Economic and social profile:
‘Delightfully situated’ on the north bank of the river Nidd, 18 miles north-west of York,
Electoral history
Despite doubts about its prosperity, the boundary commissioners concluded – mistakenly, as it turned out – that Knaresborough’s potential for ‘becoming a place of greater consequence’ merited its continued representation after 1832.
After 1832 Knaresborough’s representation swung back and forth between the parties. Among the six smallest English boroughs in 1848,
With one exception, the candidates who stood at the 1832 general election were not strangers to Knaresborough’s electors. John Richards, a Southwark hop merchant, originally from Worcestershire, had declined an invitation to contest Knaresborough in 1826.
Described as ‘an independent Whig’
Rich petitioned against Rotch’s return, 18 Feb. 1833, on the grounds that he was an alien, having been born in France to American parents.
Rotch’s populist stance was undermined by his parliamentary speeches against trade unions in 1834, which prompted ‘general dissatisfaction’ among his supporters.
There was no coalition between the candidates, and the contest was notable for their keenness to eschew party labels. This was aptly symbolised by the mixture of party colours worn on nomination day by a well-known local, ‘Lampley Ned’, who appeared ‘with one side of his face painted orange, and the other blue; dressed in an orange cloak, and mounted on a horse decorated with pink ribbon’.
Richards and Rich won the show of hands, but it was Lawson who topped the poll, with Richards re-elected in second place. Rich polled a creditable third, and Lewin a desultory fourth.
Richards’ vote with the Conservatives on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, prompted 40 or 50 Reformers to sign a requisition calling for his resignation. Despite his obfuscation on party during the contest, they argued that he had been elected ‘as we supposed, the Reform Member for our borough’.
At the 1837 general election Richards ‘bid the electors a pompous farewell’, and instead stood at Southwark as a Conservative.
Orange (Liberal) and pink (Conservative) banners gave Knaresborough ‘a very lively appearance’ on nomination day.
Langdale and Rich won the show of hands with an ‘immense preponderance’.
Langdale’s narrow majority prompted both parties to attend carefully to registration. George Leeman, of York, appeared in the revision courts for the Liberals in 1839, successfully objecting to Conservative efforts to manufacture votes by sub-dividing a large pasture owned by Rev. Collins.
After an unpropitious canvass, Langdale withdrew, lamenting that he could only win ‘by means which I believe must tend to demoralize the Inhabitants and corrupt the Constituency’.
Despite heavy rain around 2,000 people attended the 1841 nomination, where Lawson arrived with pink banners, and Ferrand with blue, while Sturgeon ‘hoisted the old Orange standard’. Assailed with cries of ‘turn coat’, Lawson maintained that he had always been ‘a moderate Tory’. The corn laws were the dominant issue, although the poor law also featured prominently. Lawson decried the Liberals’ proposed 8s. fixed duty on corn as ‘a vile trick, to deceive the electors’. He supported the poor law to some extent, but would modify its oppressive clauses. Ferrand emphasised his Yorkshire connections, and made a typically colourful speech, dismissing the ballot as ‘un-English and detestable’, declaring that he would rather separate his head from his shoulders than the church from the state, and condemning the ‘inhuman and oppressive’ poor law. He staunchly defended the corn laws, and opposed altering the timber and sugar duties, as did Lawson. Sturgeon, who denied that he was Earl Fitzwilliam’s nominee – and later also refuted claims that he had been sent by the Anti-Corn Law League
The Liberals improved their position on the register in 1841.
Ferrand nonetheless sought re-election in 1847. His address boasted that he had ‘no broken pledges to explain away’ and emphasised his support for the Ten Hours Act and ‘his unalterable hostility to Popery’ and the poor law.
Sir Charles Slingsby, of Scriven, declined the invitation of a Conservative meeting, chaired by Rev. Collins, to offer alongside Lawson.
With a close contest expected between Lawson and Westhead for the second seat, both resorted to corrupt means, opening public houses and allowing each elector to nominate a non-elector for employment as a runner or banner-bearer. Westhead allegedly spent £900 hiring over 300 non-electors, who received between 3s. 6d. and 5s. daily, as well as three meals and two quarts of ale. One of Westhead’s agents engaged ‘a large body of navvies’, who caused several disturbances. The Conservatives’ detention of several voters at the Elephant Inn prompted an altercation on the eve of the poll. After the voters’ wives summoned help, a constable and ‘a party of staff men’ entered the inn-yard, ‘notwithstanding a stout resistance’ led by Lawson’s eldest son, who subsequently sent to York for the military.
Lascelles’ death in July 1851 prompted a by-election, at which Rev. Collins’s son Thomas, a barrister on the northern circuit, offered for the Conservatives.
With a walkover expected, the nomination, at which Collins arrived with a band and light blue banners inscribed ‘Collins our townsman’, was sparsely attended.
Collins, who had won the show of hands, also triumphed in the poll, having secured the bulk of the Conservative vote.
Lawson and Collins offered again in 1852, but despite claiming to be ‘in the midst of a triumphant canvass’, Lawson reluctantly withdrew in March after being advised that he would jeopardise his party’s chances if he persisted. On the same day, Rowland Winn, of Nostell Priory, near Pontefract, issued an address as a Protectionist and defender of Protestant institutions.
The Liberals attempted to make free trade the central issue, with Westhead’s ‘spirited’ address urging voters to give ‘a decided negative to the policy of monopoly’.
