Social and economic profile
Situated in the foothills of the Pennines ten miles north-east of Manchester, Rochdale was a manufacturing town with a substantial number of collieries: by 1867, there were 50 in the district, and stone-quarrying provided another source of employment.
Electoral history
Rochdale had not initially been earmarked for enfranchisement in 1832. Its omission from the original reform bill prompted a memorial from the town to the ministry in March 1831, pointing out that there had been no separate census of Rochdale’s population, as distinct from the townships of Castleton, Wardleworth and Spotland. Rochdale was added to schedule D (receiving one MP) as one of several amendments moved by Lord John Russell, 18 April 1831.
The Daily News described Rochdale in 1865 as ‘one of the most important constituencies in the kingdom’, on account of its international renown as the capital of the co-operative movement – the Rochdale Equitable Pioneers Society was established in 1844
John Fenton, a Nonconformist Whig from a local banking and textile manufacturing family, was first in the field in 1832. He declared his support for ‘cheap and equitable government’ and the removal of abuses in church and state, including reduction of taxation on the industrious classes, a property tax and amendment of the Corn Laws.
The 1835 election was a two-way contest between Fenton and Entwisle. In December 1834, Rochdale’s Liberals and Radicals had joined together to form the Rochdale Reform Association, and decided to counter Conservative exclusive dealing by following suit.
Renewed Liberal efforts meant that in August 1836, the registers reportedly gave Fenton a majority of over 150 votes.
The new Poor Law was again a significant issue, with hecklers at the nomination asking ‘Which on ’em is it as wants to build bastiles for poor folk?’ Fenton defended his votes on the measure, claiming that he had not voted for the third reading, and had opposed the more obnoxious clauses in committee. He also affirmed his support for abolition of church rates, the ballot, franchise extension, removal of disabilities for Dissenters, and amendment of the Corn Laws. Royds denounced the Poor Law as ‘worse than slavery’, and declared his support for the established church and retention of church rates. He opposed franchise extension and the ballot, and was evasive on the Corn Laws.
Having spent £1,000 or £1,500 on the by-election, Royds declined to offer again at the 1837 general election. Holland also demurred, and the Manchester Times and Gazette suggested that ‘the tories have no chance in Rochdale, they have used stimulants so long, that being now withdrawn, the spirit of their supporters has vanished’.
Fenton repeated his by-election victory, but by May 1839 it was clear that he would not offer again. This stemmed in part from ‘infirm health’ and his desire to retire into ‘domestic enjoyment’, but also reflected growing Radical discontent with his Whig views.
Bright played a leading part in persuading Rochdale’s Liberals to adopt William Sharman Crawford, former Radical MP for Dundalk.
A requisition to James Fenton in January 1841 reportedly received a disappointing response, but The Times suggested in June that Conservative strength was growing, as evidenced by the recent voting of a church rate.
At the 1847 general election, Crawford offered again, after receiving a requisition from over 500 of Rochdale’s 927 voters.
In February 1851 Crawford advised Rochdale’s Liberals that he would not offer again. Although he had recovered from a bout of ill-health the previous year – during which John Fenton’s son Roger had canvassed in anticipation of a vacancy
Crawford’s retirement dinner having taken place, an electors’ meeting in March 1852 resolved to proceed with the requisition to Miall. In the meantime, another potential Liberal candidate had emerged, Henry Kelsall, a local manufacturer, allegedly as an attempt at a Whig-Tory coalition.
Their positions were reversed in 1857, when Miall ascribed his defeat to a delay (caused by a train breaking down) in the receipt of the writ, which afforded his opponents – whose decision to field Ramsay again was a last-minute one – time to put money and beer into circulation. He claimed that 55 of his voters were abducted, and 22 were ‘in some secret mysterious manner’ persuaded to vote Conservative.
On 11 May, a petition was presented against Ramsay’s return, alleging bribery, treating, abduction of voters and the disruption of a public meeting by a body of colliers headed by one of Ramsay’s agents.
However, Tory corrupt practices were by no means the only factor in Miall’s defeat. At the nomination, he had warned against making Palmerston ‘a perpetual dictator’, in contrast with Ramsay’s support for ‘that able Minister who had conducted them safely and with honour to the conclusion of a great war’.
Believing that party divisions and ‘confident apathy’ had been largely responsible for the 1857 defeat, the Liberals now endeavoured to reinvigorate their organisation.
The Conservatives did not intend to let Cobden go unopposed at the next dissolution, but they had to look outside Rochdale for a candidate, adopting William Balliol Brett, a Q.C. on the Northern circuit, following his address to them in June 1864.
The nomination at the April 1865 by-election was well-attended by a 15,000 strong crowd, whose patience Brett tried with a lengthy speech, in which he emphasised his opposition to a £6 borough franchise which would enfranchise ‘an unfair and preponderating number of the working classes’, and declared the permissive bill to be ‘an unnecessary encroachment upon personal liberty’. He also attacked Potter’s support for the abolition of the laws of succession and entail. Judging the mood well, Potter mocked Brett’s verbosity, confining himself to a ten minute speech in which he declared that ‘he was prepared to follow the great leaders of public opinion, and to tread in the path in which they might go’ and that, unlike Brett, he would not ‘uphold the rotten remnants of Feudalism’.
Although it deemed Potter’s Liberalism ‘too robust’ for some, The Times voiced its approval that ‘Rochdale has done its duty and elected a man after Mr. Cobden’s own heart’, rather ‘a stranger of Ultra-Conservative views’.
Potter was re-elected unopposed at the 1865 general election, after the Conservatives, having faced a ‘very expensive’ fight at the by-election, decided to focus on the county seat instead.
the area contained within a circle of three-quarters of a mile radius from Rochdale’s old market-place, which included most of the township of Wardleworth, part of the townships of Castleton and Spotland, and a very small portion of the township of Wuerdale and Wardle (1.8 square miles)
£10 householders
Rochdale was governed by a Police Commission established under the 1825 Rochdale Police Act (6 Geo. IV, c. 28). In 1844, the Commissioners were made elective, with £10 householders having the right to vote. Rochdale was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1856, with two wards (Castleton and Wardleworth) each returning four aldermen and twelve councillors, and the third ward (Spotland) returning two aldermen and six councillors. The municipal boundaries were slightly less extensive than the parliamentary boundaries, with the three-quarters of a mile measured from the centre of the market-place rather than the edge.http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/descriptions/entry_page.jsp?text_id=9…]. In 1861, the population contained within the municipal boundary was 31,114." style="color:red;" class="drupal_footnote Poor Law Union 1837.
Registered electors: 687 in 1832 941 in 1842 1160 in 1851 1448 in 1861
Estimated voters: 1,142 out of 1,358 electors in 1835 (84%)
Population: 1832 20156 1851 29195 1861 38184
