CITY POLITICS AND PARLIAMENTARY
REPRESENTATION SINCE 1612
The relations between the city and the bishop
continued throughout the 17th century to be an
important feature of Salisbury's political history, for
the limitation of the bishop's jurisdiction to the
Close by the charter of 1612 did not bring all friction
to an end. (fn. 1) The bishop retained his authority as
lord of the city, from whom all lands within it were
held, and to whom quit-rents and amercements
were due. His court leet was held half-yearly, and
if the bishop was present at the Michaelmas court
he administered the oath of office to the newlyelected mayor. His court of pleas, with an unlimited
jurisdiction in personal actions, also continued to be
held at intervals, which varied at different periods
from once a week to once a month. In 1834 no action
had been tried in it for eighteen years, though its
processes were still occasionally used to enforce the
payment of debts within its jurisdiction. (fn. 2) If the
position under the charter of 1612 was distasteful
to the Close, it did not wholly satisfy the city, and
each side stood firmly on its rights, watchful for any
encroachments by the other.
The corporation's seats in the cathedral were a
fertile source of petty disputes. In 1624 complaints
were made to the dean that the mayoress, and the
wives of the aldermen and assistants were being
'put out of their places' in the cathedral by others.
In 1632 a request by the dean that the assistants
should give up their seats was met with unyielding
opposition, and by complaints that the lock on the
seats had been broken, and one of the supports of
the mayor's seat sawn off. The dispute was referred
to the bishop, who replied that it was no concern of
his. (fn. 3) Following the grant of the city's new charter
of 1630, (fn. 4) a more serious dispute arose and continued for four years. It appears that the additions
made to the 1612 charter in 1630 were submitted by
the corporation to Bishop Davenant, who raised no
objection because they did not concern the liberties
of the Church. Moreover, the bishop was at this
time embroiled with the dean over the appointment
of a new music teacher for the choristers. (fn. 5) When
this domestic dispute was settled, the bishop, fearing
that his acceptance of the additions might be construed as acceptance of the city's charter as a whole,
and goaded by the corporation's attempts to impose
rates upon the inhabitants of the Close and other
aggressive actions, decided to initiate legal proceedings to challenge the validity of the charters of 1612
and 1630. (fn. 6) The council resolved to enter into
negotiations with the bishop to try to bring about a
reconciliation, but the charters must be defended,
if necessary by recourse to law. A deputation called
on the bishop, and a few days later representatives of
the bishop, headed by Sir Lawrence Hyde, attended
a special meeting of the council. Hyde explained
that the bishop regarded the city's charters as
prejudicial to the rights and privileges of the Church,
and had been advised that they were void, because
contrary to former charters granted by the bishop.
If the corporation would agree to their repeal, the
bishop would be ready to 'yield and grant such
things as would be to the good of the city'. The
corporation expressed its readiness to negotiate, but
could not consent to the abolition of its charters.
Preliminaries for the legal proceedings and negotiations for an amicable agreement continued side by
side throughout 1632 and 1633. By the end of 1633
a number of cross-suits in the Court of Chancery
were pending between the bishop and the corporation concerning their titles to land in Bugmore,
gardens west of the Avon, and various other matters.