With all candidates agreeing that the corn laws should not be re-imposed, the nomination was noteworthy only for Collins’s pronouncements on electoral reform. While he did not regard the 1832 Reform Act as final, he opposed placing power ‘in mere numbers’, which would ‘deprive persons of property and education of their legitimate weight’.
Dent, Westhead and Woodd were duly gazetted as MPs, with the caveat that ‘two only should have been returned, but by reason of equality of votes three are returned’.
Renewed energy was devoted to registration, and Sir Charles Slingsby provoked anger in 1853 when he blocked footpaths after ‘enclosing the town’s pasture to manufacture faggot votes’ for the Conservatives.
The Conservatives’ strengthened position through the addition of around 40 cow-house votes led Dent not to seek re-election in 1857.
The election was a quiet affair, which was ascribed partly to the effects of the 1854 Corrupt Practices Prevention Act. Intimidation may also have been a factor, with reports that ‘only one or two shopkeepers had the courage to exhibit colours’.
Woodd observed that he had faithfully kept his pledges – clarifying ‘pledges they were not, but promises’ – and dismissed the idea of returning to protection as ‘insane’. He advocated retrenchment and a reduction in income tax. Defending his vote for Cobden’s censure motion on the Canton question, he asserted that ‘as to the insult to the flag, there were many ample remedies for that without shelling a city’. Although not a follower of Palmerston, he ‘would always support him in measures which he believed were right, – and he was very often right’. Collins likewise tried to cultivate cross-party support, with a similar platform of retrenchment and non-intervention in foreign affairs. He believed that his opinions were shared by ‘the moderate and best parties’ and hoped ‘to satisfy the whole of the Liberal section of the town’. He ‘would never place himself under the wing of any man, party, or section’ in the Commons, but professed a ‘strong affinity’ with the Peelites, although his claims that he ‘never was a Protectionist’ drew dissenting laughter from the crowd. Campbell, who was ‘vociferously cheered’, endorsed Palmerston’s Canton policy and reiterated his support for church rate abolition and electoral reform. He considered it ‘a monstrosity’ that only 250 of Knaresborough’s inhabitants were enfranchised, and condemned the ‘cow-house’ votes. Woodd received ‘a good show’ of hands, with about one quarter choosing Collins, and ‘a very large majority’ for Campbell.
Woodd and Collins sought re-election in 1859, when the state of the register again prompted qualms among potential Liberal candidates. Harry Stephen Thompson, of Kirby Hall, Bedale, the chairman of the North Eastern railway, initially declined to offer.
Unusually, the nomination was held at 2 p.m., to allow voters to hear speeches in the borough that morning from the Liberal candidates for the West Riding.
At the 1865 election Woodd and Collins stood again, but as Thompson had been returned for a vacancy at Whitby, Knaresborough’s Liberals needed a fresh candidate. Having decided against contesting Pontefract,
Holden’s appearance prompted Woodd and Collins to address a Conservative meeting, the first public gathering of electors which Woodd had addressed for six years. He decried ‘the system which now so generally prevailed of annual meetings between electors and members’ because he went to Parliament ‘not as a delegate but as a representative, and not bound to answer at certain intervals as to the course he took’. He differed from many Conservatives in wishing to retain the malt tax as a valuable source of revenue. He endorsed a non-interventionist foreign policy, criticising Palmerston for having given the Danes the impression that Britain might intercede over Schleswig-Holstein. He opposed Baines’s £6 borough franchise bill and Locke King’s £10 county franchise bill, and confirmed his hostility to the ballot. On the thorny issue of church rates, he would relieve Dissenters from this burden. Collins took a similar line on fiscal and foreign affairs, observing on the Danish question that ‘people should never bark unless they intended to bite’. He pledged to uphold the connection between Church and state, and was ‘tooth and nail opposed’ to a £6 franchise.
At a well-attended but orderly nomination, the issue of parliamentary reform was to the fore, with the candidates restating their positions. Woodd and Collins feared that reform might ‘degrade’ or ‘Americanise’ the British constitution. Collins refuted allegations that he opposed Holden because he was a Methodist and that he had influenced the votes of his father’s tenants. Holden’s reception confirmed him as ‘the popular candidate’. Arguing for the ballot, he condemned the use of intimidation in Knaresborough’s elections, stating forthrightly that a man who dictated how his tenants should vote ‘ought to be tied to a cart and publicly whipped’. He won an overwhelmingly majority in the show of hands, where Woodd outperformed Collins.
Knaresborough’s small electorate made it an obvious target for redistribution, and the reform bills proposed in the 1850s and 1860s had variously sought to disfranchise it entirely, remove one seat, enlarge it to include Harrogate, or group it with Ripon and Thirsk.
the town of Knaresborough, as defined under an Improvement Act of 1823 (4 Geo. IV, c. 35), and part of the township of Scriven-with-Tentergate (increased from 0.1 to 0.7 sq. miles).
£10 householders and ‘ancient rights’ voters (burgage holders).
the government of the town was vested in the borough bailiff. There were also improvement commissioners, elected under the 1823 Improvement Act (4 Geo. IV, c. 35). Poor Law Union 1854.
Registered electors: 278 in 1832 245 in 1842 242 in 1851 265 in 1861
Estimated voters: [to be calculated]
Population: 1832 6253 1851 5634 1861 5402
