Economic and social profile
The maritime county of Suffolk, comprising 471,312 acres and situated between the rivers Stour and Waveney, was overwhelmingly agricultural, with seven-eighths of its land devoted to arable farming.
Electoral history
Suffolk West was created by the 1832 Reform Act, which split the county into two divisions. From 1790 until 1830, Suffolk had remained unpolled, with a compact between the aristocracy ensuring the return of one pro-Catholic emancipation Whig and one anti-Catholic Tory.
The voters of the western division polled at Wickham Market, Lavenham, Stowmarket, Ixworth, Mildenhall and the election town of Bury St. Edmunds. The composition of the electorate remained steady between the First and Second Reform Acts. The freeholders accounted for 63 per cent of the registered voters in 1837-38, a proportion that had fallen only slightly by 1852. The next largest body were the £50 occupying tenants, who made up approximately 25 per cent of the voters throughout this period.
The 1832 general election underlined the determination of the local Whigs to capture both of the western division’s two seats. Following the decision of Bunbury, announced in October, to retire from public life, owing to the strain his parliamentary ‘exertions’ had placed on his health, local Whigs invited Sir Hyde Parker, of Melford Hall, to come forward.
his subservience to Sir H. Bunbury in St. Stephen’s and to ... [his] faction in Suffolk, notwithstanding that he had opposed the one and the other all his life before ... [which] betokened a mind ready to break faith with an old friend the moment it was found a more beneficial collusion could be made with an old enemy.
Bury and Suffolk Herald, 26 Dec. 1832.
Parker and Tyrell were opposed by Harry Spencer Waddington, of Cavenham Hall, who had accepted a requisition from nearly 300 electors to stand in the Conservative interest. He was backed by ‘a tolerably large purse’, with one elector alone reportedly contributing £500.
At the nomination Parker and Tyrell, responding to accusations made in Conservative handbills, took great pains to stress their zealous commitment to the agricultural interest. Both men called for a fixed duty on imported corn and a reduction in the malt tax. Tyrell, who asserted that he came forward on ‘free and independent principles’, insisted that there was no coalition with Parker, though an ‘Independent Committee’ for their return issued an address stating that ‘Mr. Tyrell has no objection whatever to any of his tenantry giving their second votes to Sir H. Parker’.
Over the next five years, however, the strength of the Liberal vote was eroded an extensive registration campaign orchestrated by the local Conservative hierarchy.
Agricultural issues dominated the campaign. As all four candidates supported a repeal of the malt tax, the contest boiled down to who could claim that they best represented the interests of the Suffolk farmers, an argument that became embroiled with personal accusations and intrigue. Hart Logan, who had retained his business links with Canada, was accused of selling, through his farming steward, Canadian corn in Sudbury market, an allegation he swiftly denied.
Following a rancorous nomination, which witnessed Hart Logan being mocked by his opponents, who carried sacks of grain labelled ‘for Hard Log-an and Co. From Yankee-doodle and Co. Foreign’, Wilson was returned in first place, narrowly ahead of Rushbrooke, who gained just under 150 votes more than his Conservative colleague Hart Logan.
The 1837 general election was a more partisan affair, with the candidates putting less stress on their independence. Wilson stated that his ‘support must always be given to a Liberal government’, while Bunbury, who had been persuaded to come out of retirement, chided the Conservative party for acting like it had ‘exclusive loyalty’ to the new queen, ‘as if it were necessary to take out a license, and get a certificate from the Tories, to enable us to be honest men’.
Although Wilson’s and Bunbury’s partisan rhetoric was strong, they ran a lacklustre campaign, with both men absent for long periods due to illness. At the nomination a barely audible Bunbury appealed to the local political memory of the electorate, describing himself as ‘one of the instruments in the hands of the men of Suffolk by whom the liberation of the county was effected in 1830’. He also declared that he was standing to ‘save’ the county from ‘lapsing into the hands of a Tory oligarchy’, a claim that provoked a ‘five-minute uproar’. Meanwhile, anxious to avoid another defeat, Hart Logan implored his supporters to split their votes only between him and Rushbrooke.
The first uncontested election since the 1832 Reform Act occurred in May 1838, when Harry Spencer Waddington, who had been defeated six years earlier, came in for the vacancy created by Hart Logan’s death.
The corn laws were the dominant issue at the 1841 general election. Both Rushbrooke and Waddington were adamant that no alteration to the existing legislation should be made, while the former asserted that a fixed duty on the importation of corn was a ‘delusive’ measure that could easily be suspended by a government.
Rushbrooke’s death in June 1845 necessitated a by-election at a time when the Peel ministry’s corn law policy was under intense scrutiny. It was reported in the national press that steps had been taken in London to secure the return of a candidate who would approve of the government’s policy, but the Suffolk Conservative party resisted such a move.
Bennet and Waddington duly voted against corn law repeal, 15 May 1846, and at the 1847 general election the former castigated MPs who had broken their promises on the issue, calling them ‘a disgrace on the representation of the kingdom’.
At the 1857 general election West Suffolk’s Liberals were determined to bring forward their first candidate for two decades. Dismayed at the success of Cobden’s censure of the Liberal ministry over the bombing of Canton, for which Waddington and Bennet had both voted, 3 Mar. 1857, a group of electors resolved to put up a candidate to ‘afford general support to Lord Palmerston’.
The 1859 general election witnessed the first contest in Suffolk West for twenty-two years, though this was down to internecine conflicts within local Conservatism rather than a Liberal resurgence. Following Waddington’s retirement at the dissolution, a meeting convened by the Conservative registration committee adopted Windsor Parker, of Clopton Hall, as their candidate, preferring him to Frederick Hervey, Earl Jermyn II, whose father had recently succeeded as second marquess of Bristol.
The nomination was an uproarious affair. Bennet’s seconder, William Biddell, claimed that Parker had been selected at a ‘hole-and-corner’ meeting and that his supporters had seized ‘the whole machinery of the Conservative party to work out the objects of only a section of the Conservative party’.
Jermyn’s brief tenure as Member for Suffolk West ended in October 1864 when he succeeded his father as third marquess of Bristol. His younger brother, Lord Augustus Hervey, offered in his place, and with Fuller Maitland Wilson again declining to come forward, Hervey’s unopposed return was seemingly assured.
Hervey maintained his stance on the malt tax at the 1865 general election, though Parker called unequivocally for its abolition and argued that it was hypocritical of free traders to oppose such a measure.
After the Second Reform Act, which modestly increased the size of the division’s electorate, the Conservatives continued to dominate the representation of Suffolk West. At the 1868 general election, the first Liberal candidate to go to the polls in three decades was comfortably defeated by Parker and Hervey, who were returned unopposed in 1874. Fuller Maitland Wilson, who had been close to coming forward as a Liberal in the 1850s, was returned as a Conservative in 1875. Conservative hegemony endured until the constituency’s abolition in 1885, whereupon the county was divided into the single-member divisions of Eye, Lowestoft, Stowmarket, Sudbury and Woodbridge.
the liberty of Bury St. Edmunds and the hundreds of Hartesmere and Stow.
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: 3326 in 1832 4975 in 1842 4379 in 1851 4325 in 1861
Estimated voters: 3,810 out of 4,959 electors (77 per cent) in 1837.
Population: 1832 112211 1861 126634
