Tregony, ‘an inconsiderable village, without trade’, had a turbulent electoral history in this period. In 1788 Lord Falmouth, who had the principal interest, disposed of his property there to Sir Francis Basset, who had challenged him in 1784 and had also bought up property in other hands. It was he who in June returned Hugh Seymour Conway. Before the election of 1790 Basset sold out to the nabob Richard Barwell, who sought to strengthen his position by buying property owned by Christopher Hawkins. The latter, who had been prepared to oppose Basset’s pretensions, agreed to sell, with an ‘implied engagement’ that he would not interfere at Tregony as long as Barwell looked after the interests of Hawkins’s friends as well as his own. Barwell appointed as his agent Charles Rashleigh, attorney of St. Austell, who advised him that he must expect to pay £20 each to 160 voters (Falmouth had paid only 12 guineas each) and opined that Barwell should buy up more property (which he did) and try to reduce the number of voters.
The Barwell interest survived a test in 1790, when Sir John Morshead,* knowing Barwell to be a friend of Pitt’s administration, attempted to oppose his nominees by putting up Sir John Frederick and John Purling, who were to pay £3,250 each. This plan, which depended upon the local property of George Hunt, was frustrated when he was unable to ‘conciliate and unite the discordant and jealous interests’. Morshead alleged afterwards that one Turner, ‘a man of some influence in the borough ... [who] was engaged to assist in an opposition to Mr Barwell’s interest ... betrayed us to Charles Rashleigh’. Charles Carpenter, a local attorney, informed the Whig election managers:
Nothing less than a positive assurance from us to about 120 persons of their having at all events £20 apiece would ... have carried the election. Nine tenths at least of the electors are among the most wretched of mankind.
Ginter, Whig Organization, 106, 183, 185, 190; Prince of Wales Corresp. ii. 598.
He added that Barwell had evicted 12 tenants for promising their votes to opposition; subsequently Barwell went on to eject more tenants who were friends of Christopher Hawkins. This gave the latter a pretext for interfering, in alliance with Nicholas Middlecoat of the Queen’s Head inn, and the clergymen cousins Thomas Peter Gurney and Richard Gurney, who had grudges against Barwell. Middlecoat, whom Barwell had inherited as an on the spot agent from Sir Francis Basset,
The Gurney cousins wanted church livings, and, when Barwell would not provide them, made a pact with Hawkins whereby he promised to secure their wishes. After an interview with Hawkins and Middlecoat, Richard Gurney reported, 26 Sept. 1793: ‘Middlecoat and I mean to lead on Mr Barwell in a state of security till just before the next general election, then turn cat in the pan, kick him out, and bring in Sir Christopher Hawkins’.
In March 1796 Hawkins adopted Copley and Nicholls, two candidates with Cornish connexions, as his guest nominees. Barwell’s brother-in-law Coffin did his best to secure Lord Eliot’s influence for their candidates, one of whom, Sir John D’Oyley, was to pay £4,000 if returned, but the Eliot party made no impact when they visited Tregony and on 20 May Hawkins was formally elected recorder of the borough. Both Middlecoat and Richard Gurney were subjected to public exposure in a pamphlet issued in Barwell’s name, but they carried the day, as a careful canvass had predicted.
Although there have been many rascally transactions in regard to the numerous venal boroughs in the county yet none have exceeded what happened at Tregony. The great nabob Richard Barwell of Stansted having purchased this borough in 17 . ., Sir Christopher Hawkins received a considerable sum for his property in it and the living becoming afterwards vacant, Sir Christopher interceded with Mr Barwell for the presentation to it in favour of a friend of his, assigning as a reason that he had a great interest in it, and assuring Mr B. that this friend of his would by his residence on the spot and his great activity in the borough, prevent a possibility of any opposition to Mr B’s interest. Mr B. gave it in consequence of this representation to Sir Christopher’s recommendation who showed a proper sense of gratitude to his patron, by returning two Members against him at the very next election.
In Baron Gurney’s copy of Gough’s edition at the Law Society Lib. p. 15.
