Englishmen are now called upon to exercise their dearest rights, in the choice of Representatives, to whom they must delegate, at this important crisis, powers, on the due exercise of which every thing which Englishmen hold dear in life may eventually depend. It is a duty, therefore, which Electors owe to themselves, to their posterity, to their Country, to choose such men as are wholly free from the infection of Gallic principles; as hold in abhorrence the disseminators of universal anarchy, the friends of France, and the enemies of England. Men, who talk about rights and neglect duties; who conceal private vice beneath the mask of public virtue; who disguise Disaffection under a show of Patriotism; whose professions are, in all respects, at direct variance with their practice; now seek to cajole the Electors by panegyrizing themselves, and calumniating their opponents. But let the native good sense of Englishmen be exerted; and let them not be betrayed, by artful insinuations, into a reprobation of those ANTI-GALLICAN PRINCIPLES, which it was the boast of their ancestors to cherish and extend!
—True Briton, 27 May 1796Unlike the anti-Jacobin periodical True Briton, historians have not viewed the 1796 general election as one with a particularly Jacobin or Gallic element. Instead, the first decade of the nineteenth century is widely perceived as the formative period for radical electoral and parliamentary politics, beginning with the 1802 general election, in which reformist candidates with significant plebeian support won notable victories in Norwich, Nottingham, and Middlesex. For historians of popular politics, these contests, and in particular those of Sir Francis Burdett for Middlesex in 1802 and 1804, represent the revival of popular reformism following a difficult decade.Footnote 1 This earlier movement, dubbed Jacobin for its sympathies for the French Republic and pursuit of universal suffrage and annual elections, began with the formation of the largely artisanal London Corresponding Society in 1792. Rapid early growth of the London Corresponding Society and affiliated societies in other towns and cities was curbed by government repression in 1794 and 1795, which historians have widely seen as the beginning of a steady terminal decline consummated by the explicit outlawing of the London Corresponding Society and all similar societies in 1799.Footnote 2 The reappearance of many veterans of these organizations as integral components of the electoral challenges in 1802 therefore represents for many historians the revival of a popular movement for reform in a more moderate form, “from within the electoral system.”Footnote 3 Historians of radicalism have particularly viewed the Middlesex contests as laying the basis for Burdett's later victory in Westminster in 1807, a seat that he held until 1837. This victory has long been seen as the chief formative movement for nineteenth-century popular radicalism, since for decades “Radical Westminster” provided a base for agitation inside and outside of Parliament, and the proving ground of many of British radicalism's tribunes and leaders like Burdett, Henry Hunt, and William Cobbett.Footnote 4 In these accounts, the 1802 general election was thus the beginning of a significant recalibration of popular reformism, the most lasting effect of which was the formation of radicalism as a significant national movement.
In fact, and as True Briton warned, there was an extensive and vibrant Jacobin intervention in the 1796 general election, an intervention that I argue has been neglected by historians but which leads to important revisions of our understanding of not only the corresponding societies of the 1790s but also their influence on the electoral politics of radical reformers after 1802. These contests, held at the midpoint of the French Revolutionary Wars, have not been seen as a serious challenge to the government. With the Whigs led by Lord Portland having joined the Pitt ministry in July 1794, the remaining opposition, led by Charles James Fox, was an ineffectively small rump. Outside of Parliament, the London Corresponding Society and its affiliated provincial societies suffered under the provisions of the “Two Acts”—the Treasonable and Seditious Practices Act and the Seditious Meetings Act of 1795—passed to suppress the organizing of mass meetings and the printing of political commentary.Footnote 5 For Frank O'Gorman, 1796 was therefore a year “hardly conducive to great radical causes,” and in the general election, disorganized anti-Pitt candidates were beaten in a handful of constituencies.Footnote 6 I argue the contrary: the 1796 general election was notable for a number of contests put up in borough constituencies by plebeian reform societies affiliated with the London Corresponding Society. These groups intervened to support antiwar and pro-reform candidates in Westminster, Southwark, the City of London, Norwich, Nottingham, Derby, Maidstone, and Rochester, while a member of the society briefly contested Chichester—nine elections that represented a significant minority of the fifty-nine constituencies contested that year.Footnote 7 These events have not only been downplayed by electoral and parliamentary historians but have also been largely ignored by historians of radicalism.Footnote 8 In many accounts, emphasis has been placed upon petitioning, mass meetings, and the extent and sincerity of insurrectionary plotting, accompanied more recently by a focus on the political thought, culture, and language of the Jacobin generation.Footnote 9 Even those historians who seek to place Jacobinism within an older, constitutionalist tradition of reformism, in which the general election would seem to be a key moment, have overlooked its importance, and while the general elections of 1784, 1802, and 1807 are well studied, the only account focused on 1796 looks at the language of the Westminster contest isolated from its wider context.Footnote 10
