Economic and social profile:
Situated on the west bank of the river Derwent, Derby was an established market and county town that expanded as a result of the development of new industries such as railways and brewing. The town was already an established centre for the manufacturing of silk and lace, the latter of which employed approximately 700 people in 1846.
Electoral history:
Before 1832 the representation of Derby had been divided between the duke of Devonshire’s interest and the Whig-Liberal corporation. Control was maintained by creating non-resident honorary freemen, who were often tenants of the Whig duke. As a result there had only been two contests between 1780 and 1832.
Although the constituency’s boundaries were unaffected by the Reform Act, the franchise changed, with £10 householders joining those freemen who were not disenfranchised. This opened up politics in the town and every election in the period was contested. Freemen remained a significant and stable component of an expanding electorate, with 372 in 1832 and 359 thirty years later, but they also gave Derby a reputation for corruption.
The first election of the post-reform era saw the Conservative Sir Charles Colvile of Duffield Hall challenge the two sitting Reformers, Edward Strutt and Henry Frederick Compton Cavendish, who represented the corporation and Devonshire interest respectively. Colvile was an effective and popular campaigner, who upstaged Strutt and Cavendish’s attendance of a celebratory reform dinner with his own public entry to Derby, which was witnessed by at least 5,000 people, many of whom displayed his crimson colours.
Of the 1,136 who polled, 698 shared their votes between the Whigs, who together received only eight plumpers. Colvile received 234 plumpers, 181 split votes with Strutt and 15 split with Cavendish.
In 1835, Derby’s reformers sought a new partner for Strutt as Cavendish was thought to have neglected his duties as an MP.
At the 1837 election, Curzon stood again and was joined by Charles Robert Colvile, the son of the 1832 contestant. This was one of only two occasions in this period when Conservatives contested both seats. The hostility of the Tories to the New Poor Law, which Colvile described as ‘tyrannical, oppressive, and unfeeling’ caused the Liberals to complain that their opponents were attempting to set rich and poor against each other.
Four years later, and with no local candidates coming forward, the Conservatives asked Edward Sacheverell Chandos-Pole, of Radbourne Hall, to stand, ten hours before the nomination, which began at 10 o’clock. Chandos-Pole arrived by train at half past three.
The next opportunity for a challenge occurred in 1846, when Strutt was appointed to be the Chief Commissioner of Railways, leading him to take the Chiltern Hundreds and seek re-election. This was not a legal requirement and appears to have been a conscientious decision by Strutt, who was increasingly mindful of the disgruntlement of his erstwhile supporters.
Ponsonby’s succession to the peerage triggered a second by-election nine months. His Liberal replacement was Edward Frederick Leveson-Gower, Devonshire’s nephew. The Duke was reluctant to continue his connection with the constituency and only seems to have maintained it in this instance because of his relationship to the candidate.
One month later Derby faced the 1847 general election. Henry Raikes, of Chester, came forward as Conservative and his canvass met with ‘marked success.’
The 1847 election was the last time that Strutt and a relative of the Duke were returned. The long period of stability, guaranteed by Liberal candidates who were attached to the Corporation and the Devonshire interest, had ended. But although subsequent elections were marked by Liberal discord, the Conservatives found it difficult to capitalise on their opponents divisions and were not helped by the late entry of some of their candidates, who often lacked strong local connections.
Strutt and Leveson-Gower had little time to enjoy their triumph. On 6 Dec. 1847 Josiah Lewis and William Thomas Cox presented a petition against their return to Parliament. A committee was appointed, 17 Mar. 1848, and on 22 Mar. the election was declared void on account of bribery by the Members’ agents of which it was said they had no knowledge. The judgement also drew attention to the long-established practice in Derby of appointing freemen to serve on committees who were then remunerated for ‘pretended services’.
September 1848 saw the fourth election in two years, at which voters had the novelty of four new candidates and, for only the second time since 1832, two Conservatives, although one was labelled as a Protectionist.
In 1852, Heyworth and Bass faced Thomas Horsfall, a Liverpool merchant, formerly chairman of the city’s Chamber of Commerce, who had some family links to Derby. In selecting Horsfall, a moderate in favour of free trade, the Conservatives were attempting to reach some of the voters to whom Strutt had appealed.
The last three elections in this period were characterized by Liberal factionalism, with the Tories underplaying party labels in an attempt to appeal to moderate Liberals who were unhappy with advanced candidates. As Josiah Lewis put it in 1857 ‘The only difference between Conservatives and so-called Liberals is one of degree and time. Every man knows that a country like this cannot stand still.’
At the 1859 election, James was determined to stand again, as he felt he had been duped into withdrawing. Reworking the traditional complaint about the Devonshire interest against Beale, he complained that it was ‘unjust that such vast influence as was necessarily attached to such a corporation as Midland Railway should be brought to bear on an independent constituency’.
Liberal disunity continued at the 1865 election, allowing the Conservatives to win a seat. The disruptive element was Samuel Plimsoll, an outsider to Derby with Radical views who was invited to stand by the advanced section of the Liberal party. Given the importance of Bass’s brewery, many locals took a dim view of Plimsoll’s teetotalism. The satirical Derby Ram jested:
Plimsoll comes forth for election;
For teetotallers he has affection.
With teapot and spout
He may blow himself out,
But such things will not win an election.
Derby Ram, 6 July 1865.
Unusually for the period after 1848, the Conservatives had a strong, well-established candidate in William Thomas Cox, a merchant, banker and ‘a popular townsman’ as one Liberal conceded after the election.
Derby reverted to being a Liberal stronghold after 1867. Splits were healed in 1868, with the expanded electorate yielding a comfortable margin for Bass and Plimsoll, who represented Derby until 1880. The Liberals retained control until 1895, when the Conservatives captured both seats. From 1900 the representation was shared between the Liberal and Labour parties.
The town of Derby, containing the parishes of All Saints, Saint Michael, Saint Werberg and parts of the parishes of Saint Alkmund and Saint Peter (2.8 square miles). Boundaries unaltered by 1832 Reform Act.
Resident freemen and £10 householders
Before 1835 was governed by a corporation consisting of a mayor, nine alderman, fourteen brothers or brethren, fourteen capital burgesses, and an unfixed amount of free burgesses. After 1835, there was a town council consisting of thirty-six elected councillors, representing six wards, twelve aldermen, and mayor. Poor Law Union in 1837.
Registered electors: 1384 in 1832 2022 in 1842 2505 in 1851 2525 in 1861
Estimated voters: 2,127 out of 2,553 registered electors (1865).
Population: 1832 23607 1851 49699 1861 43091
