Among the boroughs, the City of London, the financial and commercial centre of the kingdom, was second only to neighbouring Westminster in the size of its electorate, which consisted of freemen (resident and non-resident) attached to the livery companies. They were predominantly smaller merchants, shopkeepers and artisans. Had the franchise been in the freemen at large the electorate would have been probably ten times greater; and a householder qualification would have quadrupled it.
At the mayoral election of 1819, when the Tory Alderman George Bridges, a wine merchant, defeated two liberal rivals, Waithman, sheriff Joseph Parkins and the demagogue Henry Hunt*, a liveryman, provoked uproar by proposing resolutions condemning the Liverpool ministry over the Peterloo massacre. The court of aldermen, led by Curtis, who carried a loyal address, 12 Oct., subsequently took legal proceedings against them, which were unsuccessfully resisted by common council and by Waithman and Wood as aldermen. They ended inconclusively in king’s bench in June 1820.
At their meeting, 24 May 1820, Waithman and his leading supporter, Samuel Favell of St. Mary Axe, secured inquiry into the orphans’ fund scandal by the general purposes committee.
Meanwhile, the general purposes committee’s report on the orphans’ fund duties had vindicated Curtis’s critics and recommended action to regulate collection and auditing.
By March 1826 Curtis and Bridges had made known their decisions to retire at the next dissolution. Wood sought re-election, and was joined in the field by Waithman, who adopted a purity of election stance and was supported by voluntary subscription, and by Alderman William Thompson, a wealthy iron merchant and sitting Member for Callington, who had given general but not slavish support to the Liverpool ministry and opposed Catholic relief. It was thought that Wilson, despite earlier reports to the contrary, would offer again, and Alderman William Venables, the incumbent lord mayor, a wholesale stationer, came forward as a cautious reformer and supporter of the liberalization of commerce. It was reported the following month that Ellice and the wealthy financier Alexander Baring, Member for Taunton, a conservative Whig, had turned down invitations to stand.
would have lost his election ... if 300 ministerialists had not voted for him upon the last day. He had polled all his votes and given up the matter, when this unexpected accession of strength saved him.
The Times, 4, 8, 12, 13, 18 May, 3, 5, 6, 10, 12-16, 20 June, 20 July 1826; Baring Jnls. i. 46-47.
At the mayoral election, 29 Sept. 1826, Favell and Hunt ranted for repeal of the corn laws. A common hall was held to petition, 19 Oct. 1826, when all four Members gave it their support, as they did when it reached the House, 19 Feb. 1827.
In common council, 16 Mar. 1830, Wood dealt with a motion for a reduction of public salaries and allowances in accordance with changes in the value of the currency by having it referred to a committee. In common hall, 5 Apr., Hunt proposed a string of resolutions linking distress with the need for ‘radical’ reform. Wood, whose ward of Cripplegate had petitioned for reform, 15 Mar., defended his parliamentary conduct and promised to support the resultant petition (as did the absent Ward by letter); but he argued that as reform was presently unattainable, tax remissions would be more pertinent. After criticism of the absence of all the Members but Ward from a division on the East Retford question, Hunt carried a motion binding Wood to propose in the Commons as soon as convenient the reduction of public salaries to 1797 levels and instructing the other Members to support it. Waithman, who had no time for doctrinaire advocacy of free trade principles, distanced himself from Hunt’s extreme demands, while Thompson urged a revision of taxes and paid lip service to salary reductions. When Wood presented the petition, 17 May, he and his colleagues endorsed it with varying degrees of enthusiasm.
According to the Whig Commons leader Lord Althorp, his political ally Charles Poulett Thomson, Member for Dover, a London merchant and parliamentary financial pundit, declined a ‘very respectably’ signed requisition to stand at the 1830 general election.
I have lost the opportunity of showing the world that there exists here a body (neither inconsiderable in number, nor wanting in influence) that is not to be carried away by the cry for reform, by the want of firmness of the chairman and deputy chairman of my committee ... No less than 40 of my former committee were actively engaged against me, the corporation had formed a committee weeks ago ‘to watch the bill’, as they said, but really to turn me out, and at the ward motes not a hand was raised against reform and nine-tenths had signed petitions. I nevertheless could have polled one third of the livery in my favour and this would have proved that the feeling was not universal. I had another reason for starting, because I believe if I had not, Thompson would have been thrown out and although he is for reform, he is adverse to the present government generally and if I had given way four Whigs would have been joined and would have turned him out.
Add. 40309, f. 243.
That day all four Members addressed the livery reform dinner, chaired by Grote and attended by Joseph Hume, Member for Middlesex, and John Cam Hobhouse, Member for Westminster.
The reform bill ‘watch’ committee remained in existence, and in common council, 29 June 1831, concerns were expressed over the reintroduced bill’s provisions concerning weekly tenants and, by Wood and Venables, City freeholders.
the last House of Commons partook of the nature of a Convention Parliament. The Members were not representatives in the ordinary sense of the word, for they were sent to the House pledged to votes and opinions as far as the question of parliamentary reform was concerned.
Ibid. 15, 17, 20, 22, 23 Sept. 1831; LJ, lxiii. 1011, 1019, 1024, 1034, 1035, 1037, 1039, 1046, 1060, 1062, 1063, 1068.
The mayoral election turned into a lengthy struggle between the court of aldermen and the livery, who at the third time of asking in November forced the court to swallow the re-election of the reformer Key.
The Boundary Act made no significant change to the constituency, in which the whole of the Inner and Middle Temples were included.
in the livery
London returned 4 Members to Parliament
Number of voters: 8369 in 1826
Estimated voters: over 12,000
Population: 124137 (1821); 122395 (1831)
