Huntingdon, the birth place of Oliver Cromwell, was separated from the borough of Godmanchester by the River Ouse.
Samuel Wells, the radical Huntingdon attorney, was instrumental in bringing the corporators to book over the maladministration of the hospital. The exposure of corruption by a chancery judgement in January 1820 was seized on by Weston Hatfield, the proprietor of the Huntingdon Gazette, and fuelled the latent hostility of the anti-corporation party.
According to the Gazette, a petition for restoration of the freemen’s chartered rights was got up in April 1820; but it seems not to have reached the Commons.
Early in 1823 Lady Sandwich set aside her wish to bring in Montagu in order to further his naval career.
Wells’s petition, presented on 21 May 1824, complained that the returning officer had illegally rejected the votes of several householders who had good title, but it was not considered until 24 Feb. 1825. On 1 Mar. the committee dismissed Wells’s claim that the right of election was in ‘the commonalty or burgesses ... being the inhabitant householders paying scot and lot’, and ruled that, as Stuart’s counsel argued, it was in ‘the mayor, aldermen and burgesses ... being members of the corporation’. An appeal was lodged by James Adams and several other householders, 5 July, but Parliament was prorogued the following day. Their renewed petition, bearing more than 80 signatures, was submitted on 7 Feb. 1826, when Wells was admitted a party to the appeal. The committee reported, 17 Apr. 1826, in favour of the corporation’s counter-petition (20 Mar.).
Rumours in April 1826 that one of the sitting Members would resign in order to provide William Henry Fellowes, the senior county Member, with a safe seat proved to be unfounded.
Edward Griffith, a common pleas lawyer, had already been employed by the anti-corporation party to research the history of the borough’s elective franchise. In 1827 he published A Collection of Ancient Records relating to the Borough of Huntingdon, which argued that it was in the burgesses or resident householders. A meeting of dissident freemen and householders, 16 Oct. 1827, condemned the aldermen for riding roughshod over their rights.
The same Sandwich nominees came forward in 1830. Wells appeared in the field on the eve of the election and Sweeting complied with a requisition to stand. Irregularities over the conduct of the election, particularly the mayor’s appointment of Maule as his assessor, drew a storm of protest. William Hatfield attacked Calvert and Stuart for their refusal to expand on political questions and proposed Sweeting, while Wells delivered an animated exposé of borough corruption. Calvert and Stuart were duly elected, notwithstanding a show of hands of ten to one against them. Only seven were held up for Stuart and five for Calvert, but they were deemed to have the majority of legal votes. Weston Hatfield protested against the mayor’s decision but declined to press for a poll. Sweeting and Wells entered a formal complaint and expressed their determination to petition against the return.
At a public meeting called to petition for the repeal of assessed taxes, 26 Jan. 1831, Robert Fox, a Godmanchester surgeon, regretted that the 33 requisitionists had not directed their attention to the more important object of parliamentary reform but, like Dawes and William Hatfield, he supported the resolutions. The petition was carried unanimously and only Sir John Arundel registered his dissent.
Picture to yourself for one moment the petition they would then have sent. Would they not in the most savage manner have detailed the past history of Huntingdon and your house, instanced my refusal, that I was a placeman, your creature, and have adduced the whole as a strong practical argument in favour of reform and their petition?
He resented the charge that he had abandoned his principles and the ‘interests of old friends’ and, anticipating her anger over his assent to a reform meeting, maintained that Maule’s views were not representative of the influential townsmen. He considered Maule’s threat of evictions in response to a requisition signed by some 50 townsmen, who merely wished to petition in favour of reform, to be little short of madness. At the same time, he acknowledged that the ‘cause of all our miseries is the want of a paper and the villainous conduct of [Weston] Hatfield’.
By the first reform bill of March 1831 Huntingdon was scheduled to lose one seat. Calvert and Stuart voted against it, 22 Mar., 19 Apr. Both retired at the ensuing dissolution, when Lady Sandwich placed their seats at the disposal of the Tory leader Peel. He offered one to Maurice Fitzgerald*, who declined it.
Appealing to Lady Sandwich against her decision not to interfere in corporate matters, 25 July 1831, Maule begged her to reconsider and at least subsidize the mayoralty in order to safeguard her son’s interest. He predicted that his influence and property together with ‘some sparks of gratitude’ would secure the return of the Member under the reformed system.
The Boundary Act enlarged the area of the constituency from 1.9 to 10.5 square miles by including Godmanchester, while the extension of the franchise to the £10 householders more than doubled the number of electors from about 180 (90 of whom were resident in 1831) to 384.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 87 in 1824
Estimated voters: about 180
Population: 2806 (1821); 3267 (1831)
