The Oxfordshire Election of 1754, part of the British general election of that year and involving the selection of two
Members of Parliament (MPs) to represent the
Oxfordshire
Oxfordshire is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in the north west of South East England. It is a mainly rural county, with its largest settlement being the city of Oxford. The county is a centre of research and development, primarily ...
constituency, was probably the most notorious English county election of the 18th century. It was depicted in
Hogarth's famous series of paintings and engravings, ''
The Humours of an Election''.
Background
Oxfordshire was a county constituency electing two MPs. The right to vote was held by all the
Forty Shilling Freeholders of the county, amounting to about 4,000 in 1754, but because of the expense of a contested election the competing interests tried to reach a compromise without resorting to a poll if at all possible, and in 1754 Oxfordshire had not seen a contested election for 44 years. The expenses entailed not only the cost of campaigning across the county, but the need for the candidates to meet the expenses of their voters in travelling to
Oxford (where the poll was held in the grounds of
Exeter College) and in lavishly entertaining them while they were there; but outright bribery was also rife.
Campaign
The candidates in 1754 were two
Tories,
Sir James Dashwood
Sir James Dashwood, 2nd Baronet (1715–1779) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1740 to 1768.
Early life
He was the son of Robert Dashwood, and his grandfather from whom he inherited the baronetcy was Sir Robert Da ...
(who was standing for re-election) and
The Viscount Wenman; and two
Whigs,
Viscount Parker (heir to the
Earl of Macclesfield) and
Sir Edward Turner. The other major local grandees, the
Duke of Marlborough and
Earl Harcourt, joined Macclesfield in backing the two Whigs, while the
Earl of Abingdon and
Earl of Lichfield supported the two Tories.
Both sides spent extravagantly: Prime Minister
Henry Pelham promised £7,000 of government funds towards the Whigs' expenses, while the Tories spent £20,000 (of which £8,000 was raised by public subscription).
Many commemorative objects were produced. A pot inscribed "Wenman & Dashwood Forever. 1755" is in the
Victoria and Albert Museum, and one inscribed "I say Wenman & Dashwood, friend. What say you?" is in the
Ashmolean Museum
The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology () on Beaumont Street, Oxford, England, is Britain's first public museum. Its first building was erected in 1678–1683 to house the cabinet of curiosities that Elias Ashmole gave to the University of ...
. A glass inscribed "Hark Wenman & Dashwood Sr Watn & the old Interest forever." is in the
Museum of London.
Edward Gibbon referred to the election in his ''
Memoirs of My Life and Writings'', saying:
"A general election was now approaching: the great Oxfordshire contest already blazed with all the malevolence of party-zeal. Magdalen College was devoutly attached to the old interest! and the names of Wenman and Dashwood were more frequently pronounced, than those of Cicero and Chrysostom."
The
Calendar (New Style) Act 1750 was one of the Tory issues in the election. Thomas Parker was the son of
George Parker, 2nd Earl of Macclesfield, the astronomer who had chaired the committee stage of the bill in the
House of Commons of Great Britain
The House of Commons of Great Britain was the lower house of the Parliament of Great Britain between 1707 and 1801. In 1707, as a result of the Acts of Union of that year, it replaced the House of Commons of England and the third estate of th ...
. Amongst the lampoons resulting was:
arker'sfine moving Speeches are nothing but Froth;
Our Time he has alter'd and turn'd it about,
So he like Old Christmas shall too be turned out.
Tho' Lords and great Placemen do with him combine,
'Twill signify nothing when honest Men join;
Drink Wenman and Dashwood, and stand to the Tack,
We want no old Turner nor new Almanack.[quoted in Robert Poole "'Give us our eleven days!': calendar reform in eighteenth-century England". Past & Present, November 1995, see http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2279/is_n149/ai_17782422/?tag=content;col1]
Result
The result was declared on 17 April 1754. Wenman and Dashwood were ahead in the count of votes, but the
returning officer made a "double return" (declaring both pairs of candidates to be elected, leaving the
House of Commons to make the decision), and both sides petitioned against the election of their opponents.
The Commons took months to reach its decision, examining the legitimacy of many of the individual votes; but since MPs almost invariably voted in such cases on partisan lines rather than on the merits of the case, the result was a foregone conclusion - the Commons had a Whig majority, and therefore the two Whig candidates were declared elected on 23 April 1755. As one of the Tories on the Committee,
Sir William Meredith
Sir William Meredith, 3rd Baronet (c. 1725 – 2 January 1790), was a British landowner who sat in the House of Commons from 1754 to 1780. A Rockingham Whig, he served as a Lord of the Admiralty from 1765 to 1766.
Early life
Meredith was the s ...
noted in a letter to the
Duke of Portland:
Nor, to this hour, can either side tell which had the majority of legal votes, nor any Member of Parliament who voted in that question give any other reason for his vote but as he stood inclined for the ''old'' ory Ory or ORY may refer to:
People
* Ory (surname)
* Ory Dessau, 21st century Israeli art curator and critic
* Ory Okolloh, 21st century Kenyan activist, lawyer and blogger
* Ory Shihor (born 1967), Israeli pianist
Other uses
* the title character ...
or ''new'' higinterest of Oxfordshire.
Both parties in Oxfordshire were united in their determination to avoid a repetition of such a contest, and managed to reach an amicable compromise before the next general election, the Duke of Marlborough in future to nominate one member and the local Tories the other. Oxfordshire did not see a contested election again until 1826.
References
Sources
*
Further reading
*
*
* {{citation , last=Oldfield , first=T. H. B. , authorlink=T. H. B. Oldfield , title=The Representative History of Great Britain and Ireland , location=London , publisher=Baldwin, Cradock & Joy , year=1816
1754 in England
1754 in politics
Elections to the Parliament of Great Britain
History of Oxfordshire
Politics of Oxfordshire
18th century in Oxfordshire