Economic and social profile:
Situated on the river Wye, the county town and cathedral city of Hereford was ‘surrounded by rich pasture, orchards and varied scenery’.
Electoral history:
With the exceptions of the 1837 and 1865 general elections, when the Conservatives captured one seat, Hereford’s representation was generally monopolised by the Liberals. After 1841 the Conservatives, ignoring their own weakness on the register, made a habit of unwisely contesting elections that they had no chance of winning. The intense partisanship that characterised the city for much of this period was refracted through Hereford’s distinctive local political culture. Local Conservatism had a High Tory flavour, a legacy of the influence of cathedral clergymen, known as the ‘Black and Tans’, and the corporation.
In other respects, there were considerable continuities with the unreformed period. Significantly, the city’s rival newspapers regularly used the labels Whig and Tory rather than Liberal and Conservative, even until quite late in this period. While there were occasional attempts to establish permanent party organisations, the central headquarters for Reformers or Liberals remained the Green Dragon Hotel. Furthermore, the Conservatives never once put up two candidates. While critical of their opponents’ ‘monopoly’, their objective was a return to the pre-1832 era of electoral compromises and shared representation.
The electoral culture of Hereford was marked by high levels of political participation. The first five elections after the 1832 Reform Act were contested and eight out of thirteen elections went to a poll during the whole period. The 1835 and 1837 elections had turnouts of 89.7% and 91.2% respectively.
Before 1818 control of Hereford’s representation had been shared between the Whig duke of Norfolk and the Tory corporation. After the duke’s death in 1815, the Tory James Somers Cocks, 2nd earl of Somers, high steward of the city, stepped into the breach as patron, but was unable to claim more than one seat.
The 1832 Reform Act disenfranchised over 600 non-resident freemen. The estimated unreformed electorate of 1,110 was replaced with an electorate of 920, of which 461 were resident freemen.
Somers’ heir, Viscount Eastnor, retired at the 1832 general election, his family’s liberal Toryism no longer finding favour in a constituency increasingly polarised between Reformers and Ultra-Tories.
Clive reaffirmed his independence and support for reform at the nomination, while Biddulph spoke in favour of a low fixed duty on corn, the abolition of slavery and retrenchment. Blakemore expressed Tory sentiments, but lost the show of hands and retired early on the second day leaving Clive and Biddulph to be returned in first and second place.
Anticipating the forthcoming dissolution, Clive observed in late 1834 that the
Tories were so weak that the utmost that they could attempt would be one, but after their defeat at the last election, which was very decided, I do not think they will make any attempt, as I was not opposed in 1832. Biddulph behaved liberally and he paid all above £500 ... I was in Glamorganshire with Robert Clive in October I there met Mr. Blakemore’s nephew. Mr. B. was the Tory candidate in 26 & 32. He assured me that his uncle would never appear here again.
E. B. Clive to Sir John Broughton, 23 Nov. 1834, British Lib., Add. 47227, f. 69.
In the event, Blakemore allowed local Conservatives to put his name forward at late notice at the 1835 general election on the strict understanding that he was not to be put to any personal expense or a personal canvass.
The party polarisation that emerged after 1832 was sustained by the rivalry of the Conservative Hereford Journal (established 1781) and the Liberal Hereford Times, which had been founded in 1832. Furthermore, this partisan, polarised culture, with frequent contests, led to a more intensive use of treating, bribery and other forms of influence to mobilise electors, than in the previous period of generally unopposed compromises.
According to the local solicitor John James, bribery was carried on ‘to a much more considerable extent than before’ 1832. With pardonable exaggeration, he explained to an 1835 parliamentary inquiry that electoral corruption was ‘scarcely known’ in Hereford before the Reform Act.
Before its replacement with an elected town council in December 1835, the Tory corporation exercised considerable influence, particularly through the charities it controlled. The attractiveness of the hospital, or almhouse, was an especially appealing inducement to poorer freemen.
By the time of the 1837 general election, the leadership of the ‘High Tory interest’ had passed from the defunct corporation to Tory clergymen associated with the Protestant Conservative Association and Sir Edwin Scudamore Stanhope, 2nd baronet, of Holme Lacy. Dr. Mereweather, dean of the cathedral was especially prominent, publishing an address in favour of the Conservative candidate, Daniel Duvall Higford Burr, of Gayton Hall.
After being returned in second place behind Clive, Burr spoke from a balcony and theatrically pointed to the cathedral declaring that ‘he should always try to preserve that edifice’. He also thanked the ladies of the city for ‘the very kind reception which he had experienced’ during his canvass. ‘Whenever he called upon an elector, although he might not have succeeded with him, his wife, his sister, or his daughter, was sure to advocate his cause’, he explained.