Both suits and negotiations continued into the next
year, and in May 1634 a power of attorney was
granted to the recorder to bring the dispute to an
amicable conclusion. (fn. 7) This was only temporary,
however, for bickerings continued until the eve of
the Civil War. In January 1641 the corporation
appointed a committee to examine the charters and
deeds concerning differences with the Close; and
two months later petitions to Parliament on this
subject were drawn up. (fn. 8)
The Civil War had its repercussions in Salisbury,
but these were on the whole of a minor kind. In
spite of the efforts made by the recorder, Robert
Hyde, to secure the city for the king, Salisbury from
the beginning took the parliamentary side. A band
of Volunteers was formed, which presented a
resolution of welcome and promise of loyal support
to Pembroke on his appointment as Lord Lieutenant
of Wiltshire in 1642; money was raised and preparations made for the defence of the city. (fn. 9) After the
battle of Edgehill Prince Maurice entered Salisbury
on his way westwards to join Hopton, and is said
to have kept the mayor prisoner for three weeks;
and Lord Hertford made the city his headquarters
in May 1643. In June 1644 Salisbury had its first
experience of Parliamentarian troops when it was
occupied by Essex on his way to relieve Lyme
Regis. (fn. 10) Later in the year, Ludlow and his troops,
defeated in a skirmish at Warminster Heath, were
pursued through the city by Royalist troops, when
'divers persons disaffected to the Parliament were
so unwise as to display their pleasure'. Ludlow
returned shortly afterwards with a party of horse,
procured a list of the Parliament's enemies and
exacted £200 from them. (fn. 11) At the end of September
1644 the king entered Salisbury at the head of the
victorious army of the West. Cannon, baggage, and
a garrison were left at Longford House and the
main army pushed on in an unsuccessful attempt to
attack Waller at Andover. (fn. 12) The only actual fighting in
Salisbury took place in December 1644 and January
1645. In December the two regiments of Royalist
horse quartered there were attacked by a party of
Ludlow's troops under Major Wansey. They tried
to barricade themselves into the Close, but Wansey's
men set fire to the gates, forced the Royalists out
and took their officers prisoner. Ludlow himself
came a few days later and proceeded to fortify the
belfry in the Close. A surprise attack by Royalists
under Sir Marmaduke Langdale, entering the city
by Castle Street, led to sharp fighting in the Market
Place, in Endless Street, and in the Close itself,
where the Royalists burned down the door of the
belfry and captured the garrison. Ludlow himself
with a party of his men escaped and made their way
to Southampton. (fn. 13) Salisbury was then occupied for
about five weeks by Royalists under Goring, who
not only exacted contributions from the supporters
of Parliament, but oppressed friends and foes alike.
They departed in March 1645, and for the rest of
the year a succession of Parliamentary armies passed
through the city on their way to the West, but no
further fighting took place. (fn. 14)
It is evident that a Royalist minority existed in
Salisbury throughout the Civil War. Among the
Wiltshire compounders, 36 were 'of Sarum', and
included 14 gentlemen, 2 doctors of divinity, 2
physicians, a surgeon, 2 lawyers, 2 vintners, and a
tanner. (fn. 15) In September 1646 a scuffle took place in
Catherine Street between a group of young men,
who were lighting a bonfire in celebration of the
Thanksgiving Day appointed by Parliament, and a
group of Royalists who scattered the bonfire into the
water. (fn. 16) Further evidence both of the existence of a
Royalist minority and of its smallness is provided by
the amount of support given to Penruddock's rising
in 1655. (fn. 17) The conspirators, about 180 strong, and
led by Sir Joseph Wagstaffe, Colonel Penruddock of
Compton Park, and Colonel Hugh Grove of Chisenbury in Enford, entered Salisbury at dawn on
Monday, 12 March. The spring assizes were being
held there, and the conspirators seized the two
judges and the High Sheriff of Wiltshire, broke open
Fisherton gaol and recruited some 200 of the
prisoners. They received little support from the city
and soon moved on to Blandford, Sherborne, and
their defeat a few days later at South Molton. It has
been estimated that about 200 Wiltshiremen were
involved in the rising, mostly from Salisbury and
the valleys to the north and west, and especially
from the villages of the leaders. (fn. 18) Of the 70 Wiltshiremen among those taken prisoner, 22 were
probably Salisbury men; they included 4 gentlemen,
2 inn-keepers, an apothecary, and a yeoman, and a
wide variety of trades. (fn. 19)
The success of Parliament in the Civil War gave
the corporation a unique chance to triumph over the
bishop. In March 1647 two members of the corporation, John Ivie and Francis Dove, were sent to
London to pursue the question of the purchase by
the city of the bishop's lands, liberties, and jurisdictions. In April petitions were presented to
Parliament and to the Contractors of Bishops' Lands,
describing the citizens of Salisbury as having been
'miserably enslaved' by the 'prelatical tyranny' of
the bishop, but hoping that they might be delivered
from their 'former bondage' now that parliament
had 'happily removed episcopacy'. The corporation
was supported by Lord Pembroke. In November
1647 the purchase was completed for the sum of
£1,795, half to be paid at once, and half in March
1648. The money was raised by loans guaranteed
by the mayor and commonalty. (fn. 20) In 1649 the
corporation bought four of the canonical houses in
the Close for £800, to provide residences for the
ministers of the three city parishes and of the
cathedral. The contributions of the three parishes
were fixed, but the parishes failed to raise the sums,
and the houses were conveyed to two members of
the corporation, Humphry Ditton and William
Stone, who had advanced a considerable part of the
purchase money. (fn. 21)
The successful efforts made by the corporation
to obtain a new charter in 1656 (fn. 22) were no doubt
largely due to its wish to obtain confirmation of the
purchase of the bishop's lands and jurisdictions.
