In 1780 and 1784 the Whig corporation, which had the power to create freemen and owned extensive property in the city, combined with the 11th Duke of Norfolk, who had an estate nearby, to return both Members, though one of them, Sir Charles Barrow, was nominally independent. On Barrow’s death early in 1789, they put up Norfolk’s cousin Henry Thomas Howard of Thornbury Castle, near Bristol. He was defeated by one vote in a poll of 1,673 by John Pitt, a local attorney and city landlord, who surrendered his patent places in the customs in order to stand on behalf of the anti-corporation or ‘True Blue’ party, which had developed from the remnants of the old Tory interest. Contested elections at Gloucester were expensive, for about two thirds of the voters were non-resident, and both sides ran up substantial bills. Pitt, who made an unsuccessful attempt to recover some of the cost from the Treasury, put the price of his success at £10,000 and Norfolk later admitted that he had laid out the same amount.
On 16 Apr. 1789 Sir Thomas Rich, a native of Gloucester and Member for Great Marlow in the 1784 Parliament, sought ministerial backing at the next general election against the surviving corporation Member, John Webb; but two days later the corporation and their opponents, who on the first anniversary of Pitt’s victory formed the Gloucester True Blue Club, came to an agreement that Webb and Pitt were to be jointly supported at the next general election and that Howard would not intervene.
On Pitt’s death in July 1805, two candidates came forward: Lord Arthur Somerset, a younger brother of the Pittite 6th Duke of Beaufort, who commanded the return to one of the county seats, and Robert Morris of nearby Barnwood, a partner in one of the Gloucester banks. Somerset, whose agent was his father’s Gloucester solicitor, Thomas Davis, appears to have had the support of at least some of the leading Blues, but it is not known whether they invited Beaufort to intervene in the city. Although Morris seems to have been supported discreetly by most members of the corporation, he was not regarded as a corporation candidate. In styling himself ‘independent’ and stressing his local connexions, he was probably bidding for the votes of those who had formerly supported Pitt, to many of whom he would doubtless have been more acceptable than Somerset. There may have been a division among the Blues between those who, motivated by party political feeling, saw in Beaufort a powerful ally to set against Norfolk, and others who preferred a local man in the mould of their late Member. In the month before the election, 340 new freemen were created. After three days’ polling Somerset, who relied heavily on non-resident votes, stood level with Morris, but his anticipated support from the London outvoters failed to materialize and on the fourth morning, before polling began, he gave up and asked his unpolled friends not to vote.
Morris’s conduct in the House showed him to be no Whig and he was returned unopposed with Howard at the next three general elections. In 1811 Norfolk succeeded the 5th Earl of Berkeley as high steward of Gloucester and was replaced as recorder by John Somers Cocks, 2nd Lord Somers, a conservative Whig. On Norfolk’s death in December 1815 Somers declined the stewardship, which went to the Duke of Gloucester. He briefly considered putting his son James Somers Cocks forward for Gloucester at the first opportunity, but thought better of the idea.
When Morris died in September 1816, the corporation put up John Webb’s son Edward who, though a partisan Whig, claimed to be ‘unconnected with party’ and pledged his support for economical and parliamentary reform. The vacuum left by Norfolk’s death was filled by the newly established Gloucestershire Whig Club, formed to resist the electoral pretensions of Beaufort. Webb’s brother-in-law Sir Berkeley William Guise, Member for the county since 1811, belonged to the Club which, however, was dominated by Col. William Fitzhardinge Berkeley, illegitimate son of the 5th Earl of Berkeley, whose claim to the peerage had been disallowed but who had inherited the family estates, the largest in Gloucestershire. The Whig Club endorsed Webb’s candidature, as did a meeting of Gloucester freemen resident in London, chaired by John Martin, Member for Tewkesbury.
‘The populace is fully with us. The triumph of the day is not cheered by the mob’, claimed one of the Blues immediately after the election. Cooper, who blamed his defeat on his late start, began to canvass for next time and on 8 Nov. 1816 there was a meeting of subscribers to the Blues’ election fund ‘for the purpose of entering into resolutions for the government of the club’. Cooper was the first to declare himself at the general election of 1818 and could count on the support of the Beaufort party, the old Pitt faction, a newly formed Conservative Association and Lord Somers, who was now supporting government, for his renewed attack on the Whig-corporation ‘monopoly’. The Blues opened a subscription to raise funds to bring him in free of expense.
Webb led throughout and after four days Berkeley was 50 ahead of Cooper, but Cooper outpolled him by 77 during the next three days to finish in second place. Berkeley’s demands for a scrutiny were refused by the returning officers. Cooper’s 840 votes
in the freemen
See Gordon L. Goodman, ‘Pre-Reform Elections in Gloucester City, 1789-1831’, Bristol and Glos. Arch Soc. Trans, lxxxiv. (1965), 141-60.
Number of voters: about 2000
