ORFORD (UK PARLIAMENT CONSTITUENCY)


'Orford' was a constituency of the House of Commons. Consisting of the town of Orford in Suffolk, it elected two Members of Parliament (MP) by the bloc vote version of the first past the post system of election until it was disenfranchised in 1832.

Contents
History
Members of Parliament
1529-1660
1660-1832
References

History


Orford was first represented in the Parliament of England in 1298, but did not regularly send members until 1529. The right of election was vested in the Mayor, eight portmen, twelve "capital burgesses" and the freemen of the borough. In the early days of its representation, Orford had been a prosperous port and its freemen were numerous, but by the 18th century the number of freemen was deliberately kept low to facilitate controlling the elections, and the town had become a pocket borough where most of the qualified voters consisted of the owner's family and retainers.
At one time Orford was owned by Viscount Hereford, but after his death in 1748 it was bought by the government, and by 1760, Orford was perhaps the most secure of all the "Treasury boroughs" - in other words boroughs where the influence of the Crown was so strong that the government could be sure of securing the election of whichever candidates they chose. As such, it was studied in detail by the historian Lewis Namier.
To secure government control, the Treasury started packing the Corporation with outsiders: Namier quotes a letter from John Roberts (who was managing the borough for the government) to Prime Minister Newcastle, urging an immediate decision on who should be nominated to a vacancy as capital burgess because otherwise "we shall be reduced to the necessity of chusing a townsman, the number of which it would be better not to encrease". Maintaining government control of the borough also involved considerable expenditure - £200 a year for rent of houses,and a further £100 for other expenses such as repairs and taxes, all met out of the secret service fund.
However, much of Viscount Hereford's estate had been bought by the Earl of Hertford, and he together with his brother Henry Seymour Conway, an influential minister, put pressure on successive Prime Ministers for the control of the borough to be given to him. Eventually in 1766, with the formation of Chatham's ministry, this pressure bore fruit, and Orford was transferred to the Earl of Hertford as partial compensation for his having been supplanted as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. From this point it remained under the control of Hertford and his heirs until it lost its representation 66 years later, and all its MPs were either members of the Seymour-Conway family or their friends.
By the time of the Great Reform Act in 1832, the population of the borough was only 1,302, in 246 houses, with about 22 men entitled to vote, and this was too small to justify its existence being retained.

Members of Parliament


1529-1660


★ 1621: Sir Roger Townshend

★ 1621: Sir Lionel Tollemache

★ 1628: Sir Lionel Tollemache

★ 1640: Sir Edward Duke
1660-1832

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
1660Walter Devereux Sir Allen Brodrick
February 1679Lord Huntingtower Sir John Duke
September 1679Henry Parker
1681 Thomas Glemham
1685Lord Huntingtower
1689Sir John Duke
1690Sir Thomas Felton[1]
1695Sir Adam Felton
1697Sir John Duke
1698Sir Charles Hedges
1700Sir Edmund Bacon William Johnson
1701 Sir Edward Turnor
1708 Clement Corrance
1709William Thompson
1710Sir Edward Turnor
1721Sir Edward Duke
1722 Dudley North William Acton
1727Hon. Price Devereux
1729 William Acton
1730Robert Kemp
1734 Richard Powys Lewis Barlow
1738John Cope
1741Viscount Glenorchy Henry Bilson-Legge
1746Hon. John Bateman
1747Hon. John Waldegrave
1754 John Offley Whig
1759Hon. Charles FitzRoy Whig
1761Thomas Worsley Whig
1768Viscount Beauchamp[2]Edward Colman
1771Robert Seymour Conway
1784George Seymour Conway
1790 William Seymour Conway
1794 Robert Seymour Conway
1796The Viscount Castlereagh Tory
1797Earl of Yarmouth Tory
1802James Trail Tory
1806 Lord Henry Moore Tory
1807William Sloane, junior Tory
1812Charles Arbuthnot Tory Edmond MacNaghten Tory
1818 John Douglas Tory
March 1820Horace Beauchamp Seymour[3]Tory
May 1820 Edmond MacNaghten Tory
1821The Marquess of Londonderry Tory
1822Charles Ross Tory
June 1826 Sir Henry Cooke ToryHorace Beauchamp Seymour[4]Tory
December 1826Quintin Dick Tory
1830Spencer Kilderbee Tory
1832 ''Constituency abolished''

'Notes'
1. Succeeded to a baronetcy as Sir Thomas Felton, 1697
2. Beauchamp was styled Earl of Yarmouth from June 1793
3. Seymour was also elected for Lisburn, which he chose to represent, and did not sit for Orford
4. Seymour was also elected for Bodmin, which he chose to represent, and did not sit for Orford

References



★ Lewis Namier, "The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III" (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)

★ J Holladay Philbin, "Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)

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