Newport (Isle of Wight) (UK Parliament constituency) explained

Newport
Parliament:uk
Year:1584
Abolished:1885
Type:Borough
Elects Howmany:1584–1868: Two
1868–1885: One
Region:England
Towns:Newport
Year2:1295
Abolished2:1298
Type2:Borough
Elects Howmany2:Two

Newport was a parliamentary borough located in Newport (Isle of Wight), which was abolished in for the 1885 general election. It was occasionally referred to by the alternative name of Medina.

(Prior to the Great Reform Act of 1832 there was also a separate Newport parliamentary borough in Cornwall.)

History

The borough was first represented in the parliament of 1295, and returned two members of parliament (MPs) from 1584 to 1868. At the 1868 election the Second Reform Act reduced its representation to a single seat, and under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 the constituency was abolished altogether with effect from the 1885 general election. Newport's re-enfranchisement in 1584, like that of the other Isle of Wight boroughs (Newtown and Yarmouth) seems to have been at the urging of the new Governor of the island, Sir George Carey, a relative of the Queen. In token of thanks, the borough granted him for life the right to nominate one of the two MPs – which seems to have been the reward he expected and the motive for his petition to the Queen in the first place.

Between 1807 and 1811 its two seats were held by two future Prime Ministers: Arthur Wellesley, later to become the Duke of Wellington (who also found himself elected to two other seats at the same time), and Henry Temple (later Lord Palmerston), who would go on to become one of the United Kingdom's most notable Prime Ministers. Palmerston's late father had been unable to convert his Irish title into a United Kingdom peerage, therefore the young politician was able to enter the Commons. The local patron arranging the deal was Sir Leonard Holmes, who made it a condition that they never visited the borough!

The borough was also represented by two other future Prime Ministers in the 1820s. George Canning was MP for Newport when appointed Prime Minister in 1827; however, under the law as it then stood a minister accepting office automatically vacated his seat and had to stand for re-election to the Commons, and Canning chose to stand at Seaford, a government pocket borough in Sussex, rather than fight Newport again. In the by-election that followed at Newport, the vacancy was filled by the election of the Honourable William Lamb, later 2nd Viscount Melbourne, whose father had also represented the borough in the 1790s. However, Lamb remained MP for Newport for only two weeks before also being elected for Bletchingley, which he preferred to represent.

Before the Great Reform Act of 1832, the right to vote was vested in the Mayor and Corporation (consisting of 11 aldermen and 12 burgesses). For much of the previous century the borough was "managed" for the government by the Holmes family,[1] meaning that ministers could generally secure the election of their favoured candidates, but often only at the expense of considerable "gratuities" to the voters – in 1754, this apparently amounted to a payment of £600 for each candidate. The borough consisted of the parish of Newport and of Castle Hold in the parish of St Nicholas, thereby excluding that part of the town which extended over the boundary into Carisbrooke parish; this gave the borough a population of 4,398 in 1831. The 1832 reforms extended the borough to take in the rest of the town, raising the population to 6,700, though the electorate was still only 421.

Newport's representation was reduced from two members to one by the second Reform Act for the 1868 general election, and abolished altogether in 1885, leaving the town represented as part of the Isle of Wight county constituency.

Members of Parliament

MPs 1584–1660

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1584Sir Ralph BourchierEdmund Carey[2]
1586Richard SuttonRichard Hardy
1588Sir Edmund CareyRichard Hardy
1593William CottonRichard Huyshe
1597William CottonRichard James
1601Thomas CromptonRichard James
1604John Ashdell
1614John Searle
1621–1622Sir William Uvedale
1624Philip FlemingChristopher Brooke, sat for York
and replaced by
John Danvers
1625Sir Nathaniel RichPhilip Fleming
1626Christopher YelvertonPhilip Fleming
1628–1629Christopher YelvertonPhilip Fleming
1629–1640No Parliaments summoned
1640 (Apr)The Viscount FalklandSir Henry Worsley, 2nd Baronet
1640 (Nov)The Viscount Falkland
disabled to sit, Sep 1642
Sir Henry Worsley, 2nd Baronet
1645Sir Henry Worsley, 2nd Baronet
excluded in Pride's Purge, Dec 1648
William Stephens
1653–1659Newport was unrepresented in the Barebones and First and Second Protectorate Parliaments
1659Thomas Boreman (of Broke)Sir Robert Dillington, 2nd Baronet
1659–1660Sir Henry Worsley, 2nd BaronetWilliam Stephens

