Ashburton, a stannery and market town situated on the south-eastern border of Dartmoor, in a ‘fertile valley’ suited to livestock farming, had prospered in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as a centre of woollen cloth manufacturing and as ‘a great thoroughfare’ for traffic between Plymouth and London. The production of a coarse cloth known as long ells continued to be the town’s ‘staple trade’, employing ‘a great many hands’, but this had reached its peak by the 1820s and depended heavily on access through the East India Company to the Chinese market. There was only residual tin and copper mining in the vicinity. A sizeable population of minor gentry, clergymen and professionals resided in the town.
The borough boundary was ‘imperfectly known’ but encompassed the whole of the town and a considerable area of the surrounding parish; beyond this, certain ‘scattered’ properties also conferred a right of voting, while others in intermediate locations ‘afforded no qualification’. The franchise was in ‘freeholders having lands and tenements holden of the borough’, irrespective of their value, and the representation was controlled by the joint lords of the manor, Robert Trefusis, 18th Baron Clinton, and Sir Lawrence Palk of Haldon, who appointed the portreeve, the returning officer for parliamentary elections.
In November 1820, following the abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties against Queen Caroline, the portreeve convened a public meeting at St. Lawrence’s chapel where a congratulatory address to the queen was ‘carried without a dissentient voice’. Objections were raised to a proposed illumination, ‘on the ground of the danger accompanying it’, but an alternative celebration was arranged involving a procession of the trades, fireworks, and a dinner and ball. The inhabitants, ‘with very few exceptions, displayed their feelings in the strongest manner’, and six hogsheads of beer and cider and 1,500 loaves of bread were distributed. Another meeting was held to organize a loyal address to the king, 24 Jan. 1821, but it was claimed that only 13 supported this whereas an amendment calling for inquiry into economic distress and the burden of taxation was ‘carried by a great majority’.
Several anti-slavery petitions from the portreeve and inhabitants, and from Protestant Dissenters, were sent to Parliament in November 1830.
During the election Ashburton was ‘one continued scene of bustle and excitement’, with ‘visitors from all the neighbouring towns and parishes ... constantly pouring in to witness the proceedings’. Palk was nominated by the Rev. S. White and Colonel Drake, who denounced the reform bill as ‘far too sweeping’ and emphasized the probable loss of one of the borough’s seats. Poyntz was sponsored by John Henry Seale of Dartmouth and Henry Gervis junior, and Torrens was introduced by Andrew Tucker and the attorney Benjamin Parham. Palk, who was surrounded by a phalanx of clergymen, ‘admitted some reform to be necessary’. Poyntz confirmed his support for the bill ‘in all its essentials’ and described himself as ‘a steady and tried friend of retrenchment’. Torrens maintained that he was standing solely in order to give the electors an opportunity of returning a representative committed to the principle of reform. He repeated his offer to withdraw if Palk would pledge support for the bill, but this was declined. The show of hands was called for Poyntz and Torrens, and Palk demanded a poll, which commenced at 4 o’clock. Only two split votes for Poyntz and Torrens had been cast by the end of the day. The long period that had elapsed since the last contest and doubts as to the exact nature of the franchise meant that the election became a protracted ‘scrutiny’, in which voters were required to produce legal proof of their entitlement and every case was ‘minutely inquired into’. Palk brought in two barristers and six attorneys to represent him, while Poyntz and Torrens relied mainly on the legal ingenuity of their respective advocates, Robert and Andrew Tucker. The crucial issue surrounded the claim made by Palk’s lawyers that voters had to show they were freeholders paying borough rent (which was collected by Palk’s steward, Robert Abraham); this was successfully countered by Robert Tucker, who established that it was sufficient for them to have been admitted as free tenants in the borough court and to have done suit and service there. Poyntz was always ‘decidedly secure’ at the head of the poll. On the second day Palk’s supporters ‘voted plumpers’ and at the close he led Torrens by 20 votes to 18. However, his cause had suffered another setback with Gervis’s rejection of a ‘broomstick’ voter who had only recently obtained his title deed, a decision that ‘inspired the liberals with a sure presage of success’. From the third day onwards Palk’s friends split their votes with Poyntz, thereby helping to preserve the good-natured atmosphere of the contest, although some suspected this of being a ‘manoeuvre ... for the purpose of neutralizing Poyntz’s advocate’. Torrens overtook Palk by four votes on the third day, increased his lead to six on the fourth and held his advantage on the fifth, when ‘both parties put forth their utmost strength’. Towards the end of that day ‘another of the baronet’s broomsticks was rejected’, and only one more vote was polled afterwards. Torrens was sufficiently unsure of his position to write to lord chancellor Brougham that ‘the Tories continue a desperate combat. Driven from the county they chance every move to retain Ashburton’; he asked for the treasury to ‘reserve a seat for me should I fail here’. However, the next morning Robert Palk announced his brother’s retirement. Poyntz and Torrens were declared elected and seated together in a chariot, which was ‘drawn in triumph through every street ... accompanied by music and banners and an immense and delighted procession, in which nearly all the respectable inhabitants ... participated’. It was claimed that ‘many bona fide voters remained unpolled’. According to the Tory Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, ‘not a single friend’ of Poyntz’s had done other than split with Torrens, and on the fourth and fifth days Poyntz had released those who had pledged plumpers for him and encouraged them to split with Torrens so as to ensure the latter’s success. Robert Tucker, in a public letter, unconvincingly rejected the assertion that a coalition had existed between the Poyntz and Torrens camps. Tory complaints were also directed against Gervis, who was a surgeon and apothecary and yet had taken no legal advice when making decisions about the eligibility of voters.
In July 1831 a memorial signed by 60 individuals was sent to the home secretary, Lord Melbourne, stating the case for removing Ashburton from schedule B of the reintroduced reform bill. It was argued that the 1821 census had been ‘most negligently taken’, omitting 86 houses, and that the real population at that time ‘exceeded 4,000’. Additionally, it was claimed that the borough included the manor of Halshanger, which extended into the adjoining rural parish of Ilsington. Moreover, Ashburton’s importance was ‘not confined to the mere limits of the borough’, as the woollen manufacturers employed ‘more than 1,000 weavers and ... labourers’ in other parishes.
The commissioners recommended that the borough limits be extended to cover the whole parish, but Ashburton was still one of the smallest English boroughs in the reformed electoral system, with only 198 registered electors in 1832, of whom 146 were householders and 52 freeholders.
in burgage holders
Number of voters: 101 in 1831
Population: 3403 (1821); 3467 (1831)
