Distinct in their parliamentary interests, Steyning and Bramber were territorially interwoven. The franchise had been much disputed in the early 18th century. Oldfield blasted the two boroughs as ‘enveloped in the dark cloud of legal quibble and intricacy ... irregular in their districts, unintelligible in their constitutions, indefinite in their rights, corrupt in the exercise of their functions’.
The consequence appears to have been an agreement to share the representation. Norfolk offered no opposition when Henniker Major, a ministerialist, came in, presumably on the Honywood interest, at a by-election in 1794, though the news that the habitual feast was to be omitted caused a large number of voters to nominate another candidate, John Challen, who was in London at the time. Challen had been defeated at Shoreham in 1790. ‘The bread and cheese scheme’, reported a local paper, ‘is not to be attributed to the economy of Mr Major but to the meanness of another person.’
in inhabitants paying scot and lot
Number of voters: about 150
