Economic and social profile
Bounded on the north-east by Lincolnshire and on the north-west by Yorkshire, the hundred of Bassetlaw comprised more than two-fifths of the area of the county of Nottinghamshire, but only one-fifth of its population. Agriculturally diverse, the hundred contained over 200,000 acres, which were mostly arable and meadow, and produced wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The population of East Retford, a small market town traversed by the Chesterfield canal, were chiefly engaged in the manufacture of sailcloth, hats, shoes and paper. The hundred also contained the market town of Worksop, which by the beginning of the nineteenth century had superseded East Retford in the barley trade, and the smaller towns of Tuxford and Ollerton.
Electoral history
In 1830 the franchise of the notoriously corrupt borough of East Retford was extended by Act of Parliament (1 Will. IV, c. 74) to include the 40s. freeholders of the hundred of Bassetlaw, the largest and northernmost hundred of Nottinghamshire. The measure had been the subject of fierce debate in the Commons and Lords, with the small, relatively insignificant borough becoming the focal point of the wider discussion concerning the merits of parliamentary reform.
Clause 34 of the 1832 Reform Act preserved the electoral rights of the constituency’s resident freemen and 40s. freeholders, to whom were added the newly enfranchised £10 householders.
Despite the notable limits on Newcastle’s influence in Bassetlaw, the Liberal-supporting Nottingham Review (weekly circulation 2,100 in 1841), with its editorials indulging in anti-landlord rhetoric, perpetuated the misleading picture of a constituency whose electorate was completely dominated by a tyrannical magnate, whereas the Nottingham Journal (weekly circulation 1,923 in 1839), whose editor was close to Newcastle and zealously committed to checking ‘the spread of such democratical and irreligious doctrines’, gave staunch backing to the ultra-Tory duke.
At the 1832 general election Newcastle, who felt ‘betrayed, cajoled, tricked and deserted’ by the passing of the Reform Act, declined to spend money on electioneering in East Retford.
The 1835 general election revealed both the strength and limitations of Newcastle’s influence. With Newark retiring due to poor health, Manvers and Newcastle agreed that the Conservative Arthur Duncombe, who had briefly sat for East Retford from 1830 to 1831 on Newcastle’s interest, should accept a requisition from 600 voters to come forward in Newark’s place, with the aim of restoring shared representation to the borough.
In his address Vernon was noticeably equivocal on his party loyalties, declaring that while he would watch the actions of the Peel’s recently-formed ministry with ‘a jealous eye’, he would not oppose ‘any government when its measures shall conduce to the welfare of my constituents’.
The reform of East Retford’s municipal government in 1835 dealt a further blow to the Newcastle interest. The report of the municipal commissioners was completely damning. The aldermen, who were chosen exclusively from the burgesses and therefore excluded the gentry and members of liberal professions, were found to be ‘qualified neither in respect of mental endowment, nor in the no less important qualities of prudence, temper and personal dignity’. The report also found them to be corrupt and the ‘tools of an unconstitutional influence’.
The constituency’s politics assumed a new complexion at the 1837 general election when Vernon offered as a supporter of Lord Stanley. Following his rather ambiguous address at the 1835 general election, Vernon had voted with Peel on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and the address, 26 Feb. 1835, and opposed Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835. Outraged by his disloyalty, the Liberal gentry brought forward William Mason, a former recorder of East Retford who had served as high sheriff of Nottinghamshire in 1823. Following a hard-fought campaign, Vernon, despite considerable local opposition, was narrowly returned in second place, 78 votes ahead of Mason, whose total of 1,234 votes ‘truly surprised’ Newcastle.
Vernon and Duncombe were united in their defence of the corn laws, with the former declaring in the Commons that repeal would throw ‘an enormous mass of the population’ into ‘the greatest misery’, 3 Apr. 1840. Newcastle also spoke at a large public gathering in East Retford, chaired by Sir Thomas White, in May 1841, to defend the existing legislation.
Support for agricultural protection was widespread in Nottinghamshire, even though it was strongest in the south of the county.
