Social and economic profile
The maritime county of Northumberland, bounded on the east by the North sea, and lying between the rivers Tyne and Tweed, was noted for its extensive coal resources, although these were mainly in the southern part of the region. The northern division was largely agricultural, with its predominantly arable land producing wheat, oats, barley, beans and turnips.
Electoral history
The 1832 Reform Act divided the county of Northumberland into two divisions, separating the mixed economy of the south from the largely agricultural north. The county, represented by two members since 1298, had remained unpolled from 1774 to 1826, with changes in its representation determined by compromises between the dominant landowners: the Percys, dukes of Northumberland; the earls of Carlisle and dukes of Portland; the earls of Tankerville; and the Greys of Howick. Keen to avoid unnecessary and expensive contests, they favoured bipartisan representation, with one member at least from among their ranks.
The electorate of the newly created northern division polled at Berwick, Elsdon, Morpeth, Wooler, and the election town of Alnwick. The freeholders comprised the largest portion of the registered voters. In 1837 they accounted for 55 per cent of the electorate, a figure that remained steady throughout this period. The next largest body were the £50 occupying tenants, who made up approximately 36 per cent of voters between the first and second Reform Acts.
The emergence of the Ridleys, however, as a political force in the 1840s subtly changed the political landscape. Significantly, the assimilation of new families into the old landed aristocracy of Northumberland was continuous, and this process was best personified by the Ridley family.
The 1832 general election highlighted the desire of the Grey interest to maintain shared representation. The decision of the prominent local radical Matthew Culley, of Coupland Castle, to come forward as a Reformer alarmed Howick, who was already in the field and anxious to avoid an expensive contest. With Tankerville’s son, Lord Ossulston, standing as a Conservative, Howick informed Culley that although he had his support, he was ‘not willing to spend money’ and thus ‘could not join him in any arrangements for entering into a coalition, or other measures that might be necessary to secure a joint return’.
Liddell did, however, canvass the division at the 1835 general election, and his candidacy was welcomed by the county’s most influential Conservatives.
Compared to the fraught campaigns of 1832 and 1835, the 1837 general election was a quieter affair that passed without any great incident. At the nomination, the conciliatory tone of the campaign was echoed by the Conservative William Orde of Nunnykirk who, after seconding Ossulston, praised Howick for the ‘greatness of his talents, and his attention to public business’, though he reserved some criticism for the Whig government, declaring it to be in a state of ‘suspended animation’ and too dependent on the Irish party in the Commons.
The 1841 general election witnessed the division’s first contest as three candidates went to the poll. With Ossulston and Howick already in the field, Addison Baker Cresswell, of Cresswell Hall, accepted a requisition from 38 electors, including John Hodgson Hinde, MP for Newcastle-upon-Tyne, to stand in the Conservative interest.
Following an extremely fierce contest, Ossulston was re-elected at the head of the poll, with Cresswell returned in second, 62 votes ahead of Howick. Although Howick lost his seat, the result did not reflect an overwhelming triumph for the policy of agricultural protection: 27 per cent of Howick’s total votes were split with the Conservative candidates, suggesting that his free trade principles did not completely lose him the support of the independent squirearchy who traditionally preferred shared representation. Moreover, although Ossulston and Cresswell shared 993 votes, this was only 82 per cent of the former’s total, reflecting the fact that Conservative voters were far from completely united. Howick also outpolled Cresswell in the Wooler district, home to the earl of Tankerville’s estates. Howick therefore lost the election in Alnwick, the division’s most populous district which was dominated by the Percy interest, where he received only a 40 per cent share of the vote.
The issue of agricultural protection also dominated the 1847 general election. With Howick having succeeded his father in the earldom, the family interest brought forward Sir George Grey, a nephew of the former prime minister and Howick’s cousin, who in 1846 had been appointed home secretary in Russell’s ministry. Grey framed himself as a distinctly populist candidate, appealing to ‘mixed, agricultural, trading, commercial, rich and poor’ interests. Echoing the earlier views of Howick, he argued that the only true protection to agriculture was the self-reliance of the British farmer and any other sort of protection was ‘absurd’.
