Banbury, situated on the Cherwell in north Oxfordshire, close to the Northamptonshire border, was a thriving market town and centre of communications. By this period its only significant industry, the weaving of plush and horses’ harness and trappings, still largely a domestic concern, was in relative decline: in 1831, there were 125 plush and girth-weavers in the town, but in the surrounding villages about 550 men, plus women and children, produced goods for Banbury employers.
At the general election of 1820 Guilford, a supporter of the Liverpool ministry, again nominated his kinsman Heneage Legge, brother of the 4th earl of Dartmouth, whom he had returned at a by-election less than four months earlier. Six aldermen, led by the mayor, Robert Brayne, a surgeon, and two capital burgesses, attended to endorse him. (There were nine non-resident members of the corporation at this time, and one vacancy among the capital burgesses.)
I hear of savage work in many quarters. Letters from the neighbourhood of Banbury express an opinion that a set of radicals there and, it is supposed, joined by some of [William] Cobbett’s† banditti on the road to Coventry, intended to have murdered Heneage Legge ... He, however, escaped with his life, being dragged over the tops of some of the houses and let down into the inn yard from whence he made his escape in the disguise of a postboy.
Petworth House mss bdle. 69.
Agriculturists from the Banbury area petitioned Parliament for relief from distress, 15, 19 May 1820, 19 Feb., 27 Mar. 1821. A similar petition was presented to the Commons, 11 June 1823.
In February 1826 Heneage Legge necessarily vacated his seat on his appointment as a commissioner of customs. He was quietly replaced by his younger brother Arthur, a captain in the Life Guards, for whom nine aldermen and three capital burgesses formally voted. (Eight of the corporators were non-resident at this time.)
At the general election of 1830 Bute replaced Legge with his first cousin, Henry Villiers Stuart, Member for County Waterford in the 1826 Parliament and a supporter of Catholic relief. He was drawn into the town by the crowd, spouted the cant of independence and attention to local interests, and was formally elected by eight aldermen and three capital burgesses. (Ten of the corporators were now non-resident.) He visited Banbury in September 1830 to demonstrate support for the town’s National School Society.
I heard a great noise, and as bills had been circulated saying what dreadful things would be done if Colonel Hutchinson was elected - fire and blood being named in the bills - I felt alarmed and went to our front window and saw a hundred people or more being hustled about, and in the centre of the crowd a man without a hat, looking dreadfully excited. People pushed him about, and compelled him to go on towards the bridge. I recognized him as Colonel Hutchinson. Close by him was Mr. [Francis] Francillon, the lawyer, a tall man, who threw up his hands to keep the mob off. He talked or rather shouted to make himself heard amongst the hooting and groaning. In this way they went on towards the bridge. This Mr. Francillon was an opponent in politics, and as desirous to prevent Colonel Hutchinson being elected as any of the roughs were; on that account all the more praise and thanks were due to him.
Jackson’s Oxford Jnl. 30 Apr., 7 May; The Times, 4 May 1831; Potts, 205; D. McClatchey, Oxon. Clergy, 210-12; Beesley, 39-40.
Francillon eventually forced a safe passage out of the town for Hely Hutchinson, who was hit on the head by a stone. The reform leaders were desperate for an end to the violence, and to their great relief Thomas Brayne and the deputy recorder, Andrew Amos, a lawyer of liberal views, who advised against calling in the military, secured the removal of the barricades, the restoration of order and a guarantee of free access to the poll for all except Hely Hutchinson himself. Six corporators, the Braynes, Judd, Salmon (a non-resident), Griffin and Edmunds, voted for Easthope. Walford defiantly nominated and voted for Hely Hutchinson, along with Colonel Fiennes Sanderson Miller of Radway, a capital burgess, whom he roped in to act as a seconder. None of the other ten corporators, of whom five lived in Banbury, turned up, and Walford conceded defeat on behalf of Hely Hutchinson.
The affair, and the recriminations between Thomas Brayne and Hely Hutchinson, who wrote a formal protest on the day of the election, complaining that he had been ‘assaulted, wounded, and driven from the town’ and that Brayne had connived in the ‘reign of terror’ at Banbury, received considerable publicity in the national and local press. Brayne defended himself vigorously.
By the Boundary Act, the borough was made co-extensive with the parish, which embraced Neithrop and the hamlets of Calthorpe, Easington, Wickham and Hardwick, and that of Grimsbury on the east bank of the Cherwell in Northamptonshire.
in the corporation
A single Member constituency
Qualified voters: 18
Population: 3396 (1821); 3737 (1831)
