Since 1746 a chaotic situation had existed in Carmarthen. The town had two corporations, each claiming to be the only legal one. One corporation was Tory, controlled by Sir John Philipps of Picton Castle; the other, Whig, was controlled by Griffith Philipps of Cwmgwili. At the general election of 1754 each side presented a candidate, and as the writ was sent to the Whig corporation, the Whig candidate, Griffith Philipps, was returned. In 1761 Philipps did not stand, and Lord Verney was returned as the candidate of the Whig corporation. Sir John Philipps, writing to George Grenville on 18 May 1764,
In 1763 both parties petitioned for a new charter, and each sought to obtain one which would give it control of the borough. The Grenville ministry came under pressure from Sir John Philipps on one side, and from Verney, Griffith Philipps, and George Rice, the county Member, on the other. The solution devised by Grenville was ostensibly a compromise, for each party was to choose twenty of the forty freemen named in the new charter. But Sir John Philipps failed to obtain the additional safeguard that each side should choose equally the members of the new corporation; and when no agreement was reached on the choice of a mayor, Grenville accepted the Cwmgwili candidate. Griffith Philipps and his allies had secured a firm hold on the new borough machinery, and the death of Sir John Philipps on as June 1764 removed their most dangerous adversary.
At the general election of 1768 a contest resulted from a split in the successful party. Griffith Philipps was proposed by Rice, while Verney sponsored Joseph Bullock, who was supported by the former opponents of the Cwmgwili interest.
Philipps left Parliament in 1774, but maintained his control of the constituency. He was succeeded by John Adams, who in 1767 had given £4,000 towards the erection of a town hall.
in the freemen
Hist. Carm. ii. 36-52.
Number of voters: about 100
