Economic and social profile:
North Derbyshire contained a mixture of agriculture, manufacturing and extractive industries, but its topography was ‘very dissimilar’ to that of the southern division of the county, High Peak hundred being ‘a region of high bleak moors’.
Electoral history:
Before 1832 the representation of Derbyshire had long been cordially shared between the Whig dukes of Devonshire and the gentry in the south of the constituency, who had Tory leanings. The Reform Act divided the county into two, and North Derbyshire reflected the ‘immense influence’ of the 6th duke (1790-1858), with one seat always being held by the Cavendish family, and the other by a Reformer or Liberal.
Possessing a smaller electorate than the southern division, there were 4,370 registered voters in North Derbyshire in 1833, a figure which rose to 5,410 in 1836, remaining around that level thereafter.
At the 1832 election the cause of Reform was represented by the young Whig Lord Cavendish, the cousin and heir to the 6th duke, who had briefly represented Derbyshire in the unreformed Parliament, and the Radical Thomas Gisborne of Yoxall Lodge, Staffordshire, and Horwich House, near Chapel-en-le-Frith, who had been member for Stafford since 1830.
Cavendish succeeded his grandfather as 2nd Earl of Burlington and was replaced at a by-election, 27 May 1834, by his brother, George Henry Cavendish, who was proposed by the Liberal William Pole Thornhill, and seconded by the Conservative Robert Arkwright, of Sutton Hall, and a leading local manufacturer. He was returned without opposition after praising the record of the ministry, particularly over slavery, and calling for the commutation of tithes and reform of the church and the poor laws.
Although there was no question of challenging Devonshire’s nominee, the Conservatives were determined to win the other seat at the next election, not least because they found Gisborne’s radical opinions so irksome. A meeting held in Wirksworth following the appointment of the Wellington ministry, 9 Dec. 1834, resolved that Arkwright, described by the Morning Chronicle as a ‘high Tory millionaire’, would be their candidate at the next election.
Despite their rebuff and complaints about the duke’s influence, the Conservatives, boosted by their capture of South Derbyshire and an increased vote in Derby, harboured hopes for the constituency, not least because they could count on the support of the manufacturing and landowning Arkwright family.
Illness prevented Arkwright from honouring his pledge at the 1837 general election, but his son, George, offered in his stead, promising to resist ‘all Revolutionary Schemes and Rash Projects for Innovation’.
Encouraged by the 1838 registration, when 144 objections were sustained compared to their opponents’ 37, the Conservatives declared at a meeting in Chesterfield, 28 May 1839, that they would ‘start two candidates’ to oppose Cavendish and Evans at the next opportunity.
Although the Conservatives had made gains through objections on some occasions, Henry Barker, a leading local Liberal claimed in September 1837 that his party had a majority of 700-800 on the registers, and they made a ‘considerable gain’ in 1839.
After 1841 the Conservatives seem to have given up the fight for the constituency, despite occasional rumours to the contrary. They gained no traction from the corn laws, as local farmers were apathetic on the issue, and attempts to form a local protectionist organisation were frustrated by Devonshire’s tenants standing aloof.
In 1851 there were reports that Lord John Manners, another of Rutland’s sons, would challenge Evans, but the two incumbents were again returned unopposed at the general election the following year, both stressing their devotion to local interests, although Cavendish suggested that he might support a reform of taxation to relieve the agricultural classes, if it were proved that they suffered unequal and unjust burdens.
The tranquillity of the constituency, however, was disturbed by Evans’s unexpected resignation, 5 July 1853, apparently in favour of his son, Thomas William Evans, whose address followed suspiciously quickly.
Acknowledging the ‘Liberal ascendancy’, the Conservatives did not challenge the incumbents at the 1857 general election, when Thornhill spoke in favour of ‘peace, retrenchment, and reform’, while Cavendish endorsed Palmerston’s administration and also pledged to support the equalisation of the borough and county franchises.
Thornhill’s long rumoured retirement due to ill-health was finally announced in August 1864, and mooted replacements included Charles Robert Colvile, the former MP for the southern division and Edward Coke of Longford Hall.
In 1868 the northern division was re-divided, with the two-member seat of East Derbyshire formed out of Scarsdale hundred, which partly met the long-standing demand of Chesterfield for its own parliamentary representation.
The hundreds of High Peak and Scarsdale, the latter including the borough of Chesterfield, and a portion of the Wapentake of Wirksworth, including Bakewell. Part of Beard Township on the Cheshire side of the river Goyt was included in North Cheshire.
40s. freeholders, £10 copyholders, £10 leaseholders (on leases of sixty or more years), £50 leaseholders (on leases of twenty or more years), £50 occupying tenants, trustees and mortgagees in receipt of rents and profits.
Registered electors: 4370 in 1832 5739 in 1842 5316 in 1851 5072 in 1861
Estimated voters: 4,481 (82.8%) of 5,410 electors (1837).
Population: 1832 102236 1851 130067 1861 150178