I begin by outlining the extent of the participation in the 1796 general election by a number of societies within the Jacobin political network of which the London Corresponding Society formed the center. Although Jacobin was initially a pejorative term used by opponents to describe this network, they were correct to see in it commonalities and political coalescence. In particular, these organizations shared a popular membership of artisans, tradesmen, and middling professionals, the explicit modeling of their societies on the London Corresponding Society including its program of universal suffrage and annual Parliaments, and the desire for a peace with France that would de facto recognize the republic. Jacobin is therefore a justifiable shorthand for describing a specific and organized tendency within the broader politics of popular reform, a shorthand also adopted at times by these reformers themselves.Footnote 11 This article is therefore not a study of the entire opposition to Pitt's administration in 1796 but is instead tightly focused on the societies within this Jacobin network that directly participated in the elections for their boroughs. As I demonstrate, there were clear signs of collaboration between these geographically disparate groups, with the London Corresponding Society adopting a coordinating position within this nexus, a significant indication that the society and many of its associated bodies outside London had not begun their terminal decline at the beginning of 1796. Although this revitalization was not enough to prevent their dissolution in 1799, the mobilization for the 1802 general election by many veterans of these associations was possible because of the experience gained in the contests of 1796. While undermining the notion of 1802 as the beginning of a new era, or of the 1807 Westminster election as an unheralded novelty, this research is also an important complement to the historiographical emphasis on the legacy of the London Corresponding Society and its affiliates being largely in insurrectionary sects.Footnote 12
Nevertheless, comparison of the general elections of 1796 and 1802 also reveals significant changes; the two elections were not joined by a period of unabridged and clear continuity. While strong contests were put up in Middlesex, Norwich, and Nottingham, in many other constituencies, the elections of 1796 could not be built upon, indicating the lasting damage caused by repression of the corresponding societies. Despite the continuity of personnel, there were also important organizational and tactical differences between the contests in 1796 and those in the 1802 general election, owing to a shift in the reformers’ attitudes to political morality. In 1796, the Jacobin reforming societies committed to cheap and legal electioneering conducted entirely by volunteers, in the belief that this strategy would guarantee that elections delivered the good governance that could only be attained by the free and open use of reason. I argue that this application of Jacobin political thought represented a significant break from the conventions of constitutionalist reformism in the preceding decades. This novel electoral morality was, however, abandoned in 1802 in a significant reversion to an older tradition of electioneering that relied upon illegal practices funded by the wealth of patricians like Burdett. Concurrent with this trend was the dissolution of Jacobinism as a coherent, independent, and programmatic political tendency, although, as will be made clear, former Jacobins remained important semi-organized currents within electoral alliances of reformers and Whigs. In the final section, I outline how in London these former members of the society were able by 1807 to reimpose upon Burdett the organization and principles that they had pioneered eleven years before.Footnote 13 Since the 1807 Westminster election is often depicted as the first to utilize widespread popular mobilization behind a cheap and purely legal contest organized largely by artisans and tradesmen, this view is a major revision. The 1807 election, described by one historian as “precocious,” was instead a return to the methods, culture, and intellectual framework of the 1796 contests.Footnote 14
The continuity of participation in the elections between 1796 and 1807 was accompanied by a significant discontinuity in the methods and ideas behind that electioneering, and both require detailed investigation. This revision also suggests that we need to rethink the efficacy and legacy of the popular reformist societies of the 1790s, and that the London Corresponding Society and many associated societies were healthier in 1796 than has generally been thought and were able to establish lasting sentiment for radical reform in several constituencies. The revival in 1807 of the methods pioneered in 1796 also shows that the Jacobin societies provided durable and innovative methods of popular electoral mobilization based in a novel body of political thought that brought significant new approaches to constitutionalist reformism.Footnote 15 The London Corresponding Society and its affiliated societies played a much more direct role in the legal and electoral aspects of the formation of nineteenth-century popular radicalism than has previously been considered. It is therefore necessary to contextualize the 1807 Westminster victory within a longer, broader, and more complex series of electoral contests beginning in 1796.
