Economic and social profile
The flat maritime county of Essex, comprising 981,120 acres and traversed by the Thames, Colne and Blackwater rivers, was overwhelmingly agricultural, with nine-tenths of its lands arable, pasture or meadow. Wheat, barley, potatoes, oats and beans were the chief produce.
Electoral history
Essex North was created by the 1832 Reform Act, which split the county into two divisions. From 1774 until 1830, a compromise between the leaders of the Tory and Whig interests had ensured Essex remained unpolled, save for between 1810 and 1812, when the reformer Montague Burgoune of Mark Hall had tried unsuccessfully to break the compact.
In 1832 the voters of the northern division polled at Colchester, Saffron Walden, Thorpe and the election town of Braintree. Castle Hedingham, Dunmow and Witham were added as polling districts in 1847. The composition of the electorate did not change dramatically between the First and Second Reform Acts. The freeholders accounted for 62 per cent of the registered voters in 1837-38, a proportion that had fallen to 59 per cent by 1852. The next largest body were the £50 occupying tenants, who made up 21 per cent of the voters in 1837-38 and 24 per cent by 1852.
The Conservatives, or ‘True Blues’ dominated the representation throughout this period, enjoying complete electoral supremacy over the Whigs, known locally as ‘Yellows’, until the return of a Liberal in 1865. Despite this Blue hegemony, the northern division of Essex was home to a vibrant political culture. The local clergy vigorously joined in at election time, with those attached to the established church mostly canvassing for the Conservatives, while, according to one contemporary, ‘the dissenters ... almost to a man adopt one line of politics; they are all of the Yellow party’.
The 1832 general election in Essex North strained rather than galvanised the county’s Reform movement, which had always been an uneasy union between radicals and moderate Whigs. Western’s decision to stand in coalition with Dacre’s young nephew Thomas Brand outraged Whittle Harvey, who complained that as the inexperienced Brand had professed himself an adherent of the Whig Western, the division had ‘in effect but one representative’, which was ‘a striking and serious defect’.
Western and Brand also had their own problems. Western’s health was clearly in decline (‘at my age ... no joke’), and he cut an aged and sickly figure on the hustings.
In the face of an enfeebled opposition, the two Conservative candidates were belligerent on the subject of reform. Sir John Tyrell, who had sat briefly sat for Essex between 1830 and 1831, described the Reform Act as a ‘violent attack’ on the constitution, and boasted that the still ‘powerful’ Tories would unite against the revolutionary pretensions of the Reformers.
William IV’s controversial dismissal of the Whigs in November 1834 was applauded by Tyrell, who, in his subsequent election address, asserted that they had forfeited the confidence of the agricultural portion of the country. He also argued that Peel’s Tamworth manifesto had successfully dealt with the accusation that opponents of the Reform Act could not address acknowledged abuses in the country.
The Whigs did manage to muster a candidate four months later when Baring’s elevation to the peerage as Lord Ashburton created a vacancy. Their chosen man was John Disney, of Hyde, Ingatestone, a successful barrister who had finished bottom of the poll at Harwich in 1832. He was a firm supporter of the appropriation of Irish church revenues.
The outlook for the Yellows remained similarly bleak at the 1837 general election. A succession of possible candidates were approached, including Thomas Barrett Lennard, former Member for Maldon, and Thomas Robert Dimsdale, 4th Baron Dimsdale, but with little hope of success, all declined.
In late 1838 the Chartist movement made inroads into the northern division of Essex. In December a large Chartist meeting was held at Colchester, a town with a history of working-class radicalism: in 1832 the local working-men’s association had pressed the Metropolitan Political Union to call for a ‘People’s Charter’.
Despite the emergence of the Chartist movement in the region, it was agricultural issues that continued to dominate the local political agenda. The strength of local feeling towards maintaining protection was made stark in February 1839, when Charles Callis Western, now Lord Western, put aside his usual Whig sympathies, and attacked Lord John Russell for appearing to favour free trade in corn, a policy which he felt to be ‘a most rash and hazardous experiment’.
Thereafter the local movement to maintain the corn laws gained momentum. Under the leadership of Robert Baker, of Writtle, an Essex Protection Society was formed, raising nearly £5,000 by public subscription.
Thereafter Tyrell, working closely with the Essex agricultural protection society, became the county’s leading voice against any further alterations to the corn laws, beginning with a public, open-air debate against Richard Cobden at Colchester in July 1843.
