Economic and social profile:
Renowned for its ‘fine hop gardens and very extensive and celebrated orchards, which produce the cider so universally known as the produce of the county’, Herefordshire’s economy was almost entirely based on agriculture.
Electoral history:
One of only seven English constituencies to elect three MPs after 1832, the representation of Herefordshire was generally shared between the parties in this period, an arrangement encouraged by the addition of its third member by the Reform Act. The balance of party strength did shift, however. The Liberals held two seats until 1841, after which the Conservatives held the majority. The intensity of local protectionist sentiment allowed the Conservatives to capture all three seats in 1852, but the balance was restored at the following general election in 1857, when a Liberal topped the poll, with two Conservatives elected alongside him. While triple-member status made such compromises easier, it also allowed candidates to differentiate themselves from their party colleagues. This was most notable in 1841 and 1857, when Kedgwin Hoskins, a Whig, and Thomas Booker-Blakemore, a Conservative, curried favour with electors by professing, respectively, pro-corn law and Palmerstonian sympathies at odds with their colleagues.
There were only three contests in the period, and compromises that minimised the expense of polls and avoided disturbing the peace of the county were evidently convenient for the leading landed families. The 1857 contest apparently cost one candidate £10,000 and another £5,000.
In 1847 the radical liberal Daily News observed of Herefordshire that ‘there are few counties in which the strength of family influence is more intensely felt’.
In the unreformed era, the representation of the county had generally been shared between the Whig and Tory gentry, although two Reformers came in unopposed at the 1831 general election. The 1832 Reform Act left the county intact, although there were minor boundary changes at the margins, with small portions of land being annexed to Monmouthshire, Shropshire, Radnorshire and Worcestershire West. Far more significantly the county gained an extra representative.
At the 1832 general election, the Reform incumbents, Sir Robert Price, of Foxley, and Kedgwin Hoskins, of Strickstenning, were returned without opposition alongside the Tory Edward Thomas Foley, of Stoke Edith. The election set a trend for the future in two important respects. Firstly, the candidates tended to downplay party cries. For example, Foley promised to promote ‘general prosperity’ and the agricultural interests of the county and Hoskins similarly emphasised his commitment to furthering local interests in a hustings speech notably devoid of political content.
Before the 1834 dissolution a correspondent to the same newspaper complained that:
the registration of voters in this county, and many others, has been left entirely to the Conservatives. ... The want of holding well together for the support and protection of each other’s interests ... against the common enemy, foolish bickering and divisions, and injudicious patronage, are the besetting sins and fatalities of the Liberal party, and give their less numerous but more co-operative enemy the superiority over them.
The Liberals were like ‘awkward squads’, whereas their enemies were like disciplined Roman soldiers holding their formation.
The incumbents, who all stood their ground at the ensuing 1835 general election, again made impressive and colourful entrances at the nomination, but the rituals were interrupted by an unexpected opposition.
Poole lost the show of hands, but his proposers demanded a poll, in which their candidate finished bottom. Hoskins, Foley and Price were returned in first, second and third place respectively, all comfortably ahead of Poole, in a contest in which 86.6% of the 4,970 registered electors voted.
By the time of the next general election in 1837, the electorate had dramatically expanded by 45% to 7,226.
Revealingly, when the Conservatives finally resolved to exploit their advantage on the register in 1840, it was to claim two rather than three seats. In that year Thomas Baskerville Mynors Baskerville, of Clyro Court, Monmouthshire, and Joseph Bailey, of Glanusk Park, Breconshire, were announced as the new Conservative candidates at the next general election, at which Foley would retire.
Criticising the votes of the Whig members, the Conservative Morning Post claimed that Hoskins had been corrupted by Price into becoming a blind supporter of Melbourne’s government.
