Caernarvon (Caernarfon, Segontium) was a castellated borough, port and county town in the parish of Llanbeblig on the eastern side of the Menai Straits. It was the polling town and its annually elected bailiffs were the returning officers for Caernarvonshire’s second seat, a constituency of five boroughs where no uniform franchise qualification applied and the residence required of electors had not been fully determined.
Conway (Conwy, Aberconway) was a castellated seaport and borough on the western shore of the Conway estuary, 24 miles east-north-east of Caernarvon. Government was vested locally in the constable of the castle (as mayor), two bailiffs, a recorder, coroner, 24 capital burgesses and the burgesses at large, who elected all corporation officers annually except the recorder and mayor.
The sitting Member since 1806, Anglesey’s brother Sir Charles Paget, came in unopposed in 1820, proposed by Garnons and the Rev. Owen Reynolds, rector of Aber, near Bangor. The chief concerns were the coastwise coal duties scheduled for reintroduction in August 1820 and the construction of the Menai and Conway suspension bridges which Thomas Assheton Smith I* had campaigned unsuccessfully against. Paget’s circulars were issued by the Plas Newydd agents and made no political statements, but Reynolds explained that ‘though from his profession [as a sailor] ... he was sometimes unable to attend the active debates of the House, and ... in many cases obliged to give a silent vote’, he revered the dignity of the crown and liberties of the people, and would promote local concerns and seek concessions on the coal duties.
Paget, who had commanded the royal yacht, was appointed to the king’s household in January 1822 and Plas Newydd sought the earliest possible date for a by-election, thus placing pressure on the bailiff, the attorney Richard Williams, who was required in court. Paget made only a perfunctory personal canvass. His circulars and nomination speeches by Garnons and Trevor made much of his status as a courtier; and his return was celebrated with the usual dinner and ball at the Uxbridge Arms.
All the gentry here are government men to a man, and unhappily some are against us. Captain Parry of the navy, a magistrate and gentleman of fortune in the town, is one of these. He states that to his knowledge the slaves are better off than the British labourers, and Mr. Pennant*, the heir of Lord Penrhyn, a man of £50,000 a year living in the neighbourhood, is quite against us, in virtue of being a very large West India proprietor. The Rev. Mr. Trevor had sounded the gentlemen of the place last year relative to a petition to Parliament, but the gentlemen of the town threw cold water upon it. There was no chance whatever of a committee among these gentlemen ... Mr. Roberts, the surgeon, confirmed this statement, but thought it practicable to form a committee in the town, but this could consist only of respectable tradesmen ... If such a committee were formed, not one gentleman in the town would give support to their views; and if Dissenters were among them no clergymen would countenance such a committee or their plans. Nay ... it would cause the town to be divided into two parties as regarded our cause; and in case of a petition, the gentlemen would exert their influence against it.
Clarkson accepted Trevor’s offer to distribute the society’s literature in Caernarvon and Pwllheli and relied on James Cotton, the bishop of Bangor’s son-in-law, to publicize the cause in Conway.
Borough meetings in Caernarvon and Pwllheli in March 1825 sent petitions to the Commons for repeal of the house and window taxes, and to both Houses against Catholic relief, which Paget now supported.
Should Lord Newborough persevere in Caernarvonshire your lordship’s support of Sir Robert Williams (which under all circumstances appears unavoidable) may occasion a stir at Caernarvon. There are persons there who talk of Mr. Wynn [Newborough’s brother] as most likely to move if he should be generally invited to offer himself; and at Caernarvon a few attorneys are soon collected to frame a general invitation.
Plas Newydd mss i. 223.
He added that he had found the borough meeting
composed solely of burgesses - and if noise may be considered a criterion of the strength of parties, the Newboroughs have it in their power, although there was no want of respectful acclamation when the constable of the castle, the Member for the Borough and other branches of the family were proposed as toasts.
Ibid. i. 245.
Although loath to publicize his intentions, Anglesey was considering replacing Sir Charles with their brother Berkeley Paget* and replied, 3 Oct.:
My opinion is that Mr. Wynn will offer himself for Caernarvon and if all depends upon Caernarvon he would probably carry it, but I do not think Sir T. Mostyn nor Sir D. Erskine nor Mr. Ormsby Gore would oppose me. Time will show and I have much faith in Berkeley.
Ibid. i. 248.
