Shrewsbury elections were contested on party lines by much the same families as those of the county. The corporation was dominated by the Whigs, who thus had control of the admission of freemen, but before 1723, owing to the size of the electorate, this advantage was not decisive. The Whigs had the support of the Dissenters and of the most powerful local landowner, Lord Bradford, whilst the Tory strength lay mainly in the suburbs and liberties, which extended over a wide area of countryside. In the town there was a strong undercurrent of Jacobitism, which broke out in 1715, when the mob burned the Dissenters’ meeting-houses.
The election of 1715 was compromised, but in 1722 the Tories won both seats, though the Whig corporation had admitted 138 non-resident Whig freemen. The return was reversed on petition by a party vote of the House of Commons, who took the opportunity to reduce the electorate by excluding the liberties and most of the suburbs from the parliamentary borough. The right of election was declared to be only in the resident freemen, paying scot and lot.
The 1727 election was an all-Tory affair, but the Whigs continued their measures for reducing the electorate with such effect that it amounted only to about 450 in 1734. At this election eight companies of foot were encamped in the suburbs ‘to support the corporation and overawe the other party’.
Shortly after the election of 1747, Sir Richard Corbet told Lord Powis, that he would not serve in another Parliament, especially as William Kinaston was unlikely to survive this one, and asked him to keep up the Whig interest in Shrewsbury.
the Presbyterians seem to be quite desirous that you should be the candidate ... they cry by all means an honest worthy gentleman, a neighbour and no party man.
To Thos. Hill, 19 Dec. 1748, Attingham mss, Salop RO.
Later he reported that the corporation were ‘taking a method which must infallibly give them the majority’, by striking out freemen unable to prove freedom by descent, and by manipulating parish assessments.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 1900 in 1722; 450 in 1734; 300 in 1747
