Economic and social profile:
‘A small town in a fertile valley’ situated on the river Lug, Leominster had a stagnant economy in this period.
Electoral history:
Leominster provides a rare example of what Norman Gash called an ‘incipient family borough’, in which a new controlling interest emerged after the 1832 Reform Act.
The shift from the politics of bribery to the politics of influence led to a profound change in the borough’s electoral culture. Between 1780 and 1831 there had been twelve contested elections; from 1832 to 1868 only four out of sixteen elections went to a poll. As in other small towns with venal electorates, such as Newcastle-under-Lyme, corruption had encouraged high levels of political participation, and a vibrant political culture, expressed through colours, music bands and rituals that included the whole community. Much of this traditional culture was still in evidence in the 1830s, but it declined as the borough became increasingly closed. Previously elections had been pitched battles between various candidates, encouraged by electors who sought to extract maximum value for their votes, but by the late 1840s an observer commented that ‘there is rarely even a skirmish’ at election time.
Leominster elections in the unreformed period had been frequently contested and distinguished by their venality. A system developed in which the local banker Thomas Coleman lent out money to electors, with the debt called in at election time. Coleman’s notes acted as electoral pledges which enabled him to ensure the return of any candidate who contracted with him.
The 1832 Reform Act created a new electorate of 779 voters in Leominster.
Beaumont Hotham, Lord Hotham, an Irish Tory peer, and the Reformer Thomas Bish, of Cornhill, London, who had been returned for the borough in 1826 before being unseated, were returned unopposed at the 1832 and 1835 general elections. On both occasions, Merryweather Turner, a barrister on the Oxford circuit, challenged as a second Reformer but withdrew before the nomination.
In three respects, electoral politics in Leominster in the 1830s continued much the same as before. Firstly, bribery remained central to the borough’s politics. Even though they were returned unopposed, Bish and Hotham’s record of paying bribes underpinned their popularity. As the Liberal Hereford Times euphemistically noted, his lordship had long given satisfaction to the electors and had ‘paid them that attention they like’.
Secondly, bribery was a key factor in ensuring that Leominster remained a dynamic and open constituency. Unless candidates were willing to pay, they were vulnerable to challenge and defeat, as Bish found out. As the Reform MP for Hereford city Edward Bolton Clive noted before the 1835 general election, ‘I think that Leominster will be open for money’.
Thirdly, elections at Leominster in the 1830s continued to be colourful affairs, characterised by music bands and widespread participation in rituals, including by women. The chairing of the MPs was a popular focus for the town. In 1832 it was reported that:
Every window in the various houses was thronged with the fair sex, wearing the colours of their favourite candidate, but those of Mr. Bish greatly preponderated, as he has always paid great attention to the ladies, and is with them a great favourite.
Hereford Times, 15 Dec. 1832.
At the following election the chairing ceremony, which, as in many constituencies after 1832, saw the members driven through the town in carriages rather than raised up on chairs by a crowd, lasted three hours. Again, women were visible from every window ‘wearing the colours of their favourite candidate - and in several instances the same persons were for both’.
The 1837 general election was an important turning point in Leominster’s electoral history. Although the Hereford Times remarked that ‘party feeling runs high’, the election was far from a conventional straight party fight.
Greenaway, styling himself as an ‘independent Whig’, declared his support for Irish municipal reform. Hotham professed his independence, while Wigram voiced the Tory views of the Arkwright family. Although he claimed to be ‘friendly to the reform of all proved abuses’, he criticised the Reform Act as ‘delusive and visionary’ and argued that fewer interests were now represented in the House of Commons than before 1832.
The Conservative Hotham’s total of 395 was almost equally divided between shared votes with the other Conservative Wigram (199) and split votes with the Liberal Greenaway (184). When taking into account the 21 votes split between Greenaway (Liberal) and Wigram (Conservative), this means that 42.6% of electors who polled cast cross-party votes, an extremely high figure underlining the weak hold of party attachments on Leominster. Greenaway benefited from 117 plumpers, while Wigram was too reliant on shared votes with Hotham, which accounted for three-quarters of his votes.
The electoral politics of Leominster had altered significantly by the time of the next general election in 1841. There was now no question of resisting the Arkwright influence and when Wigram offered again, Hotham transferred to the East Riding of Yorkshire.
The authority of the Arkwright family was underlined by the 1842 by-election, caused by Wigram’s appointment as a judge. The vacancy was filled by the late member’s brother-in-law George Arkwright, a staunch protectionist Conservative, who emphasised the ‘name and character of my family’ in his address.
If the 1841 and 1842 elections revealed the influence of the Arkwright family, the 1845 by-election led to the establishment of a system whereby candidates dealt with a single agent, usually a lawyer, rather than the electorate at large.
