Great Grimsby | |
Parliament: | uk |
Map2: | EnglandHumberside |
Year: | 1295 |
Abolished: | 2024 |
Type: | Borough |
Elects Howmany: | One (Two until 1832) |
Electorate: | 60,149 (December 2019)[1] |
Region: | England |
County: | Lincolnshire |
Great Grimsby was a constituency in North East Lincolnshire represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom since December 2019 by Lia Nici of the Conservative Party. Between 1918 and 1983 it was known simply as Grimsby; following the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the seat will be subject to boundary changes which will incorporate the neighbouring town of Cleethorpes. As a consequence, it will be renamed Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes, to be first contested at the 2024 general election.
Fishing is a significant sector in Grimsby which is a deprived area. These factors meant the constituency voted strongly to leave the EU in 2016.[2]
The constituency followed the boundaries of the old Borough of Great Grimsby, which was abolished when the former county of Humberside was divided into four unitary authorities in 1996. From the 2010 general election new boundaries took effect, but the Boundary Commission's review led only to minimal changes, aligning the constituency boundaries with updated ward boundaries.
The seat consisted of the following electoral wards of the Borough of North East Lincolnshire:
The constituency has been represented since the first House of Commons was assembled in the Model Parliament of 1295, and it elected two MPs until 1832. Great Grimsby was established as a parliamentary borough in 1295, sending two burgesses, and has been continuously represented ever since. The town of Grimsby in Lincolnshire, a market town, fishing port and seaport.
Freemen of the town had the right to vote, provided they were resident and paying scot and lot; in 1831 this amounted to just under 400 voters. The town corporation bestowed this status, as today, rarely on those bringing acclaim to the place, but it was routinely acquired through apprenticeship in the guilds and by inheritance; in Great Grimsby, unusually, the husband of a freeman's daughter or widow acquired the freedom.
In 1831, when the Reform Bill was being discussed in Parliament, the wives and daughters of the Great Grimsby freemen petitioned the House of Lords to retain their rights to pass on the vote to their future husbands and children. However, their concern to retain these rights may not have been rooted in any their family desiring to help choose the borough's MPs as a vote in Great Grimsby was a valuable commodity in a more mercenary sense, and the contemporary polemicist Oldfield considered that "This borough stands second to none in the history of corruption." At the start of the 18th century it was noted that Grimsby's "freemen did enter into treaties with several gentlemen in London, for sale of the choice of burgess to such as would give the most money". In 1701, the House of Commons overturned the election of one of Great Grimsby's MPs, William Cotesworth, for bribery and sent him to the Tower of London and temporarily suspended the borough's right to representation. Almost every election in Great Grimsby at this period was followed by a petition from defeated candidates alleging bribery, although that of 1701 seems to have been the only one which was acted upon.
Great Grimsby, like most boroughs except for the very largest, recognised a "patron" who could generally exercise influence over the choice of its MPs; at the time of the Great Reform Act of 1832, this was Lord Yarborough. However, the extent of the patron's power was limited in Great Grimsby, and the voters were quite prepared (at a price) to defy his advice. The patron could strengthen his position by providing employment to the freemen, as could his rivals. Jupp quotes two letters, one of 1818 and one of 1819, in which local agents advise the Tennyson family how best to do this in Grimsby so as to encroach on Lord Yarborough's influence:
"Build upon every spot of vacant ground you are possessed of... Thus you would give employment to a great number of freemen... Let Mr Heneage's estates be divided into fields of four or six acres; and let these, together with your own estates be placed in the hands of freemen to whom they would be an object of importance. Provide, if possible, small farms for the sons of Lord Yarbro's tenants".[3] On a less extravagant level, it is recorded that after Charles Tennyson was first elected in 1818 he presented a bottle of wine to each of the fathers of 92 local children about to be christened.
The General Election of 1831 in Grimsby was as notorious as in some of the rotten boroughs, the local Tories being accused of using a revenue cutter lying in the Humber to ply the Whig voters with drink and prevent them getting to the polls; the fact of the outcome standing led to a nationally well-known action by John Shelley for libel.