But they seem also to have been the result of the
divisions, in Salisbury as elsewhere, within the
Parliamentarian party itself. The new charter was
the means of excluding from the corporation the
leading members of the Presbyterian party and their
replacement by Independents. Among those displaced was the recorder William Stephens, who, in
a letter to John Ivie, another of those excluded,
deplored the use to which the new charter was being
put. 'My place', he wrote, 'I hear is already bestowed upon Mr. Henry Eyre, who will punish sin,
suppress ale-houses, and administer justice with
greater courage than I have done'. (fn. 23) The Independents seem to have taken part, with the councillors
they were about to replace, in the election to the
second Protectorate Parliament in 1656. It has been
shown elsewhere that the main issue in Salisbury
parliamentary elections in the Commonwealth
period, as in most of the Wiltshire corporation
boroughs, was whether the franchise should continue to be confined to the corporation or be
extended to a larger body of citizens. (fn. 24) An unsuccessful attempt at a 'popular' election had been made
in 1640, and this was repeated in 1654 and 1656. (fn. 25)
The Restoration wrought a great change in the
political complexion of the corporation. In June
1660 Sir Robert Hyde was restored to his former
office of recorder; and the sword and cap of maintenance, bestowed on the city by the charter of 1656,
were ordered to be brought to the Council House
to be disposed of as the council should think fit.
Early in 1661 the king's arms were ordered to be
set up once more at the city's expense over the
North Gate of the Close, and over the Castle Street
Gate. (fn. 26) In 1662 Clarendon was unanimously elected
high steward, and his three sons were given the
freedom of the city; a feast for his entertainment
was ordered in 1663, and in 1664 his son was elected
one of the members of Parliament for the city. (fn. 27)
Meanwhile under the Corporation Act 5 aldermen,
3 aldermen-elect, and 6 assistants had been removed
in June 1662; in July a further 13 members of the
corporation, a sergeant-at-mace, and 2 high constables were displaced, and all the vacancies filled
on the same day. (fn. 28) The effect of the Restoration on
people of lesser importance can be seen from the
petition in 1660 from Roger Bedbury that he be
restored to the place of postmaster at Salisbury,
from which he had been ejected for malignancy in
1645, and replaced by Ralph Rookesby, put in by
Thurloe; and a letter about the same time from
Ashley-Cooper to Secretary Nicholas asking that
Rookesby should continue as postmaster. (fn. 29) The
bishop's lands and jurisdictions were, of course,
restored to him, and this seems to have been carried
out amicably by two representatives nominated by
the city and two by the bishop. (fn. 30) The Restoration
ushered in a period of much better relations between
the bishop and the corporation, which became even
more cordial with the appointment of Seth Ward as
bishop in 1667. In his dislike of, and strict attitude
towards, dissenters Ward was in accord with the
now Anglican corporation, and he seems to have
taken a benevolent interest in the city's affairs. An
earlier plan to make the River Avon navigable was
revived and an Act for that purpose obtained in
1664, largely through the bishop's encouragement;
he contributed generously towards the scheme and
in 1675 'digged the first spit near Longford House'. (fn. 31)
In 1673 the corporation commissioned a portrait of
the bishop by John Greenhill to be hung in the
Council House. (fn. 32)
The Court stayed at Salisbury for the whole of
August and part of September in 1665 to escape the
plague in London. The corporation borrowed £100
to provide presents of plate for their visitors, and
ordered that all aldermen who had been mayors
should attend the mayor in their scarlet gowns at
the coming of the royal visitors and that the rest of
the common council should also be in attendance
in their gowns. The city also paid fees of homage
amounting to £36 6s. to the king's servants. (fn. 33) The
corporation at this period was strongly Anglican and
Royalist. At the first four by-elections to the Cavalier