I
The general election between May and June 1796 came at the end of a difficult period for the network of popular organizations that had developed in sympathetic response to the French Revolution. In 1794, Habeas Corpus was suspended, and two prominent figures within the London Corresponding Society, Thomas Hardy and John Thelwall, were tried for high treason, along with their mentor John Horne Tooke, a veteran reformer and leading figure within the Society of Constitutional Information, an association of gentlemanly and middle-class reformers closely affiliated with the London Corresponding Society. Although all three were acquitted, the trials caused the collapse of the Society of Constitutional Information and a severe decline in the membership of the London Corresponding Society. By the end of 1795, the ground that had been regained was threatened by the Treason and Sedition bills, which greatly expanded the ability of the government to act against groups and individuals they dubbed Jacobins. The opposition to the bills saw the London Corresponding Society hold two extremely well-attended mass meetings to petition against them. At the same time, economic discontent grew as the war disrupted the trade in food and goods, a problem exacerbated by the bad harvest of 1795. Concurrently, the Foxite Whigs struggled to oppose Pitt in Parliament following the definitive rupture with the Portland Whigs in 1794, and looked to the potential of the growing petitioning movement.Footnote 16 After a number of gestures by both sides, a Foxite deputation visited the home of London Corresponding Society member John Gale Jones to suggest an anti-Pitt “junction,” which society members subsequently voted for, fueling rumors of a coalition.Footnote 17 By January, however, the society's general committee rejected any deal, maintaining that the Whig Club was “too equivocal” in its conduct; the committee reassured concerned affiliates such as “the Friends of Reform” in Manchester that reports that they had abandoned their program in return for a coalition with the Whigs were untrue.Footnote 18 In March, the London Corresponding Society announced that it would resist an alliance until the Foxites clarified their principles, and following this, the society's strategy was explicitly to pressure the Whigs into supporting their full reform program.Footnote 19 Meanwhile, the Whigs saw their role as leading these societies in a broad opposition. At the beginning of May, the Duke of Bedford told the Whig Club that they would lose the anticipated general election, but that the popular opposition to the Two Acts proved that they could find an extra-Parliamentary following.Footnote 20 Fox himself believed Whig weakness meant that an alliance with the “democratic or popular party” was necessary, although he stressed that Whig leadership would ensure the moderation of this opposition.Footnote 21 When the general election took place between May and June, both the corresponding society and Foxite strategies therefore required cooperation for conditional and antagonistic reasons: while the Foxites sought to dominate and neuter the “popular party,” the London Corresponding Society and its affiliated societies outside London sought to radicalize the Foxites.
