Ironically, since it was to be the scene of his triumph in the famous Clare by-election, Daniel O’Connell* found Ennis, which lay in the parish of Drumcliff, unwelcoming and depressing on his visits as a barrister at the assizes.
They equally enjoyed an unrestricted exercise of the electoral patronage. According to various radical sources, they nominated the Member alternately, but Vesey Fitzgerald, who was closely connected with Lord Liverpool’s government, seems to have handled the necessary transactions on most occasions.
In January 1826 a petition, which aroused Vesey Fitzgerald’s anxieties, was organized to complain about the corporation’s rights, but it does not appear to have been brought up in Parliament.
Lewis, who was re-elected on transferring from the joint-secretaryship of the treasury to the vice-presidency of the board of trade in February 1828, resigned from the representation of Ennis two months later in order to come in for his native Radnorshire. He failed in his bid to nominate a successor, but O’Brien surrendered to him at least £700, being part of what he had paid.
The Catholic inhabitants’ petitions for Catholic relief, repeal of the Irish Subletting and Vestry Acts, and parliamentary reform were presented by Smith O’Brien, 7, 14, 22 May, and Hume, 23 May 1828.
At the general election of 1830 the nomination was understood to be back in the hands of the Fitzgerald family and O’Connell enquired about the possibility of it being sold to an (unnamed) ‘English gentleman of large fortune who would I think outbid anybody else’.
Lucius O’Brien, standing in for his father at the Clare by-election in March 1831, reluctantly announced that the family would support the Grey ministry’s reform bill and abandon its electoral interests, and Sir Edward’s defeat at the hands of Maurice O’Connell was considered by the lord lieutenant, Lord Anglesey, deservedly to spell the end of his patronage of the borough.
Smith O’Brien, who bragged that ‘such a kind feeling exists towards me in the town as has, I trust, secured, if anything of this kind can be called secure, my return after the passing of the reform bill’, informed Smith Stanley, 15 June 1831, about various abuses in the corporation of Ennis: notably, the invidious role of the non-resident provost as returning officer, the existence of the wholly informal position of vice-provost, the improper exaction of tolls and the desirability of extending the boundaries (if necessary) to more respectable habitations outside the town and even as far as the village of Clare.
Dominick Browne, Member for Mayo, unsuccessfully moved to exchange the borough for a third seat for county Clare, 9 July 1832, when Maurice O’Connell defended its viability as a constituency. According to the boundary commissioners, whose recommendation to extend the borough to cover the full extent of the town was implemented, the number of houses was 1,390, of which 290 were valued at £10 or over, so that, discounting vacant and female occupancy, there were expected to be about 250 electors, including the four resident corporators, at the first reformed election.
in the corporation
Qualified voters: 13
Population: 6701 (1821); 7711 (1831)
