Economic and social profile:
The ‘unrivalled capital of the newly industrialised Black Country’, the economic region of Worcestershire and Staffordshire rich in iron and coal, Wolverhampton contained a ‘great variety of sooty manufactories’, but as an observer noted in 1834, nevertheless remained ‘very salutary and picturesque’.
Electoral history:
One of the new Staffordshire boroughs created by the 1832 Reform Act, the Liberals controlled the representation of Wolverhampton with little difficulty after seeing off Conservative and Radical challenges in the 1830s. The Liberal MPs Charles Pelham Villiers and Thomas Thornely were consequently unchallenged after the 1837 general election. Popular for their vociferous support of free trade, Thornely and Villiers’s absenteeism left much influence in the hands of the local Liberal elite. Although they had benefited from the support of radical non-electors in the 1830s, thereafter, as Jon Lawrence has noted, ‘the Wolverhampton Liberal party remained confined to a small group of wealthy manufacturers, merchants and professionals, who organised local politics, through an informal, yet impenetrable, oligarchy known as the Liberal Committee’.
The new electorate stood at 1,700 in 1833, gradually rising to 2,170 in 1837, 3,295 in 1849, and peaking at 4,891 in 1866.
Wolverhampton was keenly contested at the 1832 general election, its first since its enfranchisement by the Reform Act. Hostility to the corn laws was a major theme of the campaign. William Wolryche Whitmore, of Dudmaston, Shropshire, a moderate reformer, who had previously sat for Bridgnorth, did not think the immediate abolition of the corn laws would be ‘wise or safe’.
The election was given added spice by the appearance of John Nicholson, a radical London tea-dealer, at a late stage in the campaign. This prompted Francis Lyttleton Holyoake, of Studley Castle, Warwickshire, a local banker, to come forward, offering as a ‘Conservative Whig’.
The ensuing violence led local magistrates, at the behest of the home secretary, to swear ‘nearly the whole of the householders, whether electors or not’, in as special constables. Supporters of Whitmore and Holyoake were hissed and pelted with stockpiled stones during the polling, as were special constables who attempted to intervene. The Riot Act was subsequently read and a troop of Scots Greys called in, who dispersed the crowd and restored order, only for it to flare up when the candidates returned to town. Although unpopular with the crowd, Whitmore topped the poll, his moderate politics finding favour with the limited electorate, forty votes ahead of Fryer in second place. Holyoake was third and Nicholson bottom.
Prior to the 1835 general election, at which Fryer and Whitmore retired, the Times wrote that ‘all the parties’ in Wolverhampton were ‘moderate or Conservative Reformers’.
At the nomination, Thornely advocated reduction of taxation and expenditure, free trade and repeal of the taxes on knowledge. Despite being nominated by Fryer and declaring that ‘a Reformer he had always been, and always would be’, Villiers was much interrupted during his speech. Nicholson was well-received, while Fereday professed his ‘independence’. The show of hands favoured Thornely and Nicholson. Disturbances occurred at the end of proceedings, but a downpour of rain dispersed the crowd. A ‘strong body of special constables’ had been sworn in and the military located nearby in anticipation of further tumult.
In November 1836, Thornely wrote to Villiers that at the next election:
I presume there will be two Tories against us, and I would rather have two than one - … I quite agree with you that there must be no division among the Reformers. We are not strong and our whole strength consists in Union. The Tories are a very powerful Party and they were never organised till now, and with them goes all the influence of the Parsons and of the Methodists.
Thomas Thornely to Charles Pelham Villiers, 7 Nov. 1836, Thornely papers, transcripts, I, f. 12, London School of Economics, R (SR), 1094.
He was later reassured by local Liberals that he and Villiers were ‘quite safe in case of dissolution’ as ‘the Tories have taken no measures respecting the registration’.
The 1835 and 1837 contests effectively settled the representation of Wolverhampton for the rest of the period. Despite his popularity with non-electors Nicholson had been easily defeated in 1832 and 1835. The opinions of the incumbents, particularly their vociferous opposition to the corn laws, reflected those of their constituents, which also reduced the likelihood of independent radical candidates standing. In a straight party fight in 1837 the Conservatives had been convincingly beaten. They did not challenge again until 1861, but remained a latent, unrepresented, and rather inactive minority. As Lawrence has noted, in the 1830s local Liberals (as they were increasingly known) could count on the popular support of the crowd, often manifested in violence against their Conservative opponents. This was not the case later on, particularly after 1867, as the Liberal committee relied on a narrow base of support.
