Tewkesbury was a placid borough, with the corporation in control. It was free from the cruder forms of bribery: instead, the Members paid a lump sum or else made a contribution towards some municipal undertaking. About 1754 the Dowdeswell, Martin, and Gage families had most influence in the borough: nine Dowdeswells had sat since 1660; the Martins held one seat 1734-47 and 1774-1807; and Lord Gage sat from 1721 to 1754.

At the general election of 1754 a number of voters got together and agreed ‘to choose no Members but such as will give £1,500 each towards mending their roads’. William Dowdeswell and Lord Gage, the sitting Members, refused, and when a contest became apparent Dowdeswell declined. Gage thereupon stood jointly with his son Thomas (the general) against John Martin and Nicolson Calvert, who had accepted the borough’s terms. Calvert and Martin ‘made their public entry into the town with pickaxes and shovels carried before them, and flags, with inscriptions thereon of “Calvert and Martin” on one side, and “good roads” on the other’.Namier, Structure, 131.

The next contest was in 1784. The sitting Members had diverged politically: Martin had gone with Pitt but Codrington supported Fox. John Embury, a local man, declared himself a candidate against Codrington, whom he described as ‘a man who, from his inattention to his constituents, and late political decisions, has forfeited your confidence and respect’.Glocester Jnl. 5 Apr. 1784. The contest, however, was conducted with great dignity. At the poll there was a discussion whether leases made within twelve months of the election were valid, and both sides agreed that they were not. As a consequence nearly two hundred votes were rejected. Martin and Codrington won comfortably, and Embury admitted that they had a legal majority.

Author
Number of seats
2
Right of election

in the freemen and inhabitant householders

Background Information

Number of voters: about 500

Constituency Type
Constituency ID