Essex was a rich agricultural and maritime county, with only one substantial urban centre, Colchester, whose population of 14,000 rising to 16,000 was almost three times that of the county town, Chelmsford. The once thriving woollen industry was virtually extinct by 1820, but this period saw a considerable growth in silk weaving as flourishing London manufacturers set up mills in most of the larger Essex towns.
At the dissolution in 1820 Archer Houblon retired but Western, brushing aside worries over his poor health, offered again. Houblon was replaced by the ministerialist Admiral Eliab Harvey of Rolls Park, Chigwell, who had given up his county seat in 1812 for financial reasons. There was no opposition, but at the nomination the eccentric foxhunting Tory squire Henry John Conyers of Copped Hall, Epping, grandson of a former Member, nominated, without his knowledge and consent, Archer Houblon’s brother-in-law Thomas Gardiner Bramston, who had succeeded to Skreens in 1813 and long coveted a county seat, but feared the expense of a contest. Although Harvey indicated that he was willing to coalesce with Bramston, the latter declined to stand. Meanwhile Archdeacon Francis Wollaston had savaged Western for his support for Catholic claims and sympathy for the victims of Peterloo, but Western defended himself vigorously.
A plan to have the quarter sessions divided between Chelmsford and Colchester was supported by the Members for the latter borough, James Wildman and the radical attorney Daniel Whittle Harvey of Feering, but scotched by Admiral Harvey and Western.
There was no disturbance at the general election of 1826, though at the nomination Bramston again declined to be put forward, as some of the crowd wished. Admiral Harvey stressed his hostility to Catholic relief, but Western was too ill to attend and was represented by a cousin.
Admiral Harvey died on 20 Feb. 1830. Two days later Bramston offered in his room and, enlisting the aid of John Round of Danbury, a former Member for Ipswich, began to cultivate the gentry and to canvass. Nothing came of a report that Robert Westley Hall Dare† of Fitzwalters would start.
On the king’s death a month later Long Wellesley (who had the insurance of a safe return for St. Ives) confirmed his threatened candidature as the champion of electoral independence and the promoter of ‘practical’ reform, including tax redistribution. Bramston took fright at the prospect of a contest and retired. The leading Tories first approached John Jolliffe Tufnell of Langleys, but he declined. Western offered again, resting on his past record and pointing to ‘something decidedly wrong in our domestic policy and legislation’; but he was not well enough to make a personal canvass. In the last week of July Sir John Tyrell’s son John Tyssen Tyrell, recently cuckolded and divorced, came forward on the True Blue interest. He got himself into an early scrape by seeming to describe slaves as ‘property’; but on the hustings he professed support for the gradual abolition of slavery, as well as advocating economy and retrenchment, protection for agriculture and the disfranchisement of corrupt boroughs.
There was heavy petitioning of both Houses for the abolition of slavery in the 1830 Parliament.
At the 1831 general election Western, Tyrell and Long Wellesley came forward, though for most of the campaign Long Wellesley was in hiding from his many creditors at Calais. He was represented by Sir Felix Agar, former Whig Member for Sudbury. Tyrell claimed to favour the enfranchisement of large towns and an extension of the franchise, but condemned the ministerial bill as a threat to the constitution and the agricultural interest. He received financial aid from the opposition election fund. Countywide meetings resolved to support and subsidize Western and Long Wellesley as reformers, and a formal coalition was concluded. After six days’ polling, when he was 660 behind Western and 543 below Long Wellesley, Tyrell conceded defeat.
The inhabitants of Rochford petitioned the Lords in support of the reform bill, 4 Oct. 1831.
Harvey’s speech has shown clearly to the Tories that there never can be a cordial co-operation between him and his friends and us, the Whigs: to unite with him we must assist in cutting our own throats and exposing our property to plunder. Thus has he played into the hands of the Tories as well as if he had been bribed for it ... I sometimes think we might as well leave it to the Tories and Radicals to fight it out, just supplying each with sufficient ammunition and throwing a little into the scale of each as necessary as may enable them properly to maul each other while we perform the part of disinterested spectators.
The Times, 12 Dec.; Colchester Gazette, 17 Dec.; Barrett Lennard mss C60, Western to Lennard, 21 Dec. 1831; CJ, lxxxvii. 21.
In the House, 23 Feb. 1832, George Dawson, Conservative Member for Harwich, presented a petition from inhabitants of Chelmsford seeking separate representation for that borough and the hamlet of Moulsham and pointed out that in the proposed division of Essex into East and West the former would have eight Members (two each for the county, Colchester, Harwich and Maldon) and the latter, despite its greater population, only two.
Number of voters: 5318 in 1830
Estimated voters: over 6,000
