County Limerick, a thriving area of pastoral farming and linen production, was so heavily populated by Catholics that Oldfield commented in 1816 that they, ‘in questions where their interest is concerned, must command the return of the Members’.
By the start of this period the largest interest was held by a judge, the chief baron of the Irish exchequer Standish O’Grady of Cahirguillamore and Rockbarton (later the 1st Viscount Guillamore), with 506 or six per cent of the votes; adding the other O’Gradys gives a total of 1,043 or 12 per cent (or 1,511 for the ‘family’ in the 1818-26 list). O’Grady had attempted to demonstrate his influence by securing the nomination of the sheriff in 1812, but had failed to obtain the backing of the Liverpool administration, being passed over for the office of custos rotulorum in 1818, when his son and namesake unsuccessfully contested the county. But he had at least surpassed his nearest rival, the 2nd earl of Clare of Mount Shannon, who had 456 or five per cent of the votes (and 355). With official support, his mother had attempted to keep the family interest alive in the years since her husband lord chancellor Clare’s death in 1802, their long-serving locum being William Odell of The Grove, Rathkeale, a junior minister, and Clare was usually credited with the electoral patronage of one of the seats. Odell, who came to a sorry end, made way for Clare’s younger brother Richard Hobart Fitzgibbon in 1818, when, no doubt at great expense, many hundreds of tenants were brought to the poll. The new Member became militia colonel and sole governor of the county that year, but proved a disappointment to ministers in the Commons.
The only other resident peer having a major stake, with 280 votes (or 467 in the second list), was the 1st earl of Limerick of Dromore Castle, who occasionally sought to oppose the Clare interest. His estates within the county of the city of Limerick secured the seat there to his son-in-law Thomas Spring Rice, the son of Stephen Edward Rice of Mount Trenchard, in mid-1820; this was achieved in the face of opposition from the 2nd Viscount Gort of Roxborough (and Loughcutra Castle, county Galway), who only had 25 votes in the county. Of the notable absentee peers, the most important, with 272 (and 105) votes, was the 3rd Viscount Courtenay of Powderham, Devon, who, despite selling some of them, drew an enormous income from his estates near Limerick city.
The next largest interest was that of ‘Tom Lloyd’, presumably the county’s assistant barrister Thomas Lloyd* of Beechmount, who had 229 (with 160 in the 1818-26 list). He was followed by Peter Low and his son John of Lowtown, with 219 (and 202), and the former county Member John Waller of Castletown, with 160 (and 93), while Colonel William Thomas Monsell of Tervoe, who three times unsuccessfully contested the county, with 117 (and 63), headed a group of six commoners with just over 100 votes. The smaller interests among the noblemen included: the 4th Baron Massy of Hermitage, with 121 (and 106, plus another 127 for his ‘family’), whose father had been one of the patrons of the other disfranchised borough of Askeaton and had sometimes shown a desire to interfere in the county; the 3rd Viscount Southwell of Castle Mattress, a Catholic, with 114 (and 121) votes; the 1st earl of Charleville of Charleville Castle, King’s County, with 104 (and 51) votes; the 6th Baron Carbery of Castle Freke, county Cork, with 98 votes; the 2nd Baron Cloncurry of Abington (and Lyons House, Kildare), with 14 (and 47) votes; Massy’s kinsman, the 3rd Baron Clarina of Elm Park House, with 14 (and 22) votes; and the 2nd earl of Kenmare of Killarney House, Kerry, with eight (and ten). The baronet Sir John Allen De Burgho of Castleconnell held 91 (and 61) votes, the knight of Glin (John Fitzgerald) of Glin Castle had 70 (and 119), and Limerick’s nephew Sir Aubrey Vere Hunt (later styled Sir Aubrey De Vere) of Curragh Chase, whose father Sir Vere Hunt (d. 1818) had had ambitions to represent the county, possessed 32 (and 19) votes.
An average of 400 freeholders a year were added to the registers between 1817 and 1820 inclusive, and newspapers reported that the electorate was over 10,000 at the general election of 1820.
after an odd fashion. A country gentleman with whom my father had always been on the friendliest terms, and who had waited for the last day of polling in order to impart a more emphatic character to his proceeding, rode into Limerick at the head of his numerous tenantry, and voted against him! Between the two there had never been a coolness, but many years before he had had a quarrel with my father’s uncle, the earl of Limerick; he had vowed revenge, and the opportunity had come.
Hunt forgave the offender and promised to stand again in the future, on conceding defeat, 30 Mar. 1820, when Fitzgibbon, a wayward ministerialist, and O’Grady, a similarly inconsistent and inactive Whig, disputed the mantle of ‘independence’, which really belonged to the latter.
County meetings were held in January and August 1821 to approve loyal addresses to the king; at the former, the future colonial governor Colonel Richard Bourke of Thornfield (Thornville) carried a petition complaining of agricultural distress, and this was presented to the Lords by Limerick, 16 Feb., and to the Commons by Fitzgibbon, 19 Feb.