Parliament in 1664, 1665, and 1673, Royalists were
returned unopposed. Opposition thereafter gathered
strength probably under the influence of Shaftesbury, who replaced Clarendon as high steward in
1672, and pressure for the widening of the franchise
was renewed. At both elections of 1679 the 'popular'
candidates, Sir Thomas Mompesson and Alexander
Thistlethwayte, were elected unopposed, and they
seem to have made some effort in 1680 to get up a
petition in the city protesting against the dissolution
of Parliament. The Court Party had, however, now
rallied in Salisbury. At the time of the election to
the Oxford Parliament in February 1681 a number
of Court supporters were admitted as freemen, and
the council felt strong enough to substitute the
Royalist Colonel John Wyndham for Mompesson,
who, with Thistlethwayte, was supported by the
'popular' party. (fn. 34) In the following April the council
ordered that all loans on bond to persons who had
supported the 'popular' party at the election should
be called in, and that anyone failing to pay should
be sued immediately. Further, no one was in future
to have any money granted to him by the council
unless he were a conforming Churchman. (fn. 35) In
April 1681 Wyndham presented an address from
Salisbury thanking the king for his Declaration (of
his reasons for dissolving the last two Parliaments)
and expressing detestation of 'all popish and phanatical principles and practices, tending to sedition and
rebellion'. This address was approved by 355 loyal
citizens and by the companies of clothworkers and
barber-surgeons. (fn. 36) In 1682 the corporation drew up
and presented an 'abhorrence of the horrid Association late printed and published', and a feast was held
at the Council House to celebrate the discovery of
the Rye House plot. Monmouth's rebellion found
no support in Salisbury; and a treat and bonfire was
provided in July 1688 to celebrate the birth of the
Prince of Wales. (fn. 37) On the other hand, James's
agents, sent out in 1687 to report on the attitude of
the parliamentary boroughs towards the proposed
repeal of the Test Acts and Penal Laws, reported
of the city that the generality were 'cross' to the
king's interest, so that the Tory sentiments of the
corporation were apparently not shared by all the
citizens. (fn. 38)
At the Glorious Revolution Salisbury was for a
brief period in the middle of the stage as the headquarters of James's army, from which most of it
deserted him to join the Prince of Orange. James
himself came to the city in November 1688, was
received by the mayor and escorted to the Palace,
where he stayed for three days, after which he left
to return to Windsor. William entered Salisbury in
December, where he was received by the mayor and
aldermen, and apparently with great enthusiasm by
the people. He stayed one night at the Palace on his
way to London. (fn. 39) The behaviour of the corporation
was like that of the Vicar of Bray, for they now
became as zealous for William as they had previously
been for James. This enthusiasm, however, was not
felt for their new bishop.
The death of Seth Ward and his succession in
1689 by Gilbert Burnet began a further period of
strained relations between city and Close. Burnet's
Whiggish politics, latitudinarian Churchmanship,
and friendship towards dissenters did not find
favour with the corporation, and his tactlessness
made him enemies in Salisbury as elsewhere.
Matters came to a head in 1705 when, at the general
election of that year, Burnet, who had hitherto
refrained from meddling in parliamentary elections
at Salisbury, felt it his duty to oppose Charles Fox,
the high Tory candidate, and to recommend a
candidate of his own. This raised a violent storm
against Burnet, whose candidate was defeated, many
of the clergy supporting Fox against their bishop.
Burnet himself sadly recognized that this episode
had poisoned permanently his relations with the
town. (fn. 40) Matters were not improved by the Whiggism
and high-handed methods of Burnet's chaplain,
John Hoadly (brother of the notorious Benjamin
Hoadly), who was presented by Burnet to the
rectory of St. Edmund's in 1705, and subsequently
became Archdeacon of Sarum in 1710 and chancellor
in 1713.
