Brackley, a small market town in an agricultural district, had little to recommend it to contemporary observers, one of whom commented that ‘its buildings have no pretension to uniformity or architectural taste’. Formerly ‘a great mart for wool’, by 1831 its ‘only manufacture’ was ‘that of lace’.
There was no hint of opposition. The corporation, comprising a mayor, who was also the returning officer, seven other aldermen and 23 common burgesses, was controlled by Bradshaw. Of the aldermen, only two were resident, one an innkeeper, the other the local vicar, whose living was under Bradshaw’s nomination. Three others were members of Bridgwater’s family. Of the common burgesses, 12 were local tenants of Stafford and the others were employees of the Bridgwater Navigation Company.
During the 1820s there was much discussion of the desirability of enclosing the common land around the town, but it was not until the four major landholders petitioned for it, 16 Feb. 1829, that anything was done.
Brackley was condemned by the Grey ministry’s reform bill to lose both its Members. James Bradshaw made a feeble attempt to have it reprieved, 20 July 1831, when he said that according to the 1831 census the borough’s population now exceeded 2,000, and that therefore under the government’s criteria should be entitled to retain one Member. He denied that it was a nomination borough and pointed out that it had never been charged with corruption. Number 55 in the list of small boroughs scheduled for abolition, the borough was disfranchised by the Reform Act and subsumed into the new Northamptonshire South constituency. Thereafter Robert Bradshaw abandoned any interest in membership of Parliament and in 1833 considered selling the Bridgwater estates at Brackley to pay for repairs to the trust’s docks at Liverpool. He disposed of his own private estate there in 1834.
in the corporation
Qualified voters: 31
Population: 1851 (1821); 2107 (1831)
