The prevailing interest in the fairly prosperous port of Tralee during this period was that of the most substantial landowner in the area, Sir Edward Denny, 3rd Bt.: his family’s influence was so strong that Peel once compared it with Lord Caledon’s in Old Sarum.
Moore, who had purchased the seat in 1798, was returned by ballot in January 1801, but decided to quit Parliament in 1802. Day, who had at one stage been in negotiation with a member of Addington’s cabinet,
The ease of these transactions did not repeat itself for the Parliament of 1812. In that year Day sold the seat to Herbert, a disappointed candidate in the Kerry election. The price was £5,000, instead of the usual £6,000. Their agreement was that if Herbert vacated, he would offer the seat to Day who, according to the Castle, promised to return a government nominee. Thus when Herbert decided to vacate early in 1813, Peel began to cast about for a purchaser. At this point Herbert suddenly decided that he was a free agent and expressed a wish to negotiate directly in that capacity with Peel and the prime minister. As they would, by accepting this offer, have annoyed Day and violated Curwen’s Act, the two ministers refused, with the result that Herbert surrendered the return to Day. This invoked the ‘agreement’ of 1812, except that Day suddenly announced that ‘he was only bound to give [ministers] a preference, which if declined, he had the power of returning anyone, whether friend or foe’. Ministers did not express their preference loudly enough, for Day sold the seat to Baillie, who promptly took his seat among the opposition.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 13
