Helston, a ‘thriving’ market and stannary town in the south-west of the county, on the London to Land’s End road, consisted chiefly of four ‘wide and well paved’ streets, which crossed ‘at right angles’. It was the focus for an extensive and fertile agricultural region to the south and east and a highly productive tin and copper mining district to the north and west, and its market was ‘justly ranked among the principal ones of Cornwall’. A ‘large proportion’ of the inhabitants were ‘employed as mechanics’, many of them being shoemakers, and some were engaged in pilchard fishing from the nearby harbour at Portleven. The general condition of the town was said to be ‘improving’, and ‘several families possessed of property in the county’ had taken up residence there.
The borough comprised part of the parish of Wendron. The franchise was confined to members of the corporation, which consisted of a mayor, the returning officer for parliamentary elections, four other aldermen (who together formed the common council) and an indefinite number of freemen, chosen by the aldermen from among ‘the more discreet, honest and quiet men and inhabitants’ and from whom aldermen were elected by the aldermen; all were removable but usually held their offices for life. The freemen were mostly tradesmen or professionals and included several clergymen; about two-thirds were residents. It was reported in 1833 that the corporation was of a ‘more than ordinarily exclusive character’, being dominated by the Grylls family, who were ‘connected in various ways with many of the other members’, and that their ‘complete power ... over the constituency’ was ‘exercised ... without scruple’. George Osborne, 6th duke of Leeds, was the Tory patron and recommended both Members. A report prepared for him in 1802 had stressed that his property in the borough was small and gave him little influence over the corporators, whose loyalty was secured ‘at a monstrous expense’ through ‘public entertainments’, the erection and repair of public buildings, ‘liberal and sometimes extravagant provisions’ for influential individuals and payment of the whole borough’s poor and church rates, which amounted to £800-1,000 annually. In addition, there were ‘frequent calls from the corporators for patronage and provision for themselves and friends’, which the duke could not afford to ignore if he wished to maintain his ‘precarious’ interest. In 1803 Leeds relinquished his position, only to resume it in 1807. Sir Christopher Hawkins* of Trewithen, the Tory boroughmonger, acted as patron during the intervening period, but the public disclosure of his corrupt practices forced the corporation to repudiate him. However, he still harboured ambitions to regain the patronage and waged a lengthy campaign against the Leeds interest. His petition to the Commons after his unsuccessful candidature in 1812 brought to light the ‘illegal agreement’ whereby Leeds paid the rates, and this resulted in bills in five successive sessions to extend the borough’s franchise to the two neighbouring hundreds; all were rejected by the Lords. Meanwhile, the corporation sought to protect itself by admitting 70 new freemen in 1813. In 1818 Hawkins, acting with an ‘independent’ party among the freemen, sponsored two candidates who unsuccessfully opposed Leeds’s nominees, and the following year he initiated equally futile quo warranto proceedings against the corporation.
Following the death of George III in January 1820, Hawkins was advised by his agent, the attorney J. Roberts, to make an immediate canvass in anticipation of an early dissolution. Francis James, an insurance agent, claimed that the corporation were ‘very much afraid of their strength’, having ‘lost three of their supporters lately’, which had caused them to make ‘a new batch of ... freemen’ (nine were admitted before the election), but he remained confident that ‘we shall still be able to muster a strong opposition’. At the end of February a local newspaper reported that a ‘fierce contest’ was expected. However, Roberts warned that ‘our friends ... are anxious and uneasy’ and he pressed Hawkins for definite word of his intentions. In early March the Whig financier Pascoe Grenfell*, a native of Cornwall, arrived from London, but Roberts complained that he ‘treated us very cavalierly’ by driving immediately to the house of Pearse Rogers, ‘which of all places he ought to have avoided’, and refusing to see anyone else. On learning that neither Rogers nor his relative, the recorder John Rogers of Penrose, was prepared to support him, Grenfell declared that he would ‘have nothing to do with the borough’ and left to contest Penryn. Roberts lamented that ‘all is lost for want of energy and by bad conduct’, and he wrote that ‘our friends are ... mortified beyond measure’, advising Hawkins to ‘come over immediately and explain’.
On 15 Dec. 1820 a ‘numerous and highly respectable meeting of inhabitants’, chaired by the mayor Isaac Head, unanimously agreed a loyal address to the king moved by Alderman John Trevenen.
you told me that Mr. Borlase’s civility led you to suppose that the corporation would offer you the borough, but that it should be accepted only upon the proviso of its not injuring me. Am I not to make a treaty with the corporation while you propose doing so yourself! ... I will never be the champion of a party in the borough ... for the mere sake of opposition to the gentlemen of the town. Have you given up the idea of ever joining the corporation, if by that you could secure a seat?
R. Instit. Cornw. Henderson mss HH/16/91, Vyvyan to Hawkins, 10 Nov.; West Briton, 11 Nov.; B/Helston/5, corporation election book, 3 Dec. 1825.
Hawkins circulated an address to the freemen, 28 Feb. 1826, in which he expressed regret at ‘a recent conduct not to be defended’, reaffirmed his determination to help promote ‘the independence of Helston’ and promised to ‘come forward whenever you may judge it proper to call on me’. At the general election that summer Hudson retired and Townshend and Carmarthen were returned unopposed; one of them apparently ‘expressed himself in rather decided terms’ about Vyvyan’s conduct.
The Protestant Dissenters petitioned the Commons for repeal of the Test Acts, 12 June 1827, and the inhabitants sent up an anti-slavery petition, 12 June 1828.
The Wesleyan Methodists sent anti-slavery petitions to Parliament, 12, 16 Nov. 1830.
The boundary commissioners reported that the only way to enlarge Helston’s limits to the required extent was by attaching ‘a part of the adjoining country’ in the parish of Wendron. In 1832 there were 341 registered electors, of whom 60 were freemen.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 78 in 1820
Estimated voters: 81 in 1831
Population: 2761 (1821); 3293 (1831)
