Commercially impoverished and reduced to ‘the ranks of a small and insignificant fishing town’ by repeated encroachments of the North Sea, Aldeburgh was the inspiration for its erstwhile Member Charles Arbuthnot’s* ‘Harmony in Uproar’ and the poetry of its freeman by birth George Crabbe.
Walker, an anti-Catholic supporter of Lord Liverpool’s ministry, had replaced the existing corporation and returned himself and his cousin Joshua Walker at the general election of 1818; but, impoverished by the post-war decline in the iron industry and the cost of his borough, he stood down at the dissolution in 1820 and returned Joshua with James Blair, a West India proprietor committed to promoting that interest, as a paying guest.
Croker’s resignation in May 1827 to stand for Dublin University released a seat for the former Member for Cardiff Boroughs Wyndham Lewis, who in 1826 had been defeated on Hertford’s interest at Camelford.
there was not a shadow of opposition. Some witty gentleman posted up a paper, ‘The Election is a farce by Lord Hertford’, but the sailors did not understand it and nobody seemed to give it notice. It is not a place for squibs!
N.F. Hele, Notes about Aldeburgh, 69.
With Croker in Dublin, where he was defeated, Hertford supervised the ‘parish business’ of elections at Aldeburgh and Orford, 3 Aug. 1830, returning Croker with Douro for Aldeburgh and switching Kilderbee to Orford.
Opposing the reintroduced bill in committee, 15 July 1831, Croker failed to force a division on Aldeburgh. However, before Orford’s place in schedule A was confirmed, 22 July, he and Kilderbee exploited Aldeburgh’s geographic proximity to it and, developing a proposal for more contributory borough constituencies made on the 13th by Charles Watkin Williams Wynn, they vainly suggested either amalgamating the boroughs as a single Member constituency or transferring the franchise to nearby Woodbridge as a means of restoring the balance of representation between agriculture and industry.
‘in the freemen’
Entries for Aldeburgh/Aldborough in PP (1831-2), xxxvi. 38, 39, 52, 53, 492 and elsewhere confuse and conflate information from returns for both boroughs.
Estimated voters: about 65 in 1831
Population: 1212 (1821); 1538 (1831)
