Wells, a cathedral city situated at the southern foot of the Mendips near the source of the River Ax, was described in 1830 as ‘small and compact, for the most part well built and the streets ... well paved’. Its prosperity depended heavily on the retail trade, which was sustained by ‘the respectable inhabitants and the rural population in the vicinity’. Little significant industrial activity remained, as silk manufacturing had entirely decayed and only one large stocking factory still operated; there were paper mills at nearby Wookey. In fact, Wells was in gradual economic decline, and it was reported in 1833 that the city was ‘not so flourishing as it used to be’, with ‘fewer persons of property now living in it’.
The constituency boundaries did not coincide with the city limits, incorporating as they did a considerable rural area but excluding the Liberty of St. Andrew, where the cathedral and bishop’s palace were located, and parts of the suburb of East Wells. The corporation, a self-electing body, consisted of a mayor, the returning officer for parliamentary elections, seven masters and 16 capital burgesses. The franchise was in members of the corporation, other freemen elected by them and freemen deriving their privilege through birth, marriage or apprenticeship. All those eligible to vote were required to be ‘admitted to their freedom in one of the seven trading companies. It is sufficient that they should be admitted at any time before polling, and it is oftentimes delayed to the day and even to the hour before tendering their vote’. The key to corporation influence over parliamentary elections lay in its power, established by the outcome of an election petition in 1768, to create honorary freemen. As a result, large numbers of non-residents, often complete strangers to the city, were enrolled solely for electoral purposes, and they and the corporation were seen as forming an increasingly distinct interest from that of the resident freemen. A ‘strange anomaly’ thus existed whereby ‘a body of freemen ... are entitled to vote for their representatives in Parliament, and yet are considered as being excluded from a corporation which is unlimited in its numbers’.
In November 1820 Wells was only ‘very partially illuminated’ to celebrate the news of the withdrawal of the bill of pains and penalties against Queen Caroline, but ‘the inhabitants extended a rope across the principal street’ and hung an effigy of the perjured witness Majocchi ‘in triumph’. At a ‘numerous and respectable’ public meeting summoned by the mayor, 1 Dec. 1820, a loyal address to the king, moved by Admiral Holloway and Tudway, was ‘unanimously agreed’, expressing ‘indignation and disgust’ at the ‘criminal designs’ of radical agitators who were ‘scattering [the] seeds of impiety and sedition’.
At the general election in the summer of 1826 Tudway and Williams were absent owing to ill health, the latter being represented by his sons. Tudway and Taylor were nominated by the barrister Thomas Coney and the banker D. Payne, while Edwards and Williams were introduced by Peter Sherston and Nicholls. One oppositionist freeman urged his fellows to
consider that, by your vote on this occasion, you are deciding not only the question of your own rights as freemen of Wells, but the still higher and more serious one, of Protestants and Englishmen. Let church and king then be the word ... Huzza - English bricks and mortar, No Roman cement.
Som. RO DD/SAS/SE20/7, poster, 8 June; Bristol Mirror, 10 June; Taunton Courier, 14 June 1826.
Polling continued for thirteen days, with voters being fetched from all over the country and each vote being closely scrutinized by counsel. For the first five days, Edwards and Williams headed the sitting Members, but on the sixth Tudway drew level with Williams. He overtook him next day and shared the lead with Edwards on the eighth, by which time Taylor had overtaken Williams. On the ninth day, Tudway secured the outright lead, and on the tenth the sitting Members were clear of their opponents. After the result was declared, Lethbridge condemned Taylor to his face for his poor attendance in the Commons. The opposition immediately announced that the result would be challenged and steps were taken to organize a ‘Blue Club’ in order to keep alive the ‘spirit of independence which has now beamed on the inhabitants’. A banquet was held for the victors, attended by ‘upwards of 250 of the resident clergy, gentry, burgesses, freemen, principal tradesmen and other respectable inhabitants’, to celebrate the result of ‘a contest which stands almost unparalleled, for duration and close scrutiny, in the contested elections that have taken place throughout the United Kingdom’.
Anti-Catholic petitions from the archdeacon and clergy were presented to the Lords, 27 Feb., and Commons, 6 Mar. 1827, 10 Mar. 1828, and the inhabitants sent a similar petition to the Commons, 10 Mar. 1829.
if we fail to secure a majority in the corporation our money and labours are thrown away ... we shall be beat and laughed at. We should know our strength and on whom we can depend, immediately ... I have worked hard enough. Do put your shoulder to the wheel in Wells among our friends without an hour’s loss, and remember your family must live in Wells. I need never see it again.
He thought the money spent on contesting the quo warranto proceedings might have been better used in a concerted effort to secure a majority among the ‘old corporators’, some of whom he knew could be ‘got at’. As mutual recriminations set in, Taylor protested that he had been ‘used very scurvily’ by Tudway and his associates, who seldom consulted with him, and he accused his colleague of ingratitude for the support he had provided. Tudway retorted that it was he who had ‘sacrificed myself entirely on your account’ by persevering with their joint interest when, as he now revealed, a deputation during the last election had offered him their votes provided he dissociated himself from Taylor, which, ‘as a friend and a gentleman’, he had refused to do.
At the dissolution in 1830 Tudway announced his retirement, while Taylor departed in silence. The candidates brought forward by the dominant group in the corporation were John Edwards Vaughan (formerly Edwards), the unsuccessful challenger in 1826, and Hanning’s son, John Lee Lee. Opposition to them focused on Richard Blakemore, sheriff of Herefordshire, who received a requisition from certain freemen inviting him to stand. In his address, he professed loyalty to king and constitution and presented himself as the champion of the ‘rights and privileges’ of the freemen. One critic of Edwards Vaughan and Lee pointed to the absence from their joint address of any statement of political principles, other than ‘that loose and indefinite cant, so invariably flowing from the lips of every place-hunger and public locust ... "of faithfully discharging their duty"’, and he condemned the way in which the new interest had used its power in the corporation to suppress the freemen’s privileges. Another opponent recalled Edwards Vaughan’s shady business connections with the architect John Nash, observing that the city could do without ‘public peculators or jobbers’, and one freeman urged his fellow electors to show that they were ‘not to be bought or sold for the convenience or profit of a lawyer.
Edwards Vaughan’s poor health meant that by November 1830 Hanning, who was described as the ‘influential person and agent who manages the affair’ at Wells, was already anticipating an early vacancy.
The inhabitant householders petitioned Parliament against the Beer Act, 14, 25 July 1831.
Wells retained both its seats under the Reform Act, the boundary commissioners recommending that the Liberty of St. Andrew and the whole of East Wells be united with the city. There were 358 registered electors in 1832. Prior to the general election that December John Wilson Croker* received a requisition to stand, with the ‘concurrence of the majority of the corporation and respectable inhabitants, and of the dean and all the clergy’, but despite observing that ‘there might be a chance of getting in a Conservative’, as ‘Wells is one of the few places in which the two bills (reform and boundary) seem to have left the interest of the gentry and clergy almost in statu quo’, he declined. In the event, Norman Lamont, president of the Loyal Society, was returned with Lee, ahead of Nicholas Ridley Colborne, formerly Member for Horsham and a strong reformer, and Edwards Vaughan. The metamorphosis of the Tudway interest into a pro-reform body was demonstrated by the fact that Lamont was nominated by Brookes and Lovell, while Ridley Colborne was introduced by Robert Tudway and Besley.
in the freemen
Number of voters: 308 in 1830
Estimated voters: about 350 in 1831
Population: 5888 (1821); 4048 (1831)
