The leading noblemen in the county of Warwick were Lord Craven, Lord Hertford, Lord Warwick, and Lord Aylesford. The representation was in the hands of the gentry, the leading family being the Mordaunts of Walton, who held one seat for 82 years between 1698 and 1820. The most significant feature of the county’s parliamentary history 1754-1790 was the growing influence exerted by Birmingham and the manufacturing districts of the north.
The years 1754-74 were uneventful, and the sitting Members, Sir Charles Mordaunt and William Craven, were unanimously re-elected in 1754 and 1761. The feeling that the peace of the county should not be lightly disturbed was very powerful. Craven succeeded to the peerage in November 1764, and exerted himself to bring in William Bromley, who was returned without opposition.
This harmony in the county was shattered at the election of 1774. Sir Charles Mordaunt, who had represented the county for forty years, retired on account of his age and infirmities.
Had it been my inclination to have disturbed the peace of the county, I flatter myself the means were in my power ... I set out early tomorrow morning for Berkshire, where I have always met with a grateful return for that independence I and my family have long contended for.
At the county meeting the candidature of Skipwith, the sitting Member, was unanimously supported, but the second place was disputed between John Mordaunt, Sir Charles’s son, and Sir Charles Holte, of Aston, the nominee of the Birmingham commercial interests.
The struggle which followed demonstrated the amazing growth of Birmingham. Holte was lauded as ‘the man, who ... is most likely to serve the county at large, but particularly this populous and commercial town, which at this present critical era requires in our representatives the utmost vigilance, activity and ability’.
Neither of the sitting Members stood for re-election in 1780, and the Birmingham freeholders were determined not to relinquish the advantage they had gained. The Birmingham Gazette, 11 Sept. 1780, carried the following notice:
It is probable two other gentlemen may be nominated in their stead, in a great measure unconnected with this opulent town and its vicinity, and therefore not very likely to attend closely to its interests. Under these circumstances, a meeting of some of the most respectable freeholders has been convened, and ... is determined to form an association of the independent freeholders in this town and county.
The objects of the association were explained in a letter from Thomas Gem to Lord Dartmouth:
The various commercial regulations so frequently made by the legislature affect the trade and manufactures of this place very much and render it an object of great importance to its inhabitants that gentlemen may, if possible, be chosen for the county who are connected with the people and not entirely uninformed of the particulars in which their interest consists. ... We have applied to Sir Robert Lawley for this purpose, who has consented to stand forth as a candidate ... The freeholders in this place and its environs are almost unanimous in his favour.
At the county meeting, Lawley’s nomination was accepted without opposition, but two other candidates, Sir George Shuckburgh and William Holbech were proposed for second place.
Number of voters: about 4000