In January 1841 the Wolverhampton Operative Conservative Association held a meeting which was attended by the earl of Dartmouth, the earl of Bradford and Thorneycroft.
The sitting members’ support for the 1845 Maynooth college bill prompted some disaffection from their Dissenting supporters, who objected to religious endowments by the state.
The re-election of Villiers and Thornely at the 1847 general election was prevented from becoming a self-congratulatory celebration of the repeal of the corn laws by the challenge of local Chartists. Joseph Linney made a lengthy speech proposing Samuel Cook, a prominent Black Country Chartist, in which he advocated the six points of the people’s charter, but also called for the separation of church and state and the repeal of the new poor law.
Although Thorneycroft managed to be the inaugural mayor of the town in 1849, Wolverhampton Conservatism remained moribund, and, as Villiers noted, ‘all the Tories were Peelites’. Furthermore, it was noted that the ‘old religious squabbles exist no more’, reducing strong party feeling.
Prior to the 1857 general election it was noted that ‘the general feeling here is one of strong sympathy with Lord Palmerston’.
The septuagenarian Thornely retired at the 1859 general election as ‘the failing state of my health is such that I am no longer equal to fulfilling the duties of a Member of Parliament’.
It was obviously impossible that a crowded meeting could select a candidate … As soon as he became aware that Mr Thornely intended to resign, he called together those gentlemen, to the number of twenty or thirty, who on former occasions had exerted themselves in favour of the Liberal candidates, and he received replies from seven or eight more who were unable to attend, but who agreed to abide by the decision of that meeting.
The meeting of 450 in Wolverhampton and another at Bilston attended by 1,200-1,500 thereby endorsed Bethell, but it had been very much orchestrated by the Liberal committee.
Bethell’s promotion to lord chancellor and consequent elevation to the peerage in June 1861 created a vacancy that a number of candidates sought to fill. The Liberal committee’s chosen successor was Thomas Matthias Weguelin, the governor of the Bank of England and former MP for Southampton. A meeting attended by 100 electors from all over the parliamentary borough endorsed Weguelin by 47-25 over Thomas Lloyd, a former mayor of Birmingham who was well-acquainted with Wolverhampton’s iron trade.
The gentlemen who had hitherto represented the borough were gentlemen who had come down … only to obtain places of influence, strangers to the town and its wants, and who were never seen but when they came to solicit the suffrages of the electors, … They returned to London and forgot all about Wolverhampton.
Bagnall was jubilant that ‘at last the electors of Wolverhampton were not tamely submitting to vote for any man who might be sent down to them from London by the Reform or some other club’. Hill supported extending the franchise to ‘intelligent and respectable men’ and a ‘judicious compromise’ settlement of the church rates question.
At the nomination, Griffiths backed Palmerston’s foreign policy, and like Hill emphasised his local credentials and denounced the clique. Hill was at pains to make clear that he was ‘not a Tory’ but a ‘Liberal Conservative’. Weguelin, who was met with ‘a storm of yells and groans’, alleged that the failure of Griffiths’s bank in the 1857 commercial crises was due to his own ‘ignorance’ of the currency laws and also defended the income tax, which was opposed by Griffiths. Although Griffiths easily won the show of hands, he was convincingly beaten by Weguelin in the poll, with Hill in third place.
Griffiths published an address ahead of the 1865 general election, but took no further part in the campaign.
The 1867 Representation of the People Act trebled Wolverhampton’s electorate to 15,772.
Townships of Wolverhampton, Bilston, Wednesfield, Willenhall and the parish of Sedgley (29.8 sq. miles).
£10 householders.
Before 1832, the future parliamentary borough of Wolverhampton was governed by the county magistrates and the officers appointed annually at the court leets of the respective parishes; improvement commission 1777; town council 1848, consisting of a mayor, twelve aldermen, and thirty-six councillors.
Registered electors: 1700 in 1832 2467 in 1842 3316 in 1851 4517 in 1861
Estimated voters: 2,700 out of 3,821 (70.6%) at 1861 by-election.
Population: 1832 67514 1851 119748 1861 147670
