The chief interests at Retford in 1715 were those of the Duke of Newcastle, whose estates surrounded the borough, and of four country gentlemen: two Whigs, Thomas White and John Thornhagh; and two Tories, William Levinz and John Digby. ‘I found Levinz and Jack Digby in possession of it’, Newcastle wrote over half a century later. ‘I soon got in Jack White’s father and have, by degrees, totally got the better of Levinz and Digby’.
gentlemen can never submit to have Retford entirely thrown under the influence of your Grace and that little share of interest which has been established in my family by the countenance it has had from your Grace’s ancestors and yourself ever since the Revolution.
White to Newcastle, 22 Apr. 1741, Add. 32696, ff. 345-6.
No trouble arose in 1715, when Digby was left in possession of the second seat, or in 1722, when Digby was replaced by Levinz’s son-in-law, Patrick Chaworth. But when in 1727 it was proposed that George Gregory, a dependent of Newcastle’s, should stand, in conjunction with White, the head of the Thornhagh family threatened to declare in favour of Levinz and a Whig country gentleman, Sir Robert Clifton, who had announced their intention of standing for the borough. This led to a compromise under which Gregory stood down; White and Levinz each promised not to oppose the election of such person as the other should propose for the borough; and both agreed that if any third person were to stand they should jointly oppose him.
In 1741 White and Clifton, standing jointly, were opposed by a third Whig, William Mellish, who defeated Clifton by paying up to £80 or £100 a vote.
in the resident freemen
Number of voters: about 80