The impeachment in 1710 of Dr. Henry Sacheverell had repercussions in Salisbury as elsewhere.
Burnet was a strong supporter of the impeachment
and spoke against Sacheverell at the trial. When the
news of Sacheverell's light sentence reached Salisbury the bells of St. Thomas's Church were rung—
though it was later claimed that this was on account
of the races, and not in Sacheverell's honour. A
large bonfire was made at the upper end of the High
Street, drink flowed freely, and Sacheverell's health
was drunk. The following week another bonfire
took place at the Cheese Cross. Drink again flowed
freely, passers by were threatened, and one was
actually knocked down for refusing to drink the
doctor's health. A third bonfire in the Market Place
was planned, but the mayor now intervened to
prohibit it. Early in May Burnet returned to
Salisbury and was, as usual on these occasions, met
by the mayor and senior aldermen, whom he received
with cold civility. He made no reference to the
bonfires and tumults. The following Sunday, however, he preached in the cathedral and took occasion
in the course of his sermon to condemn the tumults,
which he described as stirred up by the papists. He
does not appear to have made any reflection upon
the conduct of the city magistrates, but the mayor
took offence. A few days later the bishop preached
in St. Thomas's church. The mayor and eight of the
aldermen attended the service, sitting 'at their seat
doors and would not go to the top of their seats as
they used'. When prayers were over and Burnet
went into the pulpit, they rose and left the church
in a body. These events led to a brisk exchange of
pamphlets between an anonymous 'Citizen of New
Sarum', defending the action of the mayor and
citizens, and John Hoadly, defending the bishop.
In the course of this exchange the 'Citizen' also
accused Hoadly of influencing the bishop to withdraw his annual subscription of £10 to the workhouse, and of insisting that the customary reception
of the bishop on his return to the city after any long
absence was not merely a matter of courtesy on the
part of the mayor and aldermen, but a duty they
owed the bishop as lord of the town. The attitude
taken up by Hoadly made it necessary, the writer
claimed, for the corporation to discontinue this
courtesy for a time. (fn. 41) Burnet died in 1715, and
relations between his 18th-century successors and
the city seem to have been much more amicable.
Salisbury's members of Parliament in the 17th
century were all local men and until the seventies
were generally citizens and members of the corporation. It seems to have been customary to elect the
recorder as one of the members; between 1612 and
1660 there were only two elections when the
recorder was not returned, 1620 and 1656, and the
practice continued fairly regularly until 1710. In the
seventies the city began to elect members of the
local gentry as its representatives, and this became
its general practice throughout the 18th century. (fn. 42)
Citizens of Salisbury were still occasionally elected;
for example Francis Swanton, deputy recorder, in
1715, Francis Kenton, alderman, in 1722, Edward
Poore, deputy recorder, in 1747, and William
Hussey, alderman, and mayor in 1758, at every
election from 1774 until his death in 1813. In the
early 19th century the Wyndham family, of St.
Edmund's College, (fn. 43) provided one of the city's
members for the first time since Colonel John
Wyndham's election in 1681 and 1685, though
attempts had been made to obtain a seat at the byelection of 1765 and in 1768. (fn. 44) Wadham Wyndham
was elected in 1818 and to every Parliament (except
that of 1833) until his death in 1843. The important
part played in Salisbury's parliamentary history in
the later 18th century by the Bouverie family, later
Earls of Radnor, has already been described. (fn. 45) A
member of the family was elected to one of the
Salisbury seats in every Parliament from 1741 to
1833, and from 1743 to 1836 the heads of the family
succeeded one another in the office of recorder.
