During the early part of this period Newport was controlled by Thomas Holmes and its Members were invariably recommended by Administration. On Holmes’s death in 1764, his place was taken by his nephew and heir, the Rev. Leonard Troughear Holmes, who continued to work with successive Administrations in co-operation with the new governor of the Isle of Wight, Hans Stanley. But their interest came under attack in all three Isle of Wight boroughs from a party led by Jervoise Clarke Jervoise, Sir Thomas Worsley, and Sir William Oglander; and at Newport they were particularly vulnerable. ‘I find there is a complaint’, wrote Stanley to Grenville on 9 Dec. 1764, ‘that my Lord Holmes and his friends carried matters too imperiously.’
Nevertheless at the general election of 1768 the Holmes-Stanley group were attacked at Yarmouth by Jervoise Clarke and at Newport by Worsley and Oglander. At Newport Holmes and Stanley were successful, and Holmes retained control of the borough for the remainder of this period.
in the corporation
Number of voters: 24
