Until 1802 Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle, returned two Members unchallenged for Morpeth. The party of independent freemen which had threatened Carlisle’s family interest earlier in the century was checked by a policy of careful management which combined charity payments to the poorer voters with a limitation on the size of the freeman electorate through control of the organs of local government.
Ord had hoped for a compromise rather than a contest in 1802 and his hopes were subsequently fulfilled by the mediation of a mutual friend Charles Grey. Carlisle’s son Viscount Morpeth and Ord secretly agreed ‘that each should assist the other to the exclusion of any third’. It appears that ‘some points remained to be settled’, but in 1806, when Morpeth stood for Cumberland and Carlisle substituted his second son William, he secured Ord’s cooperation, with the assistance of Howick and Francis Gregg. The candidates agreed to canvass separately, ‘as a joint canvass might be very prejudicial’. Ord claimed that he had to dissuade his supporters from seeking a second candidate to oppose William Howard:
The agreement between Lord Morpeth and myself is one rather of mutual forbearance than of mutual assistance, it being utterly impossible that the persons who supported me at the last election should ever become supporters of Lord Carlisle’s interest if I were ever so much inclined to make them so.
He relied rather on his friends’ willingness to spare him ‘the expense and trouble of a contest’.
No further opposition arose to the junta of Howard and Ord. They allegedly spent at least £1,000 a year in buying each freeman a field, and in 1833 complaints were still being made that the creation of freemen was restricted for political purposes.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 200
