Wigan was a rapidly expanding manufacturing town 18 miles west-north-west of Manchester: its population, which included a large Irish Catholic element, almost doubled between 1801 and 1831. Its main industries, which had been stimulated by local improvements in canal transport, notably the Douglas navigation (1732-42) and the Leeds-Liverpool canal (1770-7), were coal mining and metal and textile manufacture.
Since 1802, when a coup by the corporation had overthrown the controlling aristocratic Bradford and Portland interests, the seats had been occupied by Sir Robert Holt Leigh of nearby Hindley and John Hodson, a wealthy Wigan textile manufacturer, who had no children but a number of nephews. Both retired at the dissolution of 1820, when Hodson transferred his interest to his nephew James Alexander Hodson of Upholland. In Leigh’s room there came forward Lord Lindsay, the eldest son of the 6th earl of Balcarres, a Scottish representative peer, who had long ago sold his Fifeshire property and settled near Wigan at Haigh, the former Bradshaigh estate, which had come to him by marriage. Haigh was rich in fine cannel and coal, which Balcarres had fully exploited: he was a leading local employer in his mines and their associated ironworks. He and his son had staked a future claim to a seat in 1806, but since then had bided their time, while cultivating good relations with Leigh, the Hodsons and the corporation. The third candidate was Lord Newport, the son of the 1st earl of Bradford, who was seeking to re-establish the family interest and whose brother, the Rev. George Bridgeman, was still, as rector of Wigan since 1799, lord of the manor.
At the court leet of 30 Sept. 1820 44 jury burgesses, of whom all but two were Wigan residents, were admitted.
Protestant Dissenters of Wigan petitioned heavily for repeal of the Test Acts, which Lindsay opposed and on which the ailing Hodson abstained.
It was known by then that Hodson was inclined to retire at the next dissolution. Lindsay assured Balcarres that he was ‘on the best terms’ with the unpredictable Kearsley, while he believed that ‘you are entirely so, with Sir Robert Leigh; still, there is no saying what may happen’. In view of Hodson’s stated wish to retire, Balcarres evidently asked him on the eve of the 1830 general election ‘if there were any of his family coming forward’, whom he felt obliged to support, ‘particularly’ naming Kearsley and one of Hodson’s Cardwell cousins. According to Balcarres, Hodson ruled out any of his relatives, including Kearsley (who supposedly confirmed this himself), and agreed to stand again. On 18 June 1830, six weeks before the election, James Lindsay engineered a ‘convention’ between Balcarres and the 1st Baron Skelmersdale of Lathom, near Ormskirk, whereby in the event of Hodson’s retirement the Lindsays would give their interest to his son Richard Bootle Wilbraham† on a basis of mutual support. Lindsay told Skelmersdale that ‘it might be two or three years before Hodson might place him there, but that eventually he might calculate on it’.
Hardcastle and Potter petitioned against the return, 3 Nov. 1830. That day Hodson, who had been ill since the election, told Balcarres that he intended to retire. He made no mention of a replacement, but Balcarres alleged that Kearsley, who was subsequently allowed by the Commons to defend the return in Hodson’s room, had already canvassed. Bootle Wilbraham apparently issued an address, but it was thought that he had ‘little chance of succeeding’.
I much fear the battle ... has not been fought without considerable loss. I cannot tell what the expense of it will be, but it lasted five days, which ... must cost us many hundreds of pounds ... I have let Kearsley off lightly, by shaking hands with him without explanation, for which he is obliged to me and avows eternal friendship, not one syllable of which I believe further than his interest goes. I think this question now settled will enable you ... to keep the borough without further interrogation.
Crawford mss 25/1/449, 450, 452; 40/7/14; CJ, lxxxvi. 247-8, 273-4.
Kearsley came forward for the vacancy and on 1 Mar. 1831, when the details of the Grey ministry’s reform bill were disclosed in the Commons, easily defeated a token challenge in the name of the absent Hardcastle. He was reported to have ‘professed his intentions’ of opposing renewal of the East India Company’s charter, but the large hostile crowd which witnessed the proceedings was not appeased, and he was slightly injured by a stone thrown by a woman as he left the hustings.
Wigan Dissenters sent several petitions to the 1830 Parliament for the abolition of slavery.
At the dissolution following the defeat of the bill, when the reform tide ran very strongly in Wigan, Lindsay abandoned the borough to stand for Fifeshire. Bootle Wilbraham came forward in his place, claiming to be a friend of moderate reform but an opponent of the bill, while Thicknesse and Potter offered as its uncompromising supporters. Kearsley sought re-election, but, so fierce was the popular hostility towards him that he dared not appear on the hustings and refused to do so even when summoned by a deputation.
Roger Holt Leigh died of chest inflammation 12 days after being beaten and his brother, who had himself been nearly killed, blamed his death at least partly on that episode.
Wigan, which in 1831 was reckoned to contain 568 £10 houses, was unchanged by the Boundary Act.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 78 in 1820
Estimated voters: about 120
Population: 17716 (1821); 20774 (1831)