This conflict was particularly obvious at the contest for Fox's constituency of Westminster, where Tooke reemerged from a period of seclusion after the 1794 trials to stand. Westminster possessed a “scot and lot” franchise of those who paid the local poor rates; with around twelve thousand electors, it was the most populous constituency in the country.Footnote 22 Members of the London Corresponding Society played a key organizational role in this contest: they formed the majority of Tooke's committee, which met at Hardy's shop and organized a systematic canvass of the electors, leading to the True Briton describing Tooke as the “Society's own candidate.”Footnote 23 This support was also deliberately prominent on the hustings: Felix Vaughan, barrister and former member of the Society of Constitutional Information, proposed Tooke, while John Thelwall, John Gale Jones, and fellow member of the London Corresponding Society Paul Thomas LeMaitre were the “Political Cerberus which guards the Pluto of Covent-Garden.”Footnote 24 Superficially, the election was a rerun of the contest of 1790, when Tooke had stood against Fox in protest at the agreement he had made with his nemesis, Pitt, to divide Westminster's two seats. Fox and Pitt's “disgraceful compromise” had infuriated Fox's more radical supporters, who were already disappointed that he was not the reformer he had presented himself as in his first contest in 1780. Tooke subsequently won 1,697 votes.Footnote 25 When he stood again in 1796, however, he instead praised Fox for opposing the Treason trials and Two Acts and derided the war, taxation, and the “elective Dictator” Pitt, while pressing his desire for a united opposition by requesting that the electors split between himself and Fox.Footnote 26 Fox criticized Pitt's government for subverting the constitution of 1688 in order to support despotism in Europe and attacked Tooke's trial and imprisonment in 1794. Contrary to rumors among Pittites, this accord did not extend to a pact, and Fox responded to Tooke's overtures by instructing his supporters not to split their votes.Footnote 27 Many electors ignored the directive, and although in his previous contests Fox had relied upon a core support of “plumpers” who voted solely for him, this section of his electorate now collapsed and he became the centrist candidate who received votes split with both Tooke and the Pittite Sir Alan Gardner. Tooke's 2,819 votes showed that Fox was vulnerable to a more consistent reformer, a fact underlined at a dinner for Tooke after the election by an elector who warned that if “Mr. Fox continued an enemy to all Reform, he could not expect the friendship of the people.”Footnote 28
In its other London strongholds, the London Corresponding Society similarly mobilized. In the City, which returned four MPs, efforts had been made by society members and Foxites since 1795 to press an antiwar agenda in the Liverymen's Common Hall. During the election, these efforts translated into support for William Pickett, the former lord mayor and a member of the Society of Constitutional Information, who came a close fifth with 2,795 votes, and the Foxite H. C. Combe, who came third.Footnote 29 A similar effort was made in Southwark, which like Westminster possessed a wide “scot and lot” franchise. In early December 1795, the Foxite candidate, Michael Angelo Taylor, was approached by five men from the London Corresponding Society offering him support and “400 out of 500 votes in the Parish of St George.”Footnote 30 Taylor's committee informed him that the society's “interest was very powerful in the Borough,” a fact evident from the large public meeting it held in St. George's Fields in June 1795 and the frequent meetings the society later held there against the Two Acts.Footnote 31 The delegation made their overture in the same week that Foxites and society members began discussing the prospect of a “junction”—an indication that the society had been planning to participate in the general election long before May 1796. It was also likely these members of the London Corresponding Society were those referred to in 1793 as “a kind of jarring interest in the Borough of Southwark,” who had begun a canvass that increased the lowest class of electors by “at least one thousand.”Footnote 32 At some point prior to the election, Taylor was replaced by George Tierney. Tierney had formerly been the treasurer of the Society of the Friends of the People, which was founded in Southwark and led by a body of reforming Whigs before their disbandment amid the growing reaction of 1794. As part of this reaction, Tierney was largely responsible for the society's report The State of the Representation of England and Wales, a plan of reform that, despite its moderation, was respected by the Jacobins. Tierney also likely had direct contact in this role with the corresponding society members, since Thelwall was also a member of the society and in 1792 Hardy sought to arrange an affiliation with the society.Footnote 33 At the election, Tierney stood under the slogan of “peace and reform against war and corruption” and utilized a canvass and public subscription like those in Westminster.Footnote 34 His first speech at the hustings was kept among Hardy's papers, along with a ticket soliciting votes, further indicative of the society members’ roles as canvassers.Footnote 35 After petitioning the result and fighting a by-election, the result of which he again challenged, Tierney was finally seated in December. The win was celebrated by the society and Hardy in particular.Footnote 36
