Until 1780 Truro was controlled by Lord Falmouth, and generally returned members of his family. But shortly before the general election of that year, a majority of the corporation rebelled, complaining that Falmouth’s ‘avarice, increasing with age, hath grossly abused a confidence as complete, perhaps, as unguarded disinterested friendship ever placed in man’.
Betrayed and deserted as we have been by men who professed themselves our friends [they wrote in their address
St. James’s Chron. 28 Sept. 1780. ] and in whom we were taught to put the utmost confidence, we join in the utter detestation and contempt of their treacherous practices.
Basset retained control of the corporation until the general election of 1784, when the candidates of the 3rd Viscount Falmouth (who had succeeded in 1782) were successful by one vote. Still, for some time Basset maintained his challenge. In October 1784 Mrs. Boscawen, widow of the Admiral, told Mrs. Delany:
in the corporation
Number of voters: 24