In 1831, the population of the borough was 4,008, and contained 784 houses. The Boundary Act in concert with the Reform Act enlarged the borough to include eight neighbouring parishes, brought the population up to 6,413 with 1,365 houses but the landed property aspect to the franchise was not reformed so this increased the electorate only to 656 so Great Grimsby lost one of its two seats. However, Grimsby's population and housing continued to grow and, unlike most of the boroughs that lost one seat in 1832, it has retained its existence, without taking up large swathes of the county.
The constituency underwent further significant boundary change in 1918 and 1950. In 1918, parishes that had joined, (Bradley, Great Coates, Little Coates, Laceby, Waltham, Weelsby and the adjoining neighbourhood/parish of Scartho) were detached to be added to Louth county constituency, and the seat consisted of the county borough of Grimsby and the urban district (later borough) of Cleethorpes. In 1950, Cleethorpes was moved into the Louth county division, leaving the borough once more as Grimsby alone. More recent boundary changes have only been adjustments to conform to changes at local government level.
Labour's Austin Mitchell retained the seat in 1977 by only 520 votes in a by-election following the death of the Foreign Secretary Tony Crosland. He held the seat until retiring in 2015. At the 2010 election, Mitchell's majority was again reduced to three figures, after a swing of over 10% to the Conservatives.
At the 2015 election, Great Grimsby was considered a target for the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP).[4] UKIP had selected as their candidate the 2010 Conservative candidate, Victoria Ayling, who had switched parties since the previous election. Labour's candidate was Melanie Onn, while the Conservatives stood Marc Jones. In the event however, Onn was successful, increasing Mitchell's majority of 714 more than sixfold and enjoying a swing of 5.6% from the Conservatives, with UKIP finishing third, just 57 votes behind the Conservatives.[5] The Conservative and UKIP votes combined outnumbered the Labour vote, which was an indication that the Labour position was potentially precarious.
Similarly to many other traditionally working class Labour strongholds – labelled the "Red Wall" – in the North of England, in 2019, Great Grimsby was won by the Conservatives for the first time since 1935.
Year | First member | Second member |
---|---|---|
1330 | Edmundus Rayner | Robertus Keilby[6] |
1341 | Johannes de Grymesby | |
1346 | Peter de la See | |
1355 | Johannes de Grymesby | |
1365 | Willielmus Grymesby | |
1372 | Johannes de Grymesby | |
1377 | Willielmus Wele | |
1379 | Willielmus Grymesby | |
1382 | Willielmus Grymesby | |
1383 | Petrus de Gryesby | |
1385 | Willielmus Wele | |
1386 | John Newland | William Elmsall[7] |
1388 (Feb) | Robert Burton | William Paule |
1388 (Sep) | Geoffrey Askeby | Richard Barber |
1390 (Jan) | Richard Misen | Walter Slotheby |
1390 (Nov) | ||
1391 | John Hesilden | William Welle |
1393 | Robert Burton | John Kelby |
1394 | Robert Burton | Walter Slotheby |
1395 | Robert Burton | William Elmsall |
1397 (Jan) | Robert Burton | John Kelby |
1397 (Sep) | ||
1399 | Walter Slotheby | William Elmsall |
1401 | ||
1402 | Richard White | John Kelby |
1404 (Jan) | ||
1404 (Oct) | William Hosier | John Miles |
1406 | William Lele | John Kelby |
1407 | William Fosse | Simon Grimsby |
