At Leominster, which was reputedly very open, several neighbouring landowning families seated within a radius of about five miles from the borough had an interest. The Coningsbys of Hampton Court, whose heiress married Charles Hanbury Williams, had represented Leominster in the first half of the eighteenth century as Whigs, the Harleys as Tories. But no family could obtain a permanent, still less an exclusive, hold on the borough. If at Leominster ‘two brothers were to stand, they must be clear of each other’.
On the death of Hanbury Williams in 1759, Lord Bateman succeeded him as high steward of Leominster, and Chase Price as Member; and, hostile to each other, they next shared the representation of the borough (Jenison Shafto was returned in 1761 on Bateman’s interest). How Price first established his interest is uncertain—ranking as a Tory, and a nephew of Sir Richard Chase, in 1755 Lord Oxford’s candidate for Radnorshire, he may have had the support of the Harleys, whom in 1761 he supported in the county and borough of Radnor. But in time he acquired so strong a position as to be able in 1767 to barter away his seat to the Government, for the solicitor-general, Edward Willes. An opposition was attempted by Arthur Evans, a retired East India captain, and member of the Leominster corporation, who, however, declined after the poll had been open for two hours.
In 1768 Bateman and Carnac were returned unopposed. In 1774 Price does not seem to have played any part; and when he died in 1777, his interest, which was personal, vanished. Bateman retained his seat till 1784, when he retired from Parliament. Of the other Members, Thomas Hill and Richard Payne Knight sat primarily on their own interest, while Frederick Cornewall was of the Powis-Clive connexion. Knight voted with the Opposition, and in 1780 Administration thought of starting a candidate against him.
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: about 500
