Ludlow, the former seat of the council of the Marches, was a castellated town overlooking the confluence of the Rivers Corve and Teme, 24 miles north of Hereford and 25 south of Shrewsbury on the Herefordshire-Shropshire border. Its principal industry, glove making, was in decline.
In November 1813, and acting though the St. Lawrence parish vestry, opponents of the Clives had instigated proceedings against Powis and the corporation for demolishing St. Lawrence’s chapel in breach of the terms of Foxe’s charity of 1590. Chancery ruled in their favour, 17 Nov. 1815, and on 9 Feb. 1819 the master of the rolls Sir Thomas Plumer† directed ‘the bailiffs, burgesses and commonalty of Ludlow’ to convey the charity estate to new trustees and to contribute £1,200 towards the erection of a new chapel. The corporation rejected the trustees nominated by the vestry, and their appeal to the Lords against the ruling was still pending at the dissolution following the death of George III. (Plumer’s judgment was confirmed, 12 Sept. 1821.)
In 1820 the radical Edmund Lechmere Charlton† of Ludford, who had recently displayed largesse, was expected to stand on the ‘independent’ or anti-Clive interest. He estimated the electorate at only 51 (12 aldermen, 21 common burgesses and 18 resident burgesses) and ‘had very confident hopes of success, if not the first time, certainly the second’.
Clive control of the corporation was confirmed by the appointment as bailiffs in October 1825 of Rogers and the bishop of Worcester’s heir Frederick Cornewall of Delbury, Powis’s Member for Bishop’s Castle, 1830-2. Lechmere Charlton, who with Knight failed to carry a resolution extending burgess status to the tradesmen, 28 Oct. 1825, spent almost £600 on publicizing their cause. They were strongly supported by the Hereford Independent, the voice of the anti-corporation parties in Hereford, Ludlow and Monmouth, but in May 1826 it became a casualty of the temporary collapse of the Whig Hereford City and County Bank of Bodenham, Jay, Cusack and Company.
By the time his petition was presented, 5 Dec. 1826, Lechmere Charlton had ‘resumed the turf’, repaired to his residence at Down House, near Epsom, and fought a duel with Rogers, who resented his criticism of the corporation.
Of the politics of my opponents, if by politics is meant parliamentary conduct, I do not complain; and for the most simple reason, because I know not to which side they belong. Nay, I believe it would not be difficult to prove that they have, at this critical juncture, for some reason or other best known to themselves, promised their support to both parties.
Hereford Independent, 1 Dec. 1827.
His petition against the 1827 Commons ruling was presented, 11 Feb., and considered, 22 Apr. 1828, with a counter-petition from three non-resident burgesses, William Lacon Childe*, his father-in-law William Cludde of Orleton and Rogers’s brother-in-law, Benjamin Brown of Clapham. Their claim that the right of election was in the corporation and freemen was upheld, 24 Apr.
Although they no longer considered the duke’s hard line against parliamentary reform appropriate, the Clives divided with the Wellington administration when they were brought down on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830. Both houses received petitions from the bailiff, burgesses and inhabitants for decisive and effective measures to secure the abolition of colonial slavery, 14, 15 Apr. 1831.
The Clives sponsored the Ludlow roads bill, which received royal assent, 2 Aug. 1831, and opposed the reintroduced reform bill.
By the Boundary Act Ludlow became a polling town for the South Shropshire constituency and, as the commissioners had recommended, Ludford, part of Oakly Park and Whitcliffe were included in the new borough constituency and the River Teme became its south-western boundary.
‘in the 12 aldermen, the 25 common councillors and the rest of the sworn burgesses at large’
Number of voters: 16 in 1826
Estimated voters: 500-1,000
Population: 4820 (1821); 5253 (1831)
