Economic and social profile:
A prosperous inland market town on the navigable river Suir, the greater part of Clonmel lay in the ‘old and rich Catholic area of south Tipperary’ and a small portion in County Waterford. Lying at the intersection of three great roads linking Cashel to Dungarvan, Waterford to Limerick, and Dublin to Cork, the town became the hub of the public road transport network developed by Charles Bianconi, an ardent Catholic Liberal and friend of Daniel O’Connell, who boasted many contacts in government circles.
Electoral history:
The enfranchisement of £10 occupiers in 1832 increased the electorate from 105 to 521, of whom 493 were householders and 28 resident freemen.
Given the likely expense of a contest at the 1832 general election, the sitting anti-Reformer, Eyre Coote, retired in favour of his cousin, John Bagwell.
The period after the 1832 election saw the popular party advance still further. In October 1833 the commission on Irish corporations investigated the extent of Bagwell’s influence over the borough, with Ronayne presenting the case for reform. At the subsequent registry session, 24 of the 32 persons registered ‘were in the popular interest’, and the revising barrister’s refusal to admit one applicant as a freeman was expected to disqualify ‘the batches of freemen’ admitted by the corporation since the reform bill, ‘in the vain hope of overwhelming the popular interest’ in the borough.
Ronayne and Bagwell both offered again at the 1835 general election. The sitting member’s entry into the town on New Year’s Day was greeted by ‘an orderly assembly of at least 10,000 persons’, after which he denounced the ‘vile Tory faction’ which had recently taken office. O’Connell believed that Ronayne was ‘quite safe in Clonmel’, but visited the town to speak on his behalf a few days later.
Rumours that Ronayne would be given the chairmanship of the county’s grand jury, and perhaps retire from the representation, raised the possibility that O’Connell would offer assistance to Bagwell in return for his support in the House.
With the town ‘one vast scene of angry discussion’, in which ‘every corner’ was ‘transformed into a rostrum, and every human … a disputant’, a requisition was sent to London calling upon Stephen Spring Rice, the 21 year-old son of the chancellor of the exchequer, to stand.
By the 1837 general election Clonmel’s nominal electorate had grown to 795, with the number of available voters estimated at 526.
The by-election consequent upon Ball’s elevation to the Irish bench in February 1839 saw David Richard Pigot, the Catholic solicitor-general for Ireland, enter Clonmel to an enthusiastic reception.
Soon after the election, local landowners, including Bagwell, petitioned parliament against any alteration of the corn laws.
In spring 1841 Thomas Reynolds was despatched to Munster to organise agitation on behalf of the Repeal Association, and visited Clonmel in May.
The repeal movement in county Tipperary did not, however, show signs of abating. Significant public meetings were held in Clonmel in the autumn of 1841, and an address on the issue was presented to O’Connell the following February.
With anti-repeal electors said to be ‘few and far between’, Lawless’s position as a ‘moral force’ repealer was unassailable and he was proposed in his absence. That he was then ‘amusing himself with the sport of cock-shooting in the Highlands of Scotland’ caused some disapproval, but Burke ‘soon silenced the grumblers’.
Lawless’s position as a Protestant aristocrat representing a Catholic radical constituency was anomalous. The dispute over the representation had occurred just as the experience of famine became evident, the town experiencing a serious outbreak of fever in April 1846.
The turbulence created in Tipperary during the Young Ireland rising of May 1848 did not subside quickly, and there was a renewal of unrest in the neighbourhood of Clonmel that November.
At the 1852 general election Thomas Henry Barton, a barrister, addressed electors in the Conservative interest.
A by-election consequent upon Lawless’s sudden death in November 1853 occasioned considerable political controversy. It had been anticipated that ‘over a hundred of Father Burke’s men’ would lose their votes under Griffith’s valuation, leaving only 230 available votes (out of 379 registered electors), 80 of which belonged to Conservatives.
However, the Freeman’s Journal’s claim of victory for the independent opposition soon proved hollow.
As feared, O’Connell proved a firm adherent of the Aberdeen ministry and a vacancy in the representation was long awaited. It was not until August 1856, however, that O’Connell was appointed as clerk of crown and hanaper and another by-election was held.
The election was not held until the following February, when a strong force of police and military were required to keep the peace between the ‘Murrayites’ and the ‘Bagwellites’. Proposed by Burke, Bagwell sympathised with the plight of tenant farmers and supported reform of the Irish church establishment, adding that ‘as a Protestant gentleman of high position, his vote would have weight in protecting the threatened Maynooth Grant’. Murray continued to charge Bagwell with concealing his real opinions under generalities, and the show of hands was greatly in his favour. After polling began, Murray challenged Bagwell’s eligibility for election on the ground that he had employed the sub-sheriff of Tipperary as his conducting agent.
At the 1857 general election, The Times anticipated that changes in the Irish representation would ‘be few and unimportant’, and it was considered an auspicious time to judge the relative balance of political forces within ‘popular’ Irish boroughs such as Clonmel. In the absence of a ‘bitter sectarian question … to influence the passions of the people’, electors were expected ‘to make an impartial selection of the candidates best qualified to guard their interests in the Legislature’.
Prior to the 1859 general election the Central Conservative Society of Ireland reported impressive activity in several southern boroughs, including Clonmel, and a Derbyite challenge was anticipated.
There had been intense popular anger in Tipperary over Palmerston’s approval of the aims of the Risorgimento in Italy, many Irish Catholics believing that a successful challenge to papal authority there might adversely affect ‘the religious balance of power in Ireland’.
The town, including Long Island on he south and a space on the north side of the River Suir (361 acres).
Freemen and £10 occupiers, £8 rated occupiers from 1850.
Corporation of mayor, bailiffs, burgesses and freemen until 1842, mayor, two aldermen, and eighteen councillors after 1842, town commissioners from ?1834.
Registered electors: 521 in 1832 687 in 1842 379 in 1851 341 in 1861
Estimated voters: 514 (97%) in 1835.
Population: 1832 12256 1842 13505 1851 15204 1861 11190
