Tavistock, situated in the Tavey valley 15 miles north of Plymouth, was one of the principal market towns of Devon. It was not entirely agricultural: it had an old tradition of coarse woollen manufacture and was located at the centre of the west Devon copper, tin and manganese mining district, though all these industries were in decline in this period. It was connected by a canal, opened in 1817, to the River Tamar and Plymouth.
I see no danger to the duke’s political interest from parting with the control of houses that confer no votes, as any lands or gardens that can be objects to connect with freeholds may be retained. The objections to leases for lives on farms do not apply to property in a town and I can see no danger of any persons getting influence in getting popularity as we find universally that the middle man exacts rents too high to make them objects of regard.
J.J. Alexander, ‘Tavistock’, Trans. Devon Assoc. xliii (1911), 378-80; Denham, 23.
While Bedford’s electoral control was in practice impregnable, it and his pervasive influence were not without their local critics. The chief among these, and the bane of the life of the alarmist Wilson, was John Rundle†, a partner in the Tavistock Bank, who had additional interests in his large family’s iron founding and timber businesses. His politics were distinctly radical. His daughter, the authoress Elizabeth Charles, recalled:
The bank ... was a focus and centre of the neighbourhood. Men of all classes came to hear what he thought of all matters political and social. He was liberal to the core ... With him politics meant public spirit in the largest sense; reform, radical reform, not destroying except as the seed destroys the husk, uprooting nothing but weeds, to give room for all good things to live and grow.
Denham, 21-22; Hicks, 166; Alexander, Trans. Devon Assoc. xliii. 402; Elizabeth Charles, Our Seven Homes, 6-7, 39-41, 44-45, 49, 54, 61-64, 95.
Lord Holland described him in 1832 as ‘the head of ... the radical party’ in Tavistock and ‘a good reformer, but considered and even called by many of the electors a dictator or despot, and governing even his democratical crew as much by fear as love’.
At the general election of 1820 Bedford returned the staunch backbench Whigs John Peter Grant, a debt-ridden Scottish lawyer and laird, and the popular John Fazakerley, a close friend of his son Lord John Russell*. Like Grant before him, Fazakerley had suffered financially as Member for Grimsby. Two months later Bedford reluctantly turned out ‘poor dear Faz’ in order to accommodate the Devonian Lord Ebrington, the son of the 1st Earl Fortescue and a rising star of opposition, who had been ousted from his county seat. Bedford reported that the electors of Tavistock were ‘delighted to have him’.
he was free to confess that the freeholders of Tavistock generally did him the honour of considering his wishes; but he pledged himself that he never asked for place or pension or favour for any elector ... the moment the representation of that borough was thrown open to the town, and every inhabitant paying scot and lot was entitled to vote, would be the happiest moment of his life.
Cambridge and Hertford Independent Press, 27 Apr. 1822.
Petitions were sent to the Commons for repeal of the coal duties, 10 Mar. 1823, 10 Mar. 1824, 21 Feb. 1825;
At the general election of 1826 Ebrington came in again, but Grant made way for Bedford’s eccentric and impoverished younger brother Lord William Russell, who had sat for the borough from 1807 until 1819, when he had vacated for Grant and headed for the continent.
Our objects are still the same. I have no desire to form a party or to join any party against the present government and were you to give up your seat ... I should care so little about your successor that I should not interfere in his election, but leave it to the freeholders to elect Mr. Rundle or Mr. Gill, or anyone else they might take a fancy to.
Devon RO, Earl Fortescue mss, Ebrington to Bedford, 8, 12 May, reply, 10 May 1827; Russell Letters, i. 65.
Protestant Dissenters of Tavistock petitioned the Commons for repeal of the Test Acts, 30 May, 6 June 1827, 18, 22 Feb. 1828, and members of the established church petitioned the Lords likewise, 21 Feb. 1828.
At the dissolution that summer Lord William Russell retired on account of the ill health which had badly interfered with his parliamentary attendance. He later told his nephew Lord George William Russell* that he had wished to step down two or three years earlier, but had agreed to stay in as a course ‘more advisable as affecting the election interests at Tavistock’. His replacement was Bedford’s grandson and heir presumptive Lord Russell, a shy young man just down from Oxford, who only came of age at the beginning of July 1830. Bedford told his son Lord George William, whom he had decided on good advice to drop as Member for Bedford, where his non-attendance and neglect had put the family interest in jeopardy, that ‘the same reasons would operate against my proposing you for Tavistock, where the electors are not at all disposed to submit to a non-attending representative’.
As Lord John Russell was defeated at Bedford, where he stood in his negligent brother’s room, he was the obvious replacement for Ebrington at Tavistock, though there was some talk, which came to nothing, of his standing for the vacant Southwark seat.
as the head of a party is never at rest, and must dictate in everything, however unreasonable or inconsistent it may be. His whole aim seems to be directed against ... [Bedford] and agents, constantly uttering every expression of detestation at the way in which the borough is held, and that titles are only nicknames.