The 1841 nomination thus saw the unopposed return of three protectionists, two of whom were Conservatives, and Hoskins, who was a Reformer. Bailey and Baskerville were accompanied by a two mile long procession, comprising 1,500 horsemen and 70 carriages. Hoskins made a characteristically brief speech, declaring that his ‘politics were unchanged’. Baskerville and Bailey both declared their opposition to the proposed fixed duty, which would not stand in their view. The absent Price was nominated but withdrawn after the show of hands. After the proceedings, Bailey and Baskerville left in a ‘beautiful triumphal car covered with blue silk’.
The popularity of protectionism was underlined by a series of public meetings in the early and mid-1840s. In 1842 Baskerville defended his support for Peel’s revision of the sliding scale on corn, while admitting that he wanted a ‘greater protection’ to farmers of barley and oats in particular.
Despite the apparent strength of protectionist feeling in Herefordshire, the 1847 general election was notable for another unopposed compromise. Baskerville retired and was replaced by Francis Richard Haggitt, of Belmont Abbey. He was not, however, a protectionist, but a Peelite, who promised a ‘fair trial’ to free trade, and enjoyed the backing of significant landowners such as John Arkwright.
There was some criticism of Lewis, who had served as a poor law commissioner, as a ‘Whig placeman’, but even though he lectured farmers on the merits of repeal of the corn laws, there was no attempt to oppose him.
By the time of Bailey’s death in August 1850, the fall in agricultural prices, blamed on the repeal of the corn laws, meant that farmers were much less willing to tolerate a compromise that gave free traders two-thirds of the representation. As a statement of intent they solicited the candidature of Thomas Booker, of Velindra, Glamorgan, a landowner and ironmaster, whose wealthy uncle Richard Blakemore, MP for Wells, owned land in the county.
Booker’s return was a foretaste of the 1852 general election, when the popularity of protectionism led to a contest that ousted Lewis and allowed the Conservatives to take all three seats, the only occasion the constituency was completely under the control of one party in this period. When Derby’s government took office in February 1852, candidates began jostling in anticipation of the expected dissolution. Haggitt retired, but two new Conservatives entered the field to stand alongside Booker. James King King, of Staunton Park, summed up his principles as ‘Conservative, Protectionist and Protestant’. Charles Spencer Bateman Hanbury, brother of 2nd Baron Bateman, the county’s lord lieutenant, declared to the Ross Protection Society that he would support the re-imposition of agricultural protection. The ‘vast majority, the combined strength and the unanimity of feeling of the Protectionist party in this county’ meant that it had a ‘just, fair, legitimate, undeniable right to assert and affect its claim to return three Protectionist members’, argued the Hereford Journal. Furthermore, the newspaper claimed that Hanbury was an ‘avowed Whig’, whose father had been ennobled by Melbourne’s government.
Undeterred, Lewis made no attempt to trim his free trade views, telling electors that any attempt to restore the corn laws was ‘doomed to certain and inevitable disappointment’.
The candidates arrived as part of ‘vast cavalcades’ at the nomination, although banners and bands were conspicuous by their absence as it had been agreed beforehand by both sides that they should be dispensed with. Lewis defended free trade and his votes against Disraeli’s motions for agricultural distress, which were really of a ‘party character’. The Derby government had no intention of restoring the corn laws he sneered, but were cynically sending ‘protectionists to the counties and free-traders to the towns’. Booker reaffirmed his support for the ‘good old policy of Protection’, while King complained that Lewis was the ‘bitterest enemy’ of the agricultural interest. Hanbury justified his support for Derby’s government as it would protect the constitution, grant concessions to farmers and stand up for Protestantism. A poll was demanded on King’s behalf after he lost the show of hands.
The polling was distinguished by violence. Booker and Hanbury’s carriage was pelted with stones and the declaration was delayed by the destruction of poll books in Ross district by a mob. Liberal agents, including F. L. Bodenham, questioned the legality of declaring without such records, a tactic described as ‘vexatious’ by Booker. The high sheriff, after a discussion of the law, declared King, Booker and Hanbury returned in first, second and third place, with Lewis relegated into fourth by less than 200 votes.
