A plantation frontier county with a strong interest in the linen trade, Monaghan was populated fairly evenly by Protestants and Catholics. The leading proprietary interests belonged to Lords Cremorne (Dawson), Rossmore (Westenra), Clermont (Fortescue) and the Leslies of Glasslough. There were also several lesser interests and ‘a vast number of little gentlemen who have from 50 to 100 votes each’, who could constitute a species of independent interest. It is therefore surprising that contests were avoided in this period.
In 1801 a series of changes took place. Both Members had opposed the Union, but on 9 June 1800 Dawson, heir presumptive to his uncle Cremorne, accepted the fâit accompli. Then, on 24 July 1800, Charles Powell Leslie, sitting on his own and the independent interest, died. Leslie’s son of the same name hoped to replace him but declined when Westenra, nephew by marriage of Rossmore and Clermont, stood as a Unionist and a favourite of the Castle.
On Dawson’s death in September 1807, a scramble ensued and a contest was narrowly averted. Had Dawson’s son and heir been of age he would probably have succeeded, and nothing came of a plan to put up Madden, Leslie’s brother-in-law, on Dawson’s interest as locum tenens. As it was, Rossmore put up his brother, Maj. Henry Westenra on Lady Clermont’s and his own interest and, despite Castle approbation and ‘what little interest’ it had in the county, ran into difficulties. Leslie, the chief secretary’s cousin and a government supporter, found himself unable to support Westenra, for want of a quid pro quo. He informed Wellesley:
If I now give my interest to Lady Clermont’s friends, I give offence to a party that I am certain would in future assist me and I have some reason to think would not secure the future aid of Lady Clermont’s interest. If her ladyship and family require my assistance at the present time, I am sure you as my friend and relation will admit I should have some security given me of an adequate return hereafter, when I make a number of enemies and oppose some friends in order to serve them. From the present appearance of the feeling of this county Major Westenra will experience great opposition, many objections are raised to him.
Add. 38242, f. 123; Wellington Supp. Despatches, v. 136; Wellington mss, Wellesley to Leslie, 13 Oct., reply 20 Oct. 1807.
The independent and anti-Catholic interest, on which Edward Lucas of Castle Shane had at first allegedly started, supported the candidature of Thomas Corry, one of the lesser gentry. Westenra’s prospects depended on imponderables: Cremorne had decided to take no part and his tenants were thought to be amenable to the wishes of his agent, reported to be influenced by Col. Anketell who was anxious to avoid a contest.
By the next election in 1812, Cremorne’s great-nephew and heir, Dawson, had come of age and Corry’s making way for him with hardly a murmur was indicative of the strength of the Cremorne interest. On 1 Mar. 1813 Dawson succeeded to the peerage and Corry offered to replace him. Rossmore was expected to put up his brother again, as locum tenens for his son, but he was in India. An unexpected opposition to Corry was then started by a representative of the long dormant and absentee interest of Lord Dacre, previously placed at the disposal of Cremorne, in the person of an Essex squire’s son, Thomas Barrett Lennard. Lennard, however, was reluctant, and though Corry was ‘very unpopular’, found the odds against him: many votes had been promised Corry before he arrived and his own ideas were too liberal for the independent freeholders, who ‘would support the devil if he would vote against Catholic emancipation’. The absentee Blayney, a prisoner at Verdun, was virtually inaccessible, though he ultimately objected to supporting a stranger with such notions. Cremorne, who had wished to support Edward Lucas of Castle Shane, gave tepid support after Lucas had declined (without feeling able to transfer his interest to Lennard) and Rossmore’s approbation came equally late. It was now up to Leslie, whose support, involving as it did ‘by much the greatest number of votes of his own’, could have carried Lennard, but he, ‘a cunning fox and a deep politician’, objected to him because ‘the resident independent gentlemen’ were against him. ‘What Mr L[eslie] called the resident independent gentlemen’, Lennard informed his father, ‘is a faction of men of small fortunes who oppose themselves to the great interests of the county as well as to the liberal thinkers.’
Number of voters: about 3500 in 1807
