Carlow had a considerable trade in grain along the River Barrow to Waterford and the River Slaney to Wexford and possessed ‘habitations of the peasantry’ which were ‘of a far better description than in many other parts of the country’.
At the 1820 general election Bruen and Burgh offered again as supporters of the Liverpool ministry. Rumours that ‘one or two new candidates’ would start on the independent interest came to nothing and they were returned unopposed. During their chairing they threw ‘a great quantity of silver amongst the mob’.
Attempts to establish a county Brunswick Club during 1828 were unsuccessful, the sheriff refusing permission for meetings, and although an inaugural meeting was eventually held in January 1829, there were no prominent individuals present and ‘the great bulk of the meeting was composed of some companies of yeomanry’. On 19 Jan. a county meeting was chaired by Walter Blackney of Ballyellin and Michael Finn, secretary of the local Catholic Association, and attended by Dr. James Doyle of Broganza House, the prominent Catholic bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, at which resolutions were passed in support of the Association and its collection of the Catholic rent, condemning the recall of Lord Anglesey, the Irish viceroy, and urging ‘an immediate registry of every independent freehold’.
Shortly before the 1830 dissolution Rochfort’s eldest son Horace William Noel Rochfort, who was just of age, approached the Whig Lord Milton*, son of the 2nd Earl Fitzwilliam and a friend of his maternal uncle Sir Robert Heron*, to beg him ‘to obtain from Lord Duncannon a permission for me to canvass his tenantry’, explaining:
There is a strong spirit of independence in this county. It would be a pity to shackle them again with Members who do not represent them and who only now and then appear in Parliament to vote for ministers ... I have no weight of family property to secure me, and I depend solely on free and conscientious suffrages. There are some tenants also of Earl Fitzwilliam’s residing on the border of the county; they would certainly vote for me if ... such was your Lordship’s wish.
Fitzwilliam mss, Rochfort to Milton, 7 June 1830.
Heron, who until recently had ‘had no confidence’ in his nephew’s politics, assured Milton that he would not have asked for assistance had he not ascertained that Rochfort ‘generally concurred with you’ and had ‘declared himself as perfectly agreeing with me’. Rochfort also promised Milton that ‘if returned’ he would ‘follow a conscientious and liberal line of politics’, adding, ‘my family has been settled in the county for upwards of two hundred years and during that time has been almost constantly resident there. My grandfather [John Staunton Rochfort, Irish Member for Coleraine, 1786-7, and Fore, 1798-1800] lost his election by only fourteen votes in the year 1783’.
In the House Bruen opposed the Grey ministry’s reform bill, in support of which he brought up a Borris petition, 28 Mar. 1831.
In the House, 11 Oct. 1831, Blackney recounted how under the motto ‘the king, the bill, and the people’, some ‘thirty thousand’ had ‘assembled on the first day of the election, free from the slightest tendency to riot or outrage, and had the poll proceeded, we should have had on the polling day double that number of patriots to witness the triumph of the reformers’. Sheil later dubbed Dr. Doyle the ‘nominator’, who had turned Doyle and Blackney into Members ‘with a single touch of his magic crosier’:
Who could have conjectured that ... a professor of dogmatic divinity in the Sacerdotal College of Carlow should ... accomplish that which not a peer in the empire could have effected! Where is the man, except [the] ... bishop of Leighlin and Kildare, who could return two county Members? Even the great Daniel could not achieve so much in a single Irish county ... These gentlemen were not only placed in Parliament by Dr. Doyle, but Mr. Kavanagh and Mr. Bruen, the heads of the old Protestant aristocracy, did not even venture to enter the lists against them.
R. Sheil, Sketches, Legal and Political ed. M. Savage, ii. 348, 349.
Both Members supported reform and campaigned for the disarming of the Irish yeomanry (a drunken party of whom Doyle alleged had fired at him during his canvass, 9 Sept.), for which petitions reached the Commons, 31 Aug., 6 Sept.
the magistrates want a hint in that county, and Bruen more than any of them. Duncannon’s appointment should be made out, and be put in immediate communication with the chancellor. These gentlemen should feel they have a master in Ireland. I believe Carlow and Wexford, but for the Protestants, to be well disposed.
PRO NI, Anglesey mss D619/31D/59.
The ensuing appointment of Duncannon, a member of the government, as the first lord lieutenant of Carlow was welcomed by the Members and the Catholic press, who were delighted that Bruen and his ‘high functionaries will be virtually superceded in their office’ and hoped that a ‘purge’ of the commission would remove the ‘burnings and feuds, to which this fertile district has been so long subject’.
A county meeting in support of reform was announced for 15 Nov. 1831.
Number of voters: 371 in 1830
Registered freeholders: 1,510 in 1829; 530 in 1830 530 in 1830
