Renfrewshire was geographically small but populous and highly industrialized, being ‘intimately connected’ with neighbouring Lanarkshire. Textile production was carried on at Renfrew, Johnstone, Pollokshaws and, above all, Paisley, one of the largest manufacturing towns in Scotland, where some 6-7,000 weavers were employed in 1818. Coal and ironstone were extensively mined in the heart of the county around Johnstone. Greenock was one of the largest Scottish seaports, having overtaken nearby Port Glasgow; both were engaged in trade with Canada and the West Indies and were important shipbuilding centres. The soil in the north of the county was best suited to arable farming, but the ‘somewhat bleak’ hill district in the south had some ‘excellent pasture’ for sheep and cattle.
In 1820 Maxwell offered again and, after some delay, Alexander confirmed his candidature. The latter’s claim that he was, at worst, only six votes behind Maxwell was dismissed by Lord Melville, the Liverpool ministry’s Scottish manager, who told him bluntly that ‘I cannot persuade myself ... there is any possibility of success at present’, as ‘several of those persons whom you contemplate as likely to be prevailed upon to support you are to my certain knowledge quite hopeless’. Melville continued to respond coolly to Alexander’s importunate requests for patronage for potential supporters, which included a naval promotion for the son of a friend and a baronetcy for the brother-in-law of Henry Westenra, Member for county Monaghan. Alexander also complained that the 1st earl of Glasgow did not do enough to mobilize support on his estate. The Tory challenge was further undermined by Alexander’s long-running personal feud with Archibald Campbell* of Blythswood, who, though a ‘liberal subscriber to the fund for the ... government party in the county’, refused to vote for him. In these circumstances, as the lord advocate Sir William Rae* concluded, Alexander had ‘little chance of ... success’. Nevertheless, a week before the poll Rae reported that the parties were exactly balanced.
Paisley had been ‘the main centre’ of radical activity in the west of Scotland during the autumn of 1819 and, following the Glasgow radical committee’s call for an uprising, 2 Apr. 1820, attempts were made to gather arms and persuade the weavers to strike. Troops were immediately sent into the town and a number of raids and arrests took place. One army officer estimated the number of insurgents at 300 to 400. Similar events occurred at Johnstone, where many radicals fled the town in the night. Greenock was initially quiet but, when five Paisley radicals were brought to the gaol there, the military escort was reportedly attacked by a mob with stones and staves. In the ensuing gunfire, nine civilians were killed and 12 seriously wounded. The infuriated mob broke down the prison gates and liberated the five prisoners, only one of whom was recaptured. Melville was satisfied that local anger would ‘probably subside soon ... especially if the population ... as has been supposed, are not politically tainted like Paisley and other places in that part of the country’. However, the alarmed local military commander believed there was ‘a nest of dangerous and decided radicals’ in Greenock, and he protested against the withdrawal of regular soldiers, warning that ‘martial law’ would soon be necessary throughout the county. That summer two radicals were tried at a special court in Paisley, but acquitted of treason.
In October 1824 Westenra agreed to sell his superiorities to the Whig 10th duke of Hamilton, ‘at the rate of £1,000 for each freehold’, and claimed that ‘by this purchase’ Maxwell would be ‘seated forever’. Westenra had apparently been ‘entreated to keep’ his votes ‘till after the next election’, so that Alexander might be ‘secure of [the] seat’, but explained that the latter had ‘not behaved well to me’ whereas Maxwell was ‘an old schoolfellow’. An analysis of the political state of the county, compiled for the Whigs in September 1825, showed that the Shaw Stewart family controlled 22 votes, Speirs had 15, Sir John Maxwell 13 and Hamilton 11.
County meetings in July and September 1826 provided confirmation that the economic situation was deteriorating. On 20 Nov. 1826 certain freeholders and others met in Paisley, with Clerk of Greenock in the chair, to consider relief measures. John Neil moved resolutions which detailed the ‘most unheard of privations’ being suffered by the ‘industrious classes’, blamed the corn laws in large part for the ‘disastrous crisis’ that had ‘gradually destroyed the commerce of Britain’, and condemned the ‘continuance of an expensive and numerous standing army’ and the fact that ‘millions ... [were] bestowed upon peers of the realm ... and relatives’. Popular grievances ‘necessarily resulted from the improper and unlawful mode by which the majority of [MPs] obtained their seats’, and it was declared that ‘the people have an imprescriptible right to elect their representatives’. An immediate measure was required to allow the free importation of all foodstuffs, ‘in exchange for the manufactures of this country’. After the resolutions were ‘unanimously agreed’, Maxwell expressed his approval and presented the resulting petition to the Commons, 22 Feb. 1827.
At the dissolution that summer Maxwell retired to make way for Shaw Stewart, in accordance with an arrangement made in December 1828. The ‘Tory party’ was reportedly ‘anxious’ to bring forward Campbell, whose seat at Glasgow was in danger, but it was ‘hardly expected’ that he would agree. There was indeed no opposition and ‘comparatively few’ of the freeholders attended the election, which excited ‘very little interest’ amongst the townspeople of Renfrew. Maxwell delivered a farewell address in which he commended Shaw Stewart as one who would ‘preserve the independence of the county’, supporting the government only ‘when it deserved ... support’. Speirs was chosen as praeses and Sir John Maxwell and Campbell nominated Shaw Stewart, who was ‘unanimously elected’. He promised to pursue an ‘independent’ course, expressed admiration for Wellington and Peel and pledged support for economy and retrenchment, as far as practicable. It was customary to ‘regale the populace with a butt or two of porter’, and when it did not appear ‘the people, amongst whom were a large proportion of females, saluted Sir Michael in a very uncourteous manner’. A supply was immediately sent for, much of which was ‘as usual showered about in all directions by the opponents of those who were in the act of carrying it off in hats, pitchers, etc.’
On 1 Sept. 1830 Bailie Fairrie, the chief magistrate, chaired a ‘highly respectable’ meeting of the inhabitants of Greenock, who praised the ‘enlightened moderation’ of the revolution in France. Next day a similar meeting took place in Paisley, summoned by Sir John Maxwell, Speirs and Wallace, after the magistrates had rejected a requisition. Resolutions were passed expressing ‘admiration ... at the noble stand made by the French in defence of their liberties’ and opening a subscription for them.
The factory cotton spinners petitioned the Commons for a statutory ten-hour working day, 30 June 1831.
Enrolled freeholders: 143 in 1820; 158 in 1826; 143 in 1830
