The corporation, an oligarchical body, self-recruiting under a set of intricate rules, listed under the banners of neighbouring landowners. About 1754 the dominant parliamentary influence was with the Bromleys of Horseheath; and from about 1760 with the Yorkes of Wimpole, till Mortlock and the Rutland family captured the borough in the 1780’s. Between 1737 and 1774 elections were uncontested, and the 1st and 2nd Lord Montfort, for a time with the help of Lord Dupplin, managed the borough for the Government. During Newcastle’s term at the Treasury a yearly payment of £550 was made to Cambridge; but there is nothing in the Newcastle mss to indicate its origin, nor how that sum was calculated or distributed. After a short interval the bounty re-occurs in 1764, though reduced to £300; and Rockingham’s secret service accounts contain the entry, 20 July 1766: ‘Lord Montfort, for the Cambridge distribution, two years to midsummer, £600.’
About 1766 an opposition, of which the nonconformists formed the core, started in the borough against Government influence, and in 1774 Thomas Plumer Byde and Samuel Meeke stood against Soame Jenyns and Charles Sloane Cadogan. ‘A statement binding the candidate, if elected, to oppose the Government’s American policy and to support an enlarged toleration of Protestant dissenters and a more equal representation in Parliament was after vehement opposition in a meeting at the Guildhall submitted to all four and signed by the new candidates, who obtained two-fifths of the votes polled, and, as the poll-book shows, a majority of the votes of resident freemen.’
In the decade 1780-90, by means of a series of by-laws and lawsuits, the municipal government of Cambridge was ‘transformed from an oligarchy to a dictatorship’, and an open borough with varying affinities was converted into a pocket borough. The oligarchy of the aldermanic bench was entrenched behind an elaborate system of by-laws and customs: and these it proved possible to set aside without violating the charter, a vague document that ‘did little more than draw a few outlines within which municipal government functioned’.
in the freemen
Number of voters: about 150
