On this day … 7 July 1865

On 7 July 1865 the Preston journalist and historian Anthony Hewitson added the following entry to his diary:

‘Friday 7 July 1865 At night went to a meeting of Roman Catholics & Liberals at the Castle Inn, Market Place. Got up for the purpose of inducing Mr Alderman Goodair (who had refused to accept the invitation at dinnertime) to reconsider his decision [not to stand as Liberal candidate in the forthcoming general election]. Large and enthusiastic meeting. Good speeches. Goodair said he had no chance and would not standโ€” much to the regret of (no doubt) many unscrupulous Romans who were sighing for a contest.’

Hewitsonโ€™s โ€˜unscrupulous Romansโ€™ were the townโ€™s Catholics and his comment reflects a strain of anti-papist hostility that infests some of his writing. He didnโ€™t like John Goodair either, as a diary entry the following year shows, when he records that at a council meeting โ€˜Old Alderman Goodair made a long & stupid speech about t[he] new police regulations. Goodair is an unreadable fellowโ€™.

The Catholics were not alone in wanting Goodair, a mill owner and former mayor, to stand, for if he didnโ€™t, the Tories would be unopposed in the contest and would win the townโ€™s two parliamentary seats without a fight.

And that was what happened. The Liberals failed to put up a candidate for either seat and the two Conservative candidates, Thomas Hesketh and Edward Stanley, later the 16th Earl of Derby, were returned unopposed. The election of a Stanley brought the Earl of Derbyโ€™s family back to the forefront of the political life of the town, which they had abandoned, along with their Preston mansion, Patten House, when a Stanley lost his seat to the radical Henry Hunt at an election earlier in the century.

The Conservative victory ushered in a period of nearly half a century during which they held both the Preston seats at every subsequent election.

The following year the Conservative government passed the Second Reform Act, which gave the vote to male householders and lodgers who paid rent of ยฃ10 or more. This enfranchised a good many skilled workers and doubled the electorate from one to two million men.

In Preston, the electorate swelled from 2,578 in 1867-8 to 11,302 in 1868-9. It might be expected that since a large number of the new voters belonged to the working class as skilled craftsmen, their votes would have gone to the Liberals rather than the Tories.

Not so. For as Disraeli, whose baby the reform act was, had correctly identified, skilled workers who gained the vote were essentially conservative, both socially and politically. His political shrewdness helped give the Tories their long hold on the Preston seats, aided in no small part by their superb grassroots organisation, the now-forgotten Primrose League, which shepherded that new electorate into their fold at each election.

Sources
Andrew Hobbs’ Hewitson diaries: https://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0262
Clemesha’s History of Preston


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