Northampton, one of the largest potwalloper boroughs, was ‘a flourishing town’ whose prosperity was on the increase.
At the 1820 general election Compton offered again and Robinson came forward at the behest of the independents. The corporation invited George Agar Ellis* to be their second man, but he demurred, and they reluctantly reverted to William Leader Maberly, Member for Westbury since May 1819, who had continued to cultivate the borough since his abortive candidature in 1818, when he had been forced to resign in favour of Kerrison on account of being under age.
Robinson is likely to come in at last. Maberly’s people have quarrelled with Compton’s, and they both split their votes upon Robinson. Maberly has shown great skill, he had not paid his bills, but he has contrived to throw all the odium of it upon Compton, and the probability is that Compton will be beaten. He has been pelted and abused in the most violent manner during all his canvass.
Althorp Letters, 101.
This disagreement had probably originated in Maberly’s following his father John’s lead in defecting to opposition towards the end of the previous session. Despite his new allegiance, he did not unite with Robinson, and all three candidates emphasized their independence.
Both Members of course sided with the Whig opposition to the Liverpool ministry. They presented a Northampton loyal address, containing 1,476 signatures, to Queen Caroline, 26 Aug. 1820. The abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties was celebrated in the town, 11 Nov., and a congratulatory address, with over 1,600 names, was presented to her by Maberly, 1 Dec. 1820. A counter-petition organized by the corporation was announced a few days before Christmas, but the mayor refused to accede to a requisition for a public meeting to petition the king against any further proceedings against Caroline.
another cause why we combined together was to keep ourselves independent at elections. It is well known that the masters combined to all except one or two individuals to force men to vote for the Whig interest at the last election, and by that means Earl Compton was thrown out of this borough ... We was obliged to return two Members that have supported the Catholic claims contrary to our principles altogether.
Add. 40377, f. 394.
Although the cordwainers soon resumed work, another dispute erupted in early 1826. The masters refused to meet their demands and the journeymen shoemakers, after several weeks, gave up.
Without Lord Northampton to aid them, the Tories were left to find their own candidate for the approaching general election. A number of aldermen and some of the other leading figures convened a public meeting at the Dolphin in early February 1826, when they determined to open a subscription, get up a requisition to secure a Tory candidate, and appoint a committee to find one. A deputation visited Peel and asked if he could recommend a country gentleman, preferably one associated with the county. They had in mind Sir Robert Gunning of Horton, and Peel, knowing of no other, suggested that they try him, but Gunning reluctantly declined, fearing the expense of a contest. When William Henry Lytton Earle Bulwer* of Haydon Hall, Norfolk, offered his services, claiming to be ‘a friend to the present administration and a strong anti-Catholic’, Thomas Armfield, a member of the committee, wrote to Peel, 18 Feb., to ask
whether or not he is likely to fulfil his professions ... particularly in regard to the latter point, for upon that, any person offering ... must in a great measure rest his pretensions, the decided determination of a great body of the electors being not to give their suffrages to any candidate who will not pledge himself to vote against Catholic emancipation.
On 23 Feb. Peel replied, recommending George William Finch Hatton, who had been born at Kirby Hall, near Oundle.
At the 1826 general election Gunning duly came forward, citing his support for the Liverpool administration, attachment to the ‘constitution, church and state’ and hostility to Catholic relief, 30 May. Robinson and Maberly offered again a few days later.
From what I heard there I conclude that Robinson is quite safe, and that Gunning will be beaten. At present there is not a word said about Popery, and if Robinson’s people play their cards well there will not, for both parties want assistance from him, and fear his joining the other, therefore the Tories will be very cautious how they raise any cry which will force Robinson to make common cause with Maberly. I understand that Maberly made a capital speech yesterday and began the series of daily castigations which Gunning will undergo for the next fortnight.
Two days later he continued:
Both parties expect that Robinson will join them as soon as he is secure himself ... and Maberly’s speaking is beginning to tell in his favour and has already almost frightened the corporation out of their pledge to give Gunning £1,000.
He added that he had given a list of his father’s tenants to Edward Bouverie, who had secured all but one for Robinson. Spencer’s agent was ill, and Althorp could think of no other way to assist Maberly. He dined with Robinson at Delapré, 5 June, and told his father that while he was safe
Gunning has all the quality of Northampton, but Maberly has all the back lane gentry who do not give plumpers to Robinson. An attempt was made to halloo ‘No Popery’ on Friday night, but it failed entirely. Everybody, both his friends and foes, say that Gunning must be beaten unless Robinson joins him, which of course he will not do.
Althorp Letters, 127-8.
Polling commenced, 12 June, and the Mercury noted that ‘this town has been in a feverish state of excitement during the whole of the present week’, while The Times reported that each day crowds of electors could be seen ‘reeling and staggering from pillar to post, their conduct annoying the more peaceable portion of the town’. After the close on the fourth day a stone was thrown at Maberly as he was addressing the crowd from the balcony of his inn. The culprit was seen to flee to the George, where Gunning was haranguing his supporters, and the mob that followed him pelted the inn with stones. Althorp, who was dining there after his return for the county, managed to restore peace by telling the crowd that they were ‘injuring the cause of reform’. Gunning was absent for much of the contest because of illness, but his kinsman Charles Ross, Member for Orford, stood in for him. Maberly’s father, after his own return for Abingdon, arrived on the final day to lend his support, and castigated the corporation for funding his son’s opponent.
