Hertfordshire was described in 1819 as ‘a county, in which there is no certainty’.
who never thought of the county till the day of nomination ... found the general cry of the freeholders so violently against Lord Grimston’s bargain for a peerage, and his being succeeded by Mr Hale ... that he offered himself and carried the election after a very hard-contested poll.
At his nomination, Baker produced a string of resolutions humiliating the aristocratic conspirators and in his address of thanks, 23 June, claimed ‘the triumph of principle over influence in its strongest hold, of manly openness of conduct over mystery and chicane, of independence over power’. He thought that ‘even the majority of those who from pre-engagement, connection, etc. voted against me actually rejoice in my success’. Hale spent nearly £4,000 of Lord Grimston’s money in vain. Baker was supposed to have won considerable support from the dissenters, who might have been more inclined to Viscount Malden had he stood, as his father, a former lord lieutenant of the county, had presbyterian sympathies. In any case, the Duke of Portland, the Whig leader, hailed the result as ‘the most brilliant event’.
Baker’s success rankled with his ministerial opponents; his resignation from the Friends of the People in June 1792 alienated his more radical supporters, though he confronted them at a county meeting. Opposition to him was led by Thomas Brand of the Hoo, Samuel Whitbread II and George Byng, and Brand chaired an association ‘for purposes similar to that in London’. Baker doubted if it would damage him: he found that even Lord Grimston approved his stand. On 14 Nov. 1795 he carried a loyal address at a county meeting against a ‘milk and water’ address proposed by his colleague Plumer and in the face of a violent attack from Whitbread. In 1796 the candidature of Waddington, a London radical defeated at St. Albans, was directed against Baker the ‘turncoat’, not Plumer, though the sitting Members had offered jointly on 26 May. According to one observer:
Waddington has not a foot of land in the county, nor I believe anywhere, though he talked of his qualification in Wales, and had the impudence to brag upon the hustings of having £70,000 to invest in the county. He had more votes than I should have expected (though only 400) but half of them seem to have been got by surprise, and the other half were a league of dissenters.
In their joint address of thanks, 3 June, Plumer and Baker claimed, ‘we have the advantage of any itinerant candidate’.
In 1802 Baker, who had not only supported the war against France, but criticized the peace, was overthrown by what he termed ‘the most preposterous coalition’ arising out of ‘twelve years’ dormant spleen’. On the eve of the election, an address appeared from the Hon. Peniston Lamb, Lord Melbourne’s heir, who claimed that Baker was so unpopular with a majority of the freeholders, that if he did not stand against him, some one else would. Lord Salisbury, Lamb’s instigator, who had drawn Lord Grimston into the plot, wrote to the prime minister’s brother Hiley Addington, 11 July 1802:
The popular cry raised against Mr Baker by a considerable body of dissenters was brought to that pitch that they would have put up any person whether he had or had not either property or connections in [the county] and might have carried this point. That being the case, [‘I thought it’ erased] it was thought expedient to try to turn the tide, and Mr Lamb a neighbour and a very good man was yesterday proposed at Hertford to represent the county. He only came from London on Friday evening, and therefore the state of the poll last night at seven o’clock when the books were closed and adjourned will surprise you. Mr Plumer 951 Mr Baker 469 Mr Lamb 465. It may perhaps be improper for me to request the government support in favour of Messrs Lamb and Plumer, but I beg leave to explain that by adopting this plan Mr Lamb secures Mr Plumer’s second votes.
Lamb, who went on to defeat Baker, was proposed by Hale, Baker’s opponent in 1790: so nothing was omitted that might humiliate him. Except in the hundreds of Odsey, Edwinstree and Hertford, freeholders preferred to vote for Plumer and Lamb rather than Plumer and Baker. In his farewell address, 12 June, Baker marvelled that the aristocratic influence he had thwarted in 1790 could align itself with Jacobinism and did not envy Lamb the tightrope he now had to walk. Lamb was soon involved in a dispute with Plumer over election expenses.
Baker’s revenge came sooner than expected, owing to Lamb’s death in January 1805. His competitor was the Hon. Thomas Brand, son of his advanced Whig critic of 1792, supported by many of the dissenters, by Joseph Halsey and by Lord Salisbury, recently deprived of his Household place. Both Salisbury and his wife wished Brand to marry their daughter, Lady Georgina Cecil. Salisbury this time failed to secure Lord Grimston’s co-operation, though he obtained William Hale’s. He would have preferred to avert a contest by a suitable replacement for Lamb, but neither Lamb’s brother William, nor Halsey would do. The prime minister Pitt supported Baker, as the lesser of two evils; and so did the other leading interests in the county, as Baker discovered in a bustling canvass of which he left a classic account. Brand secured the writ and Plumer’s professed neutrality was abused in his favour. Despite this, and Whitbread’s attack on him as a warmonger on the hustings, Baker was successful and nothing came of a threatened petition against him for treating. He denounced the machinations of Hatfield House in his address of thanks. By now he had come to regard the implacable Lady Salisbury as his enemy-in-chief, and he was not surprised to learn that she had formed a ‘Foxhunting Club’ to keep up Brand’s pretensions, consisting of ‘Hale, Heysham, Brand, the Melbournes and Lord Frederick Beauclerk’.
Baker’s conduct exposed him to a further threat in 1806: he had been well disposed to Pitt’s second ministry and critical of the Grenville ministry. On this account Earl Spencer, as a cabinet minister, could not support him this time, though he decided to take no part against him. The decision was enough to determine Brand’s withdrawal. He informed Whitbread that without Spencer’s support (which he believed would entail Lord Grimston’s) he stood no chance. He believed himself sure of a borough seat (Shaftesbury) and although Grimston offered to support him with Baker and, refusing a coalition, Plumer offered to retire in his favour, he insisted on returning the compliment. This was arranged by their mutual friends Hale, Halsey, Byde and Wilshire. Plumer had secretly offered to retire if the Hon. William Lamb had stood with Brand, to keep Baker out, but government could not obtain Earl Spencer’s sanction for this. So Baker and Plumer were unopposed. Plumer was in very poor health and it was readily supposed that Brand, who failed at Shaftesbury, might soon step into his shoes. Baker’s address of thanks referred to Brand’s handsome conduct on the occasion, though he knew there was no goodwill intended to him.
In 1807 Plumer retired in favour of Brand and could not be induced to change his mind. He was averse to a contest, but did nothing to encourage a compromise, which was the outcome, Baker retiring in favour of Sir John Sebright, one of his zealous supporters in 1805, who professed entire independence. Baker, incensed by a pro-Catholic speech made by Brand after his election, boasted that he and Sebright could have beaten Plumer and Brand, or any others, in a contest.
The county remained uncontested until 1832, but the compromise was not necessarily secure. In May 1812 Sebright, who leaned towards opposition, felt obliged to canvass because of the activities of Lady Salisbury, who had already done so on behalf of her son, Lord Cranborne. On 13 Sept. 1812 the report was:
I find the contest is not only likely to go on but that Lord Cranborne and his family are much more sanguine than ever in their expectation of success from the very satisfactory and gratifying assurances of support they have received from the far greater number of the respectable families in the county.
A Whig agent claimed that government did everything they could ‘in favour of Lord Cranborne’. Yet Cranborne, who boasted of 1,500 promises, withdrew and contested Hertford instead (where he was defeated).
Number of voters: about 4000