The petition against the return was intended to force a compromise, but Hawkins and his allies stood firm and it was abandoned in November 1796, after negotiations for mediation had failed. At first Barwell, through his agent Coffin, allowed many of his houses to decay and alienated many of his tenants by seeking to make them tenants at will (1797); but in 1799 Coffin rebuilt the houses and there were rumours that Barwell intended to sell Tregony. Middlecoat, who reproached Hawkins for his unwillingness to spend freely in the borough, assured him, on the basis of a canvass in May 1800, that he had a safe majority of the electors on his side, but by February 1802 it had been reduced to a few votes after lavish expenditure by Barwell, who sent Coffin down with £2,000 and again secured the assistance of Francis Gregor. Hawkins now began to urge a compromise and, having failed to secure the assurance of government support against Barwell, proposed an arrangement through the prime minister, Addington, whereby he offered Barwell one seat (though considering himself the stronger), either absolutely or for the present.
In August 1804, a fortnight before Barwell’s death, the Marquess of Blandford failed to secure his re-election after appointment to office: Thellusson, who was returned, was connected with Lord Eliot and evidently took advantage of the disarray of Barwell’s management. By his will, Barwell directed that Tregony should be sold and the trustees began negotiations with Lord Darlington. The conveyance of the property was not completed until 1807 and it appears that Barwell’s widow sold Darlington the nominations at the election of 1806 for £10,000. There was a contest. Middlecoat, who since Hawkins had discharged him in September 1802 had been pressing him for the settlement of accounts between them and at the same time hinting that he could procure him one seat for £5,000 (3 Aug. 1805) or both for £6,000 (18 July 1806), alleged that he had received many offers from gentlemen willing to oppose Darlington. Hawkins would not rise to the bait and Middlecoat formed an alliance with John Nicholls, the former Member who, with a friend of his, Miles, sheriff of London, contested the borough, allegedly to preserve it from the ‘pocket’ of Darlington. They were unsuccessful and, by one account, Miles paid Middlecoat 4,000 guineas to secure his return, but failed to back up the petition designed to unseat Darlington’s nominees on the grounds that 25 valid votes had been disallowed.
from the measures I have there adopted and from the total alteration that has taken place in the management of that borough since it has been in my possession, I shall feel little difficulty hereafter in resisting any opposition to my wishes.
Johnstone mss 2098, f. 71; Fortescue mss, Flindell to Grenville (who endorsed it ‘not replied to’), 25 Feb., Darlington to same, 10 Mar. 1810.
Yet in 1812 Lord Yarmouth, warden of the stannaries, by a ‘coup de main’ put up two candidates on the Treasury interest against the patron and defeated his nominees. A petition revealed bribery on both sides, Darlington having allegedly distributed £5,000. The petition failed, but Thomas Croggon, a currier of Truro, was sentenced to Newgate for corruption (13 Apr. 1813), whence he was discharged on the motion of Lord Archibald Hamilton, 22 June, still protesting his innocence. In the debate, William Holmes stated that ‘the majority of his supporters were evicted [by Darlington] the day after the election, being unable to pay the rent’.
Darlington was thought by Viscount Lowther to have ‘irrecoverably lost Tregony’. It appears that Darlington suspected Lowther of promoting the Treasury coup against him, though Lowther’s father Lord Lonsdale hoped that he had shunned ‘interference in matters in which you had no concern’. There was a party on the corporation friendly to administration and led by Capt. William Hennah, who had assisted Yarmouth’s coup in the hope of an Admiralty appointment. In May 1816 a young candidate named Tulk, of Marble Hall, Twickenham, was recommended to them by Thomas Parker, a friend of the ministerialist James Brogden, who promised to name a second candidate later. Parker was told by Hennah that they wished only for candidates who, if not friends of government, ‘should not be violent opposition men’; and that it would be advisable to distribute about £5 each among 100 poor electors. Darlington, who meanwhile set about reconstituting his influence, reported, 3 Dec. 1817, ‘If I can succeed in defeating the measures of the Tregony corporation, or of the majority who are hostile to me, I am convinced that the borough is quite secure’.
in inhabitant householders
Number of voters: about 200
