Great Yarmouth, Norfolk’s second largest town and principal port, 19 miles south-east of Norwich and nine miles north of its rival, the Suffolk port of Lowestoft, had been ‘irregularly built’ on a narrow five-mile strip of land that created a haven between the North Sea and the estuaries of the Rivers Bure and Yare. With its suburb of Southtown (Little Yarmouth) in the parish of Gorleston on the Suffolk bank of the Yare, it was noted for its wind and steam mills, shipbuilding and fishing (salted herrings and mackerel) and carrying trade in coal and corn, which the corporation taxed to non-freemen at 2d. a last and 6d. a chaldron.
the names of those eligible to take part in the election - i.e. the freemen who were present, were put into three hats and a child was asked to draw four names out of each hat. These were the 12 who were then locked up like a jury to choose the next year’s mayor [who acted as returning officer and selected all corporation committees] from among the aldermen. A two-thirds majority was necessary for a successful nomination ... Sometimes those who were able to smuggle the most biscuits in their pockets and were therefore able to stick it out longest had their way. But more often it was well known in advance who the mayor was to be. He was usually the person toasted at the corporation’s annual outing up the river and he frequently canvassed those likely to be on the inquest and warned them to go well supplied with food and drink.
Ibid.; Barrett, 170.
Freeman admissions were concentrated in election years (1818, 447; 1820, 91; 1826, 265; 1830, 370; 1831, 57), escalating after 1814, when the right of nomination, previously confined to the mayor, was vested in the corporation.
At the general election of 1818, the influence of the corporation Tories, the Reds, previously patronized by the Townshend family of Rainham, high stewards of the borough until the death in 1831 of the 2nd Viscount Sydney, had been successfully challenged by the Whigs or Blues of the independence party, whose candidates, Thomas Coke I* of Norfolk’s grandson Thomas William Anson, heir to part of Southtown and Gorleston, and Charles Rumbold, the son of a nabob and relation of the former Member Stephen Lushington*, had defeated the sitting Members, the banker Sir Edmund Knowles Lacon and General William Loftus, the Townshend nominee. In February 1819 Anson, having succeeded his father as 2nd Viscount Anson, was replaced unopposed by his brother George.
The freemen displayed their customary party loyalty. Of 1,366 polled, only 15 (one per cent) failed to split their votes between their party’s candidates. There was an overall drop of about 47 in the non-resident vote and both sides conceded the disqualification of 280 freemen in receipt of poor relief on account of the ‘severe winter’.
The 1820 mayor’s inquest lasted almost two days,
The corporation, haven commissioners and proprietors of land adjoining the Rivers Ant, Bure, Waveney and Yare had kept a close watch since 1818 on preparations for a Norwich and Lowestoft navigation, engaging rival surveyors and civil engineers in their pamphlet war.
They tacitly acquiesced in the return of Anson and Rumbold at the general election in June, but the Members canvassed as usual and faced a challenge got up by disaffected partisans and others irked by their opposition votes and support for Catholic relief. Swelled by the admission of 133 freemen (102 by birth and 31 by servitude) on 5 June, paid for by the attorney Nathaniel Palmer, who spent £5,000 on the election, the self-styled ‘Crimson interest’, led by Charles Symonds and addressed nightly by the shipwright and local poet John Henry Drury, vowed to bring in the absent Lacon ‘free of charge’ and claimed to have secured the support of 400 resident freemen, 300 of whom reputedly signed a requisition to Lacon.
Of 899 freemen polled (34 per cent fewer than in 1820), 641 split their votes between the Blues and nine between the parties (seven for Rumbold and Lacon and two for Anson and Lacon), while 241 plumped for Lacon, two for Anson and one for Rumbold. Partisan voting remained steady at 99 per cent.
Campaigning on the Norwich and Lowestoft navigation bill revived in September 1826. A new bill was petitioned for, 22 Nov., and ordered, 28 Nov., and Telford, the proprietors and the shareholders sought a compromise to end the costly litigation.
The Tories had rallied with the election of the banker John Mortlock Lacon as mayor, and their partisans the county Member Wodehouse, his cousin John Wodehouse*, the lord lieutenant, and Sir Thomas Gooch* were the speakers at the 1827 Michaelmas dinner. Afterwards Barclay, Dowson and Patrick Stead met Thomas Frankland Lewis* and the premier Lord Goderich to discuss problems arising from the new Malt Act.
The Reds and the Crimson interest combined to mount a strong opposition to Anson and Rumbold at the 1830 general election. According to the diary of the attorney and Yarmouth historian Charles Danby Palmer, then a young common councillor, the corporation ‘entertained about 200 gentlemen with a cold collation at the town hall’, 1 July, and sent the substeward Lacon, the future chairman of the Norwich Union Life Insurance Company, Isaac Preston junior, and the Ultra Robert Cory (the proposer of the 1829 address) to London in search of a ‘crown and constitution’ candidate and to rally the out-voters. They ‘did not succeed definitely till the 15th [of] July, when an arrangement was made with Mr. Henry Preston of Moorby Hall, Yorkshire, and Mr. Thomas Edmund Campbell, a captain in the 2nd Dragoon Guards’, who issued a joint notice, 17 July and canvassed personally from the 19th.