Barkly declared his support for the Maynooth grant, but refused to be drawn on the corn laws.
The rise of the Arkwright family influence on the one hand, and the practice of candidates paying local lawyers rather than the wider community on the other, meant that the borough was notable for its ‘political lethargy’ at the 1847 general election.
When Barkly was appointed governor of British Guinea in early 1849, his place was taken by another Liberal Conservative, Frederick Peel, the son of the former prime minister. Writing to Sir Robert Peel, Barkly advised that if his son followed his course:
I see no reason why he should fail to secure the vacant seat at Leominster, where party feeling has never run very high, provided he can secure a Whig agent whom I retained, & thereby prevent any united opposition being offered by that party. My colleague’s friends I feel pretty sure will wisely rest content with the seat they have got.
Qu. in Gash, Politics in the age of Peel, 198-9.
Peel was joined in the field by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, the writer and former Reform MP for Lincoln, and John George Phillimore, of Shiplake House, Oxfordshire, a Liberal barrister. Lytton sought to appeal to protectionist sentiment by proclaiming the repeal of the corn laws a ‘hazardous experiment’, but this alienated local Liberals.
When Peel transferred to Bury at the 1852 general election, Phillimore once again took the field. He followed Barkly and Peel’s tactic of employing Bedford, James and Herbert as agents, while emphasising his free trade opinions to curry favour with local opinion.
Arkwright’s death in February 1856 prompted another by-election. John Hungerford Arkwright, heir to Hampton Court, who had recently came of age, declined to stand, citing his inexperience.
Campbell won the show of hands, but the poll resulted in an easy victory for Hardy. Although there had been a contest, the Hereford Times remarked that the election had ‘excite[d] very little interest’, while Hardy wrote in his diary that ‘the whole thing was conducted in the quietest and most inexpensive way’.
After 1857 the Conservative retained both seats until the end of the period. At the general election that year Hardy was returned unopposed with Willoughby, whose candidature forced the retirement of Phillimore. This added spice to an otherwise dull election. Phillimore had used his parliamentary position to assail the East India Company and resented his ousting by a former Company director and ‘monopolist’. In Phillimore’s view, this episode demonstrated that Leominster was a rotten borough in the pocket of the Arkwrights.
At the nomination, Willoughby jibed that Phillimore’s animus against the EIC had its root in being passed over for appointment as professor of law at the East Indian Civil Service College at Haileybury. Hardy, whose talents had quickly established him as a candidate for office in any future Conservative administration, offered a forthright critique of Palmerston’s conduct over Canton. He also expressed opposition to compulsory education, and like Willoughby reaffirmed his support for traditional institutions, especially the Church of England.
Although electors were deprived of the bribes and treating that they had formerly enjoyed, they enterprisingly found other ways to extract money from their representatives. Hardy wrote that Willoughby’s weakness was in believing stories of pseudo-Leominster electors and their female relations, and giving them money or buying daubs [paintings] from them. I warned him never to believe any reference to me unless he saw my own writing, but nevertheless he used to greet me with “I gave this or that to the person you sent”, when the person had never been near me, and I had sent no message.
Mercifully for Willoughby’s finances he was required to vacate the constituency on his appointment to the Council for India in October 1858. His place was taken by Charles Spencer Bateman Hanbury, of Shobdon Court, formerly Conservative MP for Herefordshire, and brother of Lord Bateman. Rumours that James Wilde, formerly MP for Worcester, or the local lawyer J.H. James would stand in the Liberal interest proved to be ill-founded.
Hanbury and Hardy were returned unopposed at the 1859 general election, the latter defending Derby’s government, in which he held junior office.
When the new Parliament met in February 1866, Hardy opted to sit for Oxford University, for which he had also been returned, creating a vacancy which was filled by Richard Arkwright, younger son of John Arkwright, and scion of Hampton Court. Returned unopposed at the nomination, Arkwright expressed his family’s traditional Tory opinions, and denied that there was any need for parliamentary reform.
The reform bills of the 1850s and 1860s all proposed reducing Leominster to single member status.
The borough of Leominster.
£10 householders; scot and lot (‘ancient rights’ voters).
Before 1835 a corporation comprising a bailiff, two aldermen, a chief steward, a recorder and town clerk chosen annually from 25 self-selecting capital burgesses. After 1835 town council consisting of a mayor, four aldermen and twelve councillors. Improvement commission 1808 (48 Geo. III, c. cxlviii). Further improvement acts passed in 1838 and 1853 (1 & 2 Vict., c. xiv).
Registered electors: 779 in 1832 553 in 1842 551 in 1851 360 in 1861
Estimated voters: 579 (87.9%) out of 658 electors (1837).
Population: 1832 4300 1851 5214 1861 5658
