From 1754 to 1790 the representation of Wycombe was controlled jointly by the Waller family of Hall Barn, Beaconsfield and the Petty family of Temple Wycombe and Loakes House, whose head from 1761 was William, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne. Their control derived from influence exerted within the common council, a self-electing body with the power of creating freemen, almost half of whom were non-resident by 1790.
Lansdowne decided to try for both seats in 1789 when his son Earl Wycombe, one of the sitting Members, and his friend Sir John Jervis canvassed the freemen. Robert Waller, the other Member, did not stand in 1790, but Lansdowne’s nominees were opposed by John Dashwood King of West Wycombe. Lord Wycombe was well supported by both resident voters, including the mayor and most of the aldermen, and by non-residents, and comfortably topped the poll, but Jervis only scraped into second place. Dashwood King’s support was predominantly local, with 17 of his 22 votes coming from residents. Of Jervis’s supporters, less than half were townsmen and the dozen ‘foreign’ votes which he received from Lansdowne’s interest were crucial to his success. While Dashwood King’s local supporters included 12 gentlemen, of whom eight, among them three aldermen, cast plumpers for him, the 11 Wycombe residents who voted for both Lansdowne candidates included only three gentlemen and two clergymen.
At a meeting of the common council in 1791, from which the three hostile aldermen were absent, Lansdowne secured the election of 15 new freemen, 11 of them non-resident. Their votes were decisive in the victory of Sir Francis Baring, Lansdowne’s former financial adviser, over Dashwood King at the by-election of February 1794. Dashwood King’s support among the local gentry remained strong. There seems also to have been some popular hostility to aristocratic dictation, and Lord Wycombe is said to have been physically assaulted at about this time.
By 1800 Lansdowne had disposed of his property at Wycombe to Lord Carrington and it is not clear whether he continued to exercise any direct influence in the borough.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 50