This agitation was not confined to London. At the beginning of 1796, the society sent out delegations to organize provincial sympathizers into organizations affiliated with the society, starting with the trips of John Gale Jones and John Binns to Kent and the south coast.Footnote 37 Society member Francis Place depicted these initiatives as overambitious failures, and historians have followed this assessment largely because both Jones and Binns were later arrested in Birmingham. In fact, the south coast tours were important precursors to the electoral organization of May and June.Footnote 38 Both men were instructed to ensure that those they met formed organizations based on the London Corresponding Society model, which pursued universal suffrage and annual elections, and they were not distracted by the Whig Club's proposals for united action against the Two Acts.Footnote 39 The response was enthusiastic, with the Rochester reformers telling Jones after one of his speeches that they “professed their determination to live and die united with the London Corresponding Society.”Footnote 40 This success was followed a few days later by the corresponding societies of Rochester, Chatham, and Brompton pledging to work with the society and pursue their program of reform, “even though it should be at the hazard of their lives.”Footnote 41 As in London, these corresponding societies were open to supporting reforming, antiwar Foxites, and Jones likely anticipated the general election in his tour. The precursor of the Rochester Corresponding Society had contested the mayoral election the previous September “as warmly as if it had been for a Member of Parliament.”Footnote 42 The Rochester organization began corresponding with its London counterpart, and Jones wrote that at the time of his visit, “the inhabitants in general were attached both to the Whig interest and to the London Corresponding Society”; he left believing the society was in “the most flourishing state.”Footnote 43 These reformers asked George Smith, former member of the Society of Constitutional Information and son of the former MP of the same name, to stand, but he declined, owing to the manner in which “the whole frame of Parliament is so completely election vitiated.”Footnote 44 They then pressed the recorder, John Longley, who had written a pamphlet advocating reform that Jones thought highly of, to contest the seat. Similarly, in Maidstone, Jones met the Foxite MP Clement Taylor, whom he described as an ally of the London Corresponding Society and “a strenuous friend to reform.”Footnote 45 While in the town, Jones set to work establishing a corresponding society, which was founded in the home of Taylor's brother-in-law.Footnote 46 By the time of the election, Taylor declined to re-contest the seat, as he anticipated the government would force an expensive contest upon him; he was replaced with Christopher Hull, a London lawyer who had joined the Society of Constitutional Information in 1791.Footnote 47 Similarly the London Corresponding Society and a group of Portsmouth reformers jointly sought to maintain a group in Chichester, which was likely why William Hodgson, a member of the society recently imprisoned in Newgate for toasting the French Republic, briefly stood there.Footnote 48
This same pattern of deep-rooted electioneering by plebian reforming societies modeled on the London Corresponding Society was repeated in Norwich and Nottingham. In both boroughs, the franchise was held by freemen and freeholders, with weavers particularly prominent among them. Weaving, the principle trade in both boroughs, had been disrupted by the war, which along with the poor harvest of 1795, had increased the price of food. Both boroughs were home to well-organized reformers closely linked to those in London. In Norwich, the Revolution Society, which was affiliated with both the London Corresponding Society and the Society of Constitutional Information, was founded in 1792, before being reorganized into the Norwich Patriotic Society in April 1795. In its inaugural declaration, the Patriotic Society blamed excessive taxation and economic distress on abuse of the constitution and recommended universal parliaments and annual elections as the remedy. One of its stated purposes was “corresponding and co-operating with other societies united for the same objects,” and like the Revolution Society before it, it organized the wider region and worked closely with the London Corresponding Society.Footnote 49 In July, the Whig MP William Windham's acceptance of the position of secretary at war in Pitt's cabinet caused a by-election, and the opposition, centered around the Patriotic Society, managed to secure seven hundred votes, largely from weavers behind an absentee candidate. This antiwar reformism remained vibrant throughout 1795, with the publication of the openly pro-French Cabinet magazine, the organization of a petition of peace in October, and protests against the Two Acts in November and December.Footnote 50 As in London, Norwich's reformers were organizing in preparation