The two present Members having been so coldly received, two new candidates are about to offer themselves. A great majority of the resident voters having declared themselves in favour of the new representation, it is supposed that Colonel Anson and Mr. Rumbold will not stand a contest.
The Tory Norfolk Chronicle meanwhile cast doubt on the ‘success’ of Anson and Rumbold’s five-day canvass of Yarmouth, reported the dinner for 350 addressed by Henry Preston and Campbell at the London Tavern, 20 July, and their promises and arrangements to convey their London supporters to Yarmouth whether or not there was a contest. One-hundred-and-sixty-two freemen (101 by birth and 61 by servitude) were admitted, 9 July 1830, a further 113 (84 by birth and 29 by servitude) were enrolled on the 26th, and the Reds’ propaganda promised ‘400 by election day’ at a reputed cost of ‘£20-30,000’.
Anson and Rumbold were nominated by the party leaders Dowson, Robert Palmer Kemp of Colishall, John Shelly and Nathaniel Palmer, who reiterated his 1826 plea for frequent and open corporation assemblies for freeman admissions and maintained that voters ‘would have heard nothing of the port of Norwich if corporation dues had not been so overbearing’. Preston was proposed by Lacon and seconded by the London attorney and organizer of their freemen John White; and Campbell was nominated by Isaac Preston junior and J.G. Fisher. The Blues called for corporation and parliamentary reform, retrenchment, an end to the monopolies of the Bank and East India Company and for religious and civil disabilities. The Reds’ speeches eulogized Wellington’s achievements and emphasized Anson’s poor parliamentary attendance, while their squibs mocked his connection with Coke and lack of independent funding.
Rumbold, as expected, voted against the Wellington ministry when they were brought down on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830, but Anson, possibly deliberately on account of his private support for government, was ‘shut out’.
Sorry am I to say ... we are going, I believe, to lose Yarmouth. George Anson and Rumbold are taken by surprise. The whole London voters poured in upon them in the eleventh hour, and Anson writes to his grandfather Coke that their case is nearly desperate. This is an infernally bad job.
Dawson Turner, handbill, 30 Apr. 1831; Creevey mss, Creevey to Miss Ord, 30 Apr. 1831.
That evening Anson and Rumbold thanked the ‘poorer classes for their sacrifice’ in supporting them, and announced that they would do all they could ‘to procure the adoption of that measure which will secure to them the right of suffrage in the cities and towns in which they reside’.
I have promised George Anson and Rumbold to bring under your notice the case of the borough of Great Yarmouth, with a view to your considering the propriety of removing the government patronage from Harwich, which has opposed your government, to Yarmouth, which now and for several years has, and that under very difficult circumstances ... supported Whig Members ... You will know that Anson and Rumbold have fought this battle over and over again at great expense [and] inconvenience to themselves, and they now naturally look to some acknowledgement of what they have done ... I cannot see how you can refuse to do this out of justice to these people.
Grey mss, Duncannon to Grey, 26 May 1831.
Of the 1,445 polled (15 per cent fewer than in 1830), ten plumped.
The Members voted for the reintroduced and revised reform bills. With Anson’s acquiescence, on 30 Aug. 1831 Rumbold moved to amend the former, to enable the freeman out-voters of boroughs retaining both Members to vote ‘by virtue of their present corporate rights ... in such cities or boroughs where they are resident’, but he was obliged to withdrew it for want of support, after Lord John Russell, responding for government, claimed that out-voters were already adequately catered for by the proposed £10 householder franchise.
Inquorate and infrequent assemblies had paralysed public business in the borough since the 1831 general election. Edmund Preston as mayor was granted a rule nisi for a writ of mandamus from king’s bench, 3 June, in compliance with which the corporation met on 23 June and 18 July 1831. However, a ruse by Preston’s opponents, who were anxious to replace Robert Alderson as recorder, as had recently been effected at Ipswich, where he also officiated, left all but one of the vacant offices unfilled, necessitating a further application to king’s bench. The matter was resolved only after further litigation and at the third ballot, 3 Apr. 1832, when Richard Aldworth Merewether defeated the sub-steward Isaac Preston by a single vote. He was installed as recorder, 8 May 1832, with the new high steward, the 1st Baron Exmouth, two aldermen and four common councillors; 54 freemen (21 by birth and 33 by servitude) were admitted, 26 July 1832. Shelly’s campaign to expose the borough accounts to public scrutiny now stalled.
As the boundary commissioners had recommended, Southtown and Gorleston were brought wholly into the constituency, doubling its acreage. The revising barristers rejected the qualifications of 20 pauper freemen and several sailors and master mariners only occasionally resident with their families, and the new registered electorate of 1,683 comprised 1,040 freemen and 643 £10 voters (488 from Yarmouth and 155 from Southtown and Gorleston).
in the freemen
Draws on C.J. Palmer, Hist. Great Yarmouth and Perlustration of Great Yarmouth; J.A. Phillips, Great Reform Bill in Boroughs, 196-210, 246-7, 274, 281-9
Number of voters: 1702 in 1830
Estimated voters: 2,000 in 1831
Population: 18040 (1821); 22028 (1831)