Although the contest was a severe one, the nomination was given an air of levity by a placard, raised directly in front of the stage, which stated in legible characters that Ossulston had attended only 47 out of 610 divisions since the last election. Ossulston denied that he had neglected the interests of his constituents, but Grey was quick to capitalise on his opponent’s discomfort and quipped that:
There is one way of resisting contagion, and that is keeping at a very long distance from it – and if that placard which we have seen here to-day contains any approximation to an accurate estimate of the votes given by the noble lord, he had taken a most effectual means of avoiding any contagion which might be caught within the walls of the House of Commons (loud laughter).
Ibid.
Despite such mockery, Ossulston narrowly secured his re-election, coming in second, ten votes ahead of Lovaine. Grey comfortably topped the poll by over 100 votes, and thus restored shared representation to the division.
The result of the election highlighted the continuing unevenness of support for agricultural protection among the independent landowners of Northumberland North. 21 per cent of Grey’s total votes were shared with the Protectionist candidates and he received a respectable 47 per cent share in Ossulston’s home district of Wooler. Unsurprisingly Lovaine performed strongly in the Alnwick district, gaining 61 per cent of the total votes, but he fared poorly in Berwick, gaining a share of only 35 per cent. He also polled unspectacularly in Morpeth and Wooler, a likely reflection of his late entry into the campaign.
At the 1852 general election local Conservatives, under Ridley’s management, were determined to oust Grey and restore Conservative hegemony to the division. Following a requisition from 23 tenant farmers paying in total more than £32,000 in annual rental, Lovaine offered again,
Following a fierce two days polling, Lovaine was elected at the top of the poll, with Ossulston coming in second, 35 votes ahead of Grey. Lovaine again dominated the poll in Alnwick, gaining an impressive 66 per cent share of the total votes, but more significantly, he performed strongly in the district of Morpeth, second only to Alnwick in terms of the numbers of registered electors, where he secured a 53 per cent share, up from 46 per cent in 1847.
The 1857 general election, which witnessed the unopposed return of Lovaine and Ossulston, heralded the beginning of uncontested Conservative hegemony in the northern division. The subject of the British bombardment of Canton dominated the nomination in 1857. Both candidates had voted for Richard Cobden’s censure of the government on the issue, 3 Mar. 1857, and while Lovaine, who had served in the army, was more guarded in his criticism, Ossulston condemned Palmerston for indulging ‘in the pleasures of quarrelling’ while ignoring ‘the bill of damages to pay’.
At the 1859 general election Sir Matthew White Ridley came forward in place of Ossulston, who had been summoned to the House of Lords through a writ of acceleration in his father’s barony, 6 May 1859. Although Ridley, through his management of the local party, had been assiduous in furthering the Conservative cause, at the nomination he insisted that in Parliament he ‘should not find himself imbued with party spirit’. Parliamentary reform was the most prominent issue, though with Ridley and Lovaine both cautious in endorsing any extension of the franchise, there was no controversy. Ridley and Lovaine also agreed on the necessity of maintaining the strength and efficiency of the army and navy, and both men were returned without a contest.
Following his father’s succession as fifth duke of Northumberland in February 1865, Lovaine, now styled Earl Percy, resigned his seat at the dissolution later that year, citing ‘the pressure of new duties’.
After the Second Reform Act, which marginally increased the division’s electorate, the Percy and Ridley families continued to dominate the representation of Northumberland North. At the 1868 general election Percy, who retired in order to rejoin the army, was replaced by his nephew, Henry George Percy, eldest son of Lovaine, who had recently succeeded as sixth duke of Northumberland.
the wards of Bamborough, Coquetdale, Glendale and Morpeth, the Bedlingtonshire, Norhamshire and Islandshire districts of Durham, and Berwick bounds.
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: 2322 in 1832 3070 in 1842 3111 in 1851 3088 in 1861
Estimated voters: 2,567 (83%) in 1852.
Population: 1832 60653 1861 65982
