Economic and social profile:
Popularly known as the ‘toy shop of Europe’, it was said of Birmingham in 1849 that ‘there is no place equal to her in the multiplicity, diversity, and subdivision of manufactures in metal, or in the number of persons so employed’.
Electoral history:
By the early nineteenth century, the inhabitants of Birmingham had become increasingly dissatisfied at their lack of parliamentary representation.
Responding to distress, a motley group distinguished by their advocacy of a non-convertible paper currency, led by Spooner’s business partner Thomas Attwood, formed the Birmingham Political Union (BPU) at a public meeting, 25 Jan. 1830. Using peaceful means, including mass meetings, the BPU’s mobilisation of popular support for the Grey ministry’s reform bills has been viewed as an important factor in traditional accounts of the passing of the Reform Act.
The wider historiography of nineteenth-century Birmingham has been dominated by Asa Briggs, who, in a seminal 1948 article, argued that the BPU was able to unite middle and working classes because of the town’s distinctive social and economic structure.
The rival interpretation put forward by Behagg has argued that any ‘unity of the productive classes’ was largely a myth propagated by Attwood and his colleagues, with smaller masters being increasingly subordinate to large employers, whose dominance also eroded the autonomy of workers.
Birmingham was included as one of the new double member boroughs in the first reform bill, 1 Mar. 1831, and had the largest population of the provincial towns included in Schedule C.
Attwood’s popularity made his return at the town’s first parliamentary elections inevitable, and after some dispute within the BPU’s political council it was decided that Joshua Scholefield, a banker, merchant and ironmaster, should partner ‘King Tom’, much to the chagrin of the local Radical George Edmonds. A challenge to the Union’s political authority came from a public meeting, 29 Oct. 1832, which expressed support for universal suffrage and established the Midland Union of the Working Classes, with Henry Hunt calling for the new body to go beyond the BPU if necessary. Attwood took a dim view of these proceedings and his deflating epistle to the meeting asserted that ‘to divide is to destroy’.
Attwood and Scholefield faced no opposition after Tory attempts to rouse support for Horsley Palmer, governor of the Bank of England, foundered.
With Attwood absent at Westminster, leadership of the Union passed to the metal manufacturer and merchant George Frederick Muntz, who was disinclined to give the reformed Parliament a lengthy trial.
The unchallenged ascendancy of Attwood’s party, however, was drawing to a close. Although the levy of a church rate in the parish of Birmingham had been suspended after an acrimonious vestry meeting in 1832, local Conservatives, led by Spooner, attempted to reintroduce one in December 1834, but the resolution was rejected by a crushing majority, which effectively settled the issue.
At the nomination, Attwood was unsparing in his criticism of the late government, but spoke in favour of church reform, a point of agreement with his new allies, whilst Scholefield launched a strong attack on Peel and Wellington.
Undeterred, the Conservatives redoubled their efforts, and when the Lords’ treatment of the Irish church and municipal reform bills led to calls for the reconstitution of the BPU in September 1835, the party promptly got up an address, signed by 2,000 inhabitants, denying that the revived body (which did not in the end materialise) would represent ‘either the property, the respectability, or the opinions of this town’.
On the formation of a new Reform Society, soon renamed the BPU, local Conservatives complained in May 1837 that such action would be ‘highly prejudicial to the manufacturing and mercantile interests of the town’.
In autumn 1837, the BPU organised a campaign to petition for incorporation, and after rejecting a counter-petition, the privy council granted the town a charter in October 1838. At the ensuing elections that December the Reformers routed the Conservatives, who failed to win a single seat.
The Union collapsed soon after, mainly because the political council’s claims to leadership were no longer accepted by its erstwhile working-class supporters.
Attwood’s surprise resignation as an MP, 18 Dec. 1839, triggered much manoeuvring.
Sturge was eventually joined in the field by Attwood’s protégé Muntz, who had returned from South Wales to stand, and Robert Allen, a barrister who described himself as a ‘Conservative Whig’.
The Conservatives’ late and disorganised campaign had provided a token opposition, but the by-election was a missed opportunity.
Suitably emboldened, at the 1841 general election, the Conservatives were able to mount a formidable challenge, mobilising their organisation with speed and efficiency.
Continued distress led to renewed calls for currency reform in the early 1840s, including a petition from the chamber of commerce in 1843, whilst Attwood pursued the campaign through letters to the premier Peel and, after the collapse of his short-lived and deliberately vague ‘National Union’ that year, to the Times.
Scholefield’s death in July 1844 sparked a fierce contest.
Spooner led throughout the contest although his margin was reduced as pragmatic Sturge supporters gave their votes to Scholefield.
