An independent borough, with a minor government interest from the customs officers at the port, Chichester returned two Whig townsmen at a contested election in 1715. About 1720 the 1st Duke of Richmond bought Goodwood, three miles away. In 1722 his heir, who succeeded to the dukedom in 1723, was returned unopposed, after which it became the custom to pay the Goodwood family the compliment of permitting them to recommend one Member, on condition that the inhabitants of Chichester should be left to choose the other. From 1727 to 1734 the second seat was filled successively by brothers of the 2nd Earl of Scarborough, whose seat at Stanstead was also not far from Chichester; but in 1734 Lord Scarborough did not put up a candidate, and after his death in 1740 the Stanstead interest lapsed.
In 1741 the candidates were James Brudenell, the Duke of Richmond’s uncle, who had been unsuccessful in 1715 but headed the poll in 1734, and John Page, a local country gentleman, who had stood with the Duke’s support in 1734,
The inhabitants were at that time so determined to keep within themselves the free choice of an independent gentleman for one of their members that the Duke of Richmond thought it not only necessary to make Sir John withdraw lest Mr. Brudenell’s election should grow precarious, but likewise to declare that he thought himself highly obliged to the city for allowing him to recommend his uncle, and that he never would think of recommending both their Members.
To Newcastle, 14 Jan. 1767, Add. 32979, f. 225.
In fact the affair proved, one of Newcastle’s local correspondents observed, greatly to Page’s advantage, by ‘engaging the other party [i.e. the Tories] who were before very suspicious (I hope justly too) of Mr. Page’s conduct in Parliament’.
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: about 440
