In 1754 Saltash was an Admiralty borough under the management of its secretary, John Clevland—he relied on his influence with the corporation and his friendship with James Buller, who had the leading local interest and whose complaisance made it unlikely that the right of the freeholders, if reasserted, would be exercised against the ministerial candidates. Although in 1751 a number of freeholders established their right to sign an election return, the Bullers, not thinking themselves empowered to make grants of freeholds in the borough, and thus to multiply burgage votes, did not assert their family interest or the freeholders’ franchise; a rumour in 1754 that Buller contemplated doing so proved unfounded. But resentment at Clevland’s influence provoked some threat of a contest: Edward Eliot suggested to Henry Pelham that he should ‘without appearing in it’ recommend two friends of Government as candidates to the other party.
before another election, the law suits would be over and let them be decided either way the Government would be certain of the borough, and all things would return to their proper channel, whereas if an opposition should be carried on upon any other principles, if it succeeds the borough would be lost forever, and in case of an opposition it is more likely to succeed and would be attended with worse consequences than is imagined.
However, ministerial candidates were returned for nearly twenty years without a contest, until Thomas Bradshaw sought re-election in 1772: but this was a dispute ‘entirely between two parties of the corporation’. When Bradshaw petitioned against the return both sides assumed that the right of election lay only in the corporation, as described in the charter granted by Charles II in November 1683, and no claim was put forward on behalf of the freeholders.
In 1773, as a result of the quarrel between the two factions, elections to fill offices under the old charter became impossible, and a new charter was issued by the Crown, 7 June 1774. Following that of 1683, it vested the franchise in the mayor and corporation, and reserved for the Crown the power to dismiss them at pleasure. To secure control of elections, the corporation was suitably chosen: eight years later at least two-thirds of them held naval appointments or places under the Crown, and only 12 or 13 out of 30 were residents. William Masterman, who had drawn up the charter, became Government agent for the borough,
In 1780 John Buller jun. began reasserting the voting rights of the freeholders: some 30 or 40 out of 150 freeholds were in his hands or in those of his relatives. But the mayor returned Sir Grey Cooper and Charles Jenkinson on the votes of the corporation; similarly in 1783, 1784 and 1786, ministerial nominees were returned against Buller or candidates standing on his interest and the right of the freeholders; and each time the defeated side petitioned. It was argued for the sitting Members that earlier records indicated that Saltash was a corporation by prescription, and therefore only members of the corporation had the right of election.
assumed to be in the corporation. The right of freeholders (i.e. burgage-holders) to vote was reasserted in 1780 and accepted in 1787.
A. Luders, Controverted Elections, ii. 122-233; I. R. Christie, ‘Private Patronage v. Government Influence’, EHR, lxxi.
Number of voters: below 30