Sanderson, however, realized that although no mass burgess creations had been made in the out-boroughs since 1784, Plas Newydd had more to fear than desertion by Caernarvon’s ‘shopkeeper class, familiar with Glynllifon and its heirs living among them’; and on 7 Oct he warned the marquess:
Pwllheli, Nefyn and Criccieth are in the centre or within the circle of all Lord Newborough’s strongholds in Caernarvonshire, and as to Conway, I hear that Sir David Erskine is one of his strenuous supporters for the county.
Ibid. i. 265.
Newborough and Sir Robert Williams had already canvassed Pwllheli, where the deputy mayor Love Parry Jones Parry banned party politics from Michaelmas day speeches. Pwllheli borough meetings also petitioned the Commons for the abolition of colonial slavery, 9 Mar., and total repeal of the coastwise coal duties, 5 May 1826.
Caernarvon had been under pressure to seek legislation for a water supply and other municipal improvements since 1824; and, while drafting the bill, 1826-7, Poole and his attorneys encountered problems over a ‘saving clause’ to protect the corporation’s rights. The bill was petitioned for in the Commons, 11 Dec. 1826, entrusted to Newborough and Sir Robert Williames Vaughan, 2 Mar., and committed, 2 May 1827. Meanwhile, one of the bailiffs changed his mind about its merits and instigated a petition against it, 14 May. His and O.O. Roberts’s testimony to the Commons committee was supported by Sir Edward Pryce Lloyd, and the bill was defeated. Paget’s failure to deal with it dominated Roberts’s speech at a public dinner in Caernarvon, 30 May 1827, and he was obliged to defend his conduct in a spirited letter to the North Wales Gazette.
the principles of the burgesses of Caernarvon being directly opposed to the principles of a liberal and enlightened policy; and this borough being distinguished by a stupid and corrupt ignorance of the progress of the mind of the British empire on the great question of civil and religious freedom, we congratulate Lord William Paget, the son of our esteemed and patriotic viceroy, that he has broken the chains by which the political bigots of Caernarvon would dare to bind him, and that we shall seize the first opportunity political changes may give us to demonstrate our respect for his little enemies in Caernarvon by making him the representative of an Irish county, who has been so long dishonoured by being the representative of an insignificant borough in Wales.
Dublin Evening Post, 31 May 1828.
In a bid to recover their popularity, Lord Anglesey’s agents hosted a Michaelmas dinner at Caernarvon, chaired by Lord William Paget. He had absented himself from the guildhall early in the day when Plas Newydd candidates were rejected at the bailiwick elections and Thomas Assheton Smith II*, who had succeeded his father to Vaenol, was sworn in as a burgess amid much anti-Catholic rhetoric, and with a view to dictating the outcome of the next election. At the dinner, Spencer Wynn proposed a toast to Paget simply as ‘a burgess’ and praised Assheton Smith. O.O. Roberts, one of the new bailiffs, challenged Paget to drink to the ‘Protestant Ascendancy’, and he did so, but made it clear in his accompanying speech that he reserved the right to interpret the phrase as he and not his constituents directed, and that he would sit ‘unfettered ... on all vital questions’. Wynn failed to moderate proceedings and Paget departed amid uproar, having earned some respect, but ruined his prospects of a second unopposed return.
You lost an opportunity of witnessing a display of political democracy at which [Henry] Hunt* might have presided with singular feeling ... Lord William Paget, you may be assured, will reject a seat in Parliament under such influence.
Plas Newydd mss i. 1891.
Anti-Catholic petitioning revived in Caernarvon and Pwllheli, where the free burgesses and inhabitants urged the rejection of emancipation and pledged allegiance to the ‘constitution of 1688’.
Irrespective of problems at Caernarvon, Anglesey had decided against sponsoring Lord William again in July 1829, when he realized the extent of his personal debts and dishonesty. ‘A new patron [Assheton Smith] was expected to put up a candidate whenever it can be demonstrated to him that a preponderating number of burgesses stand forward to assure him of their support’, and the Plas Newydd agents thought their only chance of retaining the seat was by offering Sir Charles Paget.
In the event of a petition against a return the non-residents would be deemed ineligible. Whoever may become a candidate for the Caernarvon Boroughs should, therefore, if they can, in the first place secure a majority of resident votes; and then take as many of the others as may be expedient to place him at the head of the poll; or if he should be overpowered by the latter, he may safely rely upon being seated by a majority of residents.
Plas Newydd mss i. 493.
