Economic and social profile
Situated on a steep hill at the estuary of the Bandon river, Kinsale was a small ancient port and market town. Local merchants imported timber, coal, iron and salt and exported agricultural produce and, although having little industry, the port, ‘the most important fishing station in Ireland’, attracted boats from all parts of the United Kingdom and France.
Electoral history
Before 1832 the representation had depended largely on the local proprietor, Edward Southwell, 21st baron de Clifford, whose family had controlled the corporation since the late seventeenth century. Like other Cork boroughs, the primary function of the corporation at Kinsale was to return a member of parliament, usually the nominee of de Clifford.
The electoral boundary was drawn closely to the limits of the town, with the liberties being excluded. This, along with the residential qualification imposed by the Reform Act, helped to localise the borough electorate, making its more straightforward to control. This stimulated the growth of party management at a local level and eroded the rural Whig interest in urban politics, to the advantage of the town’s Conservatives.
As neither the Catholic clergy nor the local landowner were able to establish an exclusive authority over voters, electoral corruption was inevitable. Kinsale became ‘notoriously venal’, being described in 1849 as ‘the Sudbury of Ireland’ due to its ‘electoral impurities’.
By August 1832 it had become clear that the standing reform member, John Russell, did not intend to offer, thus making Daniel O’Connell confident that a repealer would be returned. It was, however, James Ludlow Stawell, of Kilbrittain Castle, a wealthy local landowner and renowned reformer, who first addressed the electors. Making no mention of repeal, he promised to rescue the borough from ‘the incubus of the Corporation’ and seek the abolition of church rates and tithes.
Though categorised as a ‘Conditional Repealer’, Stawell behaved in parliament as ‘a classic Irish Whig’, opposing O’Connell’s repeal motion in April 1834.
In December 1834 O’Connell assured the Anti-Tory Association that Kinsale was safe from the Conservatives, the only question being whether the electors would forgive Stawell’s ‘timid reformism’. In the event, however, Stawell gave up Kinsale, sensing that the Conservatives’ prospects were being revived through their registration efforts amongst a growing electorate.
In 1837 the Conservatives, having again performed well at the registry, were confident of another victory and boasted that if Thomas ‘should be ejected, an election committee would settle the matter’.
Liberal suspicions that the Conservatives’ strategy would consist first of ‘spirited and expensive contests; secondly, well prepared and protracted proceedings on petition’ proved correct when, on 1 December, Thomas petitioned the election result on grounds of bribery and clerical intimidation.
Despite of the abolition of the corporation in 1840, the likelihood of a repeal challenge at the 1841 general election faded after O’Connell made ill-judged comments about electoral corruption in the borough.
Like the rest of county Cork, Kinsale suffered from the effects of the Great Famine and the number of ‘effective’ electors had fallen to only 213 by the time of the 1847 general election.
When a new writ was issued neither Watson nor Guinness, who was then experiencing severe financial difficulties, came forward. Instead, Benjamin Hawes, under-secretary for the colonies (1846-51), was selected by the Liberals, having been turned out at Lambeth in 1847.
The controversy surrounding Russell’s ecclesiastical titles bill of 1851 inevitably weakened the position of Irish ministerial MPs who, like Hawes, represented largely Catholic constituencies. Although faced with repudiation by Catholic voters, he refused to stand down and was appointed deputy secretary for war in October 1851.
In spite of the recent Irish Franchise Act, the registered electorate of Kinsale (139 in 1851) was one of the smallest in Ireland, and local influence came to have an ever greater role in turning the balance of elections.
At the 1857 general election, it was anticipated that Heard might have to fight for his seat. There was popular opposition in the town to a bill for recovering the levy made on property by Protestant ministers (Kinsale being one of eight Irish towns so affected), and a ‘careful reconnaissance’ was said to have been made by an opponent possessed of ‘all the qualifications for a stiff contest’. In the event, however, only Geale came forward and, again failing to gain any ground, withdrew, enabling Heard to be returned unopposed once more.
By 1858 it was anticipated that, with a mere 156 registered electors, Kinsale would be disenfranchised by any future reform act.
In March 1861 Arnott quashed a rumour that he was about to abandon Kinsale for a vacancy at Cork but, having delivered neither a promised waterworks nor a transatlantic cable station to the town in May 1863, he shed what he had found to be an increasing financial burden by announcing his retirement. As the cause for this step had not been made public, it was assumed that Arnott had agreed to hand the seat to Sir George Colthurst, who began to canvass the moment the writ was issued.
Colthurst subsequently lent his support to the Liberal ministry, and gained local popularity by completing the promised waterworks at his own expense in 1864.
Until 1874, the borough largely conformed to the pattern established at its first post-reform election, and ‘devoted most of its political energies to local issues’. It was contested solely by nominal Liberals in 1868, when Colthurst defeated Robert James Brown, a London-based Gladstonian. In 1874, however, Eugene Collins was returned as a Home Ruler and was re-elected in 1880, each time easily beating Conservative challengers.
300 acres enclosing the town and including the village of Scilly.
£10 occupiers and resident freemen; £8 rated occupiers from 1850.
Town corporation, consisting of the sovereign and an indefinite number of burgesses and freemen; town commissioners from 1840.
Registered electors: 206 in 1832 308 in 1842 139 in 1851 130 in 1861
Estimated voters: 209 out of 374 (56%) in 1837.
Population: 1832 6897 1842 6918 1851 5711 1861 4850
