On this day … 14 June 1733

Randal Andrews was appointed curate at St George’s church in Preston. Little could the townsfolk have suspected that later in the century his presence would secure universal male suffrage for the town: the only constituency other than Westminster to enjoy the privilege.

How it came about has been told by two Preston historians. Most recently by David Berry, and back in the 1950s by Winifred Proctor, when she gave a talk to the Preston Historical Society that was later turned into a journal article.

Andrews’ pivotal role in the shaping of the politics of the town came in 1768, during the notorious election that scandalised the country and saw violent mobs roaming the streets of the town. Nobody was safe from them, not the mayor, who was dunked under the town pump, and not the Catholic priest who had to flee for his life, swimming the Ribble to escape a ‘No Popery’ mob.

The mobs, which had been incited by the Whig party, were infuriated by the Tory mayor and the other councillors, who were rejecting Whig voters on what were seen as spurious grounds and allowing in Tory voters.

At that time, the franchise in Preston was limited to freemen of the borough, a small number that was promising to give electoral victory to the Tories. Preston’s electoral system was somewhat confused. Until 1661, the mayor and the twenty-four members of the corporation had elected the town’s MPs, but in the 1661 election, one of the candidates appealed to the House of Commons on behalf of the resident burgesses or freemen of the town, and won them the vote.

At each subsequent election until 1768, those burgesses, the freemen of the borough, elected the town’s MPs. But in 1768, when it looked like the Whigs were going to lose, Randal Andrews, by then vicar of Preston, claimed the right to vote even though he was not a freeman, and declared that as a resident he would vote for the Whigs.

He and his backers claimed that all male residents of Preston had been given the vote by the House of Commons ruling back in 1661, when it was resolved ‘… that this House do agree … that all the inhabitants of the said borough of Preston have voices in the election’. ‘All’ meant all adult males, women had a long time to wait for their vote.

In 1768, the Whigs argued that that meant that all adult males resident in Preston, whether they were freemen of the town or not, had the vote. The House of Commons was appealed to, and ruled in favour of the Whigs. Preston had manhood suffrage, and the two Whig candidates, Sir Henry Hoghton and Colonel John Burgoyne, had their seats in Parliament.

Col John Burgoyne - 18th-century Preston MP
No image of Andrews, sadly. This is John Burgoyne in about 1758, elected MP for Preston, thanks to Andrews’ intervention: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:John_Burgoyne,_1758,_%28after_Allan_Ramsay%29.jpg

Preston’s vicars in the eighteenth century, from the two Peploes at the beginning of the century, were Whigs and active supporters of that party. In the nineteenth century, they turned Tory, notably the Rev John Owen Parr, who ensured that all the Anglican clergy in the parish preached the Tory message.

David Berry discovered the following ballad poking fun at Andrews, published a year before the election. David included two of the ballad’s fifteen verses in his account of the 1768 election:

Did you not hear of a certain Vicar
There’s no one could get a Benefice quicker
He paid for it down, six hundred guineas
No matter says he how my conscience within is

This Levite has such a greedy belly
He’ll swallow whole Turkies and Geese some tell ye
Then who will not say the church is in danger
Gad, he’s worse than a horse at a back of a manger


Preston Historical Society is now celebrating its diamond jubilee, and like Winifred Proctor contines to discover and publish new aspects of Preston’s history. We’ve a number of events later this month and early next month at which you can learn about some of those discoveries.
Places are limited, so book early. To find out more, and to guarantee a place go to:
http://www.prestonhistoricalsociety.org.uk/future-events.html


Sources:
David Berry, Preston Election of 1768: https://www.wyrearchaeology.org.uk/index.php/areas-of-interest/preston?view=article&id=78
Winifred Proctor, The Preston Election of 1768. Read before Preston Historical Society 6 April 1959:
https://www.hslc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/111-6-Proctor.pdf

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