In 1754, and again in 1761, the Whitmores of Apley held undisputed sway at Bridgnorth, the other two families with property near or in the borough, the Actons of Aldenham and the Weavers of Morval (succeeded by the Blayneys) having become inactive. John Grey, brother of Lord Stamford, was a Whitmore nominee, but had the additional advantage of residing eight miles from Bridgnorth and of being a brother-in-law of Richard Acton. When in November 1765 the bailiffs consulted the Whitmores as to the choice of a successor to him, and his nephew Booth Grey was recommended, their answer was ‘no one so proper’. But their attitude changed when George, Lord Pigot entered the field, a nabob of Shropshire origin who in 1765 had bought the estate of Patshull in Staffordshire, seven miles from Bridgnorth. After a good deal of manoeuvring and ineffective attempts by Whitmore and Stamford to dissuade Pigot from standing, an agreement was reached whereby Whitmore and Pigot divided the borough; and until 1784 parliamentary elections at Bridgnorth were uncontested.
John Robinson, in the electoral survey drawn up in the second week of December 1783, wrote against Bridgnorth: ‘the old Members’; and marked them as opposed to Pitt.
By 1784 less than one-third of the freemen listed or voting were resident in the borough, which rendered the Whitmore hold on it less proprietary. Still, the Bridgnorth contest in 1784 was unique in that for once a Whitmore did not top the poll.
in the freemen
Based on research by J. F. A. Mason.
Number of voters: about 1000