The lesson the Hereford Times drew from the contest was that the ballot was needed to counter ‘foul influences’, but also that the Reformers relied too much on the popularity of the incumbents without preparing the ground through thorough organisation. It welcomed the establishment of a new Reform Association to rectify this.
In the event, the Liberal Clive and his running mate Henry William Hobhouse, of Farley House, Somerset, won an easy victory over Burr at the 1841 general election, for a number of reasons. Firstly, with the local economy strongly tied to agriculture, both Hobhouse and the Hereford Times opposed the abolition of the corn laws. Preferring instead the moderate fixed duty proposed by the Whig government, they successfully neutralised the protectionist cry.
Thirdly, Dr. Mereweather’s intervention also proved counter-productive to the Conservative campaign. He apparently warned one elector to vote for Burr otherwise he would jeopardise his son’s prospects of a choristership. Hobhouse subsequently wrote to Dr. Twistleton, the canon, for assurance that the elector would suffer no penalty.
Three months after this triumph, Hobhouse unexpectedly resigned following the collapse of his bank. At the ensuing by-election the rich London merchant Robert Pulsford, brother-in-law of William Hayter, MP for Wells, was returned as a Liberal. His opponent Edward Griffiths, of Newcourt, who declined to be put to any expense or attend the nomination, was easily beaten.
An attempt by the Conservatives to rally Anglicans and Dissenters around a Protestant, anti-Maynooth platform at the 1847 general election ended in a humiliating fiasco. A requisition to the former MP for Canterbury, Henry Gipps, garnered only 23 signatures.
Much to the embarrassment of the local Conservatives, Glover withdrew before the nomination, after an interview with his opponents in which he confessed that he had insufficient support to justify a contest. This shambles meant that Price and Clifford were returned unopposed. The Whig baronet declared on the hustings that Glover had expressed himself ‘quite as ready to follow Lord John Russell as any other political leader in the House of Commons’. It was a harsh lesson to his opponents, Price crowed, ‘not to rashly pledge themselves ... in favour of a man of whom they know nothing’.
Prior to the 1852 general election, the local branch of the National Parliamentary and Financial Reform Association passed resolutions backing Price and Clifford, approving especially of the latter’s support for the ballot and ‘every other Liberal measure’.
Meyrick’s campaign was assisted by William Henry Cooke, a barrister and native citizen, who brought his characteristic brand of mudslinging to the campaign.
The declaration was notable for the Conservative mayor and returning officer, E. Wemyss, rebuking Cooke for going behind his back to use the Hereford Journal (which the mayor had formerly edited) to ‘libel other persons’. Price and Clifford, returned in first and second place respectively, won an easy victory over Meyrick. The Liberals had been so confident of victory that they had offered to show the Conservative committee the canvassing returns, independently verified, to stop Meyrick wasting his time and money. The offer was declined by their opponents, who erroneously took it as a sign of Liberal vulnerability.
Price resisted growing pressure to resign after ruinous investments and ‘a damaging series of mortgages’ rendered him a virtual bankrupt in late 1855.
The result prompted the Hereford Journal to bemoan how the Conservatives’ disorganisation meant that, unlike the Liberals, they did not know their own strength on the register, which led them into fighting pointless contests.
The decisive outcome of the 1857 by-election meant that the Conservatives did not oppose Clifford and Clive at the 1857 and 1859 general elections. On the first occasion, both incumbents declared their support for Palmerston over Canton, Clifford expressing his general admiration for the premier’s ‘manly and English’ foreign policy.
By the time of the 1865 general election, the Conservatives were in a much better position. Aided by a Mr. Garrald, the registration had been ‘well attended to’ and they had a strong candidate in the barrister Richard Baggallay, a ‘most eloquent man’ and future attorney-general.
As a general election was imminent under the 1867 Representation of the People Act, which expanded Hereford’s electorate from 1,215 to 2,380, with the boundaries left unchanged. There was no opposition to Baggallay at the September 1868 by-election occasioned by his appointment as solicitor-general. At the general election that November, Clive and another Liberal defeated two Conservatives, but were unseated on petition in March 1869. The Liberals held both seats at the resultant by-election. The Conservatives gained one seat at the 1874 general election, but were unable to retain it in 1880.
the city of Hereford and Castle Green. 8 sq. miles (unaltered by 1832 Boundary Act)
resident freemen (‘ancient rights’ voters); £10 householders
Before 1835 self-selecting corporation consisting of 31 chief citizens who formed common council. After 1835 town council consisting of mayor, six aldermen and eighteen councillors. Improvement Acts 1774, 1816, 1824; Poor Law Union 1836
Registered electors: 920 in 1832 1002 in 1842 997 in 1851 1096 in 1861
Estimated voters: 986 (81%) out of 1,215 (1865)
Population: 1832 10282 1851 12113 1861 15585
