Parliamentary Representation
After 1835 (fn. 1) Gloucester, which returned two members of parliament until 1885,
was represented by political moderates, usually Whigs or Liberals. Maurice Frederick
Berkeley (M.P. 1835–7 and 1841–57) and his son Charles Paget Berkeley (M.P.
1862–5) belonged to a leading county family, but the influence of Whig landowners on
Gloucester's parliamentary elections declined in the mid 19th century. The Guise
family of Elmore continued to support Liberal candidates. (fn. 2) Most members,
including John Phillpotts (fn. 3) (M.P. 1837–47), had significant city connexions. William
Philip Price (fn. 4) of Tibberton Court (M.P. 1852–9 and 1865–73) was a leading timber
importer and Unitarian, and the barrister Charles James Monk (fn. 5) (M.P. 1859,
1865–85 and 1895–1900) was the son of a former bishop of Gloucester. The Tory or
Conservative Henry Thomas Hope of Deepdene (Surr.), a banker who owned the
Hampnett estate near Northleach, (fn. 6) won a seat in 1835 and 1837, when M. F.
Berkeley and Phillpotts, both supporters of parliamentary reform, were at loggerheads, and again in 1847 when Price, who came forward as candidate in place of
Phillpotts, failed to join forces with Berkeley and withdrew before the poll. (fn. 7)
The electorate numbered 1,308 in 1835. (fn. 8) By 1859 it had risen to 1,518, (fn. 9) and in
1868 the parliamentary borough was enlarged to take in most of the suburbs, the new
boundary including Dockham ditch on the north, the Wotton brook on the east, a
disused railway line bypassing the city on the south-east, and watercourses, notably
the canal, Still ditch, and the Severn, on the south and south-west. (fn. 10) The electorate,
which was also increased by the extension of the franchise in 1867, rose from 4,040 in
1868 (fn. 11) to 5,371 in 1880. (fn. 12)
With the exception of the 1847 election all general elections were contested and
Conservative candidates, often only one at the beginning of the period, were usually
men brought in from outside. (fn. 13) Improper electoral practices, encouraged by the
conduct of municipal elections, were a prominent feature of parliamentary contests
and occasionally, as in 1857, influenced the result. The electorate showed little
interest in political debate and the venality of many voters, both freemen and
householders, was disclosed in evidence before a Royal Commission in 1859. Both
parties paid for men to register as freemen, thereby slowing the decline in the number
of freemen voters, which fell from 800 in 1832 to 534, including 197 outvoters, in
1859. Hope's opponents attributed Conservative successes to his lavish expenditure,
and after the election of 1837, which was particularly costly and corrupt, there was a
petition against his return. He resigned and regained the seat the following year. In
1852 the three candidates agreed to avoid unnecessary and corrupt expenses and the
election was conducted with remarkable purity. Hope, who lost his seat, unsuccessfully contested a byelection in 1853 (fn. 14) when his supporters were accused of
treating on a lavish scale. (fn. 15) That contest broke the convention of not opposing the
re-election of members appointed to office under the Crown. In 1855 Price was
unopposed in a byelection following his involvement in a government contract for
supplying huts to the army in the Crimea. (fn. 16)
Although there were earlier party clubs to ensure the registration of supporters, (fn. 17)
Gloucester's first permanent political organization was established by the Conserva
tives in 1853 to repair the loss of Hope's seat and to win control of the city council. For
the parliamentary election of 1857 they brought in Sir Robert Carden, a wealthy
London stockbroker, and secured his place at the top of the poll by extensive bribery
and treating. The Liberals also resorted to corruption, though on a much smaller
scale. Political issues were irrelevant to the result and Berkeley, who had supported
Palmerston on the Chinese question, was beaten into third place. Petitions against
Carden and Price were unsuccessful, but it was later found that at least 116 voters had
been bribed, 109 of them by Carden's supporters. After the election the Liberals
improved their organization by setting up a political club similar to the Conservative
association and at the election in 1859 copied the methods used by their opponents
two years earlier. The 1859 contest was consequently energetic and even more costly
and corrupt, with 250 voters, a sixth of the electorate, taking bribes. The Liberals
were also helped by the strong local ties of C. J. Monk, who had become their second
candidate in Berkeley's place. Carden, who spent more than his two opponents
together, was decisively beaten, but Price and Monk were unseated for bribery and a
Royal Commission was appointed to investigate illegal practices. (fn. 18)
Gloucester remained unrepresented in parliament until 1862 when a writ for a new
election was issued. The Liberal candidates, including the barrister John Joseph
Powell, held off a challenge from Richard Potter of Standish House, a local
industrialist and former Liberal who fought as a Conservative, (fn. 19) and they stood down
at the next general election in 1865 to enable Price and Monk to resume their
parliamentary careers. (fn. 20) Conservatism received greater support in Gloucester in the
early 1870s, and in 1873 William Killigrew Wait, a Bristol corn merchant with
business interests in Gloucester, defeated the local Liberal leader, the corn merchant
Thomas Robinson, in a contest for the seat vacated by Price on his appointment as a
Railway Commissioner. Robinson's campaign was not helped by his outmanoeuvring
of Powell in his bid for the Liberal candidacy, but Powell was equally unsuccessful as
a candidate in the general election of 1874 (fn. 21) when both parties resorted again to
widespread illegal practices. Corruption was on an even greater scale in 1880 when the
Liberals, who in 1875 had improved their organization by establishing a party caucus
chosen by ward meetings, redoubled their efforts to defeat Wait. Robinson and Monk
were returned but were petitioned against for bribery. Robinson, who topped the
poll, was unseated, but his willingness to stand down and the unwillingness of the
Conservatives to continue proceedings against Monk and of Monk to claim his costs
raised suspicions of collusion by the parties and led to the setting up of a Royal
Commission to examine electoral practices.
