Oxfordshire was a fertile agricultural county, with centres of manufacture at Bicester (leather slippers), Henley (silk) and Witney (blankets).
Ashhurst joined Macclesfield, Marlborough, Blandford, Harcourt and Abingdon in signing the requisition for a county meeting to vote a loyal address to the regent in the aftermath of Peterloo. He attended it, 12 Nov. 1819, but Fane, who had been represented on the requisition by his eldest son and namesake, was an absentee. Macclesfield moved and Marlborough seconded the address, which was unanimously carried after the Rev. Vaughan Thomas, vicar of Yarnton, had been persuaded to withdraw a largely incomprehensible amendment asserting the right of the freeholders to petition for redress of grievances.
The abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties against Queen Caroline was widely celebrated in the county, and at Ewelme a mob smashed the windows of the rectory, where the bishop of Llandaff, who was himself stoned, had arrived from the Lords.
There was a petitioning campaign for relief from agricultural distress in 1821, when Ashhurst presented petitions from Burford, 19 Feb., and Chipping Norton and Henley, 1 Mar., and petitions from Burford and Chipping Norton reached the Lords, 12 Mar.
On Fane’s death, 8 Feb. 1824, the first candidate in the field was George Dashwood, son and heir of Sir Henry Watkin Dashwood of Kirtlington Park, the impoverished 3rd baronet, formerly Member for Woodstock on the Marlborough interest, whose father had represented the county. When Fane’s son came forward, however, Dashwood withdrew, disclaiming any wish to disturb the peace or to incur financial problems. At the county meeting which nominated Fane, 25 Feb., one of Dashwood’s clerical backers explained that he had responded to an unsolicited invitation to stand and that he did not consider his pretensions to be inferior to Fane’s. The latter was formally elected, 8 Mar., when he promised to follow the same independent line as his father.
At the general election of 1826 they came forward again, but the first contest for 72 years was presaged when George Frederick Stratton, a staunch protectionist and anti-Catholic, secretary of the Agricultural Society and major commandant of the Bloxham yeoman cavalry, offered, ostensibly in response to a numerously signed requisition. Stratton, who had nominated Ashhurst in 1820, had once owned an estate at Great Tew, bought by his nabob father; but a disastrous experiment in convertible husbandry under the aegis of the Scot John Claudius Loudon had forced him to sell up in 1815.
I consider my cause to be the cause of the yeomanry of the county. I consider that the northern part of the county is not represented, as far as communication between its Members and their constituents is concerned; and the cause of complaint is that they never see their Members.
He gave assurances of his hostility to Catholic claims and determination to uphold the agricultural interest. Following some desultory discussion Edward Simeon nominated and Weyland seconded Dashwood, who ‘declined a contest’. Subsequently they and 73 of Ashhurst’s other leading supporters, including Blandford, issued a declaration pressing him to change his mind and promising financial support through a public subscription. On 14 June Smith told Peel:
The county election is to take place on ... [the 16th]. All those of the better sort are indignant at the impudence and bad faith of Mr. Stratton. Preparations are making for a poll ... It is hoped that many of those who signed the requisition will not follow it up with their votes, when they see the unanimity of the principal persons in the county in favour of Mr. Ashhurst.
Oxford University and City Herald, 17 June 1826; Add. 40387, f. 146.
On the day of election Ashhurst announced his intention of standing. Two freeholders demanded that Stratton should swear the requisite qualification oath, which he did with a bad grace, insisting that his rivals should do likewise. Stratton led after the first day’s polling and was still ahead at the end of the second, a Saturday. Ashhurst, who was in second place, remained confident; and on the resumption of polling on the Monday there was a surge of support for him and Fane, which relegated Stratton to third and forced him to retire, complaining of coalition and the use of intimidation and undue influence. Fane’s second place was ascribed partly to mismanagement and partly to the anxiety of the respectables to ensure Ashhurst’s success.
Ashhurst and Fane responded to the Oxfordshire petitioning campaign against further interference with the corn laws in 1827 by voting against the corn bill, 2 Apr.
In mid-June 1830, when the king’s final illness heightened expectations of a dissolution, it was announced in the Oxfordshire press that Abingdon’s eldest son Lord Norreys, who had come of age the previous year, would stand at the next general election. Ashhurst immediately announced his retirement for domestic reasons, but Fane stood his ground. After the king’s death there were mutterings in the press about an attempt to revive aristocratic nomination, and Dashwood, who had succeeded his father in 1828, came forward. There was little to distinguish his written political professions from those of Norreys: both promised to act independently and to safeguard the agricultural interest, though Norreys also claimed to favour ‘all practical retrenchment’; while Dashwood, called on to be more specific, gave an assurance that ‘my attachment to our invaluable constitution is firm, and not to be shaken’. It was reported that Stratton, who soon afterwards went to America, where he died in penury, had declined an invitation to stand.
Oxfordshire petitioning for the abolition of slavery was resumed in the new Parliament.
held forth to a working man, possibly a forty shilling freeholder, on the established text, reform was revolution. To corroborate my doctrine I said, ‘Why, look at the revolutions in foreign countries’, meaning of course France and Belgium. The man looked hard at me and said these very words: ‘Damn all foreign countries: what has old England to do with foreign countries?’
Harcourt, who argued that Canning, whom he had followed in the 1820s, would have supported the reform bill, and Weyland denied any formal coalition, while admitting that some of the voluntary reform committees in the localities, which organized the free transport of voters to Oxford, may well have canvassed for them jointly. The outcome was never in doubt and Norreys gave up after three days, when he was almost 373 behind Weyland and 466 behind Harcourt in a poll of 2,934.
On a rumour in late May 1831 that Harcourt was soon to be made a peer Blandford announced that he would stand as a reformer, but the story was immediately discounted by Harcourt himself.
Number of voters: 2934 in 1831
Estimated voters: about 3,500