Agricultural distress was again considered on 6 May at a meeting chaired by the sheriff, Waller’s son John Thomas Waller, whose petition for protection of the butter trade was brought up by Fitzgibbon, 30 May 1822.
In August 1824 Rice commented on the representation of the county that ‘matters seem still in suspense’, but the following month it was rumoured that Hunt would offer again on Lord Limerick’s interest, so involving the sitting Members in a hard struggle.
According to a parliamentary return, the number of freeholders was as high as 12,786, including over 10,000 40s. ones, in 1825, and the electorate certainly numbered above 8,000 at the general election of 1826. With Fitzgibbon safe, O’Grady, who was characterized as insufficiently liberal on the Catholic question, was challenged by Lloyd, who had a good local reputation and claimed to be the choice of the independents, but was apparently dependent on Kingston’s interest.
The Catholics of the county and city had met, with O’Connell in attendance, in July 1826, and their petition for relief was brought up in the Commons, 14 Feb. (when one was also presented from the Protestants), and the Lords, 23 Feb. 1827, probably by Rice and Lansdowne, respectively.
The death of Lloyd in December 1829 led to feverish preparations for what was expected to be the first Irish contest since the alteration of the franchise, with the £50 and £20 freeholders attempting to impose their weight of influence and numbers.
There were scenes of considerable disorder on the hustings, 25 Jan. 1830, when O’Grady, proposed by James Denis Lyons of Croom House, was only well enough to stake his claim with the £10 voters, and Massy Dawson, nominated by Monsell, could only with difficulty represent himself as a close resident and honest potential representative. A severe contest, replete with handbills and squibs, followed, during which the unrest culminated in a nearly murderous attack on Massy Dawson and the high spirits of O’Grady’s supporters reached fever pitch on his taking an unbeatable lead.
They were big and burly men both, and in high good humour, now quaffing a bottle of champagne, now leaning out and chaffing the city mob, which cheered them to the echo, for it united the old Irish taste for chieftainship with the novel aspiration after democratic power ... The appointed hour was sounded ... In mile-long cavalcade the K[ingston] tenantry rode down Limerick’s chief street; another and larger crowd cheered them and their fine horses, and doubtless that acclaim sent an exhilaration into their heads as potent as the fumes of champagne could have created there. After an hour or two a dullness began to spread over the gay apartment, and many talked in whispers. The earl soon perceived that all was not right, and its usual sternness returned to his strong face. ‘You are hiding something from me,’ he exclaimed, ‘something has gone wrong; what has happened?’ After a pause a gentleman moved forward and replied, ‘My lord, what has gone wrong is this, the K[ingston] tenantry have voted’. ‘What of that?’ ‘My lord, they have voted with the enemy to a man! The other tenants are following their example. The election is lost!’ I record these things as they were described to me by those who witnessed them.
The shock, at least according to De Vere, was enough to tip Kingston, who meditated savage retribution, into insanity.
Massy Dawson’s petition, which, as well as citing bribery and corruption, alleged intimidation and obstruction on the part of O’Grady and the collusive indifference of the election officers, was brought up, 19 Feb. 1830. After his agent had successfully applied for a postponement because of the difficulty of securing the attendance of witnesses, 3 Mar., the committee was appointed, 27 Apr., and it found in his favour, striking off O’Grady’s Catholic voters for having omitted to sign the roll containing their subscription to the qualification oath, 3 May.
unable to consider you merely in your character of an officer and a gentleman, but were compelled also to look at you as the representative of a powerful election interest, to which another was opposed. They may have been wrong in their choice, but its adoption was compatible with every personal respect.
Limerick Evening Post, 7, 18 May; NAI, Leveson Gower letterbks. Leveson Gower to O’Grady, 14 May; Warder, 29 May 1830.
Following a requisition to the sheriff, the knight of Glin, a county meeting approved petitions against the increased Irish spirit and stamp duties, 8 May, and these were presented to the Commons by Fitzgibbon, 20 May, and to the Lords by Clare, 21 May 1830.
Fitzgibbon, whose position was thought to have been jeopardized by the startling by-election result earlier in the year, offered again at the general election of 1830, when opinion was divided in the press about how safe he was in his seat.
There were further ugly agrarian disturbances in April 1831, when Dunraven called a meeting of magistrates and (by 42-12) secured an address to the lord lieutenant for the reimposition of the Insurrection Act.
Nothing apparently came of a requisition to form an Independent Election Club in October 1832 and, although Dunraven suggested to William Smith O’Brien* of Cahermoyle that he might enter, the only new candidates later that year were a couple of O’Connellite Repealers. They only succeeded in putting the sitting Members, who still represented two of the largest electoral interests in Limerick, to great expense at the general election that year, when there were 2,565 registered electors.
Number of voters: about 7500 in 1826; 1589 in Feb. 1830
Registered freeholders: 9,277 in 1829; 3,142 in 1830
