‘Perfect quietness’ was not to be expected at elections for Lewes, where the electorate more than doubled in this period.
In 1790 Pelham’s son and Kemp were opposed by Henry Shelley, scion of a local family, who had made an unsuccessful bid for the countenance of government, given to Kemp. Thomas Pelham informed his father that there was no doubt of his brother’s and Kemp’s return ‘notwithstanding many unfair dealings on Shelley’s part, particularly among some of your tenants’ (the Pelhams could control some 80 votes).
Kemp’s ‘weekly bounty of pea broth’ issued to a thousand people in the winter months of 1794-5 was calculated to increase his popularity, but by January 1796 it was clear that opposition could be expected from another quarter. An anonymous address to the ‘independent electors’ promised a platform of immediate peace negotiations, parliamentary reform, repeal of the Test Act, abolition of the slave trade and restoration of civil liberties. The candidate championed by an Independent Club at Lewes turned out to be ‘Citizen’ Green, a radical Whig (and a Lewes elector), of Fendon Place. The Pelhams were the more vulnerable, having meanwhile committed themselves to Pitt’s administration while Kemp opposed the war, and having been obliged to substitute a cousin for the unsatisfactory Henry Pelham. Lord Pelham’s brother-in-law Lord Sheffield exerted himself on their behalf. Even so, the cry ‘was strongly in favour of Kemp and Green’, wrote Thomas Pelham, ‘but I understand that Green has no votes’.
John Pelham had been a Member for only a year when he became temporarily insane and his sponsors decided he would not do. A ‘proper successor’ was the problem: Thomas Pelham suggested another cousin, Lord Leslie, or failing him ‘some person in the county’ such as John Fuller of Rose Hill, or William Stephen Poyntz, or Sir John Shelley, all of whom might be relied on not ‘to cultivate any interest to our prejudice’.
In fact it was Henry Shelley, the candidate of 1790, who challenged Lord Francis and Kemp and narrowly defeated the latter, who demanded a scrutiny, fixed for 16 Aug. 1802. It made no difference to the result, but Kemp, aggrieved by the number of voters who had divided their votes between the Pelham nominee and Shelley, rather than with him, gave up the coalition with the Pelhams. The latter were, theoretically, strengthened by inheriting the Sussex property, much of it in Lewes, of Sir Ferdinando Poole, Bt., who had regularly proposed the Pelham candidates at elections. (Lord Minto commented, ‘I don’t know whether they are related but they are connexions as Harry Pelham was Lady Poole’s lover, and would have made him a cuckold if he had been able’.) But Thomas Pelham, who in 1805 succeeded his father as 2nd Earl of Chichester, had no wish for a repetition of the contest of 1802 and on the morning of the election of 1806 withdrew his nominee, enabling Shelley and Kemp, both well inclined to the Grenville ministry, to come in unopposed. For this he received the thanks of the borough.
The peace of Lewes was not disturbed in 1807, and on Kemp’s death in 1811 his son and heir came in quietly. George Shiffner, who looked to the Pelham interest for support, withdrew then, but came in on Shelley’s death a few months later. An opponent, Col. Colin Macaulay of the Indian army was nominated, but withdrew before the poll.
Shiffner and Shelley coalesced in 1818 against a third man, Lord Erskine’s younger son, replacing Scarlett, who could not face a third disappointment. Erskine was supported by the same clique that had invited Scarlett to Lewes, headed by William Elphick, breeches-maker. After 377 votes had been cast, Erskine persuaded Henry Baring to join him, promising that he would petition on grounds of bribery. He was chaired by his supporters after his defeat, but nothing came of the petition. Shiffner, who was dismayed by the expense of the contest, informed Lord Chichester that Shelley got more votes than he did ‘owing to his voting so strong in the House’. About 100 electors had not polled and 404 had done so. Of these some 255 shared their votes between Shiffner and Shelley, while 99 plumped for Erskine. The former were supported by ‘clergy, gentry, yeomanry and tradesmen’, and the latter by ‘clerks, journeymen, handicraftsmen and labourers’.
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: about 240 in 1790 rising to over 500 in 1818
