Ludlow | |
Parliament: | uk |
Map2: | EnglandShropshire |
Map Entity: | Shropshire |
Year: | 1885 |
Abolished: | 2024 |
Type: | County |
Elects Howmany: | One |
Next: | South Shropshire |
Year2: | 1473 |
Abolished2: | 1885 |
Type2: | Borough |
Elects Howmany2: | 1473–1868: Two 1868–1885: One |
Next2: | Ludlow |
Electorate: | 66,199 (December 2010)[1] |
Region: | England |
Ludlow was a constituency in Shropshire represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament.
Under the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the constituency was abolished. Subject to minor boundary changes, it was reformed as South Shropshire, first contested in the 2024 general election.[2]
From its 1473 creation until 1885, Ludlow was a parliamentary borough. It was represented by two burgesses until 1868, when it was reduced to one member.
The seat saw a big reduction in voters between 1727 when 710 people voted to the next contested election in 1812 when the electorate was below 100. The Reform Act 1832 (2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 45) raised the electorate to 300-400.[3]
The parliamentary borough was abolished in 1885, and the name transferred to the new county "division" (with lower electoral candidates' expenses and a different returning officer) whose boundaries were expanded greatly to become similar to (and a replacement to) the Southern division of Shropshire.
The seat was long considered safe for the Conservatives with the party winning by large majorities from the 1920s until 1997 when the majority was reduced to under 6,000. When the sitting Conservative MP stood down in 2001 it was won by a Liberal Democrat. Ludlow was regained by a Conservative in the 2005 general election, held with a greatly increased majority five years later which was almost doubled in 2015.
In the 2016 referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union, Shropshire, which the constituency entirely forms a part of, voted to leave the European Union by 56.9%.[4]
1885–1918: Parts of the Boroughs of Ludlow, Bridgnorth, and Wenlock, the Sessional Divisions of Bishop's Castle, Brinstree South and Stottesden Chelmarsh, Burford, Clun and Purslow, Munslow Lower and Upper, and Stottesden Cleobury, and parts of the Sessional Divisions of Ovens and Stottesden.
1918–1950: The Boroughs of Ludlow, Bridgnorth, and Bishop's Castle, the Urban District of Church Stretton, and the Rural Districts of Bridgnorth, Burford, Church Stretton, Cleobury Mortimer, Clun, Ludlow, and Teme.
1950–1974: The Boroughs of Ludlow, Bridgnorth, Bishop's Castle, and Wenlock, the Urban District of Church Stretton, and the Rural Districts of Bridgnorth, Clun, and Ludlow.
1974–1983: The Rural Districts of Bridgnorth, Clun and Bishop's Castle, and Ludlow.
1983–1997: The District of South Shropshire, and the District of Bridgnorth.
1997–2010: The District of South Shropshire, and the District of Bridgnorth wards of Alveley, Bridgnorth Castle, Bridgnorth East, Bridgnorth Morfe, Bridgnorth West, Broseley, Claverley, Ditton Priors, Glazeley, Harrington, Highley, Kinlet, Much Wenlock, Morville, Stottesdon, and Worfield.
2010–2024: The District of South Shropshire, and the District of Bridgnorth wards of Alveley, Bridgnorth Castle, Bridgnorth East, Bridgnorth Morfe, Bridgnorth West, Broseley East, Broseley West, Claverley, Ditton Priors, Glazeley, Harrington, Highley, Much Wenlock, Morville, Stottesdon, and Worfield.
nb. in April 2009 the districts of South Shropshire and Bridgnorth (together with their wards) were abolished; the constituency's extent was still constituted by reference to them.
The Ludlow constituency was situated entirely within the county of Shropshire in England.
It covered a large, rural area dotted with market towns, the largest of which are Ludlow and Bridgnorth (which was a borough constituency until 1885), each having a population of just over 10,000. The other towns — all with a population of under 5,000 — are Broseley, Clun, Bishop's Castle (a 'rotten borough' constituency until 1832), Cleobury Mortimer, Much Wenlock (former seat of the borough constituency of Wenlock until 1885 and notable for its part in the history of the modern Olympic Games movement), Craven Arms and Church Stretton.
On its northeast border (just beyond Broseley) is the Ironbridge Gorge (notable for its part in the Industrial Revolution), just to the south of the large new town of Telford. The Guardian encapsulates the seat in a nutshell as "Big, rural, hills and small towns, increasingly middle class."[5] Other than the Telford borough constituency, Ludlow borders onto similarly rural county constituencies, including Montgomery on the other side of the border with Wales.
The constituency covered most of the south area of Shropshire Council (without Shifnal and Albrighton).
