Economic and social profile
A county palatine on the North sea coast between the rivers Tyne and Tees, Durham was agriculturally diverse, producing wheat, oats, barley, peas and beans. It also had rich deposits of coal, iron and lead.
Electoral history
The 1832 Reform Act created two divisions for the county of Durham, but the original contrast between the agricultural areas to the south and the collieries to the north quickly became redundant.
At the 1832 general election John Bowes, the illegitimate son of the tenth earl of Strathmore and owner of the coal-rich estates of Streatlam, near Barnard Castle, offered as a Reformer, with the backing of the duke of Cleveland.
Bowes’s election committee, led by his agent Thomas Wheldon, repeatedly denied that they were in coalition with Pease.
On the eve of the 1835 general election Bowes informed his agent that, as he did not intend to spend any money on the election, he expected to be defeated.
In response to their successive failures to offer a candidate, local party supporters established the Stockton Conservative Association in February 1838.
The first major Chartist organisation in Durham South was in Darlington. By June 1839 there were signs of ‘considerable’ activity in the town, and in July that year the Darlington Women’s Charter Association was formed.
On the eve of the 1841 general election Pease admitted that he was suffering from the ‘fatigues and responsibilities of my present position’, and retired to concentrate on his commercial concerns.
Political principles, however, still permeated the contest. Bowes’s advocacy of a sliding scale on corn duty, rather than a fixed one, was strongly criticised by a group of Darlington’s leading Liberals, who urged him to modify his stance.
In 1842 the duke of Cleveland was succeeded by his eldest son, Henry, which placed Vane in the delicate position of being the Liberal nominee of a Conservative patron, and raised the prospect of Cleveland having to choose between party and family loyalties.
At the 1857 general election the candidature of Henry Pease, younger brother of Joseph, critically undermined Cleveland’s ability to satisfy both family and party interests. Pease, who had visited Russia as part of a deputation from the Society of Friends to urge tsar Nicholas to abstain from intervening in the Crimea, committed himself against the Chinese war, over which Palmerston had appealed to the country.
At the 1859 general election ‘the pressures of party proved stronger than the ties of blood’.
The 1865 general election was contested by three new candidates. Pease, whose parliamentary service ‘did not suit his health’, retired at the dissolution, and was replaced by his nephew, Joseph Whitwell Pease, while Farrer, who had become unpopular with local Conservative leaders due to his ‘independent’ support for Palmerston, made way for Charles Surtees, a former army captain whose family owned substantial estates in the county.
The 1867 Reform Act left the boundaries of the Durham South seat unchanged, but created the single-member boroughs of Darlington, Hartlepool and Stockton, all of which were held by Liberals for the following two decades, save for Ralph Ward Jackson’s tenure as Conservative MP for Hartlepool, 1868-74. At the 1868 general election Pease and Beaumont were returned for Durham South, and thereafter the Liberals dominated parliamentary elections, with Pease holding his seat until the constituency’s abolition in 1885, whereupon the county was split into eight single-member divisions. At the 1885 general election all eight divisions returned Liberals, including John Wilson and William Crawford, two working-class candidates backed by the powerful Durham Miners’ Association. Pease represented the Barnard Castle division until his death in 1903 and was replaced by his agent Arthur Henderson, who stood as an independent Labour candidate. Durham South and its electorate are analysed in detail in Thomas Nossiter’s Influence, Opinion and Political Idioms in Reformed England: Case Studies from the North-east, 1832-74 (1975). The politics and religion of the southern part of the county’s miners are examined in Robert Samuel Moore’s Pit-men, preachers and politics: the effects of Methodism in a Durham mining community (1974).
wards of Darlington and Stockton
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: 4336 in 1832 5941 in 1842 5616 in 1851 6989 in 1861
Population: 1832 78506 1851 118907 1861 170412
