The county town of Brecon (Aberhonddu), on the confluence of the Rivers Honddu and Usk, comprised two parishes and a chapelry, whose large church formerly served St. Mary’s priory.
After the 1820 election interest focused on celebrations marking the coming of age of Lord Brecknock*, whose father the 1st Marquess Camden owned The Priory, the appointment of a postmaster, and the health of the recorder Edward Morgan, who had been taken ill after arriving in the town to chair a canal company meeting.
Brecon was ‘in a perfect blaze of illumination’, 13 Sept. 1821, when George IV slept at The Priory on his way to London from Ireland following the queen’s death. He ‘was received by almost the whole population’, and the ‘corporation and inhabitants’ delivered a loyal address to the courtier Lord Graves*.
Brecon hosted the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists’ ‘sasiwn’ in 1827, and the borough’s Dissenters petitioned strongly in 1827-8 for repeal of the Test Acts, which the Morgans opposed.
His boundary dispute with the Rev. Thomas Watkins of Penoyre having been resolved after litigation,
The bailiff, recorder and inhabitants sent petitions for the abolition of West Indian slavery to both Houses in 1830-1, and the Wesleyan Methodists and Welsh Calvinistic Methodists petitioned independently.
Troops from Brecon were sent to Merthyr during the June 1831 riots, and popular support for reform remained strong. In November, following the bill’s Lords’ defeat, it culminated in a violent demonstration by ‘a crowd so large the constables dared not interfere’. They went on the rampage, smashing windows at the homes of Price, the Rev. Thomas Vaughan and other known anti-reformers, before the magistrates, having hastily sworn in 250 special constables, threatened to read the Riot Act.
As the commissioners had suggested, the Boundary Act added the extra-parochial districts of the Castle and Christ College to the Brecon constituency, but their recommendation that Llywel be excluded from it because of its distance from the town was overruled. Eleven burgess and 231 £10 voters were registered in October 1832.
in the resident freemen
Estimated voters: 21 in 1831
Population: 4193 (1821); 5026 (1831)
