Economic and social profile
The Border city and county town of Carlisle was a castellated borough at the confluence of the rivers Caldew and Eden.
Electoral history
Before 1832, Carlisle politics had been dominated by the Cumberland Whig hierarchy, the ‘Blues’, who were assisted by the dukes of Norfolk and Portland and the earls of Carlisle in their bid to undermine the influence of the Lowther family and their supporters, the ‘Yellows’.
Instead, following the 1832 Reform Act, the Ferguson and Dixon families, the town’s dominant cotton manufacturers, played an increasingly pivotal role in the leadership of the Liberal party. With only a limited number of handloom weavers on the register, though, they largely owed their influence to their role as civic leaders, rather than as employers.
At the 1832 general election the two sitting members, the Radical William James of Barrock Lodge and the Whig Philip Henry Howard of Corby Castle, came forward to defend their seats. Although both men were endorsed by the Carlisle Reform Association, led by the cotton manufacturer John Dixon, they had separate committees and rooms.
At the 1835 general election James made way for William Marshall of Patterdale Hall, Cumberland, brother of John Marshall, MP for Leeds, 1832-35.
Towards the end of the 1830s Carlisle witnessed a flurry of extra-parliamentary activity. John Dixon, a member of the council of the Anti-Corn Law League, co-ordinated an active course of agitation in the town that was championed by the Carlisle Journal.
The Carlisle Chartists were a vociferous force at the 1841 general election, which was a riotous contest. Canvassers from all sides were routinely pelted with stones, the main perpetrators reported to be ‘children and half-grown lads’, and a series of violent disturbances required the military to be called out.
Despite Hanson’s withdrawal, Chartist interventions at the hustings had been effective. Howard and Marshall were repeatedly put on the defensive over their condemnation of the Newport rioters, and the canvass of Edward Goulburn, the first Conservative candidate to make it to the poll since 1832, went well following his denunciation of the new poor law, an issue on which the Chartists, backed by the Carlisle Patriot, had campaigned.
At the 1847 general election the hegemony of the ‘Blue’ party was finally broken. William Nicholson Hodgson, a director of the Lancaster and Carlisle railway and former mayor, came forward as a protectionist, with the issue of free trade dominating the campaign.
However, Howard’s supporters petitioned against the return of Hodgson on the grounds of bribery, corruption and treating, 6 Dec. 1847, and a further petition was lodged against the return of Dixon, on account of the Blenkinsop coal company, in which he was a partner, holding a contract with the board of ordnance at Carlisle, 7 Dec. 1847. Another petition against Dixon’s return on the grounds of bribery, corruption and treating was submitted, but it was subsequently withdrawn.
The subsequent by-election of March 1848 saw the ‘Blue’ party descend into internecine warfare. At the beginning of the canvass it emerged that Dixon, to ensure that the petition against his original return on the grounds of bribery, corruption and treating was dropped, had agreed not to coalesce with a second Liberal candidate in the event of a by-election. This ‘most injudicious compromise’ outraged Howard’s supporters.
The 1852 general election witnessed the return of Sir James Graham, MP for Carlisle 1826-9, who had vacated his seat at Ripon in order to contest his native city. Following his outspoken criticism of the ecclesiastical titles bill, Howard, who had staunchly defended his Catholic faith and called Lord John Russell and his supporters ‘the friends of intolerance’, felt that his position was untenable and retired.
Graham briefly alluded to his tenure as home secretary during Peel’s ministry, insisting that the Conservative government had supplied the people with cheap food, but he principally focused on his support for free trade and, in a move that surprised some Peelites, he insisted that he had ‘no apprehensions’ regarding an extension of the franchise. Ferguson also championed free trade, arguing that the Derby ministry ‘could not be trusted’ to pursue such a course, leaving Hodgson, who had previously stood as a protectionist, to rather unconvincingly insist that he had been a long-time supporter of free trade.
Graham’s appointment as First Lord of the Admiralty necessitated a by-election in January 1853. The Chartist Charles Sturgeon, a London-based barrister who had unsuccessfully contested Nottingham at the 1852 general election, issued an address in which he called for the main points of the Charter and labelled Graham ‘a Tory’.
At the 1857 general election the unity of the ‘Blues’ was again torn apart. Graham, who believed that the Chinese war was ‘unworthy and unwise’, called Palmerston ‘a Tory of the deepest dye’ and refused to coalesce with Ferguson who, although frustrated with Palmerston’s ‘deficiency’ in the cause of reform, backed the premier over events at Canton.
‘Blue’ unity was restored, however, at the 1859 general election when Graham came forward alongside his nephew, Wilfrid Lawson. Although connected by family, the coalition was a curious one, as they held diametrically opposed views on the ballot, with Lawson a zealous advocate and Graham, a consistent opponent, admitting that ‘I cannot honestly, at my time of life, depart from the course I have hitherto taken’.
Graham died in October 1861, necessitating a by-election. The ‘Blue’ party brought forward Edmund Potter, a Manchester merchant who was head of one of the largest calico printing works in the world.
The 1865 general election at Carlisle was a fractious affair. Lawson, who had introduced the permissive bill which called for a neighbourhood to have a ‘local veto’ over the establishment of ‘drink shops’, was extremely unpopular with local publicans.
Carlisle’s electorate increased to over 4,500 as a result of the 1867 Representation of the People Act, though no changes were made to the borough’s boundaries.
the ancient city of Carlisle, comprising the parishes of St. Mary’s and St. Cuthbert’s. The 1832 Reform Act altered the boundaries to include the townships of Botchergate and Rickergate, and part of the township of Caldewgate (2.7 square miles).
resident freemen and £10 householders
before 1835, the town was divided into five wards, with its corporation consisting of a mayor or returning officer, a further 11 aldermen, a recorder, two bailiffs, a town clerk and 24 ‘capital intigers’, chosen from among the freemen citizens by the mayor and the majority of aldermen. Incorporated in 1835 and divided into 10 wards, with a council of 30 councillors, 10 aldermen and a mayor. Poor Law Union 1838.
Registered electors: 977 in 1832 990 in 1842 1184 in 1851 1418 in 1861
Estimated voters: 1,195 out of 1,304 electors (92%) in 1865.
Population: 1832 18865 1851 26310 1861 29417