West Briton, 3 Sept. 1830; Denham, 42-43.
Rundle and the Rev. William Rooker, a Unitarian minister, got up a meeting to petition Parliament for the abolition of slavery in early November, and further petitions to the same effect were presented during the 1830 Parliament.
At the general election which followed the defeat of the bill, Lord John and Lord Russell were returned again, though the former only came in for Tavistock in case of failure in his bid for one of the county seats. Rundle, who seconded his nomination, led a chorus of praise for the bill, while Lord John spoke at some length in its defence.
with regard to any future influence my family may possess in the borough, I think that would be improved by my bringing in Mr. H. rather than you ... Russell being already in with John, and your succeeding John, our enemies there (for we have some of course) may say that before reform I made a family borough of it; whereas if I bring in a person wholly unconnected with me, but solely for the sake of promoting the great measure of reform, the feeling would probably be materially different.
Add. 51663, Bedford to Holland [31 May 1831]; Blakiston, 231; Russell Letters, ii. 340-2.
After establishing that the offer was free of political and financial strings, Hawkins accepted it, so putting paid to the hopes of the reformer Sir John Byng*, a protégé of Lord Anglesey, the Irish viceroy, who was anxious to obtain a seat.
accompanied the duke’s steward and another agent round the town, to canvass the small constituency; rather above 30. Reform feeling very strong, with a slight feeling of republicanism. Very cordially received indeed. I find that the first proposal to return me emanated from some of the freeholders; the duke adopted it very readily ... This morning duly and unanimously elected, after sundry speeches from such of the electors as take a strong interest in politics; very complimentary to myself, very laudatory of the reform bill, and somewhat vituperative of tithes and parsons. I talked to them at some length, chiefly on ‘the bill’.
The other principal speakers were Francis Willesford, who called for the abolition of ‘abominable sinecures and unnecessary expenses’, John Bray, an attorney, and Rundle, who complained that when advocating reform outside Tavistock he was accused of having been ‘seduced by the duke of Bedford’, but that ‘in the borough’ he was ‘calumniated by the agents of the duke for acting in opposition to his Grace’. He traced to Bedford’s agents a rumour that the purpose of his recent visit to London had been to secure the nomination to the vacant seat for himself. He denied this and insisted that he was at present too preoccupied with his business concerns to contemplate entering Parliament, though he did not rule out standing on a future occasion. Wilson, who presided over the meeting in the absence of the portreeve, was suitably outraged at Rundle’s impertinence.
Rundle and company met to petition the Lords to pass the reform bill, 29 Sept. 1831. News of its rejection was greeted with public expressions of mourning; and Gill, Rundle, Flamank and John Bray promoted a meeting to address the king in support of the measure and the ministry, 13 Oct., when the language used was studiously moderate.
As the proprietary borough of a Whig magnate, and one with which Lord John Russell was so intimately connected, Tavistock’s treatment in the reform bills attracted close scrutiny in Parliament. Its population of well over 5,000, according to the 1821 census (which in fact included the whole of the parish, of which the borough formed only a part) put it comfortably outside the disfranchisement schedules of the first measure. When Alexander Baring, sore at the proposed disfranchisement of his own borough of Callington, complained, 3 Mar. 1831, that Bedford’s ‘monopoly’ would not be infringed, Lord Tavistock, Bedford’s son and heir, indicated that he would personally support any motion to have the borough included in schedule B, though he disingenuously denied that his father ever influenced his tenants ‘as to the manner in which they should give their votes’. Four days later William Peel remarked on the unfairness of depriving Tamworth, where his family had influence, of one Member, while Tavistock and the minister Lord Lansdowne’s borough of Calne went unscathed. He was taken to task by Bedford’s nephew John Russell (another son of Lord William), who argued that the bill was not intended to destroy such ‘just and proper influence’ as Bedford’s at Tavistock and would significantly increase the unacceptably small electorate. On 18 Apr. Sadler observed that while Tavistock might meet the requirements of population, it was not ‘famed for any particular pursuit of national industry’, whereas Rochdale, the centre of flannel manufacture, had been ignored. Outlining the reintroduced reform bill, 24 June 1831, Lord John Russell explained that further inquiries had revealed that the number of £10 houses in Tavistock had proved to be almost the same as those enumerated in the tax office returns, which ministers had found to be defective in many other instances. He cited the fall in the number of Tavistock electors during the past 110 years as an example of the abuses which had crept into the representative system and which the bill was designed to eradicate.
Lord John Russell paid us a visit at the council office, principally to ascertain what had become of Tavistock, whether Captain Beaufort and I had examined the case, and whether we were of opinion that it should lose a Member or not. The duke of Bedford had written to him urging that he should not hesitate an instant about its partial disfranchisement. We had found the documents about it defective, and accordingly had not yet formed an opinion on it.
Hatherton diary.
There was an expectation that Tavistock would be put in schedule B in the revised bill of December 1831;
in the freeholders
Estimated voters: about 30
Population: 5483 (1821); 4221 (1831)