The 1847 general election was notable for Muntz’s theatrical display of independence at the meeting of Liberal non-electors. After hearing complaints about his conduct, Muntz, who had been thought to be absent, rose ‘like an apparition’, to general astonishment. He told the crowd what he had told Parkes, that ‘it is no part of my duty to dictate to my constituents who shall be my colleague, and I shan’t do it’.
What have been my votes and speeches for eight sessions that I’m sneaked at and treated as the scum of the earth? Come and fight it out now. I am here … Where now are the vile miscreants who have traduced me? You poor vile, pusillanimous wretches, come out.
Daily News, 14 July 1847.
In the event, however, Muntz and Scholefield subsequently convened a joint meeting, following which they were returned within 80 votes of each other, suggesting that shared votes helped them see off Spooner who finished 500 votes behind, with Allen trailing on 89.
Spooner was compensated for his defeat by his return for North Warwickshire shortly after, where he sat until his death in 1864. His removal deprived Birmingham Conservatism of its linchpin, but he nevertheless participated in the meeting of October 1847 which sent a memorial and deputation to Russell, lobbying for currency reform, because as Muntz put it, repealing the corn laws but not the ‘money laws’ was to ‘put the cart before the horse’.
The incumbents were returned unopposed at the 1852 general election.
The town was ‘exceptionally quiet on all political questions’ in 1856, and the following year Muntz and Scholefield were again returned without opposition at the general election, when a public meeting criticised Palmerston, but offered support for the incumbents whilst noting that ‘a more frequent attendance in Parliament’ was desirable from both of them.
Muntz’s death that July occasioned a by-election for which rumoured Conservative or ‘Liberal Conservative’ candidates included Ratcliff, the mayor, and George Whateley, Q.C., the veteran party organiser. Forster Alleyne McGeachy, of Shenley Hill, former MP for Honiton and brother-in-law of Charles Adderley, MP for South Staffordshire, eventually offered, but withdrew before the nomination.
This by-election marked the end of the influence of Attwood and the currency school, but the tradition of support for parliamentary reform remained important.
At the 1859 general election, Bright’s address and speeches concentrated almost exclusively on reform, and, like many of his orations, were directed as much at a national newspaper readership as a local audience. He faced an unexpected opposition from a Conservative, Dr. George Bodington, of Sutton Coldfield, who published an address advocating a restoration of the Navigation Laws and the repeal of the Union with Ireland, but then withdrew.
Bright’s claims to continue Birmingham’s radical tradition benefited from the whole-hearted endorsement of his colleague Scholefield and Philip Henry Muntz, brother of the late member and a former political councillor.
After the election, local political activity continued to revolve around Bright’s reform campaign, but reformers also sought to expand the electorate through practical means.
Another significant factor in the election, although its chief impact lay beyond this period, was the formation of the Birmingham Liberal Association (BLA), 17 Feb. 1865.
The by-election occasioned by Scholefield’s death in July 1867 provided an early test for the BLA, who hastily put up their president, George Dixon, an Anglican merchant, who resigned as mayor in order to stand.
A series of well-attended ward meetings preceded the nomination, at which Dixon declared himself an ‘advanced Liberal’, whilst Lloyd restated his support for reform and the established Church, and called for the extension of the Factory Acts to Birmingham.
The by-election was a rehearsal for the following year’s general election, the first under the 1867 Representation of the People Act. Although the electorate tripled in consequence and the constituency gained an additional member, the minority clause meant that electors continued to have two votes. In October 1867, a reorganisation of the BLA created a structure which later became known as the ‘caucus’: a system of permanent ward committees, whose representatives sat on a general committee, from which an executive committee was drawn. The BLA organised Liberal electors by ward so that their two votes were deployed to return the three Liberal candidates, Bright, Dixon, and Philip Henry Muntz, who were separated by less than 500 votes, comfortably ahead of their opponents, Lloyd and Evans.
Boundaries: Parishes of Birmingham and Edgbaston; townships of Duddeston and Nechells, Deritend, and Bordesley (13.1 square miles).
£10 householders
Local government: Before 1838, the court leet (or manorial court) and the street commission were the principal bodies in the parish. (The court leet consisted of high and low bailiffs, two constables, one headborough, two high tasters, two low tasters, two affeirers and two leather sealers; after 1838 it was obsolete, and was abolished in 1854). The Birmingham Street commission was established by an Improvement Act in 1769 (with later Acts in 1773, 1801, 1812, 1829) creating a town watch, granting road-making powers and facilitating construction of a town hall.
Registered electors: 4000 in 1832 6129 in 1842 7936 in 1851 10823 in 1861
Population: 1832 142251 1851 232841 1861 296076