for the general election; as a “trial of strength” in May 1796, they made an “entirely unexpected” intervention in the mayoral election, seeking to remove the Pittite incumbent.Footnote 51 In the same month, Anne Plumptre and Amelia Alderson, two local reformers who knew Tooke, invited John Thelwall to give lectures in the city, which he claimed regularly drew four thousand to five thousand people. Alderson was also a contributor to the Cabinet, and during the election she visited the Westminster hustings.Footnote 52 Thelwall was almost certainly using these events as covers for electioneering, as at the same time he advertised a course of lectures in his rooms in Westminster “on the Elective Franchise of ancient Rome, and the miseries brought upon the people by its abuses and corruptions,” offered three days a week “during the present Election.”Footnote 53 Once the election was called, Thelwall sought the candidacy for the city, but as he was not qualified, the “members of the patriotic societies” settled on Bartlett Gurney, a Quaker who had worked on the defense in the Treason Trials and was believed to support “equal and universal suffrage,” with a canvass put together and Thelwall remaining to campaign for him.Footnote 54 The squibs distributed by Gurney's supporters focused chiefly on the distress caused by the “continuance of this mad, murderous war,” which allowed Windham to earn £30,000 a year as the “War-Minister,” at the cost of both prosperity and human lives.Footnote 55
In Nottingham, reformers had also contacted the London Corresponding Society as early as March 1792, and Hardy visited the town in November. By early 1794, these individuals had formed the Nottingham Society for Promoting a Reform in the Representation of the People, modeled directly on the London Corresponding Society. The group found strong support from workers whose years of agitation for higher pay led to local loyalists describing them as being “disposed to embrace the Levelling principle.”Footnote 56 In response, there was a growth in loyalist violence, which reached its apex in July 1794 and for a time achieved the suppression of reformism and antiwar activism. The 1796 general election therefore served as an opportunity for these reformers to return to operating openly and politicizing social grievances, which focused as in Norwich on the growing food shortages and the economic impact of the war.Footnote 57 Like Windham, one MP, Robert Smith, had been antiwar in 1792 but had since backed Pitt. The other, Daniel Parker Coke, supported the government, although he remained more open to peace. Against both MPs, the reformers adopted Dr. Richard Crompton, a close friend of Thelwall.Footnote 58 Crompton had “somewhat in the style of Horne Tooke”Footnote 59 just contested Derby, another location with a body of reformers who in August 1795 had sought affiliation with the London Corresponding Society.Footnote 60 Although Crompton only received six votes in Derby, in Nottingham he fared better by coming last with 561, compared to Smith's victory with 1,210 and Coke coming second with 1,069. During the heated election, Crompton's supporters made several demonstrations in which they allegedly sang the “Marseillaise” and carried a liberty tree, and the election ended with a riot as Crompton's well-armed supporters successfully routed an attempt to prevent him leaving the town.Footnote 61
Thus a significant number of reforming societies with plebeian memberships, in most cases explicitly modeled on the London Corresponding Society and all demanding the same program of peace and radical reform, made coordinated interventions in a number of boroughs with relatively broad electorates. Their involvement had a concrete effect, with lower-class electors mobilized by effective canvassing. Fox never recovered his plumper base in subsequent Westminster elections, while between 1796 and 1807 the vote of independent reformers grew. This development was a major victory for Tooke and his committee and a rejection of Fox's explicit call for the continuation of his plumpers’ sole support.Footnote 62 In Southwark, the talent of the London Corresponding Society for organizing lower-class electors is evident in the fact that St. George's parish did go on to poll heavily for Tierney, just as they had promised.Footnote 63 In Nottingham, notably, Crompton received the most plumpers, at 364 compared to eighty-two for Coke and 282 for Smith. Most of these votes were the worsted weavers.Footnote 64 In Norwich, the poll book similarly illustrates that Gurney was supported by the immiserated weavers. With 1,076 votes, most of them plumpers, he was only eighty-three votes behind the second-placed Windham, whose 1,159 votes were largely secured by electors brought in from London and Norfolk.Footnote 65 Despite the close result, Thelwall was incensed that the wealthy Gurney had remained an absent candidate and did not pay to have electors travel to Norwich. His analysis is reflected in the poll book: only four London and ninety-eight country voters arrived to vote for Gurney, while forty-four and 259 were transported in by Windham. The self-described Jacobin Richard Dinmore, a merchant who canvassed and plumped for Gurney, reported that there were enough out-voters to win the election, but transporting voters looked too much like bribery to implement, despite its legality. The result was nevertheless an impressive one for the Gurney party, who had a mere three days of preparation before the poll.Footnote 66
