Merioneth (Meirionydd) was a rugged county on Cardigan Bay, where slate quarrying, lead mining and the manufacture of woollen goods were locally important. The Mawddach estuary formed a natural north-south barrier within the county and the River Dee flowed north-eastwards towards Chester from Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake) in the north-east. Administratively, Merioneth comprised five hundreds: Ardudwy; Edeirnion; Estumaner (Ystumanner); Penllyn, and Talybont and Mawddwy. Bala and Dolgellau shared the assizes and the other market towns were Barmouth (Y Bermo), Corwen and Towyn.
Despite recent enclosures, Merioneth was a county of large estates and comparatively few freehold farms, and was noted for its crown land, mountainous wastes and sheepwalks.
Fears of an increase in coastwise coal duties prompted slate owners and other users of steam power to lobby successfully against their reintroduction that summer. Griffith ap Howell Vaughan chaired the petitioning meeting at Dolgellau, 18 May, at which Wynne of Peniarth and John Edwards of Tyn-y-Coed carried resolutions, and Vaughan presented the ensuing petition to the Commons, 12 June 1820.
Merioneth did not experience a great Methodist revival until 1832, but Methodists and Protestant Dissenters were already established in the county and Bala was an important centre for training and ordaining their ministers.
Merioneth’s memorial of 7 Nov. 1828 asking the law commission to consider abolishing the Welsh courts of great sessions and judicature was the work of Corbet, undertaken in conjunction with Lord Cawdor’s agent, R.B. Williams of Llandeilo, Carmarthenshire, who encouraged the adoption of similar memorials throughout Wales.
Dolgellau and landowners and occupiers in the hundreds of Ystumanner and Talybont petitioned for protective tariffs on imported wool, 28 Apr., 1, 15 May, and against ending the circulation of small bank notes, 13 June 1828.
Support for the 1831-2 petitioning campaign against colonial slavery was restricted to Barmouth, Harlech and a handful of parishes near Llangollen and Bala.
Although a spirit in favour of reform seems to pervade most other parts of the kingdom, yet so little progress has it made in Merionethshire, that even the alluring prospect of an additional representative failed in attracting more than about 70 individuals, a great proportion of whom came from Towyn and Aberdovey. From the total absence of all persons connected with Bala, Corwen and Barmouth, it is fair to infer that no feeling in favour of the proposed change existed in those places; and that the majority of the inhabitants of Dolgellau are averse to any alteration in their representation.
Salopian Jnl. 22 June; Shrewsbury Chron. 24 June 1831.
The Methodists, led by John Elias, had resolved at their Bala meeting to distance themselves from the political issue of reform.
Bala, Corwen, Dinas Mawddwy (which had 19 burgesses) and Dolgellau joined Harlech as polling towns and 582 electors were registered in November 1832.
Qualified electors: 600
