Leicestershire’s agriculture was dominated by corn and sheep production. As well as the thriving and expanding county town, where about 15 per cent of the freeholders lived, it contained a number of considerable settlements, some of which were centres of hosiery, cotton and worsted manufacturing, still largely conducted on a domestic basis: Loughborough (population in 1821 7,365); Hinckley (5,933); Ashby-de-la-Zouch (3,935); Melton Mowbray (2,815); Lutterworth (2,102); Market Harborough (1,873), and Market Bosworth (1,117). Dissent had a significant presence in these places, as well as in Leicester.
The abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties against Queen Caroline in November 1820 was popularly celebrated.
There was no stir at the 1826 general election, when Manners was put forward by Edmund Cradock Hartopp of Freathsby, the son and namesake of a former county Member, and Henry Halford† of Newton Harcourt, and Legh Keck was nominated by Charles Godfrey Mundy of Burton Hall and Henry Hungerford of Dingley, Northamptonshire. Political issues were apparently not aired, but Manners declared his ‘firm adherence to the Protestant constitution’.
By the time of the 1830 general election hostility to Rutland’s dominance in county politics was strong enough to inspire a bid by urban-based Dissenters and some independent-minded freeholders to make a run against his interest. Legh Keck, who had gone into sporadic opposition to the ministry in 1830, was not under threat, but there was some vicious criticism of Manners in the liberal press:
Surely our county is not in such state, that no fitter person can be found to represent us than this nominal lord, this scion of aristocracy ... whose family have ever been the creatures, the fawning, flattering parasites of every administration ... and who have ever put their hands to roll the snowball of the state, in order to increase its bulk and pressure upon the industry of a groaning and already overloaded people.
Leicester Chron. 24 July 1830.
Both sitting Members sought re-election, but the dissidents put up the radical Unitarian Leicester banker Thomas Paget, a leading critic of the corporation. His costs were to be met by public subscription, with his supporters paying their own way to the poll. At the nomination, 11 Aug., Legh Keck was proposed by Palmer and Mundy, and Manners by Cradock Hartopp and Halford. Paget was nominated by Ralph Oldacres of Arnesby, who declared that ‘the time had arrived when the freeholders ought to look to their pockets themselves, as they had been picked long enough’. His seconder was Thomas Stokes, Leicester’s leading hosiery manufacturer, who commended him as a man ‘friendly to reform and economy’. Paget spoke at length in support of these and other liberal causes and stressed his determination to restore electoral independence to the county. (He later published this speech as a pamphlet.) The show of hands was for him and Legh Keck, but Manners demanded a poll.
I fear the character of the new House of Commons, and I expect to see questions of reform carried against the government ... I really believe ... that no man possesses a more splendid and magnificent interest than I have the pleasure of heading in ...[Leicestershire]. But there is a much more formidable interest than could be supposed among the radicals and Dissenters, and I find that my conduct on the Catholic question has certainly so far alienated some of the Ultra Tories as to have had an effect at the election. But a great interest is like a great army. It cannot be set in motion without an enormous expense, and and if there should be a premeditated contest on a future occasion, £50,000 would not more than cover the expenses ... There was no canvass this last time, and by great good management on the part of my brother’s committee the expenses will be within £6,000. A meeting took place last week at Leicester to congratulate the French on their revolution, and ... the orators promised that in a short time ‘there should be not a vestige of nobility in England unless the aristocracy mended their manners and sentiments’, and the whole meeting responded, ‘the sooner it is done away with the better’.
Arbuthnot Corresp. 138.
The county’s Dissenters sent up dozens of anti-slavery petitions to the 1830 Parliament.
At the ensuing dissolution Manners offered again, but Legh Keck backed out. Paget, whose supporters had been active since the last election, came forward on the same terms as previously, but Otway Cave and other Whig squires appealed to March Phillipps, their preferred candidate, to stand. Stokes, the chairman of Paget’s committee, wrote to Paget’s brother-in-law Thomas Pares*, a former Member for Leicester, ‘to solicit the esteem of your interests in his favour as a supporter of the reform bill’. Pares obliged, believing that ‘it becomes all true patriots to forget every minor point of difference and to join heart and hand in promoting the success of the great measure’. His only regret was that so far no second candidate ‘takes the field between whom and Mr. Paget we might divided our votes and so give Leicestershire a chance of sending two advocates of the ... bill to ... Parliament’.
Petitions in support of the reform bill reached the Lords from Barwell, Burbage, Castle Donington, Earl Shilton, Hinckley, Loughborough, Market Harborough and Melton Mowbray, 30 Sept., 3, 5 Oct. 1831.
Number of voters: 5442 in 1830
Estimated voters: about 6,000