These elections are revealing about the vitality of the London Corresponding Society in 1796. Francis Place's claim that the delegations and the publication of The Moral and Political Magazine of the London Corresponding Society fatally drained the society's resources has influenced historians, yet in both his autobiography and his manuscript history of Westminster politics, he ignored all of these electoral interventions. This omission was likely because he had come to view the society in a Godwinian light as malignant beyond its encouragement of the consumption of rational reading material.Footnote 67 It is, in fact, evident that the Jacobin groups so far discussed not only made clear impacts during the elections but in most cases were galvanized by them. The elections involved the first large, legal meetings since the passing of the Two Acts. In all of these contests, the speeches coherently linked the war, economic distress, and the ongoing food crisis and attributed them to the constitutional abuses and war policy of Pitt's government. The speeches were reprinted in several publications in the months after the elections, including by publishers and London Corresponding Society members J. S. Jordan and John Smith, providing a legal form of political commentary that defied the Two Acts. Their actions support the suggestion that space still remained for the printing of opposition to Pitt and the war after 1795.Footnote 68 It caused the return of Tooke, Hardy, and Thelwall to politics following their absence after the 1794 Treason Trials and was likely one reason that the society's membership figures remained healthy during the first half of 1796.Footnote 69 All of this was also true outside London. Although in June the Rochester Society wrote to tell the London Corresponding Society that a case of fraud had caused them to collapse, in August a letter from Maidstone announced the official founding of a corresponding society there.Footnote 70 The societies in Norwich and Nottingham were particularly strengthened. In Norwich, those previously reviled “as Jacobins, Republicans, and Levellers, were now received as the guardians of domestic comfort,” and in September the Patriotic Society put forward a member as a candidate in the election for sheriff.Footnote 71 Although he narrowly lost, it was to a different reformer who was backed by the government but was nevertheless “a friend” of the society, a fact commended by the London Corresponding Society.Footnote 72 In November a leafletting campaign in the city caused anti-militia protests, and a week later, effigies of Pitt, Windham, and the bishop of Rochester were burned by “some of the lowest Order of People.”Footnote 73 In the same month, the Norwich group told the London Corresponding Society that the Nottingham Society had re-formed as the Nottingham Corresponding Society and that “the cause of reform proceeded rapidly there . . . The late election proved how much that city was against the present system of corruption.”Footnote 74 The elections in Derby and Nottingham were also instrumental in the foundation shortly after of the Melbourne Corresponding Society, which reported to the London Corresponding Society in November that it continued slowly expanding.Footnote 75
II
This revival contributed to a feeling of confidence among reformers in early 1797, a period of economic and political crisis caused by fears of French invasion that led to bank runs in February and dislocations caused by the Banking Restriction Act in May. The disruptions were followed by a naval mutiny in Spithead, largely over poor conditions, and then a much more serious and political one at the Nore. The London Corresponding Society had been discussing organizing a mass meeting to petition against the government, possibly as early as December, and in March it advertised this intention and called for other societies to join. The meetings were scheduled for 31 July, with Norwich planning to participate, and although the society's meeting in St. Pancras was interrupted by magistrates, Nottingham's Corresponding Society met unmolested by the town's sympathetic corporation.Footnote 76 Meanwhile the strategy of radicalizing the Foxites evident during the general election continued, with the society remaining cooperative but refusing to accept anything less than a commitment to universal suffrage and annual elections. The Foxite secession from Parliament later in the year, followed by Fox's gesture in a speech in October that he supported “discussion” of universal suffrage, was viewed by the society as a partial victory.Footnote 77 This galvanization should not be overstated, however. While Place's depiction of the 1796–97 period as disastrous is wrong, the society's membership did stagnate in 1798, and the organization was encumbered by financial burdens. In response, some reformers turned to insurrectionism, with links evident between them, the United Irishmen, and even perhaps some Foxites.Footnote 78 Alongside its sibling societies outside London, the society was banned by the government in 1799 in a raft of legislation that also led to mass arrests.
