Economic and social profile:
North Warwickshire contained a diverse mix of industry and agriculture. Birmingham was renowned for its production of a remarkable range of metal goods, whilst Coventry was a centre of silk and ribbon weaving, with the latter trade also carried on at Nuneaton.
Electoral history:
Despite the best efforts of such formidable electioneers as Joseph Parkes, the Birmingham Political Union, the Anti-Corn Law League and the Birmingham Liberal Association, North Warwickshire remained out of Radical and Liberal hands in this period. In his 1976 opus, The politics of deference, D.C. Moore attributed the Conservatives’ dominance to the failure of urban Radicals to organise and register potential voters in the towns: ‘the power of these men would seem to have languished because it was simply not exercised, or exercised effectively’.
The 1832 Reform Act’s horizontal division of Warwickshire was justified ‘because it separates [the] Agricultural from the Manufacturing Population of the County’.
The first candidate to offer ahead of the 1832 general election, after accepting a requisition signed by 1,000 electors, was the Tory William Stratford Dugdale, of Blyth and Merevale Halls, whose father had been a long-serving MP for the county.
The ‘tumultuous disorder of the mob’ forced the suspension of polling at Nuneaton for a time, as Tory supporters were apparently greeted with the shout of ‘there’s a Dugdale, kill him!’
At the next general election in 1835, the Birmingham Reform Election Committee, an adjunct of the BPU, brought forward Captain Arthur Francis Gregory, of Stivichall, a former president of the Coventry Political Union, who was variously described as an ‘ultra-Liberal’ and ‘a Reformer of the Durham school’.
The outcome was a comprehensive victory for Wilmot and Dugdale as Gregory failed to win a single district. Although he polled strongly in Birmingham and Coventry, even there he trailed Wilmot, who topped the poll.
As Wilmot held aloof from local Conservative meetings it was left to Dugdale to praise the party’s efforts at the annual meeting of the North Warwickshire Conservative Association in January 1837. The British constitution was a ‘model of perfection’, he told supporters, and any changes were likely to be detrimental. Those radicals who professed to revere the ‘people’ would prove to be tyrannical and despotic rulers should they ever gain the reforms they demanded. However, with 300 MPs in the Commons, a majority in the Lords and a ‘Protestant King’, the Conservatives were well-placed to block further proposals.
At the 1837 general election the dissatisfaction of Conservatives and Reformers with Wilmot encouraged the latter party to bring forward Sir Grey Skipwith, of Newbould Pacey, a former MP for the southern division, and Charles Holte Bracebridge, of Atherstone Hall.
In late 1838 Parkes reported mistaken rumours that Dugdale was about to resign due to ill health, but decided that Reformers should keep their powder dry for the next general election.
Wilmot’s surprise appointment as governor of Van Diemen’s Land in February 1843 created a vacancy that was filled by the ‘decidedly Conservative’ Charles Newdegate, a young Middlesex-born country gentleman, who had inherited an estate at Arbury, near Nuneaton.
At the nomination, Newdegate described Peel’s revision of the sliding scale the previous year as a ‘misfortune’, and promised not to support any further diminution in agricultural protection. He reluctantly agreed with the reintroduction of the income tax, even though it was ‘an odious impost’, emphasised his commitment to the established Church, and criticised the new poor law.
In August 1845, 710 objections against voters in the Birmingham and Aston districts were made, all apparently signed by one man, William Worthington.
Dugdale’s support for repeal of the corn laws in 1846 provoked a requisition calling for his resignation, which he ignored.
Bracebridge then withdrew, explaining that he had only offered at short notice as no other Liberal was in the field.
In defeat, the Liberals argued that Leigh’s youth and inexperience as well as the protectionists’ support for currency reform had told against him in Birmingham in particular.
After the election the leadership of the Liberal cause was taken up by a local artisan, James Taylor, founder of the Birmingham Freehold Land Society (BFLS), the first annual report of which noted that it was only after the defeat ’that a sufficient amount of enthusiasm could be generated in our townsmen’ to organise.
The success of the Society in enfranchising its members, with estimates of the number of new votes created ranging from 631 to 1,000, prompted the Morning Post to describe it as the ‘Birmingham Vote Manufacturing Society’.
Despite rumours that the influence of the BFLS would force him to find another constituency at the 1852 general election, Newdegate issued a joint address with Spooner reiterating their firm commitment to the established Church in particular and Protestantism in general, and promising support for Derby’s government and policies to relieve those who ‘suffer from foreign competition’.
The nomination was disrupted by a mob, apparently from Nuneaton and Coventry, sporting the traditional orange colours of Warwickshire Toryism, whose entry sparked a general tumult. Consequently, Newdegate and Spooner were forced to make uncharacteristically brief speeches, although the former found time to voice his hostility to ‘Papal Aggression’. Craven promised to oppose the reintroduction of the corn laws. After witnessing the ordeal of the other candidates, Skipwith opted to address supporters in close proximity, with the result that ‘no one a yard from him could hear a word he said’. The show of hands favoured the Liberals by a margin of five or six to one.
The incumbents were returned unopposed at the 1857 general election, when Newdegate denied that he had offered a ‘factious opposition’ to Lord Palmerston, before justifying his resistance to the admission of Jews to Parliament as necessary to preserve the ‘Christian character of the constitution’. Spooner expressed similar views, but emphasised the importance of maintaining ‘a high state of efficiency in the army and navy’, warning that ‘peace-at-any-price men had forced their false economy’ on the country before the Crimean War, with disastrous consequences.
The sitting Members were again unchallenged at the 1859 general election, after Chandos Leigh, the only likely challenger, did not offer.
In 1863, the ailing Spooner announced he would retire at the next dissolution and local Conservatives sent a requisition to William Davenport Bromley, of Baginton Hall, near Coventry, (but from a Cheshire family), to replace him. Spooner’s death in November 1864 merely hastened Bromley’s return to Parliament.
The nomination was only attended by a few hundred people, but was notable for some ambiguity over Bromley’s principles, being variously described as a ‘Liberal Conservative’ and a ‘Conservative’.
At the general election of July 1865, the incumbents were challenged by Muntz, who had accepted a requisition from Liberal electors to stand.
At the nomination, the crowd did not give Newdegate or Bromley’s proposers much of a hearing.
Despite great excitement, the polling passed off without incident, although a few dead electors were impersonated.
True to their word, the Liberals made 662 new claims at the 1865 registration and 1,444 the following year, the overwhelming majority in Birmingham, Edgbaston and Aston.
Hemlingford hundred, the Rugby and Kirby divisions of Knightlow hundred, and the city of Coventry.
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: 3730 in 1832 6720 in 1842 7106 in 1851 6646 in 1861
Population: 1832 81336 1851 105661 1861 117127
