Totnes, a market town situated on the western bank of the navigable River Dart, midway between Plymouth and Exeter, lay at the heart of a ‘rich agricultural district’ known as the South Hams. It consisted principally of ‘one good street nearly three-quarters of a mile in length’, which led to the river where a bridge, rebuilt in 1828, connected the town to the ‘handsome eastern suburb’ of Bridgetown, in the neighbouring parish of Berry Pomeroy. Some of the inhabitants were employed in agriculture and fishing, but with the virtual disappearance of woollen cloth manufacturing the town’s prosperity depended on its role as a trading centre for the surrounding area, importing coal, culm and timber, and exporting corn, cider and other agricultural produce. The monthly cattle market was ‘one of the finest ... in the West of England’. Its favourable location made Totnes ‘one of the most eligible places for business and residence in the kingdom’ and there was a substantial ‘genteel ... population’.
The borough comprised the town and the ‘most populous portion’ of the parish of Totnes. Local power was exercised by the corporation, which consisted of a mayor, the returning officer for parliamentary elections, 13 other aldermen and an indefinite number of freemen, from whom the aldermen were elected by the aldermen and resident freemen; all held their offices for life. The franchise was vested in the freemen, who were created by the aldermen ‘from such persons as they think proper’ and a majority of whom were non-resident. Control of the corporation was exploited to ‘forward the interests’ of the Adams family of Bowden House who, with their relatives the Bentalls and Marshalls, supplied six of the aldermen in 1825. It was reported in 1834 that 24 freemen were connected ‘by blood or marriage’ with the Adams’ and another 12 were similarly related amongst themselves or with the aldermen. This dominant family network was able to return one Member throughout this period. A radical newspaper declared in 1830 that Totnes was ‘as corrupt a borough as the villainy of the borough system presents’ and alleged that the corporators and their relatives were being ‘provided for at the public expense’. William Dacres Adams, for instance, was a commissioner of woods and forests, while the physician Richard Marshall was barrack master at Chatham and his son a clerk in the treasury. Thomas Peregrine Courtenay, Adams’s brother-in-law, who was returned for the borough from 1811, used his long tenure as secretary to the India board to obtain employment with the East India Company for the sons of his supporters. After the death of the duchess of Bolton in 1809, control of the rival Powlett family interest, which had operated throughout the eighteenth century, was left in a confused state. The duchess’s property passed to her maternal grandson William Frederick Vane, second son of William Henry Vane, 3rd earl of Darlington, the Whig boroughmonger and former Member for Totnes. Vane assumed the surname Powlett on coming of age in 1813, but he was returned for County Durham in 1815 on his father’s interest. For reasons that are unclear, the management of the Powlett interest was left in the hands of the steward, the attorney George Farwell, who seems to have followed his own political line. Farwell had an independent power base, as he was the town clerk and an alderman, his uncle and brother became aldermen, he was connected by marriage to Richard Marshall and his family were in partnership with the Bentalls in the Totnes Bank. There was also an ‘independent party’, led by the recently elected alderman William Doidge Taunton and supported by some of the resident freemen, who were anxious to ‘prevent the borough and its public rights from becoming the property of two or three families, to their own exclusion’. Totnes politics were determined by the shifting alliances between these three groups. In 1820 Courtenay was returned unopposed with John Bent, a supporter of Lord Liverpool’s ministry who was related by marriage to the Farwells.
The inhabitants sent a ‘numerously and respectably signed’ address of support to Queen Caroline in October 1820, and the following month the news of the withdrawal of the bill of pains and penalties was marked by a ‘general illumination’ in which only the corporation declined to participate. It appears that the mayor summoned ‘above 100 mob constables’, but so few responded to his call that the aldermen were ‘compelled to turn mob constables themselves’ and patrolled the streets all night. Nevertheless, ‘the windows of the mayor’s house, with a few others, were shattered’. A loyal address to the king was organized, but it was claimed that this only received 68 signatures from ‘the body corporate and its hangers on, and government dependents’.
the Farwells see with regret the necessity of substituting your lordship for Mr. J. Bent, and that his restoration at a future election is now their chief object, as the majority of their newly chosen freemen are his personal connections and friends. In this plan they may possibly succeed, but most certainly not without the sacrifice of your lordship to gratify Mr. J. Bent’s ambition, as they well know that they have not the remotest chance of returning him conjointly with you, although they may perhaps be able to turn out Mr. Courtenay.
Add. 43507, ff. 34-50; PP (1831-2), xxxvi. 592-3; Alfred, 27 Sept. 1825; Trewman’s Exeter Flying Post, 15 June 1826.
Prior to the dissolution in June 1826 a canvass for Barnard revealed that of the 63 freemen eligible to vote, 39 (including four of the requisitionists of 1822) supported him, 23 were hostile or doubtful and one would not attend the election. On the hustings, William Dacres Adams and the recorder, Walter Prideaux, introduced Courtenay, while Christopher Farwell and Prideaux sponsored Barnard. Baldwin, whose published address had emphasized his opposition to Catholic relief, was nominated by Taunton, who expressed his determination to ‘free the town from [its] degrading and contemptible thraldom’, and seconded by the Rev. John Taylor, who professed no uncharitable feelings towards ‘that party with which I have co-operated on former occasions’. Courtenay maintained that he was ‘as independent as any man’ and did not regard himself as ‘the representative of any party of the electors but of the whole body’. Barnard dwelt at length on the requisition he had received from ‘parties now supporting another interest’, which prompted an explanation from Taunton, and declared that he was ‘no adventurer ... or one who comes amongst you to create a division of parties’. Baldwin said that he too was ‘no adventurer (looking steadfastly to Lord Barnard)’ and was ‘exercising the rights of an Englishman in appearing before you’. After a show of hands, a poll was conducted and Courtenay and Barnard were declared elected; Baldwin pledged himself to ‘appear before them at any future election’. Some dissatisfaction was later expressed that Totnes had returned two supporters of Catholic relief.
The Unitarians petitioned the Commons for repeal of the Test Acts, 22 Feb. 1828.
On 30 Aug. 1830 a reform dinner was held at Totnes to celebrate Lord Ebrington’s victory in the county. The mayor, William Bentall, ‘endeavoured to check the exuberance of joy’ by arresting two boys for letting off firecrackers, and the inhabitants responded by breaking his windows.
Baldwin reiterated the arguments contained in the memorial against the borough’s inclusion in schedule B of the reintroduced reform bill, 2 Aug. 1831, and he was supported by Courtenay, who protested at the unjust treatment of the freemen and warned that a £10 household franchise would make Totnes ‘more susceptible of bribery than ... at present’. However, Lord John Russell saw no ground for removing Totnes from the schedule. The inhabitants petitioned the Lords for the bill’s speedy passage, 30 Sept., declaring that it ‘alone [would] restore the constitution to its true and legitimate principles, promote the general prosperity and avert the calamitous consequences of a national revolution’.
The boundary commissioners recommended that the borough limits be extended to cover the whole of the parish and to include the manor of Bridgetown, where many houses and warehouses had recently been built. Nevertheless, Totnes was one of the smallest two Member boroughs in the reformed electoral system, having only 217 registered electors in 1832, of whom 175 were householders and 42 freemen.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 78 in 1831
Estimated voters: 94 in 1831
Population: 3015 (1821); 3308 (1831)
