Plympton remained under the joint control of the 1st (d.1795) and 2nd Earls of Mount Edgcumbe, successively recorders of the borough, and the Treby family, its largest property owners, whose head from 1783 to 1832 was Paul Treby Treby (formerly Ourry) of Goodamoor. Between them they dominated the corporation, which enjoyed the power of creating freemen, most of whom were non-resident gentry. Both patrons sold their seats. The 2nd Earl did so, according to what Canning heard in 1801, ‘without reference to government’, though his paying guests were invariably supporters of the government of the day; but Treby, who ‘set out in life with Mr Pitt, for whom I have so great respect and attachment’, as he wrote in 1806, disposed of his seat to followers of Pitt and his political successors. Hence his return in 1806 of Castlereagh, an opponent of the ‘Talents’, which prompted Mount Edgcumbe, who had earlier pledged his support to the ministry, to assure Lord Grenville that he had had no part in the transaction and that Treby ‘had long been determined to bring in some leading member of that party’.
There was an unexpected challenge to the patrons’ control in 1802 when Capt. George Palmer, son of a former mayor, revived the question, in abeyance for a century, of an alleged hereditary right to admission to the freedom and franchise, by trying to poll seven men who claimed the vote as the sons of deceased freemen. The returning officer rejected their votes and Palmer’s threatened petition never materialized, but the disturbance was inconvenient in that it decided Mount Edgcumbe to lay aside his original plan to replace Golding, whom he had also returned for Fowey, with Addington’s friend Alexander Allan. At the sessions of November 1802 the corporation successfully resisted an attempt by several persons to establish their hereditary right to the freedom.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 50
