On this day … 19 June 1818

On 19 June 1818, Peter Crompton, a radical politician, put himself forward as a candidate in the forthcoming election in Preston. By doing so, he upset the cosy arrangement by which the Whigs and Tories agreed that each should have one of the town’s two seats in the Commons.

This arrangement came about after John Horrocks came close to upsetting the Earl of Derby’s long-standing Whig control of Preston’s two Parliamentary seats, when he stood as a Tory in the 1796 election. He very nearly won one of the seats in what proved to be a very expensive contest.

So, by the next election an agreement had been reached between the Derby faction and Horrocks and the Tory corporation. This ensured that at the next election in 1802 the town got a Tory MP in John Horrocks and a Whig MP to represent the Derby faction in Edward Smith Stanley, the future 13th Earl of Derby. This spared both sides a colossal sum of money in election expenses, most spent in the town’s pubs.

The arrangement survived four more elections, with Samuel Horrocks replacing his brother as MP after John Horrocks died in 1804. The alliance was unopposed in 1806, but faced an independent candidate at each of the next two elections, comfortably defeating both. At the 1818 election the comfortable alliance between Whigs and Tories was again challenged.

The previous year, Peter Crompton, a Liverpool doctor and independent radical, had addressed a meeting in Preston in favour of parliamentary reform. When an election was called the following year, a number of disgruntled liberal voters urged Crompton to contest Preston and challenge the Tory/Whig alliance.

His backers had their sights set on the seat held by Edmund Hornby, the Earl of Derby’s son-in-law and nephew. Hornby was Preston-born but at that time was living in Westmorland. He was seen ‘as a servile Whig who should have known better than to enter into the repressive and corrupt coalition’ with the Tories.

The attempt to overthrow the alliance was again unsuccessful with the two sitting MPs retaining their seats. But victory came at a price, estimated at £6,017, of which £4,111 was spent treating their supporters (and those who pretended to be supporters) in the town’s pubs.

Hornby was also seen as merely a ‘seat-warmer’ until the earl’s grandson Edward Smith Stanley, the future prime minister, came of age, which he did in time for the 1826 election, when he replaced Hornby as MP. His tenure was fairly brief and the ending bitter, for he was ousted by the radical Henry Hunt at a by-election in 1830.

Although another Stanley represented the town from 1832-1837, the Derby faction was withdrawing from Preston, which for so long had been its town, both politically and socially, including its base in the town, Patten House in Church Street, which was demolished in 1835.

Patten House Preston
‘Patten House, Church Street, Preston c.1830 Former home of the Stanley family. Located on the north side of Church Street, bounded by Pole Street and Derby Street and directly opposite Grimshaw Street. Demolished in 1835. Watercolour by Edwin Beattie: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4680095715/

Sources:
https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/constituencies/preston
https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/constituencies/preston

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