There was no predominant influence at Lichfield. Contests were frequent and sometimes turbulent owing to a strong and aggressive Jacobite element in the town. In 1715 Chetwynd, a Whig, and Hill, a moderate Tory, defeated two high Tories. At a by-election caused by Chetwynd’s appointment to office in 1718, a Tory was successful, Chetwynd’s supporters being ‘kept out of the Hall and barbarously beaten and abused, and their lives endangered by a very great mob with papers in their hats resembling white roses’, the Pretender’s emblem.
there will be a right majority at Lichfield but the returning officer, who was always thought a Tory and an honest man, has been bought and will certainly return the others.
HMC Portland, vii. 318.
Two Whigs were returned. In 1727 the Whig Members were again returned, according to their opponents’ petition by paying the corporation £800, and by threatening the tenants of the dean and chapter with eviction and even ‘with ecclesiastical censure for incontinency’ if they did not support them.
At a by-election in 1753, the Tory candidate,
Sir Thomas Gresley Bt., entered the city attended by upwards of 200 gentlemen and 500 freemen. The ribbons worn on this occasion were blue [Tory] and white [Pretender], with the mottoes of ‘No Jews’ [against the bill for the naturalization of the Jews], ‘No venality and corruption’, ‘Christianity and the English constitution for ever’.
Staffs. Parl. Hist. ii (2), 254.
He was successful, only to be unseated on petition.
’in the bailiffs, magistrates, free-holders of forty shillings per annum, and all that hold by burgage tenure, and in such freemen only of the said city as are enrolled, paying scot and lot there’
Number of voters: about 600
