A poor county of backward cultivation and limited manufactures, including the benighted Arigna iron works, Leitrim was sparsely populated and boasted few towns apart from Carrick-on-Shannon, where the elections were held, and Jamestown, the county’s other disfranchised borough, while Leitrim village was said to be a ‘miserable little place’.
Latouche died at the end of January 1820, but no writ was issued before the dissolution the following month. Clements brought forward his brother, Lieutenant-Colonel John Clements of Glenboy, who, although a Tory, apparently coalesced with White; the latter, who declined to pursue the candidacy of his son and namesake in the neighbouring county of Longford, where he had recently been defeated in a by-election, thereby secured the valuable support of Crofton. This meant that there was no realistic chance for William Ormsby Gore* of Woodford, who had won the seat in 1806, or Lieutenant Francis Nesbitt of Derrycarne, who addressed the electors; White and Clements were returned unopposed.
It was the recently of age Viscount Clements, Leitrim’s eldest son, who offered as a liberal pro-Catholic at the general election of 1826, when realistic estimates of the size of the electorate varied between 6,000 and 8,000. Lord Clements opposed both his kinsman and White, who were roundly condemned for uniting their electoral interests despite their political differences and the fact that it was against John Clements’s brother that White’s father had first won his independent seat.
I do not think Johnny Clements has acted right by his Protestant friends in Leitrim, as there was no doubt of his success and the party by whom he was espoused could have brought in another candidate of the same principles had they received an earlier intimation of his intentions. The real cause of his declining to stand is from Lord Waterford refusing to advance part of the expense of the contest.
Add. 40334, f. 171; 40387, f. 212.
An attempt was made to have John Clements put up, but his brother announced his withdrawal on the hustings. White (proposed by Charles Henry Tottenham of Glenfarne Hall and John Reynolds Peyton of Laheen House), who stated that he would have supported his former colleague in return for the backing he had received at the recent by-election, and Lord Clements (nominated by Peter Latouche and O’Beirne), who spoke in favour of Catholic relief, were elected unopposed. The Catholics met under O’Beirne’s chairmanship, 10 July 1826, to issue resolutions critical of White’s electoral conduct in comparison to that of his late father and of his brother Henry, who had just retained his seat for county Dublin.
Following another gathering of Catholics in November 1826, petitions in favour of their claims were brought up in the Commons by Lord Clements, 21 Feb., and the Lords, 12 Mar. 1827, while another was presented to the Lower House, 7 Mar. 1828.
The results of the registry are putting our country gentlemen into high good humour. With the recent measures they have no longer the fear of the priest before their eyes and do not hesitate to admit that after all the duke [of Wellington] and Peel kept a sharp look out for the Protestant interests.
Roscommon and Leitrim Gazette, 20 June, 4 July; PRO NI, Carr Beresford mss T3396, Curren to Mahony, 6 June, 6 July 1829.
By 1 Jan. 1830 the electorate numbered 602, compared to 6,361 a year earlier, although this had risen to over 750 by the general election that summer.
Amid calls for a truly independent candidate, John Clements offered again with the backing of ministers against the sitting Members. The government, despite his apparent hostility to their recently rescinded increase in Irish stamp and spirit duties, were also prepared to countenance the unpopular White, who, regardless of statements to the contrary, insisted that he would not withdraw but was still expected to lose.
Later that year Lord Leitrim became lord lieutenant of the county, where the Protestants were reluctant to forward their interests by meeting early in 1832, and his remained the leading electoral interest. On the eve of the reformed Parliament, he was credited with 158 votes, comfortably ahead of White (117), the Latouches (72), Crofton (49), Jones (46) and John Clements (28). At the general election of 1832, when there were 1,318 registered electors, White, who held his seat until 1847, and Lord Clements, who with two of his brothers occupied the other until 1852, were returned as Liberals after a contest with the Conservative John Clements.
Number of voters: 436 in 1830
Registered freeholders: 6,361 in 1829; 602 in 1830 602 in 1830
