations that the corporation had taken reprisals against many who had withheld their support from Hotham in May and that no assessor attended in December 1831 cannot be confirmed, but Hotham’s confidence that no petition would be presented was justified.
Leominster petitioned in support of the factories regulation bill, 20 Feb. 1832, and supported the campaign for abolition of the stamp duty levied on newspapers and printed matter promoted by Evans and his fellow barrister William Stephen Meryweather Turner, who offered himself in his place at the first post-reform election.
that the present borough contains all that is, or is ever likely to be in any sense part of the town. The area of land included by it on the outside of the town is very large, and in the only place (towards the east) where the borough boundary comes near to the town the land is marshy and the houses nearest to the boundary are often flooded so that an extension of the town in this direction seems to be quite impossible.
Hereford Jnl. 20, 27 June 1832; PP (1831-2), xxxviii. 393-5.
The Reform Act made little difference to the size of the registered electorate of 770: 488 scot and lot payers and 233 £10 householders from the old borough and 49 £10 householders from the out-parish.
‘in the burgesses resident within the limits and the scot and lot inhabitants resident within the limits of the borough’
Number of voters: 702 in 1831
Estimated voters: 700-785
Population: 3651 (1821); 4300 (1831)