The Bouverie interest was at its height under the
second Earl of Radnor, a respected and valued
patron of the city, but never its master. His relationship with the corporation is well illustrated by the
negotiations over the building of the new Council
House. Following the destruction of the old Council
House by fire in November 1780, (fn. 46) Lord Radnor
offered to build a new one at his own expense,
stipulating that it should be in the middle of the
Market Place and entirely to his own plan. This
offer was at first refused, though with becoming
expressions of gratitude, because the council disliked the idea of thus encroaching upon the Market
Place; and when Lord Radnor agreed to a different
site and the plan proceeded, the council again
objected to the idea that the new Council House
should face Queen Street, because this would
involve an inconvenient projection into the Market
Place, and Lord Radnor again gave way. (fn. 47)
The building of the new Council House also
provides an illustration of the good relations which
existed at this period between the corporation and
the bishop. Bishop Barrington seems to have cooperated willingly in the city's plans, though
standing firmly upon his rights. He agreed to the
proposed demolition of the bishop's Guildhall and
gaol, (fn. 48) but stipulated that the corporation should,
at their own expense, build a new gaol and that the
new Council House must provide places for holding
the bishop's courts, the courts of the dean and
chapter, and the quarter sessions for the Close, the
bishop to have no responsibility for the upkeep of
the buildings. The appointment and payment of the
gaoler should be by the corporation, but the
nomination must be submitted to the bishop for his
approval. In consideration of all this, the bishop
agreed to surrender to the corporation the office of
Clerk of the Market, (fn. 49) and further showed his
goodwill by telling Lord Radnor that if anything
were obtained from the late bishop's executors by
way of dilapidations, it should go to the new
building. (fn. 50)
Salisbury elections during the 18th century seem
on the whole to have been quiet and contests were
exceptional. In 1715 there was a feeling of resentment by some of the justices, aldermen and assistants that parliamentary elections and admissions to
vacancies on the corporation were being settled in
advance of the council's decisions by a small clique,
who had procured the election of Edmund Lambert
and Francis Swanton with the help of arbitrary
proceedings by the mayor, and it was further contended that Swanton was not qualified under the
Act of 1711 requiring members of Parliament to
own land of the annual value of £300. Petitions to
the House of Commons were presented by the disgruntled members of the corporation and by Robert
Pitt, the unsuccessful candidate, but were later
withdrawn. (fn. 51) In contrast, the by-election of 1765,
caused by the death of Julines Beckford, when there
were five candidates, seems to have been exceedingly
respectable, three of the candidates withdrawing
before the poll and the remaining two carrying on
'an active but polite canvass'. (fn. 52) The council kept
in touch with their representatives and sent them
instructions not only upon local matters but also on
national questions. In 1735 the members were asked
to see what could be done about relieving the city
of the burden of a regiment of Foot Guards
quartered there for nearly a year, to the great loss
of various inn-keepers, several of whom had been
obliged to close their inns. The soldiers behaved
well, but their increasing numbers inevitably gave
rise to many complaints from the citizens. (fn. 53) In 1742
the members were requested to support bills for
triennial parliaments and the limitation of placemen
in the House of Commons, and for the support of
the woollen industry. (fn. 54) The members seem to have
written to the council in 1756 about the proposed
militia bill, and the council replied, approving in
principle, but asking to be given the heads of the
bill. (fn. 55) In 1790 the council instructed its representatives to work for the repeal of Pitt's proposal to
transfer the tobacco duties from customs to excise,
as this was likely to be injurious to manufacturers of
tobacco and snuff, and to oppose any further
extension of the excise laws. (fn. 56)
The political tranquillity of 18th-century Salisbury was disturbed during the last years of the
century by the impact of national events. The war
and the possibility of invasion provoked a loyal
response from the city, which contributed to the
county fund for the internal defence of the kingdom,
and a local body of cavalry was established under
the command of Henry Penruddock Wyndham. A
Loyal Association for local defence, consisting of
three companies, one for each parish, was formed