Gloucester was among the most corrupt of the seven towns investigated at that time
and 1,916 voters known to have taken bribes were disqualified for seven years. The
Royal Commission concluded that bribery was the rule at all elections in the city,
reckoned that c. 2,756 voters, over half of the electorate, had taken bribes in 1880, and
blamed local politicians for most of the corruption; scheduled persons included 18
councillors and aldermen, 6 poor-law guardians, 3 magistrates, and 5 solicitors. (fn. 22) No
new writ was issued for the seat vacated by Robinson (fn. 23) but a proposal to disfranchise
the borough entirely came to nothing. (fn. 24) Gloucester's reputation for corrupt politics
lingered until the First World War, and allegations of corruption on a significant scale
were made, notably in January 1910. (fn. 25)
In 1885 Gloucester's parliamentary representation was reduced to one member. (fn. 26)
Because many voters were disqualified for corruption the electorate was then only
4,547. In 1900 it was 7,685 (fn. 27) and in 1918, when the parliamentary borough was made
coterminous with the larger county borough, (fn. 28) 25,006. It had grown to 34,786 by
1935. (fn. 29) In 1948 the constituency was enlarged to comprise the county borough and
the parishes of Barnwood, Brockworth, Hempsted, Hucclecote, and Wotton Vill, (fn. 30)
and in 1950 the electorate was 49,005. Several minor changes in the parliamentary
boundary followed, and in 1970, when the parliamentary borough was again made
coterminous with the county borough, that part outside the municipal boundary,
namely the parishes of Brockworth and Hucclecote, was detached, leaving 61,164
voters. (fn. 31) In 1983 five parishes south of the city were added to the constituency to give
an electorate of 74, 316. (fn. 32)
In the late 19th century the Conservatives gained ground in Gloucester. They
benefited from the antipathy of some Liberals towards Thomas Robinson, whose
control of the Liberal party caucus ensured that he, and not the sitting member C. J.
Monk, became the candidate for the single parliamentary seat in 1885. (fn. 33) Robinson,
who was knighted in 1894, represented Gloucester between 1885 and 1895. (fn. 34) The
Liberals were harmed more by the split over Home Rule in 1886, (fn. 35) and prominent
among the Liberal Unionists were former M.P.s Price and Monk. Price's daughter-inlaw, Margaret Price (d. 1911), remained a patron of the Gloucester Liberals, as did
Sir William Wedderburn, a landowner at Meredith in Tibberton. Monk, who gained
the support of the Conservative association, challenged Robinson for the parliamentary seat in 1892 and held it between 1895, when his opponent was an
inexperienced and radical 'carpet-bagger', and 1900. (fn. 36)
In the 1890s there were occasional socialist gatherings in the city and a branch of
the Independent Labour Party had been formed by 1896. Liberal candidates before
the First World War broadly supported the demands of organized Labour, and
Russell Rea, a Liverpool merchant and shipowner and a director of the Taff Vale
Railway Company, regained Gloucester for the Liberals in 1900 with the backing of
the railwaymen's national leader. Rea was defeated in January 1910 by a Conservative,
and the Liberals failed by five votes to recapture the seat at the end of the year. (fn. 37) With
few exceptions Gloucester's representatives in the 20th century lacked local ties. Of
the four Conservatives holding the seat between 1910 and 1945 (fn. 38) Sir James Bruton
(1918–23) was prominent in local industry and commerce and in civic affairs (fn. 39) and
James Nockells Horlick (1923–9) was the son of a county landowner. (fn. 40) The first
Labour candidate, W. L. Edwards, stood in 1918 and gained 17 per cent of the vote. (fn. 41)
In the early 1920s Labour gained from having an exceptionally popular candidate in
Morgan Philips Price, grandson and heir of the former Liberal M.P. and himself the
prospective Liberal candidate before the First World War. Price, who as a journalist
had reported political revolutions in Russia and Germany during the war and its
aftermath, (fn. 42) won 36 per cent of the vote and came within 52 votes of defeating Bruton
at the election of 1922. The Liberals, who from 1922 held third place, did not put up a
candidate in 1931 or in 1935, when the Labour candidate won 43 per cent of the vote.
Gloucester fell to Labour as part of the national swing in 1945 and the Conservatives
recaptured the seat in 1970. The Liberals contested all but one election between 1945
and 1979, (fn. 43) and the Labour party retained second place in 1983 when a Social
Democratic Party candidate represented the national alliance with the Liberals. (fn. 44)