Penryn (UK Parliament constituency)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Penryn
Borough constituency
Created: 1554
Abolished: 1832
Type: House of Commons
Members: two

Penryn was a parliamentary borough in Cornwall, which elected two Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons from 1554 until 1832, when its boundaries were extended and the constituency renamed by the Great Reform Act.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Franchise

The borough consisted of the town of Penryn, a market town in the west of Cornwall, two miles from Falmouth. The right to vote was exercised by all inhabitants paying scot and lot, which in prosperous Penryn made for a big enough electorate to ensure competitive elections; in the 18th century the number with the right to vote varied between 130 and 200, and by 1831 over 500 were qualified.

Nevertheless, Penryn recognised "patrons", important local landowners who were allowed influence in the choice of MPs. In the mid 18th century, the patrons were Lord Edgcumbe and Viscount Falmouth, both prominent "election managers" for the Whig government; but Edgcumbe's influence was much more secure than Falmouth's. Sir Lewis Namier, in his ground-breaking study of the elections of the 1750s and 1760s, took Penryn as one of his case studies. He quotes a contemporary source that Penryn prided itself "upon having had representatives of name and note", and the patrons' continued influence seems to have rested partly on their finding candidates for Penryn who fitted the voters' feeling of self worth.

[edit] The election of 1761

In 1761, another influential local figure, Francis Basset, challenged the Edgcumbe and Falmouth domination. Edgcumbe had proposed the famous Admiral, George Rodney, while Falmouth's candidate was the less well-known Sir Edward Turner. Basset put up two candidates of his own, Edmund Maskelyne and George Clive, a London banker and cousin of the famous general "Clive of India", and there followed a vigorously contested and expensive election. Clive had paid his own expenses in the contest, but four years later still owed his cousin 2,000 guineas which had lent him for the purpose, which gives some idea of the scale of expenditure involved.

The politics of the period was complicated by the accession of King George III the previous year, which had disrupted many of the established party and factional alignments. A forged letter was apparently circulated in Penryn, seeming to show that Prime Minister Newcastle supported the Basset candidates, and this swayed a number of votes among Customs officers, who depended on government favour for their livelihood.

The Falmouth and Edgcumbe candidates won, receiving 68 votes each compared to 63 for Clive and 61 for Maskelyne, but from this point onwards the Falmouth influence was broken and in future elections it was Basset who found himself with the power of nomination in Penryn.

[edit] After the 1760s

Later in the century the patronage came to be shared between Basset and the Duke of Leeds, though in the last years before Reform Basset's son (who became Lord de Dunstanville) was allowed to exercise patronage alone on the understanding that he did not interfere in the Duke's other Cornish borough, Helston. Elections were generally contested, and the outcome was often a sharing of the representation with one Whig and one Tory returned. In this final period, elections in Penryn became notoriously corrupt, although as Namier suggests the notoriety may have arisen chiefly from the fact the bribery now involved private citizens on both sides instead of the government being complicit in it. In 1828, two years before the first attempt to pass a general Reform Act, the Whigs picked Penryn as a suitable case for an attempt at more limited reform after an election where voters were reportedly treated to a "breakfast" worth 24 guineas a head; they proposed a bill in the House of Commons to disfranchise Penryn and transfer its two seats to Manchester, but as there was at this point a Tory majority opposed to Reform the proposal was defeated.

Unlike most of the Cornish rotten boroughs before 1832, Penryn was a town of reasonable size: in 1831, the population of the borough was 3,251, and contained 654 houses, which would have been big enough for Penryn to retain one of its two MPs under the Reform Act. However, neighbouring Falmouth was a much larger town and had no borough representation; the decision was therefore taken to extend the borough's boundaries to take in Falmouth, as well as parts of Budock and St Gluvias, which raised the population to 11,881. This newly delineated borough, which elected two MPs, was renamed Penryn and Falmouth.

[edit] Members of Parliament

[edit] 1554-1660

[edit] 1660-1832

Year First member First party Second member Second party
1660 Samuel Enys James Robyns
1661 William Pendarves John Birch
1673 Sir Robert Southwell
February 1679 Francis Trefusis
September 1679 Sir Nicholas Slanning Charles Smythe
1685 Henry Fanshawe
1689 Anthony Rowe Alexander Pendarves
March 1690 Samuel Rolle
April 1690 Sidney Godolphin
1695 James Vernon
1698 Samuel Trefusis
1699 Alexander Pendarves
1705 James Vernon
1710 Alexander Pendarves
1713 Hugh Boscawen
1714 Samuel Trefusis
1720 Viscount Rialton
1722 Sidney Meadows Edward Vernon
1727 Sir Cecil Bishopp
1734 Sir Richard Mill John Clavering
1741 John Evelyn Edward Vernon
1743 George Boscawen
1747 Henry Seymour Conway
1754 Richard Edgcumbe
1758 John Plumptre
1761 Sir Edward Turner George Brydges Rodney
1766 Francis Basset
1768 Hugh Pigot Whig
1770 William Lemon
1774 Sir George Osborn William Chaytor
1780 Sir Francis Basset John Rogers
1782 Reginald Pole-Carew
1784 Sir John St Aubyn
1790 Richard Glover
1796 Thomas Wallace William Meeke
1802 Sir Stephen Lushington Sir John Nicholl
1806 Henry Swann Sir Christopher Hawkins
February 1807 John Bettesworth-Trevanion
May 1807 Charles Lemon
1812 Philip Gell
1818 Sir Christopher Hawkins
1820 Pascoe Grenfell
1824 Robert Stanton
1826 David Barclay William Manning
1830 Sir Charles Lemon James William Freshfield
1831 Charles Stewart
1832 Constituency renamed Penryn and Falmouth

[edit] References

  1. ^ ODNB article by J. P. Vander Motten, ‘Killigrew, Sir William (bap. 1606, d. 1695)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [1], accessed 9 Sept 2007.
  2. ^ ODNB article by Mary Wolffe, ‘Slanning, Sir Nicholas (1606–1643)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [2], (accessed 5 Dec 2007)
  • John Cannon, Parliamentary Reform 1640-1832 (Cambridge University Press, 1972)
  • Lewis Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)
  • J Holladay Philbin, Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
  • Edward Porritt and Annie G Porritt, The Unreformed House of Commons (Cambridge University Press, 1903)