The Liberals regained their seat at the next general election in 1857, restoring the ‘balance and equilibrium of interests’ as Lewis termed it.
But Booker-Blakemore (as he was now known) also proclaimed in his address that Cobden’s motion on Canton, supported by most Conservative MPs, had been ‘unfair and dangerous’ and ‘not justified by the circumstances of the case’.
The Liberals also contrasted the poor parliamentary performance of the incumbents with Lewis. Electors had rejected a man of rare talents for a trio of nonentities, the Hereford Times argued. As ‘A Farmer’ put it in one letter, despite their noisy support for protection at the last election, King and Hanbury in particular had been conspicuous by their silence and inactivity at Westminster.
Hanbury was especially vulnerable for two reasons. Whilst King and Booker-Blakemore had conveniently absented themselves from the division on Canton, Hanbury had voted in the majority that defeated Palmerston.
Hanbury lost the show of hands and finished fourth in the ensuing poll, with Cotterell, Booker-Blakemore and King elected in first, second and third place respectively. The Liberals’ electoral strategy was for their supporters to plump for Cotterell and once he was secure, cast split votes with any of the other candidates except Hanbury. Of Cotterell’s 3,360 votes, 2,074 (61.7%) were plumpers. The young baronet also shared 356 votes with Booker-Blakemore and 335 votes with Booker-Blakemore and King. Booker-Blakemore secured second place because 1,841 cast their votes for him, Hanbury and King, which may be considered straightforward Conservative party votes, whilst he also secured split votes with Cotterell. While the Liberal strategy worked to his advantage, it is likely that Booker-Blakemore’s Palmerstonian sympathies also proved appealing.
A rare example of female electoral patronage was revealed at the by-election in December 1858, occasioned by Booker-Blakemore’s death.
the owner of Stoke Edith estate ought to have, directly or indirectly, a voice in the legislature, and that, owing to the ineligibility of the lady in possession to a seat in the senate, she may, consistently with reason and right, authorise her brother to take her place, i.e. nominate him as a candidate. It is well known that her Ladyship exercises great political influence ... It is for the electors of Herefordshire to accept or reject her nominee.
A.P., letter, Hereford Times, 11 Dec. 1858.
Throughout the canvass and campaign Graham was accompanied by his sister’s agents and steward.
The representation remained divided between one Liberal and two Conservatives at the 1859 and 1865 general elections, both of which were uncontested. On the first occasion, Cotterell’s place was taken by another Liberal, Humphrey Mildmay, a Kent landed gentleman, whose uncle Lord Ashburton, owned land in the county.
Mildmay and Graham retired at the 1865 general election. They were replaced by Michael Biddulph, of Ledbury, son of the former MP for Hereford and high sheriff of the county, and Sir Joseph Russell Bailey, 2nd baronet, of Glanusk Park, Breconshire, and son of the former MP, who stood in the Liberal and Conservative interests respectively. Although John Joseph Powell, MP for Gloucester, was championed by some local Liberals, it was Biddulph who was the party’s representative at the nomination, when he was returned unopposed alongside the two Conservatives, Bailey and King.
The 1867 Representation of the People Act left Herefordshire undivided but disenfranchised the urban freeholders in the county’s parliamentary boroughs, who accounted for a small proportion of the electorate in any case. It was no surprise, then, that politics followed a similar pattern after 1868, even though the electorate rose to 9,528. Contests became more frequent, but the representation remained divided. The Liberals fielded three candidates at the 1868 general election, two of whom were elected alongside a Conservative in second place. Two Conservatives and a Liberal were returned unopposed in 1874. In 1880 a Conservative topped the poll, but the Liberals secured second and third place, with another Conservative fourth.
the county of Herefordshire
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: 5013 in 1832 7944 in 1842 7092 in 1851 7283 in 1861
Estimated voters: 5,533 out of 7,330 voters in 1857 (72.7%).
Population: 1832 110976 1851 115489 1861 123564
