There was no contest between 1768 and 1820. The dukes of Devonshire returned one Member, invariably a member of the Cavendish family, as a Whig, and the gentry returned the other, during this period a Mundy of Shipley, as an independent. In February 1795 Thomas Coutts approached a representative of the duke in case Lord John Cavendish wished to ‘quit’, suggesting his son-in-law (Sir) Francis Burdett ‘as a locum tenens in the minority of his Grace’s own immediate representatives’, guaranteeing his attachment to the family. Nothing came of this—Burdett himself was not ambitious of it.
Number of voters: about 3000