in 1798, and on the renewal of war in 1803 a
subscription of £2,000 was raised to equip a corps
of 430 volunteers under the command of William
Boucher, who had been commander of the Association of 1798. (fn. 57) There was less unanimity about
domestic affairs. In 1797 the majority of the council
presented an address to the king deploring the
continuance of the war and urging a change of
ministry, but this was immediately followed by a
general meeting of inhabitants, which drew up a
counter-address signed by 270 people. Opinion was
again divided over the charges brought in 1805 by
Colonel Wardell against the Duke of York, and
there was opposition by two members of the council
in 1808 when, on the conclusion of the affair, the
corporation conveyed its thanks to Wardell. In 1820
Queen Caroline had some vociferous supporters in
Salisbury, as elsewhere, who broke the windows of
those who refused to take part in a general illumination in her honour. On Catholic Emancipation there
was a sharp division of opinion on the council and
most of the inhabitants seem to have been opposed
to it. Meetings to draw up addresses against concessions to Roman Catholics were held in 1813, 1819
and 1829; and in 1825 Lord Radnor and Wadham
Wyndham, both of whom had spoken and voted
against Catholic Emancipation, were enthusiastically
received by large crowds on their return to Salisbury. Parliamentary Reform had both enthusiastic
supporters and strenuous opponents in the city. (fn. 58)
The strong conservative element in the city at this
time must have been sorely tried by its representation in the House of Commons by William, Lord
Folkestone, eldest son of the second Earl of Radnor,
a leading reformer of radical views and a friend of
William Cobbett. Folkestone seriously considered
resigning his seat in 1813, but was dissuaded by his
father. (fn. 59) The election of 1818 was preceded by a
period of complicated intrigue, described at length
by Folkestone in a memorandum written shortly
after the election. (fn. 60) It is clear that many members of
the corporation objected to Folkestone's politics,
and to a lesser degree to those of the other member,
George Purefoy Jervoise, chiefly because these
politics were anti-ministerial, and therefore the city
was not in a position to obtain favours from the
government. Folkestone's politics were, however,
deplored not only for this reason, but because of
their radicalism. Feeling in Salisbury was so strong
that the corporation at one point considered asking
Lord Radnor to put up his second son as candidate
instead of Folkestone; and it even considered putting
up a second Tory candidate with Wadham Wyndham against Folkestone and Jervoise. In the end
Jervoise did not stand and Folkestone and Wadham
Wyndham were elected unopposed, the corporation
perhaps feeling satisfied by having at least one
'ministerial' member. In 1828 Folkestone succeeded
to the earldom of Radnor, and his place as member
for Salisbury was taken by his brother, Duncombe
Pleydell-Bouverie, who, though in favour of
Parliamentary Reform, was much less radical in his
views. He and Wyndham were re-elected in 1830
and 1831. At the latter election, the last under the
unreformed franchise, a leading Salisbury supporter of reform, William Bird Brodie, owner and
editor of the Salisbury and Winchester Journal,
boldly decided to stand against Wyndham in view
of the address from a body of inhabitants to the
mayor and corporation, asking them not to choose
any representative who would not pledge himself
to support reform. (fn. 61)
The Reform Act of 1832 extended the franchise
to £10 householders, bringing the electorate up to
575, with the result that Brodie, who had received
only 7 votes in 1831, was easily top of the poll in
1833. (fn. 62) Apart from this, the Reform Act did not
bring about any startling change in Salisbury's
representation. The city retained its two members
until 1884, and the tradition of electing men with
local connexions was continued until almost the
same date. In 1874 one of the members, G. R.
Ryder, had no local connexions and in 1880 this
was true of both members. The representation was
reduced to one member in 1884, and this was
shortly followed by a return to the tradition of
electing a local man— E. H. Hulse of Breamore
House, who represented the city from 1886 to 1897.
Traditional family connexions also continued for
some time after 1832. The custom of electing a
member of the Bouverie family to one seat, which
had continued without a break since 1741, came to
an end in 1835, but the Bouverie connexion was
revived in 1852 with the election of the third earl's
son-in-law, Major-General E. P. Buckley, who sat
for Salisbury as a Liberal from 1853 to 1865. The
Wyndham connexion also continued until 1847.