1411 | William Fosse | John Thoresby |
1413 (Feb) | ||
1413 (May) | Gilbert Keremond | Richard Duffield |
1414 (Apr) | ||
1414 (Nov) | Roger Dale | Richard Duffield |
1415 | ||
1416 (Mar) | Roger Dale | Gilbert Keremond |
1416 (Oct) | ||
1417 | ||
1419 | ||
1420 | John Lufford | Richard Duffield |
1421 (May) | Simon Elkyngton | Roger Grainsby |
1421 (Dec) | Roger Dale | Richard Duffield |
1410 | ||
1448 | Willielmus Grymesby | |
1472 | Willielmus Grymesby | Hugo Eden |
1483 | Hugo Eden | Peter de la See |
1485 | Stephen de la See | |
1485 | John Saynton | Thomas Pormard[8] |
1487 | John Saynton | John Moigne |
1494 | Hugo Eden | |
1496 | John Heneage | |
1509 | Sir Robert Tyrwhitt | |
1510 | Sir William Tyrwhitt | Sir Robert Wingfield[9] |
1512 | George Barnardiston | Robert Vicars |
1515 | Philip Hamby | William Hatcliffe |
1523 | John Heneage | Robert Lord |
1529 | Sir William Askew | John Heneage |
1536 | ? | |
1539 | ? | |
1542 | Richard Goodrich | ? |
1545 | Thomas Hussey | Richard Goodrich |
1547 | Richard Goodrich | John Bellow |
1553 (Mar) | ? | |
1553 (Oct) | George Heneage | John Bellow |
1554 (Apr) | Ambrose Sutton | John Bellow |
1554 (Nov) | John Bellow | Thomas Constable |
1555 | John Bellow | Thomas Constable |
1558 | John Bellow | Marmaduke Tyrwhitt |
1558–9 | Sir Edward Warner | John Bellow[10] |
1562–3 | Edward Fitzgerald | |
1571 | John Thymbleby | |
1572 | Thomas Grantham | |
1584 (Nov) | William Wray | Thomas Moryson |
1586 (Oct) | Tristram Tyrwhitt | Thomas Moryson |
1588–9 | Tristram Tyrwhitt | |
1593 | William Barne | Nicholas Saunderson |
1597 (Sep) | Thomas Hatcliffe | Thomas Ellis |
1601 (Oct) | Thomas Clinton alias Fiennes, Lord Clinton | Edward Skipwith |
1604 | Sir George St Paul | |
1614 | Richard Toothby | |
1621 | Sir Christopher Wray | |
1624 | Sir Christopher Wray | |
1625 | Sir Christopher Wray | |
1626 | William Skinner | |
1628 | Christopher Wray | |
1629–1640 | No Parliaments summoned | |
April 1640 | Sir Gervase Hollis | |
November 1640 | Sir Gervase Holles | |
1645 | Edward Rossiter | |
1654 | William Wray | One seat only |
1656 | One seat only | |
1659 | Edward Ayscough | |
Election | Member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1832 | William Maxfield | Whig | ||
1835 | Edward Heneage | Whig[17] [18] [19] | ||
1852 | William Annesley | Conservative | ||
1857 | Charles Anderson-Pelham | Whig[20] | ||
1859 | Liberal | |||
1862 by-election | John Chapman | Conservative | ||
1865 | John Fildes | Liberal | ||
1868 | George Tomline | Liberal | ||
1874 | John Chapman | Conservative | ||
1877 by-election | Alfred Watkin | Liberal | ||
1880 | Edward Heneage | Liberal | ||
1886 | Liberal Unionist | |||
1892 | Henri Josse | Liberal | ||
1893 by-election | Edward Heneage | Liberal Unionist | ||
1895 | Sir George Doughty | Liberal | ||
1898 by-election | Liberal Unionist | |||
Jan 1910 | Thomas Wing | Liberal | ||
Dec 1910 | Sir George Doughty | Liberal Unionist | ||
1914 by-election | Thomas Tickler | Conservative | ||
1922 | Tom Sutcliffe | Conservative | ||
1924 | Sir Walter Womersley | Conservative | ||
1945 | Kenneth Younger | Labour | ||
1959 | Tony Crosland | Labour | ||
1977 by-election | Austin Mitchell | Labour | ||
2015 | Melanie Onn | Labour | ||
2019 | Lia Nici | Conservative | ||
2024 | Constituency abolished |
|colspan="6"|Due to the outbreak of the First World War, this election did not take place. These candidates were chosen by Autumn 1914.