Despite Gunning’s defeat, the corporation formally voted £1,000 towards his expenses at the next full assembly, which was not held until 15 Jan. 1827. Only two of its members, Brown and Charles Freeman, opposed the grant. Two petitions subsequently reached the Commons, one with over 600 signatures from the inhabitants, 14 Feb., and another from Brown which Maberly presented, 21 Feb.
Persons in this borough under the influence of Colonel Maberly have so coloured up the proceedings ... that the persons in opposition to government really believe and don’t hesitate to say the corporation will be brought before the bar of the House to hear the displeasure which they entertain of the proceedings of the corporation ... We are held up to the ridicule and taunts of this opposition entirely from the matter not having been fairly before the House.
He also noted that they had obtained a copy of the petition and that it contained many forgeries.
A Whig Club was established in early 1827, under the direction of the Rev. Benjamin Lloyd Edwards, a Dissenting minister, to counter the increasingly active Tory King and Constitution Club, which had been founded in 1823.
At the 1830 general election Robinson offered again, alluding to his votes for religious toleration and retrenchment and pledging his support for parliamentary reform. Maberly announced his retirement. Gunning came forward as a supporter of the Wellington ministry, indicating that he would back a limited reform, transferring seats from corrupt boroughs to populous unrepresented towns. He made it clear that he would pay nothing towards his expenses and a subscription was opened to defray his costs.
Robinson secured support from 72 per cent of the 1,919 who polled (782 as split votes with Gunning, 512 shared with Hill, and 82 as plumpers). Gunning received votes from 69 per cent (489 as plumpers and 44 shared with Hill), and Hill from 29 (ten as plumpers). Gunning was the preferred choice of all the social groups except the skilled craftsmen, who gave Robinson 871 votes and Gunning 654. Of the 657 boot and shoemakers in this category, Robinson was supported by 88 per cent, Hill by 54 and Gunning by 46. Of the 32 footwear manufacturers who polled, 13 divided their votes between Robinson and Hill and eight between Robinson and Gunning, while seven plumped for Robinson, and two for Gunning and two for Hill.
Sir Robert Gunning’s friends have had reason to thank those of Sir George Robinson for their forbearance during the late contest, if they wish for another trial of numbers let it be made in a real pollbooth and with real voters and then it might be seen what is the true power of the Northampton Tories against that of the reunited liberal party ... half of whose strength was not put forth at the late elections.
Northampton Mercury, 28 Aug. 1830.
In response, Gunning’s friends insisted that they had only undertaken the exercise after Robinson’s party had claimed that they had 400 unpolled voters. They also condemned the Whigs’ new Patriotic Union, which deducted a penny a week from the wages of workers to defray the expense of any future election, those refusing to pay being denied work. Exchanges along these lines continued for several more weeks in the Mercury.
The proposed railways linking Birmingham and London, and Derby and London, aroused considerable interest in Northampton. A meeting held in the George was informed that a deputation of four gentlemen had visited the proposers of both, and that although they were told at Derby that plans were only tentative, the Birmingham project was further developed and intended passing within four or five miles of Northampton. The Birmingham committee also held out the prospect of a branch to Northampton. In response to a requisition, the mayor chaired a public meeting to discuss the matter, 2 Nov. 1830. Charles Markham, a local solicitor and member of the deputation, moved that the town should press for the branch and was seconded by Alderman John Marshall. The motion was passed unanimously, and a new deputation, including a number of aldermen, formally lobbied for a branch. The project provoked great opposition among the county landowners, who formed their own committee to combat it, and in February 1831 the corporation reconsidered its view and joined those actively opposed to the railway.
At the 1831 general election Robinson and Smith duly came forward in a ‘Blue party’ coalition. Gunning offered again as an anti-reformer. Smith arrived, 25 Apr., and made a long speech lampooning Gunning and advocating the bill. As he was concluding, Gunning started to address a group of his supporters from another inn on the market square, but was forced to give up when it appeared that the peace was threatened by the agitated crowd.
Of the 2,404 who polled, Robinson secured support from 65 per cent (1,235 shared with Smith, 327 with Gunning, and eight plumpers). Smith received votes from 53 per cent (40 shared with Gunning and four plumpers), Gunning from 48 per cent (605 plumpers and 185 shared with Lyon), and Lyon from eight per cent (all shared with Gunning). Robinson was again the first choice of skilled craftsmen (76 per cent), retailers (64) and merchants and manufacturers (63). Of the 755 boot and shoemakers who polled, 654 (87 per cent) polled for Robinson, 613 (81) for Smith, 146 (19) for Gunning, and 12 (two) for Lyon. Of the 53 footwear manufacturers, 36 divided their votes between the Whigs, 12 plumped for Gunning, three split for Robinson and Gunning and two split for Gunning and Lyon.
On 22 Sept. a meeting was held to petition the Lords urging them to pass the reform bill, which was presented, 30 Sept. 1831.
Reform made no alteration in Northampton’s representation or boundaries. The boundary commissioners reported that according to its rate books, the town had 1,047 £10 houses, but they suspected that the real number was higher.
in inhabitant householders not receiving alms
Number of voters: 2404 in 1831
Estimated voters: over 1,300 in 1821, rising to over 2,400 in 1831
Population: 10793 (1821); 15351 (1831)
