The corporation of Winchester contained an indefinite number of freemen, many of them non-resident and appointed purely for electoral purposes. One seat was held by two Henry Pentons, father and son, 1747-96. The other was at first contested between the Duke of Bolton and the Duke of Chandos, who in 1751 inherited the Avington estate, within five miles of Winchester. Henry Penton and Chandos’s son, Lord Carnarvon, were returned unopposed in 1754. In the autumn of 1756 there was a contest between Bolton and Carnarvon within the Winchester corporation. On 24 Sept. Carnarvon wrote to the Duke of Bedford, asking for his attendance at a meeting of the corporation at which Lord Winchester’s election was to come up—‘if he is chose, they intend to propose 22 more in opposition to me and my friends’. Bolton too applied for Bedford’s support, which he declined to give to either side, being ‘in general averse to the method of carrying elections by the means of honorary freemen’.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 70
