Reigate, a ‘small but remarkably neat’ market town, was situated on a branch of the River Mole, in the east of county, on the London to Brighton road. Apart from its ‘thoroughfare importance’, it was ‘a place of but little trade’ and there were ‘no manufactures’. However, it was reported in 1831 that the town contained a disproportionately large number of gentlemen’s residences.
The inhabitants sent up anti-slavery petitions to the Commons, 16 Mar. 1824, 10 Apr. 1826.
The freeholders, landholders, householders and inhabitants petitioned the Commons for parliamentary reform, 26 Feb. 1831.
Within days of the sudden death of Sir Joseph Yorke, in May 1831, Alexander Donovan of Framfield, Sussex, an ardent reformer and unsuccessful candidate for Lewes and Rye, arrived in the borough to commence a canvass, accompanied by a Mr. Burt. According to Glover, Donovan promised to demand a scrutiny if he could poll a single vote, to test his contention that the parchment votes were invalid and that the true right of election lay in the freeholders at large. He met with a curt refusal of his audacious bid for support from Somers (who in any case had no claim on the seat), and Joseph Nash, Hardwicke’s local agent, reported that his hopes were at an end following rebuttals from two independent freeholders, both innkeepers, who profited handsomely from patronal munificence at elections. Hardwicke’s brother, Charles Yorke, nonetheless advised the employment of counsel at the election and the investigation of likely sources of support for Donovan; Sir Edward Sugden*, a Sussex resident, was approached for information on the latter point. To forestall a challenge, Hardwicke wanted an early announcement that his nephew Charles Philip Yorke, the late Member’s son, would offer, and he assured his brother, 19 May, that Somers was exerting himself ‘to counteract the effect of anything which Mr. D. may do’. He was ‘sure our families, from what we have done for the town, ought to stand better with the people of the place than any man who comes ... to oppose us’. While anxious that they should be prepared to meet him on the hustings, Hardwicke correctly suspected that Donovan was ‘a mere bully’, who would not venture to a poll.
The new criteria adopted in the revised reform bill of December 1831 confirmed Reigate’s position in schedule B, as it contained 256 £10 houses and paid £910 in assessed taxes, placing it 67th in the list of the smallest English boroughs. The boundary commissioners recommended that the borough be extended to the parish, after considering the addition of the adjacent rural parishes of Betchworth and Buckland, but rejecting this on the grounds that the first was too large and the second too small to permit their inclusion. Bryant alleged that Somers, the dominant landowner in the new constituency, had interfered to ensure this outcome, and he tried to press the Yorke interest into demanding a further extension of the borough. He maintained that there had been ‘trickery’ in the calculation of the assessed taxes, and ascribed the high figure to ‘the number of gentlemen’s houses’ mentioned in the commissioners’ report, a document which he dismissed as ‘nearly all untrue’.
in the freeholders of burgage properties
Estimated voters: 59 in 1831
Population: 1328 (1821); 1419 (1831)
