Christchurch, a market town close to the Dorset border, lay at the confluence of the Rivers Avon and Stour, but by the nineteenth century its natural harbour was too shallow to accommodate any but the smallest craft. In 1832 the boundary commissioners recorded that ‘the town presents no symptoms of activity or industry. The houses are of a middling description. The appearance of the inhabitants, who are thinly scattered, gives few indications of prosperity’.
Rose was anxious to obtain leave from his diplomatic post at Berlin to attend the general election of 1820, but it was not granted in time. He may have been concerned at the possibility of an opposition, such as that which had been rumoured at the 1818 general election.
At the 1830 general election the Members were re-elected unopposed, after which the burgesses, with whom they had ritually processed to the town hall, were given a ‘sumptuous dinner’.
Christchurch had been spared from being placed in the disfranchisement schedules of the first reform bill on account of the population of its parish, which stood at 4,644 in 1821, but as the returning officer readily acknowledged, the parish limits greatly exceeded those of the borough. (The borough comprised just one of the parish’s ten tithings.) It was cited by Lord John Russell as a notable example of the inequality of tax assessments, 24 June 1831, and the boundary commissioners estimated that only 80 houses would qualify for the new £10 householder franchise, but reckoned that under a ‘fair and equitable assessment’ of the whole parish, the number of qualifying houses would ‘exceed 300’. ‘Should the legislature deem it proper to extend the suffrage to the parish at large’, they added, ‘there is no place in the kingdom where ... the measure will be attended with more beneficial effects than at Christchurch’.
The reformers were contemplating their candidate for the post-reform election as early as November 1831, when they drafted a requisition to Sir Francis Charles Knowles of Lovel Hill, who had challenged the patron of Shaftesbury at the elections of 1830 and 1831.
in the corporation
Qualified voters: 36 in 1831
Population: 1510 (1821); 1599 (1831)