The most recent boundary changes took place at the 1997 general election, when a part of the Bridgnorth district was removed to The Wrekin constituency.
Parliament | First member | Second member | |
---|---|---|---|
1510–1515 | No names known[6] | ||
1523 | ?William Foxe | ?John Cother | |
1529 | William Foxe | John Cother | |
1536 | ?John Cother | ||
1539 | Charles Foxe | Thomas Wheeler | |
1542 | Edmund Foxe | ||
1545 | John Bradshaw | Thomas Wheeler | |
1547 | Robert Blount | Charles Foxe | |
1553 (Mar) | Thomas Wheeler | ||
1553 (Oct) | John Passey | ||
1554 (Apr) | Sir John Price | Thomas Blashefield | |
1554 (Nov) | James Warnecombe | John Allsop | |
1555 | William Heath | Thomas Croft | |
1558 | Richard Prince | Robert Mason | |
1559 | William Poughmill | Robert Mason I[7] | |
1562–3 | Richard Langford | William Poughmill | |
1571 | William Poughmill | Robert Mason I | |
1572 | Robert Mason II, died and replaced Jan 1581 by Philip Sidney who sat for Shrewsbury and was replaced by Robert Berry | ||
1584 | Robert Berry | Richard Farr | |
1586 | Thomas Canland | ||
1588 | |||
1593 | |||
1597 | Hugh Sanford, election declared void and was repl. 1597 by Robert Berry | ||
1601 | Thomas Canland | Robert Berry | |
1604 | Robert Berry | Richard Benson | |
1614 | Sir Henry Townshend | Robert Berry unseated on petition- replaced by Robert Lloyd | |
1621 | Henry Spencer, Lord Compton | Richard Tomlins | |
1624 | Ralph Goodwin | ||
1625 | |||
1626 | |||
1628 | |||
1629–1640 | No Parliaments summoned | ||
1640 (Apr) | Charles Baldwin | Ralph Goodwin | |
1640 (Nov) | |||
1645 | Thomas Mackworth | Thomas Moor | |
1648 | |||
1653 | Ludlow not represented in Barebones Parliament | ||
1654 | John Aston | (one seat only) | |
1656 | |||
1659 | Job Charlton | Samuel Baldwyn |
Year | First member | First party | Second member | Second party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1660 | ||||||
1670 | ||||||
Febr. 1679 | Francis Charlton | |||||
Sept. 1679 | ||||||
1681 | ||||||
Apr. 1685 | ||||||
Jn. 1685 | ||||||
Nov. 1685 | ||||||
1689 | ||||||
1690 | ||||||
1691 | ||||||
1695 | ||||||
1698 | ||||||
1699 | ||||||
Jan. 1701 | ||||||
Dec. 1701 | ||||||
1705 | ||||||
1713 | ||||||
1715 | ||||||
1719 | ||||||
1722 | ||||||
Febr. 1727 | ||||||
Sept. 1727 | ||||||
1741 | ||||||
1743 | ||||||
1748 | ||||||
1754 | ||||||
1768 | ||||||
1770 | ||||||
1774 | Tory[8] | Tory | ||||
1780 | ||||||
1783 | ||||||
1784 | Whig | |||||
1794 | Tory | |||||
1806 | Tory | |||||
1807 | ||||||
1818 | ||||||
1832 | Whig | |||||
1834 | Conservative | |||||
1835 | Conservative | |||||
1837 | Whig[9] [10] [11] [12] [13] | |||||
1839 | Whig[14] [15] | |||||
1840 | Conservative | |||||
1841 | Conservative | |||||
1847 | Conservative | Whig | ||||
1852 | Conservative | |||||
1854 | ||||||
1857 | ||||||
1860 | ||||||
1863 | ||||||
1865 |
Year | Member | Whip | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1885 | Jasper More | Liberal | ||
1886 | Liberal Unionist | |||
1903 | Rowland Hunt | |||
1917 | National Party | |||
1918 | Unionist | |||
Conservative | ||||
Liberal Democrat | ||||
Conservative | ||||
2024 | Constituency abolished |
General election 1939–40:Another general election was required to take place before the end of 1940. The political parties had been making preparations for an election to take place from 1939 and by the end of this year, the following candidates had been selected;
General election 1914–15:
Another general election was required to take place before the end of 1915. The political parties had been making preparations for an election to take place and by July 1914, the following candidates had been selected;
Clive succeeded to the peerage, becoming 2nd Earl of Powis and causing a by-election.
Alcock's election was declared void on petition, due to treating, on 12 May 1840, causing a by-election.[16]
Clive resigned to contest the 1854 by-election in South Shropshire, causing a by-election.
Herbert resigned by accepting the office of Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, causing a by-election.
Botfield's death caused a by-election.