Addressing the electors in 1826, Abel Rous Dottin recalled his first visit to Southampton some 30 years earlier, when
it was, compared with its present appearance, little better than a village. Now, it was one of the most elegant towns in England; its commerce had improved; it was brilliantly lit with gas ... Majestic steam vessels were seen floating on their beautiful river, magnificent baths were erecting [and] rows of elegant buildings were rising round the town and its vicinity.
Southampton Herald, 12 June 1826.
The population of Southampton doubled between 1811 and 1831, as it underwent rapid development as a port and enjoyed a new lease of life as a fashionable resort. Horse races were revived in 1822 and the regatta in 1826, while the new baths to which Dottin referred opened in 1829.
At the 1820 general election both Members offered again. The local press was justifiably sceptical of the rumoured candidacy of William Cobbett†, once a neighbour of Chamberlayne at Botley, but talk of an unopposed return was cut short by the early canvass of Dottin, ministerialist Member for Gatton in the previous Parliament, who had recently taken up residence in the town at Bugle Hall. His pledge to go to a poll appears to have put off another rumoured contender, William Alexander Mackinnon* of nearby Portswood House, lately Member for Dunwich.
Dinners were held to celebrate the return of Chamberlayne, 24 Mar., 14 Sept., and De Crespigny, 9 Nov. 1820.
The poor health of both Members that autumn prompted talk of a candidacy by Dottin, and an unidentified ‘Mr. Home’ and ‘Mr. H.W. Wilson’. In November 1824 De Crespigny, who had suffered from recurrent bouts of sickness, indicated that he would not offer again.
At the 1826 general election De Crespigny retired, likening himself to a dying swan and making a pointed reference to his colleague’s shyness of intervening in debate in an emotional valedictory speech. Dottin came forward for the vacancy. On the hustings Chamberlayne’s proposer dwelt on his Whig credentials and efforts to secure the prosperity of the town, asserting that ‘when a neighbouring port tried to steal our trade, he opened wide his purse strings ... From the death of a poor man’s pig to the building of a church, his name was ever foremost in the [subscription] list’. Chamberlayne spoke in support of reduced taxation and, in response to questions, indicated general support for Catholic relief, though without guaranteeing his future conduct. Dottin, who signalled his continued hostility to this measure, praised the foreign policy of the Liverpool ministry and their domestic record, by which ‘taxation was lessened, juries were consolidated, and the hydra-headed monster, radicalism, had received is death blow’. The Members were returned unopposed.
The death of Chamberlayne in December 1829 created a vacancy, for which a bitter struggle ensued. First in the field was John Story Penleaze of Bossington, who since leasing a house in the town in 1826 had held a succession of municipal offices, including that of bailiff, which he resigned to contest the election.
On 26 Dec. 1829 Penleaze withdrew on the advice of Martin Maddison, a Tory banker who had been entrusted to keep a record of promises for both parties, which he reckoned at 355 for Penleaze and an unassailable 763 for Hoy.
The lukewarmness and selfishness of what is called the better class of people could not keep pace with the active and powerful engine of bribery. After spending 3,000 [guineas] I discovered Southampton to be as rotten as any borough in England, and to have any chance of success, and that very doubtful, I must spend 7,000 more.
Southampton RO D/Z 681/1A.
Nothing was heard of the other rumoured candidates, who included John Leigh Beckford, the son of Chamberlayne’s chief supporter, Arthur Atherley, former Whig Member for Southampton, a son of Sir Eyre Coote, Member for Barnstaple, 1812-18, and William Gore Langton*, former Member for Somerset. William Sanders, a local builder, was mocked for his audacity in issuing an address and withdrew after a disappointing subscription.
Hoy, who was chaired in ‘a beautiful Roman car’ during a blizzard, polled 72 per cent of the vote and was credited by his pollbook keeper with another 100 disputed votes and 315 unpolled supporters (the published pollbook lists 371), against 14 and 63 respectively for Penleaze. This left 289 electors unaccounted for out of the notional electorate of 1,411. Only 12 non-resident burgesses polled, ten for Hoy and two for Penleaze. Hoy, who refused to be drawn on politics even after the conclusion of the contest, attributed his success to ‘the mercantile and trading interest’, and a supporter hailed his victory as a triumph over the corporation.
At the 1830 general election the sitting Members, described by the local press as ‘too firmly fixed to fear an opponent’, offered again. Rumours that John Fleming of Stoneham, the county Member, would intervene came to nothing and the possibility of Stanton renewing his candidacy was not taken seriously.
Petitions for the abolition of slavery reached the Commons, 11, 12 Nov., 11 Dec. 1830, 28 Mar. 1831, and the Lords, 25 Nov. 1830, 15 Apr. 1831, and one from the women of the town was presented to the Commons, 28 Mar., and the Lords, 20 Apr. 1831.
On 5 Jan. 1831 the inaugural meeting of the pro-reform Patriotic Association was held at the Long Rooms, where the main topic of discussion was the need to curb ‘the torrent of corruption and iniquity so generally witnessed at a Southampton election’. (As if to illustrate the point, the proceedings were disrupted by drunken Tory hecklers.) It was determined that the Association would make no binding endorsement of a candidate, for although Williams had evidently renewed his interest, he did not command universal approval.
A reform dinner at the Long Rooms was addressed by the new Members, 26 May, and thanks were voted to them for their steady support for the reintroduced bill at a meeting held to urge the Lords to pass it, 21 Sept. 1831. The resulting petition reached the Upper House, 30 Sept.
The returns associated with the revised reform bill showed that Southampton contained 1,667 houses worth over £10 per annum and paid assessed taxes of £11,378. The boundary commissioners reported that it displayed ‘all the marks of a flourishing and wealthy place’ and, finding ample space for further development within the established boundaries, recommended no enlargement.
in the freemen and inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: 1018 in 1831
Estimated voters: rising from about 900 in 1820 to over 1,700 in 1831
Population: 13353 (1821); 19324 (1831)
