Milborne Port, a ‘very irregularly built’ town with the appearance ‘more of a village’, which had been ‘anciently ... of importance’, was situated on a branch of the River Yeo close to the Dorset border. Agriculture was crucial to the town’s economy, employing 283 families in 1821, but 159 worked in trade and manufacturing and 26 in other occupations. In the eighteenth century it had been a centre for the production of linen, sailcloth and the coarser types of woollens, but these industries were in serious decline by the 1820s and the market house had long been closed up. However, the rapid development of glove making, since its introduction in 1810, more than compensated for these losses, and by the middle of the nineteenth century it provided the chief source of employment, supplemented by leather dressing and boot and shoemaking.
The borough was wholly contained within but not coextensive with the parish of the same name, excluding as it did the tithings of Milborne Wick and Kingsbury Regis.
A concerted challenge to Anglesey’s interest had begun to emerge in the months preceding the 1818 general election, when the steward of his Somerset and Dorset estates, William Castleman, informed him that ‘frequent meetings’ were being held in the borough. It appears that the ringleaders, including William Foot, Thomas Shepherd and John Henning, a glove maker, had private grievances against Anglesey, and Castleman suspected that a ‘Mr. Cox’ was ‘leading this cabal and furnishing money’. In addition, the conduct of some of the ‘independent voters’ convinced him that ‘an opposition will take place at the next election if there is the least ground for success’. A contest duly occurred, following the arrival of the Whig Member for Portarlington, Richard Sharp*, and the West India proprietor Samuel Moulton Barrett*, but the ‘Blues’ finished at the bottom of the poll behind the ‘Red and Greens’ of Sir Edward Paget (Anglesey’s brother) and the lawyer Robert Casberd; a petition alleging bribery, treating and the illegal restraint of voters was rejected.
if I am allowed to proceed on my plans, the opposition will never again be able to bring as many votes to the poll ... and ... the number of votes in your lordship’s interest will be nearly doubled. Sir W. Medlycott’s tenants, who at the general election did us mischief, have in consequence of some very firm but moderate proceedings on my part (in which Sir W. Medlycott has supported me) become very zealous and firm supporters. The tenants on both sides have determined immediately to dismiss those servants who have misconducted themselves, and it is my intention ... to follow the example set on the other side, of prevailing on our friends to withdraw every kind of support from the persons who are hostile to your lordship’s interest. The proceedings at this election have given me an opportunity of scrutinizing the conduct of the new tenants, and I am sorry to add that some of them must be displaced to prevent them from doing mischief in future; three or four more of the old tenants must also be removed.
Twenty tenants were subsequently evicted, although Castleman hoped that many would return to their ‘former colours’, as there were already signs of dissatisfaction among Darlington’s tenantry at the poor quality of their houses.
There followed an orgy of expenditure as the rival interests battled for control of the borough. Anglesey alone laid out more than £15,000 on ‘new buildings and repairs’ between Michaelmas 1819 and Lady Day 1824, which provided lucrative employment for many local people as well as creating homes for voters.
in a more satisfactory state than it has hitherto been. After the discoveries which were sometime ago made of the defection of several of our votes and of their consequent dismissal, I find that communication or intercourse with the other party is in a great degree stopped. There are several of our opponents votes who are in my pay and from whom I receive regular information of their proceedings, and who with many others of their party I have reason to believe will join our ranks in the event of an election’.
Ibid. B5/31, Nov. 1821 list, Castleman to Anglesey, 14 Dec. 1822; B5/32, to same, 31 Oct. 1823.
Anglesey’s final, decisive blow was his negotiation with Winchester College and the bishop of Hereford by which he exchanged land in Dorset for the rectory of Milborne Port and ‘divers lands and hereditaments’ there, an agreement embodied in a private Act of Parliament (5 Geo. IV, c. 25), obtained on 17 June 1824.
The inhabitants had sent anti-slavery petitions to the Commons, 30 Mar. 1824, and both Houses, 5, 8 May 1826.
The Wesleyan Methodists sent anti-slavery petitions to the Commons, 15 Dec. 1830, as did ‘persons residing’ in the town, 2 Mar. 1831.
As Sheil had also been returned for county Louth, the prospect arose of his vacating Milborne Port to make room for Crampton. Matters were complicated, however, by signs of unrest in the borough at its impending demise and by the determination of William Coles Medlycott to come forward as an anti-reform candidate. He notified Anglesey that he was acting on the wishes of the inhabitants, who were ‘anxious to preserve their interests’, and that a canvass showed unanimous support for him ‘with only three exceptions’. Anglesey deplored his intention, arguing that while the borough’s disfranchisement was regrettable, the reform bill as a whole was ‘inevitable’ and ‘necessary for the preservation of the constitution’. He also maintained that Medlycott’s father was ‘as much bound by the lease he granted me of his property ... to support my parliamentary wishes ... as any man can be bound in justice and in honour’, and made it clear that he would strongly oppose any anti-reform candidate. Medlycott angrily abandoned his canvass, complaining that Castleman had ‘thought proper to adopt a system of intimidation with the electors’. A relieved Anglesey blandly informed Grey that the townsfolk were ‘staunch and attached to me’ and that ‘these poor fellows are really worthy reformers, to give up their franchise with so good a grace’. Crampton was thus returned unopposed for ‘the old hack place’ at the final by-election there in July 1831.
By the new criteria adopted in the revised reform bill of December 1831, Milborne Port, which contained 383 houses and paid £211 in assessed taxes (figures relating to the whole parish), was placed 48th in the list of the smallest English boroughs, confirming its disfranchisement. Exaggerated claims by the returning officers that the electorate numbered 311 rested on the fiction that in addition to the nine bailiffs all of the 302 houses in the borough were assessed for poor rate.
in the bailiffs and inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: 111 in 1820
Estimated voters: about 170 in 1820
Population: 1440 (1821); 2072 (1831)