MPs 1660–1868

Election1st Member1st Party2nd Member2nd Party
1660Robert DillingtonWilliam Oglander[3] <-- party -->
1661William Glascock<-- party -->
1670Sir Robert Dillington<-- party -->
February 1679Admiral Sir Robert Holmes
August 1679John Leigh
1685Admiral Sir Robert HolmesSir William Stephens<-- party -->
January 1689Sir Robert Dillington
June 1689Edward Dillington
1690Admiral Sir Robert Holmes
1692Brigadier Richard Leveson
November 1695Brigadier The Lord CuttsSir Robert Cotton<-- party -->
December 1695Sir Henry Colt
1698Major-General The Lord Cutts
1699Henry Greenhill
January 1701Major-General The Lord CuttsSamuel Shepheard<-- party -->
March 1701Henry Greenhill
December 1701Major-General The Lord CuttsEdward Richards<-- party -->
March 1702Colonel James StanhopeWhig
July 1702Major-General The Lord Cutts[4] William Stephens<-- party -->
1707Sir Tristram Dillington
October 1710Lieutenant-General John Richmond Webb[5] Tory
December 1710Lieutenant-General William Seymour
1713General John Richmond WebbTory
1715Anthony Morgan[6]
April 1717Lieutenant-General James StanhopeWhig
July 1717Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Tristram Dillington
1721Thomas Stanwix
March 1722Earl of March[7] The Lord Whitworth<-- party -->
October 1722Colonel Charles Cadogan<-- party -->
1726George Huxley<-- party -->
January 1727Sir William Willys
August 1727William Fortescue
1736The Viscount Boyne
May 1741Anthony ChuteMonoux Cope
July 1747Captain Bluett WallopThomas Lee Dummer<-- party -->
1749Ralph Jenison
1758Rear-Admiral Charles Holmes
1762William Rawlinson Earle<-- party -->
1765Thomas Dummer
1768John EamesHans Sloane<-- party -->
1773Hon. John St. John
1774Sir Richard Worsley<-- party -->
1780Hon. John St. John
1784Edward Rushworth<-- party -->Captain the Hon. Hugh Seymour-Conway
1786Hon. John Townshend
January 1790George Byng
June 1790The Viscount Palmerston<-- party -->The Viscount Melbourne
1793Peniston Lamb
May 1796Jervoise Clarke Jervoise[8] Edward Rushworth[9]
November 1796William Hamilton NisbetAndrew Strahan<-- party -->
1800Sir George Dallas
1802John BlackburnRichard Gervas Ker
1806Isaac CorryMajor General Sir John Doyle
1807The Viscount PalmerstonTorySir Arthur WellesleyTory
1809Sir Leonard Worsley-Holmes<-- party -->
1811Cecil Bisshopp
1812Richard Worsley-Holmes
1814John Delgarno
1816George Watson-Taylor
1818Charles Duncombe<-- party -->
1825Hon. John Stuart
1826George CanningTory[10] Hon. William ScottTory
April 1827Hon. William Lamb[11] Whig
May 1827Spencer PercevalTory
1830Horace TwissTory
1831William MountToryJames Joseph Hope-VereTory
1832John Heywood HawkinsWhig[12] [13] [14] William Henry OrdWhig
1837William John BlakeWhig
1841Charles Wykeham MartinConservativeWilliam HamiltonConservative
1847Peelite[15] William PlowdenPeelite[16]
1852William BiggsRadical[17] [18] [19] William Nathaniel MasseyRadical
February 1857Robert KennardConservative
March 1857Charles Edward ManglesWhig[20] Charles BuxtonWhig
1859Robert KennardConservativePhilip Lybbe PowysConservative
1865Charles Wykeham MartinLiberal
1868Representation reduced to one member

MPs 1868–1885

ElectionMemberParty
Liberal
1870 Liberal
1885constituency abolished

Election results

Elections in the 1830s

Ord was appointed as a Lord Commissioner of the Treasury, requiring a by-election.

Elections in the 1850s

Biggs resigned, causing a by-election.

Elections in the 1860s

Seat reduced to one member

Elections in the 1870s

Martin's death caused a by-election.

Elections in the 1880s

See also

Notes and references

Notes and References

  1. Page 25, Lewis Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1957)
  2. Web site: History of Parliament. History of Parliament trust. 19 October 2011.
  3. Created a baronet as Sir William Oglander, December 1665
  4. Lieutenant-General from 1703
  5. Webb was also elected for Ludgershall, which he chose to represent, and did not sit for Newport in this Parliament
  6. Morgan was also a candidate for Yarmouth, but the election result there was disputed. He sat for Newport until the Yarmouth election was decided in his favour, then chose to represent Yarmouth for the remainder of the Parliament
  7. March was also elected for Chichester, which he chose to represent, and never sat for Newport
  8. Jervoise was also elected for Yarmouth, which he chose to represent, and never sat for Newport
  9. Rushworth was also elected for Yarmouth, which he chose to represent, and never sat for Newport
  10. Book: Stooks Smith , Henry. . Craig, F. W. S. . F. W. S. Craig . The Parliaments of England . 1844-1850 . 2nd . 1973 . Parliamentary Research Services . Chichester . 0-900178-13-2 . 153–156 .
  11. Lamb was elected at a by-election for Bletchingley two weeks after his election for Newport. He chose to represent Bletchingley.
  12. Book: Mosse. Richard Bartholomew. The Parliamentary Guide: a concise history of the Members of both Houses, etc. 1838. 137, 175.
  13. News: John Bull . 26 November 2018 . 14 August 1837 . 4–5 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  14. Book: Dickens . Charles . Charles Dickens . Caswall . Edward . Sketches of Young Ladies, Young Gentleman and Young Couples . 2015 . Alma Books . Richmond . 978-1-84749-491-7 . 196 . 1843 .
  15. News: The Elections . 10 June 2018 . Aberdeen Press and Journal . 28 July 1852 . 8 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  16. News: Newport . 10 June 2018 . Portsmouth Times and Naval Gazette . 3 July 1852 . 4. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  17. Book: Wigley . John . The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Sunday . 1980 . Manchester University Press . Manchester . 0-7190-0794-1 . 94 . 10 June 2018.
  18. News: Newport Borough Election . 10 June 2018 . Hampshire Advertiser . 10 July 1852 . 7 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  19. News: Shipping and Mercantile Gazette . 10 June 2018 . 9 July 1852 . 8 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription .
  20. News: Glasgow Sentinel . 10 June 2018 . 21 March 1857 . 2 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription .