Westmorland

James Lowther, Earl of Lonsdale, had returned both Members for the county unchallenged since 1774 and there was no further contest until 1818. On Lonsdale’s death in 1802, his cousin and successor William, Viscount Lowther (afterwards 1st Earl of Lonsdale) a veteran Pittite, faced no particular problem until the death of Sir Michael Le Fleming in May 1806, when there was an ominous incident.

Warwickshire

Warwickshire was not contested between 1774 and 1820. The contest of 1774 had highlighted two significant features of elections for the county: the gentry’s jealousy of aristocratic intrusion, and the interest of the Birmingham commercial and manufacturing interests in the north in obtaining a representative. Sir Charles Holte† was then Birmingham’s choice and on his retirement in 1780 Sir Robert Lawley.

Sussex

The division of Sussex into western and eastern constituencies by the Reform Act of 1832 endorsed a hallowed custom. As Lord Sheffield put it, 26 May 1807:

It always appeared to me the true policy of Sussex for the landed men of East and West, each to agree to consider of a proper representative, and that being done, the whole of the county to agree to support them.NLI, Richmond mss 69/1233.

Surrey

Lady Spencer remarked, in 1806, apropos of Surrey politics, ‘One can never be certain of the ground one treads on in such sort of neighbourhood to London and where property is so sub-divided’.Spencer mss, Lady to Ld. Spencer, 5 Nov. 1806. Soon after the unopposed election of the Whig 5th Duke of Bedford’s brother in 1789, George Sumner, a nabob’s son, was prepared to take up the cudgels on behalf of Pitt’s administration. Sir Gilbert Elliot commented:

Suffolk

In the contest of 1784 Sir Charles Bunbury, after 23 years’ service as county Member, became one of Fox’s martyrs. The county was thrown open again by the decision of Joshua Grigby to retire. At this juncture, 4 Jan. 1790, Sir Gerard William Vanneck, Member for Dunwich, a county landowner with his London bank at his back, publicly announced his candidature. As a Whig who wooed the significant dissenting element among the yeomen freeholders, he stirred up the resentment of the conservative gentry. On 7 Jan.

Staffordshire

Staffordshire did not go to the poll between 1747 and 1832, during which period it became an important manufacturing county: by 1818 one of its Members claimed to represent 14,000 freeholders and in 1820 another was credited with staking £100,000 on the defence of his seat—although he gave it up.Staffs. RO, Hatherton mss M/F/5/26, diary, 19 June 1818, 31 Mar. 1820. Expense apart, contests were discouraged by the smooth operation of a compromise after 1753.

Somerset

The county gentry would not hear of an aristocratic representative, but vied among themselves for the county seats. There had been no actual contest since 1715, but only the fear of expense and the convenient assumption, denied in theory but usually observed in practice, that the eastern and western parts of the county should have a Member each, prevented others before the spell was finally broken in 1807.

Shropshire

The county representation remained in the hands of the country gentlemen, who insisted on their independence and vetoed election expenses. There had been no contest since 1722 and the peace of the county was not effectively disturbed in this period. The conduct of Sir Richard Hill in Parliament and in the borough of Shrewsbury exposed him temporarily to the threat of opposition.

Rutland

Since 1747 the Noels, earls of Gainsborough, and the Cecils, earls of Exeter, had combined to dominate the county representation, to the exclusion of the Finches, earls of Winchilsea, who did not challenge them after 1761. All three families were short of personal representatives. The 9th Earl of Winchilsea, lord-lieutenant of the county and a courtier, was unmarried.

Oxfordshire

There had been no poll for the county between 1710 and 1754, when there was such a contest as discouraged any further disturbance of the peace of the county until 1826. George, 4th Duke of Marlborough, imposed a compromise with the county Tories in 1761, returning his brother Lord Charles Spencer. Viscount Wenman, with the support of his brother-in-law Lord Abingdon, the Earl of Macclesfield and the principal country gentlemen, held the other seat from 1768. The only disturbing feature in this period was the domestic disunity of the Duke of Marlborough’s family.