Gloucestershire, a mixed agricultural, pastoral and industrial county straddling the River Severn, was broadly divided into three areas running parallel from north-east to south-west. To the east lay the Cotswold hills, where sheep farming supplied the raw material for cloth manufacturing in the unfranchised town of Stroud and a cluster of smaller settlements, including Dursley, Minchinhampton, Nailsworth, Painswick, Rodborough, Stonehouse and Wotton-under-Edge. They were beginning to experience structural economic decline in this period, and attempts to introduce factory production and new machinery and impose wage cuts led to a series of industrial disputes. Between the Cotswolds and the Severn ran the Vales of Berkeley, Gloucester and Evesham, which were noted for their corn growing, livestock fattening, dairy farming and fruit orchards. On the west bank of the river was the Forest of Dean, where rich deposits of coal and iron ore were found; in the summer of 1831 rioting by the free miners, against the alleged usurpation of their rights by outsiders, was put down using military force. The Severn provided a natural outlet for the county’s agricultural and mineral produce and was ‘considered the second commercial river in England’. Cheltenham, which had grown rapidly since the 1780s into a fashionable spa resort, was the largest unfranchised town.
County politics had traditionally been dominated by the two largest landowners, the Whig earls of Berkeley, of Berkeley Castle, and the Tory dukes of Beaufort, of Badminton House. However, at a by-election in 1811 the electoral pact between the families, which had operated for a generation, was broken by the intervention of Sir Berkeley William Guise of Highnam Court, who championed the cause of the ‘independent’ freeholders. Thereafter, Guise was returned unopposed as the Whig representative with the 6th duke of Beaufort’s brother, Lord Edward Somerset, whose supporters included the 3rd Earl Bathurst of Oakley Park, the 1st Baron Redesdale of Batsford, Sir William Blathwayt of Dyrham and, by the end of the period, Sir Christopher Bethell Codrington† of Dodington. The Berkeley influence remained formidable, but Colonel William Fitzhardinge Berkeley†, the eldest illegitimate son of the 5th earl, who succeeded to the main family estates in 1810, was prevented by a House of Lords’ judgment the following year from assuming the title. Described as a ‘very dissipated ... man’ and an ‘arrant blackguard’, Berkeley set about building up his local power base in support of his claim to a peerage.
The customary county address of condolence and congratulation was voted in Gloucester, 22 Feb. 1820.
The cloth workers petitioned the Commons against the introduction of new machinery, 5 May 1820, 6 Mar. 1821, while their employers pressed for repeal of the wool tax, 16 May 1820, 19 Mar. 1821, 16 Feb., 25 Mar. 1824, and revision of the corn laws, 22, 25 Apr. 1825.
In late 1826 and 1827 the manufacturers of Chalford, Stroud and other textile centres petitioned Parliament for repeal of the corn laws, but these were countered by agriculturists’ petitions for the maintenance of protection.
There was an extensive petitioning campaign for the abolition of slavery between November 1830 and March 1831.
Early in 1831 the feeling in favour of parliamentary reform was ‘most unequivocally displayed’ in Gloucestershire. The inhabitants of Chipping Sodbury and Dursley petitioned the Commons for the ballot, 9, 26 Feb., a Cheltenham reform petition with over 1,000 signatures was presented that day and a ‘Central Association for the promotion of reform and purity of election’ was formed at Stroud. The Grey ministry’s bill, which proposed to leave the county’s existing borough representation intact and give one seat to Cheltenham, prompted numerous petitions of support, notably from Dursley, Stroud and other cloth manufacturing towns, which were forwarded to the Commons in March.
Within days of the division on the bill’s second reading, which Guise supported and Somerset opposed, 22 Mar. 1831, Hyett chaired a meeting of freeholders at Stroud, where a committee was formed to assist in returning Guise at the next general election and to seek a second reform candidate. Similar district committees were set up at Berkeley, Eastington and Tewkesbury. In early April a requisition was circulated pledging support for Guise and inviting Reynolds Moreton to stand with him: the names of 2,100 signatories were published in the local press and another 1,600 were reportedly sent in later. In accepting, Reynolds Moreton pledged support for ‘that great act of national justice, the want of which has plunged our country into its present state of distress’, and Guise signified that he too would offer at the dissolution. When Somerset helped to defeat the bill by supporting Gascoyne’s wrecking amendment, Nathaniel Partridge, chairman of the Stroud Central Association, wrote a public letter denouncing him as ‘utterly unfit to represent the free and independent electors of this ... county’. Guise, in a published address, trusted that ‘this great and opulent county will elect for its representatives men whose votes ... upon all great and important questions, shall not in future be rendered nugatory and inefficient’.
the non-arrival of sufficient returns ... especially of the Bristol return; the decisive ill-success of the Forest canvass, which has been denied; the unfavourable impression made upon Bristol by Mr. Hart Davis’s defeat, which, it was supposed, if events had not taken that turn, would have co-operated very powerfully with the Blue party. A respectable authority on that side has stated that their own forces were computed at 2,000, in opposition to 5,000, which left to the reform candidates the enormous majority of 3,000 ... Certain it is that the committees of the reform candidates could never find where lay the adversary’s strength. The towns, which are strongholds almost without an exception, went one way. Bristol had returned 880 freeholders; the Stroud district almost an equal number ... Success had been secured to the reformers by the timely, systematic and well-conducted operations commenced in anticipation of a dissolution, whilst their opponents, except producing a declaration, awaited that event before they took the field.
Beaufort was satisfied that his brother had ‘decided perfectly’, although it was ‘certainly a great mortification, after having had so much weight in the county for so many years’. The total expenditure by the reform committee in Gloucester was ‘about £3,000’.
On 6 Aug. 1831, while the reintroduced reform bill was in committee, Bucknall Estcourt, who had estates in Gloucestershire and Wiltshire, criticized the inadequate representation given to the western cloth-manufacturing districts. At the report stage, 13 Sept., ministers announced that one seat would be given to Stroud and Minchinhampton. Frederick Berkeley, irritated that a Whig deputation on this matter had earlier been rebuffed, observed to Hyett that Estcourt evidently thought ‘your radicals of Stroud are better fighting for their own particular representative than interfering in the county’: ‘no doubt he thinks that much is gained for his master, i.e. the Beaufort family ... that it secures them a county Member - and I believe him’.
By the Reform Act Gloucestershire was divided into East and West and the county’s overall representation increased from 10 to 15 seats. Guise and Reynolds Moreton were returned for East Gloucestershire in 1832, where they remained until Guise’s death in 1834 and Reynolds Moreton’s retirement later that year, but from 1841 it was a Conservative stronghold. In West Gloucestershire, Grantley Berkeley and Reynolds Moreton’s brother, Augustus, were returned ahead of Somerset in 1832, but thereafter the representation was usually divided. The Beaufort interest had limited success in the post-reform era, with Somerset representing Cirencester, 1834-7, and successive marquesses of Worcester the Western division, 1835-6, and the Eastern, 1846-54. Berkeley, on the other hand, who had already been awarded a barony by Whig ministers in 1831, could boast that four members of his family held Gloucestershire seats in 1841, when he was promoted to become Earl Fitzhardinge.
Estimated voters: about 7000