Ormsby Gore delayed announcing his candidature until 7 July, after he and the Vaenol agent Henry Rumsey Williams had discussed matters there with Assheton Smith, who, at the same election, proposed bringing in his cousin, Charles Wynne Griffith Wynne of Cefnamwlch, for the county, where the ailing Newborough was expected to vacate. Assheton Smith had turned down an offer of support in the Boroughs for himself or a nominee, made by a deputation led by O.O. Roberts, and had informed Sir Charles Paget on 2 July that ‘it was his intention not to interfere in any way in the election for Caernarvon Boroughs’.
I am sorry Tom Smith has withdrawn his opposition; because if he had continued it, you would probably have been induced to give up all further views towards Caernarvon, sooner than be led into the expense of a contested election, which is still threatened in the person of Mr. Ormsby Gore.
Plas Newydd mss i. 466; Ll. Jones, ‘Sir Charles Paget and Caernarvon Boroughs, 1830-32’, Trans. Caern. Hist. Soc. xxi (1960), 109.
He also asked to be released from his promise to stand so that he would not risk losing his household income or feel compelled (if in office) to support the king’s government against his will. Anglesey acquiesced, and declared Caernarvon lost, but recoverable ‘whenever I please’.
The corporations, Dissenters and Wesleyans Methodists of Caernarvon, Criccieth, Nefyn and Pwllheli, and ‘friends of slaves in Conway’ petitioned for the abolition of colonial slavery, 1830-1; and Caernarvon joined the county in petitioning for repeal of the coastwise coal duty and similar taxes on culm and slate, which Newborough now actively promoted.
When the reform bill’s defeat (19 Apr.) forced a dissolution, Anglesey wrote from Dublin to his agents expressing alarm at the prospect of ‘Caernarvon and Pwllheli playing second fiddle to Criccieth’ at the general election. Before committing themselves to contesting the seat, they considered the likely impact of the bill on the constituency. They concluded that Dawkins Pennant of Penrhyn Castle (Bangor), Newborough, and Assheton Smith stood to gain and Plas Newydd and Ormsby Gore to lose support. They surmised also that unless they could return a Member this time, when their out-voters could be polled and they had a likely candidate in Sir John Byng* (the father of Anglesey’s son-in-law), they stood little chance of regaining it after the reform bill was enacted. Byng proved unacceptable in Caernarvon. Ormsby Gore refused to be frightened off and Sir Charles Paget, who again suffered through not being able to commence his personal canvass early, endured ‘a fierce contest’.
Ormsby Gore derived his chief support from the influence of three or four landed proprietors, some of whom professed undiminished personal regard toward Sir Charles Paget, and declared that it was the bill only which they opposed ... Sir Charles Paget’s voters, moreover, chiefly residing at a distance, great expense was unavoidable, and it has been rendered more expensive by the boundless licence allowed by both parties.
Plas Newydd mss i. 616.
Plas Newydd had already spent over £6,000, and Sanderson sought permission to borrow £10,000 from Drummond’s bank, adding, ‘Mr. Ormsby Gore, it is understood, has expended much larger sums’. Both election committees scrutinized accounts and delayed payment until February 1832. Anglesey’s agents warned that £15,000 could ‘easily be spent unnecessarily’ at Caernarvon, and calculated that it would cost at least £16,000 to retain the seat if contested. Gore did not as was expected proceed with a scrutiny or a petition. He disfranchised the new Criccieth burgesses, 20 May 1831, and applied to become constable of Criccieth Castle.
Plans had already been made to admit anti-Paget burgesses at Caernarvon. To counter this Sir Charles wrote to Dawkins Pennant, 30 May 1831, requesting support at the first post-reform election, and Plas Newydd agents tried to ensure that the Glynllifon and Vaenol interests did not act in tandem. Jones Parry deputized for Paget at the Caernarvon reform dinner and play, ‘Reform, or John Bull Triumphant’, 14 June 1831.
As the commissioners had recommended, the Boundary Act made no changes in Caernarvon, Criccieth, Conway and Nefyn. Pwllheli was enlarged to bring in additional £10 houses, and the town and parish were incorporated in the parliamentary borough of Bangor. The designation of returning officers for the out-boroughs proved especially contentious, as did the decision to apply the seven-mile rule from the parish church in Conway and Nefyn, but the castle in Criccieth and the guildhall in Pwllheli.
in the freemen of Caernarvon, Conway, Criccieth, Nefyn and Pwllheli
Number of voters: 538 polled in 1831
Estimated voters480 in 1831
