Cavan, the southernmost county of the old province of Ulster, was a bleak inland region of limited agricultural and commercial development, but it was populous and contained the disfranchised boroughs of Belturbet and Cavan, where county meetings and elections were held. The Catholic population greatly outnumbered, yet were electorally in thrall to, the almost exclusively Protestant gentry, of whom none individually had a sufficient interest to return a Member.
From 1806 Farnham returned his Orangeman cousin John Maxwell Barry of Newtownbarry, county Wexford, joint-governor and colonel of militia, although personal differences occasionally rendered the position of Barry, who in 1817 was appointed to a place at the treasury, perilously insecure. The other seat was occupied by the Dublin wine merchant Nathaniel Sneyd, the custos rotulorum, who had gained it on the eve of the Union on the independent interest, a loose alliance of minor landlords who favoured the Whig opposition at Westminster and perhaps resented the local Farnham hegemony. He was considered ‘a great favourite’, but, having voted consistently against Catholic relief and usually with Lord Liverpool’s administration, risked undermining his electoral base.
A loyal address to the king was agreed on the motion of the Right Rev. George de la Poer Beresford, bishop of Kilmore, at a county meeting, 19 Jan. 1821; at another, 13 Jan. 1823, in the face of an unsuccessful Orange opposition, an address congratulating Lord Wellesley, the lord lieutenant, on his escape during the Dublin theatre riots was moved by James Hamilton Story of Ballyconnell House.
Although the by-election marked no change of political complexion, revelations emerged of a plan to overturn the representation. As Fox related to Maxwell, 13 May 1824, a furious Pratt, who had his own ambitions for a seat, ‘told me what I could not and do not believe, that the bishop, Clements, Coote and Sneyd had all combined together to bring Coote in, and that [Sneyd] was immediately to resign and Coote to come in’.
Sneyd is to resign at the next general election in consequence of the support you gave him at the last. If called on by you, he is to give notice of his intentions of resigning, so as to give you time to prepare and canvass. You are to receive from me and the bishop our support, and Sneyd is to use his influence with his friends in your favour, reserving at the same time our support for the Farnham interest.
Hist. Irish Parl. trans. HP/4/1, Coote to Clements, 7 Aug. 1823, 12 May, reply [May], Sneyd to Clements, 15 May 1824.
Despite this last point, that autumn one newspaper boasted that ‘Coote will certainly beat the Barrys upon this their classic ground’, and Henry Goulburn*, the Irish secretary, regretted that Sneyd’s ‘sad disgrace’ in favouring ‘a radical and a papist’ would result in ‘the putting up of a red hot Orangeman and the most violent contest possible in a county where the old Members might have been returned without opposition’.
The Cavan petition condemning the Catholic Association, with 4,700 signatures, was presented by Maxwell, 10 Feb., but another from the county for Catholic claims was brought up by Bective, 19 Apr. 1825.
Given these local rivalries and the national sectarian context, all sides were set for a major confrontation at the general election of 1826, when the result in Cavan provided the most spectacular counter-example to the incipient trend of Catholic triumphs in county Waterford and elsewhere.
On the hustings, 19 June 1826, Maxwell (proposed by Pratt and Young) and Saunderson (introduced by the Rev. Samuel Adams, later dean of Cashel, and Humphrys) were unable to get a hearing, although the former’s anti-Catholic tirade later appeared in the press; neither the indisposed Coote (nominated by Clements and one Veitch), who was menaced by outlawry proceedings, nor Southwell (represented by Bective and Henry Grattan, the new Member for Dublin), who faced arraignment for debt, were able to be present. The show of hands was declared in favour of Maxwell and Southwell, but, almost from the start of the bitterly disputed six-day poll Maxwell and Saunderson, who presumably shared many splits, established a clear lead over Southwell and the trailing Coote, who kept it open in order to try to regain third place. According to George Marshal Knipe of Erne Hill, who estimated that only about 400 freeholders remained unpolled, 26 June:
I have been at many contested elections, but I never saw any so desperate as that now going on here, either with reference to the interference and audacity of the priests or the ferocity of the mobs. Many persons here are in danger from the beatings they received and almost every estate has lost many of their tenantry, or in other words the tenants have voted with the priests who accompanied the tallies up to the polling booths.
Newry Commercial Telegraph, 23, 27, 30 June; Westmeath Jnl. 29 June; Impartial Reporter, 29 June, 3 July 1826; Richardson mss C/18/24.
The unrest culminated on the 27th, when Maxwell (who received the votes of 61 per cent of the 4,706 electors polled) and Saunderson (57 per cent) were declared elected, in a fight between a group of Orangemen and some Coote’s Catholic tenants, one of the most active of whom, Robert McCabe, was killed.
Maxwell, several of whose connections promised retaliation against their rebellious tenants, blamed the Catholic priests for exerting theological pressure on their co-religionists, but his opponents both retorted that the real unconstitutional influence had been exercised by the coalition and its violent supporters over the independent interest.
Following another Protestant county meeting, the anti-Catholic petition from Cavan was presented to the Commons, probably by Maxwell, 8 May, and to the Lords by Lord Eldon, 7 June 1828. A petition from several inhabitants for improving the condition of Ireland was brought up by Grattan, 19 June.
Young, now a director of the East India Company, offered, apparently as an independent, at the general election of 1830, when he claimed that he had stood down in 1826 only because he believed that both the eventual Members would remain hostile to concessions. Most Protestants wished and expected him to replace Saunderson and be returned in conjunction with Maxwell, and even Leveson Gower was prepared to support him, if Saunderson dropped out, though he expressed a forlorn preference for Southwell over Maxwell.
The sheriff and grand jury addressed Lord Anglesey, the Irish lord lieutenant, against agitation for repeal of the Union in March 1831.
Both Anglesey and Edward Smith Stanley*, the Irish secretary, conceded of Farnham that year, that ‘from property or character as a landlord, and high influence in Cavan, he has the first pretensions’, but Lord Grey was implacably opposed to the idea of making him lord lieutenant of the county.
Number of voters: 4706 in 1826; 879 in 1830
Registered freeholders: 6,081 in 1829; 1,325 in 1830