The election of November 1843 was held in the
midst of the anti-Corn Law agitation. Cobden
visited Salisbury in August 1843 and held a big
meeting on the Greencroft; and the election
campaign was accompanied by nightly meetings
addressed by anti-Corn Law League speakers, from
whom both candidates carefully disassociated themselves. (fn. 63) Agitation for and against the repeal of the
Corn Laws continued. Free-Trade reading rooms
were opened and petitions for and against FreeTrade were presented to Parliament. Big Free-Trade
celebrations took place in 1846, consisting of a
dinner at the Assembly Rooms, a tea meeting at the
'Rose and Crown' pleasure gardens at Harnham,
and a procession there from the Free-Trade reading
rooms. (fn. 64) There was also some Chartist activity in
Salisbury in these years, though much less than in
other Wiltshire towns where the cloth trade had
declined. A Working Man's Association was formed
in 1839, but with little support. A National Charter
Association, founded in 1841, was more successful.
It held weekly meetings, tea or supper parties with
lectures at the Charter Coffee-house in the Market
Place, and by August 1841 found it necessary to
take a 'large room' for lectures. (fn. 65)
The year 1847 is a landmark in Salisbury's
political history in several ways. It brought to an
end the period, beginning in 1818, in which the city
had been represented by one Whig and one Tory,
and began a period of nearly thirty years during
which it was represented by two Liberals; it saw
the virtual disappearance of the old family connexions and their replacement by new men, who,
though still men with local connexions, were not
'local men' in quite the same sense. For example,
William James Chaplin, head of the well-known
carriers and coach proprietors, Chaplin & Horne,
M.P. from 1847 to 1857, owed his election to his
chairmanship of the South-Western Railway, which,
it was considered, would give him power to confer
benefits upon the city. (fn. 66) Other members with local
connexions during this period were M. H. Marsh
(1857–68), son of Canon Matthew Marsh, chancellor
of the diocese; E. W. T. Hamilton (1868–74)
brother of the Bishop of Salisbury; and Dr. J. A.
Lush of Fisherton (1868–80), an alderman, and
mayor in 1867. The Reform Act of 1867 still left
Salisbury its two members, but introduced a household franchise and probably doubled the electorate. (fn. 67)
In 1874 the Conservatives made a big effort, putting
up two candidates calling themselves LiberalConservatives. One of these, G. R. Ryder, was
returned head of the poll, with the other a good
third. (fn. 68) The Conservative triumph was, however,
short-lived, for in 1880, after a very heavy poll, two
Liberals were again returned by a substantial
majority. (fn. 69)
The Reform Act of 1884 reduced Salisbury's
representation to one member but made no change
in the franchise. From this time onwards Salisbury
elections appear to have been swayed less by
personal and local considerations, as hitherto, and
more by national issues and party politics, and the
city settled down to the long period of Conservative
representation which, except in 1906–10, lasted
until the extinction of the constituency in 1918. It
is clear that in these years Salisbury Conservatism
was more highly organized than Salisbury Liberalism, and that it attracted the patronage and support
of the neighbouring aristocracy and gentry. Conservative and Liberal clubs had existed for some
years, but by the 1890's there were three Conservative clubs and a Constitutional and Working Men's
Association. There were also several branches of the
Primrose League. There was a Liberal Association,
a Liberal and Radical Club and a Women's Liberal
Association. (fn. 70) At elections Lords Pembroke and
Radnor and their families and other leading gentry
regularly appeared on the platform at Conservative
meetings, and at the election of 1892 the Conservatives ran what was virtually a joint campaign for
E. H. Hulse at Salisbury, and Lord Folkestone for
South Wilts. (fn. 71) At the election of 1906 a tremendous
effort was made by the Salisbury Liberals and E. P.
Tennant (later Lord Glenconner) was elected after a
very heavy poll by a narrow majority. (fn. 72) At the
election of January 1910 greater efforts than ever
before were made by both parties at Salisbury;
Grey, Lansdowne and Asquith all visited the city to
speak, and a meeting was also held under the
auspices of the Tariff Reform League. Over 97 per
cent. of the electors polled, and the Conservative
candidate, G. Locker-Lampson, was returned with
a majority of over 300. (fn. 73) In December 1910, at the
last election held before the 1914 war, he was again
returned. By the Representation of the People Act,
1918, the city of Salisbury as a separate constituency
was extinguished and was merged in the Salisbury
Division of the county, which has consistently
returned Conservative members.