In 1788 John Barker Church, a former bankrupt, who had made a fortune from his business activities in America during the revolutionary war, purchased Earl Verney’s property in Wendover, undeterred by the continued truculence of the mercenary element which had broken Verney’s careless hold in 1784, Unlike his predecessor, he was wealthy and assiduous enough to profit from his investment and returned himself as a Foxite Whig in 1790. According to Oldfield, there was ‘a feeble opposition’ from two candidates sponsored by the Marquess of Buckingham, but it evidently did not go to a poll.
The Times of 25 June 1794 reported that Church had disposed of his property in the borough to Lady Fermanagh, Verney’s niece and heir, but by 1796 it was in the possession of Pitt’s friend Robert Smith, created Lord Carrington the same year. Carrington, who transferred his allegiance to Lord Grenville on Pitt’s death, controlled both seats for the rest of the period and returned political friends and members of his family. A threat of opposition in 1812 from Andrew Cochrane Johnstone ‘turned out to be a mere gasconade’.
in inhabitant householders
Number of voters: about 150
