Economic and social profile
Situated on the north bank of the river Tyne, ten miles from the North sea, Newcastle was a sizeable port that developed as a service and commercial centre for the surrounding industrial region. Although a substantial minority of male workers were employed in traditional heavy industries, such as shipbuilding, metal manufacture and engineering, the employment structure was dominated by service and commercial interests such as transport and retailing. Working-class voters accounted for 23.5 per cent of Newcastle’s electorate by 1865, a fairly standard percentage for an industrial city at this time.
Electoral history
Before 1832, the representation of Newcastle was vested in the heads of the region’s dominant families, whose wealth was founded upon the town’s commerce and industry. Freeman creations, of which there were 1,776 between 1818 and 1831, ensured that the enormous expense of mustering non-resident voters deterred any prospects of a contest, and in the pre-Reform era, elections were essentially a compromise between the local Whig and Tory factions.
At the first election of the post-Reform, Charles Attwood, president of the Northern Political Union and brother of Thomas Attwood, MP for Birmingham 1832-9, challenged the two sitting members, Sir Mathew White Ridley and John Hodgson. A Whig and a pro-Reform Conservative respectively, both were the heads of wealthy families who held extensive investments in the local coal industry. A strong candidate, Ridley was in favour of retrenchment and the abolition of window and house tax, though his equivocation on the repeal of the corn laws brought criticism from his constituents. Hodgson was less popular, and drew approbation for his refusal to back the abolition of slavery, though he enjoyed the support of the numerous freemen created prior to March 1831 by the unreformed Tory corporation.
Despite Attwood’s defeat, local Radicals brought forward James Aytoun, an Edinburgh-based lawyer, to oppose Ridley and Hodgson at the unexpected 1835 general election. With Ridley refusing to pledge himself against Peel’s administration, local Whigs, under the nominal leadership of the earl of Durham, brought forward William Ord, MP for Morpeth, 1802-32, who subsequently published an election address that made explicit his ‘utter distrust’ of the Conservative government.
Hodgson, however, was not out of parliament for long, and his return at the 1836 by-election, caused by the death of Ridley, suggests the continued importance of the freeman franchise in the early part of this period. With the Irish church issue dominating the campaign, Hodgson refused to pledge his support for Melbourne’s government, and made clear his opposition to appropriation.
The freeman effect was also evident at the 1837 general election. Aware of where his key support lay, Hodgson Hinde (as he was now known) defended the rights of freemen in municipal affairs, opposed municipal reform in Ireland and attacked the poor law. Sensitive to the high degree of single votes he had received in previous elections, Hodgson Hinde also brought forward John Coulson, a freeman of Newcastle, as a second Conservative. Dr. Thomas Headlam, the mayor of Newcastle and Durham’s political agent attacked Hodgson Hinde for what he felt was a cynical move, and in response brought forward Charles Bigge to stand alongside Ord in the Liberal interest. Despite the bitter exchanges between Hodgson Hinde and the mayor, the campaign was reported as being noticeably more subdued than previous contests, and the absence of Ord and Coulson, both due to family illnesses, coupled with the late appearance of Bigge, left a vacuum at the heart of the campaign.
Although crushed at the polls, Beaumont maintained his radical profile in Newcastle and in October 1837 launched the Northern Liberator. Edited by Doubleday and Blakey, it became the best-selling journal on Tyneside, with a circulation of 4,000, and instigated the renaissance of the Northern Political Union, which on 1 January 1838 staged a mass demonstration in opposition to the new poor law.
At the 1841 general election, local Chartists invited James Bronterre O’Brien to stand, but after initially accepting the request, he did not campaign, and although he was proposed and seconded, no poll was demanded.
The 1847 general election at Newcastle was a turning point in local politics in two ways. Firstly, it was the last time that two of the region’s dominant families contested the seat. Secondly, it was the beginning of two decades of dominance by the Liberal town council over parliamentary elections. With the popular William Ord once again seeking re-election, Dr. Headlam, the leader of the Newcastle Liberals, invited his nephew, the London-based lawyer Thomas Emerson Headlam, to be the second Liberal candidate. A supporter of free trade and the extension of education to all classes, Headlam heavily criticised Hodgson Hinde’s parliamentary record, only for the Conservative candidate to withdraw from the contest.
With the Conservative leadership of the town in flux, the 1852 general election witnessed the beginnings of internecine feuds within Newcastle Liberalism.
The retirement of Blackett, due to ill-health, triggered a by-election in February 1856. On the same day that Blackett’s intentions were made public, George Ridley, eldest son of Sir Matthew White Ridley, announced his intention to stand in the Liberal interest. The Conservatives again declining to bring forward a candidate, local Chartists brought forward Richard Hart. In the mid-1850s, Newcastle was one of the few places which still had a viable Chartist membership and notable links to other radical groups.
At the 1857 general election the Newcastle Foreign Affairs Committee brought forward Peter Carstairs to oppose Headlam and Ridley. The Committee members were loyal followers of David Urquhart, a notable critic of British foreign policy who had been revered amongst Newcastle Radicals since his tour of the region in 1838,
In December 1857 Joseph Cowen launched the Northern Reform Union in an attempt to promote manhood suffrage, and when a petition was presented to parliament in February 1859, it was estimated that more than half the adult population of Northumberland and Durham officially backed the campaign.
Headlam’s appointment by Palmerston as judge-advocate general in April 1859 necessitated a by-election. The local Liberals did not anticipate a contest, but the Conservatives brought forward William Cuthbert, their first candidate for 12 years. Hodgson Hinde, who returned to the constituency to speak on behalf of Cuthbert, accused Headlam of hypocrisy for voting against Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, only to accept his offer of a government post.
A further by-election ensued in 1860 when Ridley left parliament due to his appointment as a copyhold commissioner. The Liberal town council’s candidate, the 25-year-old Somerset Beaumont, whose family owned extensive estates and lead mines in the region, was a staunch supporter of Palmerston’s government, particularly its foreign policy.
It was not until the general election of 1865 that Tyneside Radicalism united around a single candidate. Joseph Cowen’s acquisition of the Newcastle Chronicle at the end of 1859 was undoubtedly a key turning point. The newspaper was the apex of the region’s sophisticated print culture, and through its sustained promotion of radical ideals, Cowen was able to ‘drip-feed’ his ideas on a daily basis to the local population.
Cowen and Headlam were comfortably re-elected at the 1868 general election, and following the former’s death in 1873, there was little surprise when Joseph Cowen junior, who had become the embodiment of Tyneside Radicalism, was elected Liberal MP for the borough at the ensuing by-election of the same year. While it has been suggested that towns such as Newcastle, where the effect of the lowering of the borough franchise was not as dramatic as elsewhere, ‘remained havens for independent MPs after 1867’, there is little doubt that Cowen’s local credentials, in addition to his independence, secured his continued electoral success.
a county itself, containing parts of the parishes of St. Nicholas, St. John, St. Andrew and All Saints. The 1832 Reform Act altered the boundaries to include the townships of Byker, Heaton, Jesmond, Westgate and Elswick, increasing the population from 42,760 to 53,613 (8.3 square miles).
freemen and £10 householders
Prior to 1835, the companies elected 68 stewards who elected a common council of 24 and 11 aldermen from whom the mayor was chosen annually.
Registered electors: 3905 in 1832 5041 in 1842 5269 in 1851 6838 in 1861
Population: 1832 53613 1851 87784 1861 109108
