Anglesey was divided for administrative purposes into six deaneries or hundreds: Llifon, Malltraeth, Menai, Talybolion, Twrcelyn and Tyndaethwy. The chief settlements were the county town and borough of Beaumaris; Aberffraw, the former seat of the Welsh princes; Amlwch in the north-east near the Parys Mountain copper mine; Holyhead (Caergybi) in the north-west, where the harbour served the packet ships of the royal Irish mail to Dublin, and the small market towns of Llanagefni, Llanerchymedd and Newborough.
As W. Panton, W. Williams of Tregarnedd and W. Joseph Goddard hold places under government and Mr. Lloyd of Llwydiarth is sheriff, I imagine it would not be correct to summon them on the committee, which is to be lamented. I suppose you would have the immediate neighbours, viz. Sir William Hughes, W. Rowlands, Colonel Peacocke, W. Williams and Mr. Joseph Williams of Treffos, and I should think Mr. Jones of Treiorwerth and Major Hampton would be useful members. In case the countess of Uxbridge should come down, my sister thinks that on the duration of her stay will depend whether or not there will be any formal visiting by the ladies of the county. I conceive an address to the freeholders from Mr. Paget and the new candidate, to be inserted in the newspapers, will be a proper proceeding.
Ibid. i. 8.
Plas Newydd agents drafted the addresses and consulted the sheriff about the writ.
Plas Newydd supported government over the Queen Caroline affair, and a county meeting, 8 Nov. 1820, passed a loyal address to the king, which was forwarded to Anglesey and Uxbridge.
Uxbridge’s lack of involvement in county business, despite his election promise, caused great offence, particularly when he failed to steward a county race meeting at Llangefni in August 1825, as advertised.
As to Anglesey, report is various. Lord Uxbridge has not ingratiated himself with the youth of the county and his non-attendance at a pony race was made the pretext for hissing when his name was given at the dinner as steward of the races. It was the first time in the county annals of such a demonstration as this appearing towards a branch of the noble family of Paget. However, a better spirit was shown when Lord Uxbridge’s health was proposed as Member.
Ibid. i. 245.
Berkeley Paget remained popular in North Wales, and was made to accompany Uxbridge and his brother Lord William Paget*, whom the marquess intended bringing in for Caernarvon Boroughs, to Beaumaris for the November hunt week to try to repair the damage. Berkeley Paget remained Plas Newydd’s reserve candidate for both constituencies.
The county’s Welsh Calvinistic Methodists petitioned and Uxbridge voted against Catholic relief in March 1827, and in June the Commons received petitions for repeal of the Test Acts from Aberffraw, Holyhead and Llanerchymedd.
Is it allowed for one individual to disturb a whole county with his own private political notions? I have all my life entertained certain Whig opinions. Should I have been justified in pestering society by attempting to make a party against our Ultra Tory Member? No, no. We are much too small a circle to have our comfort destroyed by any such division, which after all only plays into the hands of the designing few.
UCNW, Henllys mss 289.
The press praised Uxbridge for being ‘true to his pledge’, and despite the lack of support from the new sheriff, Holland Griffiths of Carreglwyd, the county met at Beaumaris ‘in a last effort’, 13 Apr. 1829, and adopted an address proposed by Panton and Price, calling on the king to ‘withhold his sanction from the Catholic emancipation bill’. Only four voted for an amendment to adjourn proceedings because the bill might already have received royal assent, but it was agreed that the decision whether (or not) to present the petition should be delegated and entrusted collectively to Price, Jones Panton and William Wynne Sparrow of Red House. At Hampton and Sparrow’s instigation, the meeting carried a vote of thanks to Uxbridge ‘for the manly and uncompromising spirit with which he opposed, through every stage, the bill for Roman Catholic emancipation’.
The county had also been concerned since 1828 about the line to be followed by the new road from Menai Bridge to Beaumaris,
Before I consent to have my house pulled down, in which I have lived all my life with tolerable comfort, in order that a new one may be built up for me, I should require to be laid before me not only the general plan and the dimensions of the intended building but the rooms and closets and various circumstances connected with it, that the old and the intended new conveniences and inconveniences might be compared together.
Plas Newydd mss i. 737-9.
The resident magistrates met at Llangefni, 2 Dec. 1828, when their chairman, John Williams, carried a declaration against change and forwarded it to the commissioners in London and Lord Anglesey in Dublin.
We are attached to our judicature as the only national privilege that has been left to us as Welshmen; and as one of the ancient institutions of the country, we think that its defects ought to be amended rather than the whole demolished, unless far stronger reasons can be adduced for it than any that we are aware of. We adopt the language of the grand jury of Caernarvon in their resolution at the summer assizes of 1822. ‘We are anxious for the continuation of our local judicature, subject to such improvements as the wisdom of Parliament may think proper to adopt’.
PP (1829), ix. 411.
The commissioners’ 1829 report recommended abolishing the great sessions and increasing the size of the Welsh assize districts for incorporation into the English system. Anglesey, Caernarvonshire and some Denbighshire business would be dealt with in Bangor.
A branch of the Anti-Slavery Society had been established at Holyhead in 1828, and in November 1830 they led the countywide petitioning for the abolition of colonial slavery; but it was the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists and Wesleyan Methodists who orchestrated a late surge in petitions to both Houses in April 1831.
Llangefni having been added to the number of our contributory boroughs almost thereby making a mockery of the reform intended for us in our borough representation I hope you will excuse my pausing before I take any decided step which may contribute to place both the representation of the county and of the boroughs of Anglesey in the hands of one family.
LJ, lxiii. 840; CJ, lxxxvi. 564, 729; Cheshire and Chester Archives, Stanley of Alderley mss DSA 12c.
Non-residence and the youth of Anglesey’s sons from his second marriage now proved detrimental to the political prospects of the Pagets, who, at the first post-reform election in December 1832, had to acquiesce in an arrangement whereby Williams Bulkeley was returned for the county in exchange for Baron Hill’s support for Lord Anglesey’s nephew Frederick Paget in the new Beaumaris District (Beaumaris, Amlwch, Holyhead and Llangefni).
If Wager’s estimate of the size of the pre-reform electorate is correct, it almost doubled at registration in November 1832 to 1,187. About half of them were tenants and leaseholders.
Estimated voters: 600
