New Romney was ‘an interesting, clean, and highly respectable ... town’, a mile inland from the west Kent coast, about ten miles east of Rye.
There was a challenge to his control in August 1818 when George Noakes, a Sandwich solicitor, applied to the court of session for the freedom on behalf of some 19 ‘persons in trade’ resident in New Romney. These claims, which were founded on a section of the old customal, were rejected, as they were when put to a common assembly meeting the following month. John Sawyer, a local coal merchant, thereupon brought a civil suit against the corporation ‘for the admission of persons legally entitled to their freedom’. The corporation allocated at least £1,000 towards the cost of fighting the action, which had terminated in their favour by March 1821.
In 1830 New Romney was drawn into the campaign to liberate the five oppressed Cinque Ports, which was inspired by the recent (temporary) success of the independent ratepayers of Rye in establishing their right to vote. On two occasions in early July a number of inhabitants, under the aegis of Samuel Miller, legal adviser to the Rye independents, unsuccessfully sought admission to the freedom as residents paying scot and lot, in accordance with the ancient charters of the Cinque Ports.
Freeholders and inhabitants of Romney petitioned the Lords for reform, 4 Feb., inhabitants petitioned the Commons likewise, 21 Feb., and, with inhabitants of Hastings, Hythe, Rye and Winchelsea, did do for the ballot, 26 Feb. 1831.
in the corporation
Estimated voters: less than 20
Population: 962 (1821); 978 (1831)