At the 1847 general election the issue of free trade was superseded by an almost hysterical alarm over the threat posed by the Roman Catholic church. The debate was driven by the staunchly Protestant Essex Standard, whose editorials gave effusive praise to the recently-formed National Club.
With Tyrell’s re-election never in doubt, the contest was essentially between Beresford and Rebow, and at the nomination the two men traded insults over Beresford’s ‘Irish acres’ and Rebow’s inconsistency on religious questions. Tyrell also reserved most of his fire for Rebow, declaring that his Liberal opponent was a ‘piratical schooner’ for claiming to be a supporter of the established church and the agricultural interest.
Appointed secretary at war by Derby in February 1852, Beresford swiftly secured an unopposed return the next month, when he gave his staunch backing to the new premier and called for a moderate fixed duty on corn. With no Yellow candidate forthcoming, the only semblance of opposition at the nomination was provided by raucous Braintree factory workers, male non-electors who Beresford dismissed on the grounds that they did not have the vote. For the cabinet minister, his duty ‘was to the freeholders, and not to the rabble’.
For the next two general elections, however, the northern division’s Liberals remained largely impotent. When Tyrell announced in 1856 that he would retire from Parliament at the next dissolution, Charles Du Cane, of Braxted Park, who had sat briefly for Maldon before his election was declared void in March 1853, was swiftly lined up as his replacement. Du Cane’s Conservative credentials were beyond reproach. Presenting himself to the division at Saffron Walden in April 1856, he praised Derby’s leadership and announced his intention to resist ‘every attempt to unchristianise the British House of Commons’.
At the 1859 general election a contest was threatened not by the appearance of a rival candidate but by another Conservative, in the guise of Colonel Samuel Ruggles Brise, who opposed Beresford on the grounds that the Irishman was not a ‘proper country gentleman’.
After years of seemingly inexorable decline, the northern division’s Liberals, under the leadership of Rebow and his solicitor John Barnes, party agent for Colchester, and with the assistance of Thomas Roberts, secretary to the Liberal Registration Association at Westminster, launched a concerted registration drive in 1864. After vigorously contesting that year’s registration revision, it was estimated that the Liberals had gained at least 500 voters.
With all three candidates giving general support to extending the franchise to ‘respectable’ working men and a repeal of the much-detested malt tax, it was their diverging positions on church rates that dominated the contest. Western, who called for their abolition, directly targeted the votes of the Dissenters who resided in the urban areas of the constituency, especially Colchester and Braintree. Although describing himself as a ‘sincere churchman’, he insisted that it was a grave injustice that Nonconformists were obliged to pay church rates, an assertion that won him the support of the influential Courtauld. Du Cane, in contrast, was unwavering in his defence of church rates, a position, which he admitted at the nomination, was like ‘holding the red flag in the face of the bull’ in Braintree. His views were echoed by Beresford, who painted Western as a danger to the established church. Beresford also attempted to capitalise on his Liberal opponent’s age (Western was sixty-nine years old) comparing him to ‘an ambling nag’ who, if returned to the Commons, would ‘not only break his legs, but break his neck’.
Following an extremely bitter contest, Du Cane topped the poll, with Western elected in second place, 50 votes ahead of Beresford. Western became the first (and only) Liberal to sit for Essex North. A breakdown of the poll revealed that the Liberal strategy of targeting Nonconformist voters in urban areas had paid dividends. In the Braintree division, Western gained an impressive 452 votes, compared to 213 for Du Cane and 179 for Beresford. He also narrowly outpolled Beresford in Colchester and Witham.
Despite their new-found confidence, the Liberals declined to oppose Du Cane when he stood for re-election in July 1866, following his appointment as a lord of the admiralty in Derby’s ministry. At the nomination he asserted that the late Liberal government’s reform bill would have destroyed the representation of the landed interest in the counties and warned against making the working classes the ‘sole depository of political power’.
The 1867 Reform Act abolished Essex North, dividing the county into three double-member constituencies: the new divisions of Essex East and West, and the redrawn southern division. From the abolished North, the hundreds of Hickford, Lexden, Tendring, Winstree, Witham and Thurstable were transferred to the East; Freshwell, Uttlesford, Clavering and Dunmow were transferred to the West.
Hundreds of Clavering, Uttlesford, including Saffron Walden, Freshwell, Hickford, Lexden, Tendring, Winstree, Thurstable, Witham and Dunmow.
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: 5163 in 1832 5685 in 1842 5715 in 1851 5223 in 1861
Population: 1832 146747 1861 162441
