Clitheroe, a growing manufacturing centre, noted for its Dissenting past and the production of cotton and lime, was a 3,000-acre township and chapelry on the River Ribble in the parish of Whalley, in Lancashire’s Pendle district. A borough by prescription, its government was vested locally in two bailiffs (one resident and one non-resident) elected at the annual court leet, who had the power of one magistrate and acted as the returning officer.
There is no such thing as personal freemanship in Clitheroe. There are within the borough two classes of persons; the one called ‘burgesses’, whose rights depend not on admission, but on tenure for life, or in fee, of certain borough lands and houses there, and who also have votes in the election of Members ... Of the other class [‘freemen’], the privilege depends ... on their occupancy of certain borough houses, and [their] privileges (which do not extend to the election of Members) ... cease when they cease to be occupants of the burgage houses.
PP (1831-2), xxxvi. 514.
Control of the representation effectively lay with the major landowners as purchasers of most of the 102 qualifying burgages. A series of severe contests, 1693-1780, had left the Listers of Gisborne Park, dominant locally since the fourteenth century, in control of one seat, which Thomas Lister†, 1st Baron Ribblesdale, had in 1802 sold, with 430 acres worth £1,400 a year, to Brownlow Cust†, 1st Baron Brownlow. The second seat, with land and burgages, had been held since 1754 by the Curzon family. Within the borough the properties of both families were ‘very much intermixed’.
Legislation to improve the roads to Colne and Skipton was enacted in 1821 and 1824.
The town’s Protestant Dissenters and Wesleyan Methodists contributed to the 1830-1 petitioning campaign against colonial slavery.
Clitheroe’s schedule B designation in the reintroduced bill was contested in the Commons for the anti-reformers by John Croker and Sir Charles Wetherell, assisted by Cust, 28 July 1831; but the Irish secretary Smith Stanley scotched their suggestion that by the government’s own criteria Clitheroe, ‘which was to all intents and purposes, a parish’, contained a large enough population for enfranchisement in schedule C. The inhabitants petitioned the Lords urging the bill’s passage, 4 Oct. 1831.
The 1832 Reform Act greatly extended the borough, from 3.6 to 25.3 square miles, with a population of 8,885.
Clitheroe had a registered electorate in December 1832 of 306. About 16, or almost half the old burgages were disfranchised, the others presumably attracting a £10 household qualification.
in the bailiffs, burgesses and freemen
Estimated voters: 36
Population: 3213 (1821); 5213 (1831)
