Queenborough was a decayed market town of 270 acres on the Isle of Sheppey, off the north Kent coast. Its already much reduced defensive role was further undermined in this period by the rise of neighbouring Sheerness, where the royal dockyard was greatly expanded. The population was almost entirely dependent on local fisheries, but trade was not prosperous and about a quarter of the 200 houses in the town were unoccupied.
Although in the late eighteenth century the admiralty and the ordnance had each nominated one Member, this arrangement had apparently changed before the start of this period.
is somewhat of a sore subject with me. One of the Members at least used to be from the admiralty, but in consequence of Lord Mulgrave’s† removal from that office to the ordnance [in May 1810], and carrying along with him several of his friends who had been with him at the admiralty, the admiralty seat was transferred by a coup de main to the ordnance at the next general election.
NAS GD51/2/628.
The duke of Wellington, as master-general, therefore had the paramount influence in the borough, although he realized that he had to indulge Greet’s demands, notably by promising his brother a better command in the revenue service, if he was to continue to ally with the ordnance.
In mid-1820 there began a rebellion by the poor burgesses that was to continue for much of the decade. It was caused by the combination of four grievances.
When Villiers succeeded his brother as 3rd earl of Clarendon in March 1824, Lord William Frederick Cavendish Bentinck, a retired soldier, was offered the seat by Wellington and was returned unopposed, despite fears about the erosion of the ordnance interest.
Capel presented a petition from the Protestant Dissenters in favour of repealing the Test Acts, 6 June 1827; and one from the mayor, jurats, bailiffs, free burgesses and inhabitants against Catholic emancipation was presented (probably by Sir Edward Knatchbull, the county Member), 18 Mar. 1829. The corporation objected to a bill for the improvement of the pier at Sheerness. Their petition, agreed at an assembly, 30 Mar. 1828, was not forwarded to Parliament, but another, approved on 27 Apr. 1829, was brought up by Capel the following day. The clergy, gentry and other inhabitants of the Isle of Sheppey had petitioned against slavery, 16 Mar. 1824, and a similar petition from Queenborough was presented, 10 Nov. 1830.
Capel stood again as an independent at the general election of 1830. Merewether was requested to offer with him, but he declined, while, following a supposedly successful canvass, Sir Colquhoun Grant, an army officer, also withdrew at the prospect of an expensive contest. Capel was then joined by Thomas Gladstone*, the son of the Liverpool West India merchant, John Gladstone*, who was introduced by Merewether. Against them were William Holmes*, the treasurer of the ordnance and government whip, and Admiral Sir Philip Durham†, who were unpopular in the town, but threatened to spend thousands of pounds to secure their return.
The Unitarian minister William Shepherd of Gatacre, who had presumably been wrongly informed that Durham had lost, congratulated Henry Brougham*, 15 Aug. 1830, on ‘the Lascar’s defeat at Queenborough’.
After the death of Greet, the select body had conceded several of the burgesses’ demands and the oyster beds were restocked, but peace within the town did not last long. Partly because of worsened economic conditions and partly in retribution for their having again supported anti-government candidates, the select body attempted to reduce the fisherman’s remuneration at a court leet, 25 Oct. 1830, but a group of freemen forcibly occupied the hall until the authorities agreed to pay an extra shilling per stint of oysters. However, an action was brought against the rioters in king’s bench and the fishermen continued to suffer great distress. Though Capel assisted them with his customary open-handedness, Gladstone was much less willing to commit himself to such an expense. Both attempted to mediate between the two parties and to revitalize the fishing trade, but without success.
Capel and John Gladstone quarrelled over the financial arrangements they had made to cover the costs of the 1830 election, and the rumour that Capel had contributed £2,000 of his £5,000 expenses to buy his colleague’s seat was an added embarrassment. Gladstone’s equivocal support of the freemen, his vote for the second reading of the reform bill, 22 Mar. 1831, and deteriorating relations with his election agents and Capel, who opposed reform, were enough to forfeit his chances of a second return. By late March, an indication had already been made to Grant that he would be elected if he pledged to oppose reform, while the select body had approached William Leader Maberly*, the surveyor-general of the ordnance, who would be expected to vote for the borough’s disfranchisement.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 266 in 1830
Estimated voters: rising to about 300 in 1831
Population: 881 (1821); 786 (1831)
