The smallest Welsh county, Flintshire had industrialized early and had an admirably diversified economy. The boundaries of four of its five hundreds (Coleshill, Mold, Prestatyn and Rhuddlan) were defined by the River Dee, which separated the county from Cheshire to the north-east and east. To the south lay the hundred of Maelor (Maelor Sais), a detached part of the county adjoining Denbighshire and Shropshire. There were five boroughs, the old shire town of Flint, Caergwrle, Caerwys, Overton and Rhuddlan; but coal, iron and textile production had made Hawarden, Holywell and Mold the chief towns, and Mold shared the assizes and functions of a county town with Flint.
The county met at Flint, 6 Mar. 1820, to proclaim George IV and adopt the customary addresses of condolence and congratulation. All the major families were represented, and the speakers included David Pennant of Downing, a crown appointee as constable of Flint Castle; Lord Kenyon of Gredington’s chaplain, the Rev. Whitehall Whitehall Davies, rector of Broughton; the Glynne family chaplain, George Neville Greville, rector of Hawarden; Sir Thomas Hanmer; Mostyn’s brother-in-law Sir Edward Pryce Lloyd of Pengwern, the Member for Flint Boroughs, and John Jones, the vicar of Holywell, a living in Mostyn’s gift. Minorities in the Conway, Glynne and Hanmer families, which inclined to Toryism, left little scope for a challenger to Mostyn at the 1820 general election, and his return was unopposed.
Mostyn and Lloyd’s names headed the requisition for a county distress meeting at Mold, 1 Apr. 1820, which both attended. It considered a petition for action against agricultural distress, proposed by Frederick Richard Price of Bryn-y-Pys and seconded by Edward Morgan of Golden Grove; but the meeting was adjourned until 8 June, in the hope that less formal complaints by Mostyn and Lloyd would suffice. The Commons received a distress petition from the merchants and inhabitants of Holywell, 17 July 1820.
Amid widespread concern at the extent of the economic downturn and in the wake of a similar Cheshire meeting attended by several Flintshire squires, a county meeting at Mold, 17 Apr. 1822, adopted a petition complaining of the ‘total inadequacy’ of the government’s relief proposals and of ‘prices below production costs’. Price, Mostyn Edwards and Lloyd were the principal speakers, and Mostyn presented the petition to the Commons, 24 Apr. 1822.
During the winter of 1826-7 the local consensus among the landowners and occupiers moved decidedly against free trade and the liberal Toryism of Canning and Huskisson, and the hundred of Maelor, parish of St. Asaph, and Flintshire Agricultural Society petitioned accordingly in March and May 1827.
Flintshire’s testimony to the 1828 justice commission was supplied by Price, as chairman of the county bench, Hugh Roberts, the clerk of the peace, and Mostyn. All were said to favour abolition of the Welsh judicature and incorporation of the courts of great session into the English assize system.
Mostyn, who was suffering from gout, was returned unopposed with a great display of hospitality at the general election in August 1830, proposed by Price and seconded by Sir Edward Mostyn of Talacre. Sir Stephen Glynne* had come of age in 1828, and Sir John Hanmer† would be 21 in December, and, sensing the need to publicize his opinion on issues of local concern, Mostyn announced that he expected the East India question, slavery, and the Bank Charter Act to come before Parliament shortly, and declared his support for opening the East India trade and ending slavery. He expressed no opinion on the Bank, other than to state that government policy remained undecided. Of the abolition of the Welsh judicature, he noted: ‘If we have lost our local privileges, we have gained an important benefit in having judges appointed by the courts of Westminster to administer justice, and not barristers as before’. He ended with his customary call for lower taxes, rigid economy and retrenchment.
Flintshire’s Wesleyan Methodist and Baptist congregations contributed petitions to the 1830-1 anti-slavery campaign.
Hanmer, who had been foreman of the grand jury at the recent assizes, immediately declared his candidature, as an advocate of moderate reform, thus apparently putting an end to the old Flint reactionary Serjeant Jones’s aspirations; and by 20 Apr. he had canvassed Holywell with Sir John Williams with some success.
I should think Wynne Eyton almost pledged to be a reformer since the Mold meeting, and so I should conceive Price to be; but no man can feel quite sure of the latter till he actually has him. We know this by sad experience. It would give me pleasure notwithstanding to learn that he had declared in your favour.
Ibid. 7906, 8004.
When Hanmer, who paid his retainers five guineas a day, announced his retirement, 28 Apr., Lloyd Mostyn was already secure in the erstwhile Tory strongholds of Hawarden and Overton, where ‘Price at last said he certainly would vote for you if it came to a poll against Sir John Hanmer’,
Reform retained its popular appeal. Holywell and a county meeting on 28 Sept. petitioned the Lords urging the bill’s passage, 4, 5 Oct., and Holywell addressed the king, Lords and Lord Grey regretting its defeat in the Lords, 15 Oct. 1831.
Before the general election in December 1832 a Holywell town meeting, 15 Dec., adopted a petition for the repeal of assessed taxes and resolved to use every constitutional means to bring it about.
Estimated voters: 1200
