There had been no contest for the county since 1748 and its representation remained in the hands of the country gentlemen until 1806, despite the strength of the aristocratic landowners, who were evidently disinclined to dispute it.
Yet Sir William Langham, son of the former Member, writing to Pitt, 16 Dec. 1797, affected to be ‘greatly hurt at being excluded from the chance of representing the county ... without disturbing the present Members who are both attached to government’. Then, and in December 1804, he renewed his father’s plea for a peerage.
Langham was thought to have no chance, but presented a threat because he might be induced ‘to support Dickins and to pay his bills’. On 4 Nov. 1806, however, Langham’s committee at Daventry denied that Langham and Dickins had united ‘on the Fawsley interest’ (i.e. at the instigation of Charles Knightley of Fawsley). The Spencers hoped that Langham would not persevere, but his opposition was ‘pointed against Lord Althorp’ (his friends claimed that he was ‘actuated more by a constitutional jealousy of Lord Althorp, than by any over-anxiety to represent the county himself’), and on nomination day (5 Nov.) it was, as predicted, Dickins who retired after a show of hands in favour of Althorp and Cartwright. Althorp, citing an instance in his own family of a peer’s son representing the county, rejected a proposal of Sir William Dolben’s, taken up by Langham, that they should both retire in favour of the sitting Members.
The election of 1806 was sufficiently expensive to discourage future contests for many years: Cartwright could ill afford it and took five years to pay his bills. Langham, who was regarded as the only threat, publicly declined to stand in 1807. Anti-Catholic views prevailed at a county meeting, 16 Apr., and were upheld by Cartwright and Francis Paul Stratford. Althorp could be confident of the support of the dissenters.
Number of voters: about 3000