Although support for agricultural protection was high, Newcastle’s attempts to bring forward a second candidate alongside Duncombe were initially frustrated. His original choice, George Monckton-Arundell, viscount Galway, of Serlby Hall, continually equivocated over whether to stand. An exasperated Newcastle recorded in his diary that Galway had:
Behaved in the shabbiest and most harassing manner, he will and he will not [stand]. I shall be very glad if another shall be chosen instead of him – he does not merit the honor which he does nothing to obtain. I suspect that he will make a wretched MP after all, and that he will seldom vote as we should wish.
Ibid.
On the recommendation of the duke of Portland, Newcastle approached Sir Charles Anderson, of Lea Hall, Lincolnshire, to offer as a Protectionist, but following Galway’s decision to finally stand, Anderson quickly gave way, bringing an end to what Newcastle described as ‘this busy farce’.
In February 1851 Newcastle died, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Lincoln, a committed Peelite who had little time for the zealous protectionism of his father. Thereafter East Retford’s parliamentary elections were an altogether calmer affair. In February 1852, following Duncombe’s decision to resign his seat in order to contest a vacancy for the East Riding of Yorkshire, he was seamlessly replaced by his nephew William Ernest Duncombe, eldest son of the 2nd Baron Feversham. The fifth duke of Newcastle mischievously suggested that, by replacing his uncle, Duncombe was introducing a system of borough-mongering into the borough, but, unwilling to force a contest, he declined to bring forward his own candidate. Following his unopposed return, Duncombe, after giving a rather prosaic history of the conservative movement since Charles I, warned against the rising ‘arrogance and insolence of Rome’, and insisted that the question of protection or free trade was not settled.
Duncombe’s retirement from East Retford at the 1857 general election presented the Liberals with an opportunity to bring forward their own candidate and restore shared representation to the constituency. Their nominee, Francis John Savile Foljambe, was a member of a politically distinguished Nottinghamshire family who garnered respect irrespective of political loyalties. His father, George, high sheriff of Nottinghamshire in 1826, had been narrowly defeated as a Liberal at Nottinghamshire North at the 1837 general election, and was, according to one Conservative opponent, strongly supported ‘from good fellowship and as a foxhunter and landlord’.
Galway and Foljambe were re-elected unopposed at the 1859 and 1865 elections. Their respective loyalties to Derby and Palmerston set the two members apart, but neither election generated any excitement. In 1859, despite having voted against each other on the Derby ministry’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859, they seemed to largely agree on the question of further parliamentary reform, with Galway backing Derby’s ‘safe and moderate measure’, and Foljambe, who expressed his ‘personal gratification that it had not been thought necessary to saddle him with another colleague of the same principle as himself’, insisting that franchise extension was ‘not now the question of the day’. Both men supported non-intervention in foreign affairs, though Foljambe, in contrast to Galway, staunchly backed Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill, declaring that ‘Englishmen abhor assassination, and that bill was intended to give expression to that abhorrence’.
The 1867 Reform Act extended the borough’s electorate to just over 7,500, but its boundaries remained unchanged. Galway and Foljambe were again returned unopposed at the 1868 and 1874 general elections. Following Galway’s death in 1876, the borough witnessed its first contest for nearly four decades, while in 1880 two Liberals were returned for the first time since 1832. This was the last election before the constituency’s abolition in 1885, whereupon it was replaced by the single-member county division of Bassetlaw, though it retained its existing boundaries.
the whole hundred of Bassetlaw.
£10 householders, resident freeman, and, by Act of Parliament in 1830 (1 Will. IV, c. 74) 40s. freeholders in the hundred of Bassetlaw.
Prior to 1835 the corporation of the municipal borough of East Retford comprised 2 bailiffs and 12 aldermen. The senior bailiff was elected annually by the aldermen, who were chosen from the approximately 200 burgesses. After 1835 the town council, elected by resident householders, consisted of a mayor, 4 aldermen, and 12 councillors. Poor Law Union 1836.
Registered electors: 2312 in 1832 2596 in 1842 2710 in 1851 2537 in 1861
Estimated voters: 2,256 out of 2,680 (84 per cent) in 1837.
Population: 1832 40880 1851 46054 1861 47330
