The head of the Whig interest in Nottinghamshire was the lord lieutenant, Thomas Pelham Holles, Duke of Newcastle, who had inherited the estates there of his uncle, John Holles, Duke of Newcastle. In his old age he recalled how
it was myself, and I may almost say myself alone, who rescued the county of Nottingham, and all the boroughs in it, out of the hands of the Tories; the county from Willoughby and Levinz, the town of Retford from Levinz and Digby, the town of Newark from Willoughby, the town of Nottingham from Warren and Sedley.
Newcastle to John White, 13 Oct. 1767, Add. 33003, f. 386.
In county elections Newcastle, himself a non-resident, made a point of ascertaining and supporting the views of the local Whig gentry. When invited to recommend a candidate he would reply:
Ever since I have had any concern in Nottinghamshire, I have always thought the gentlemen of the county, with whom I have ever acted, were much the best judges who were the most proper for that purpose, and I have always ... given all the assistance in my power to such persons as they have thought proper to pitch upon.
Newcastle to Duke of Kingston, 1 July 1738, Add. 32691, f. 218; see also Newcastle’s circular letter, 24 Aug. 1731, Add. 32687, f. 405; Robt. Sutton to Newcastle, 26 Mar. 1740, Add. 32693, f. 115.
Next to Newcastle, the leading Nottinghamshire Whigs were the Duke of Kingston; the Sutton and Manners families, linked after 1723 by the 3rd Duke of Rutland’s marriage to the heiress of the last Lord Lexington; the Howes; and the Thornhaghs.
On the Tory side Newcastle’s opposite numbers were successively Thomas and Francis Willoughby, 1st and 2nd Lords Middleton. In 1715 the sitting county members were Francis Willoughby and another Tory, William Levinz, both of whom were returned unopposed. At the general election of 1722 they were defeated by two Whigs, Sir Robert Sutton and Lord Howe, after a contest so costly that thenceforth both sides preferred to compromise rather than face another.
Number of voters: about 2600 in 1722