Appreciation of the Jacobin role in the 1796 general election significantly alters our understanding of the supposedly Jacobin 1802 general election, a description widely promulgated by anti-Jacobins at the time before being adopted by historians.Footnote 79 The election, held after the Treaty of Amiens secured a brief peace with Napoleon's France, was notable for victories by three reformers over incumbent MPs who had been supporters of the government. In Norwich, Windham was replaced with William Smith, a unitarian Foxite sympathetic to the Revolution, while in Nottingham, Coke was replaced with Joseph Birch, a Preston merchant. The most prominent victory was Sir Francis Burdett's contest in Middlesex, the county constituency within which the boroughs of Westminster and the City of London were located, where his success built upon several years’ agitation against the “Bastille,” Colbath Fields prison, its governor, and the constituency's Pittite MP, the banker William Mainwaring.Footnote 80 According to J. Ann Hone's argument in particular, the 1802 Middlesex election was a crucial precursor for the breakthrough of the 1807 Westminster election and an important moment in the shift from the insurrectionism evident in the London Corresponding Society's final years to constitutionalism.Footnote 81 In no account has the 1802 general election been integrally associated with the significant and coordinated interventions in the 1796 general election, despite the clear links between the two. As this section outlines, the 1802 general election was an opportunity for many of the same men and women active in 1796 to continue to attack the government for its corruption, abuses of liberty, and economic record, now in a much firmer electoral alliance with the Whigs. Despite this organizational and political continuity, there was a notable shift in the relative dominance of these Jacobins and their Whig and patricianly partners, with the popular reformers playing a considerably more subservient role that required the abandonment of much of the political culture evident in 1796.
As the 1802 elections indicate, the outlawing of the Jacobin societies in 1799 had not killed off their members’ agitation. Veterans of the London Corresponding Society remained central to various campaigns across London and politicized the 1800–01 food crisis caused by bad harvests and the collapse of international trade, while there is evidence of the posthumous existence of local chapters of the society. In Nottingham, where there were also food riots in September 1800, spy reports and confiscated correspondence indicated widespread discontent and attempts to buy guns and subvert local troops before an anticipated rising. The Nottingham Corresponding Society's inaugural address and rules were also distributed during the food protests.Footnote 82 It is therefore unsurprising that many of the participants in the 1796 contests directly participated in those in 1802. In Middlesex, John Frost, John Gale Jones, and Paul LaMaitre were among the former members of the London Corresponding Society who supported Burdett, along with barrister Robert Fergusson and attorney and former member of the Society of Constitutional Information John Augustus Bonney, who had been acquitted in the 1794 trials and was also involved in Tooke's contest in 1796. Frost himself stood in the tiny and usually uncontested borough of East Grinstead in Essex.Footnote 83 Henry Addington, the prime minister since 1801, considered these “exertions for Burdett” as evidence of “the revival of corresponding societies,”Footnote 84 an opinion shared by the Times, which, along with William Cobbett, also perceived a national Jacobin revival during the election, with Cobbett particularly singling out Middlesex, Norwich, and Nottingham.Footnote 85 In Nottingham, Birch's supporters were identified as the same “set of Tom Paine's men” who had asked Peter Crompton to stand in 1796.Footnote 86Another account described Birch's supporters as “the lower classes, together with the Democratic party and the Corporation.”Footnote 87 In Norwich, Smith was personally unknown but had been invited by the circle that had supported Gurney in 1796. This group included not just the Gurney family but also Opie and Alderson, who collaborated with Smith's wife in running a canvass in London.Footnote 88 After the election, Windham dismissed the campaign as the “triumph . . . of Jacobin politics.”Footnote 89
In each case, the contests possessed a similar tenor to their predecessors in 1796, with the campaigns focused on local distress caused by the corruption of the government. In Middlesex, Mainwaring's personal responsibility for the abuses in Coldbath Fields were the centerpiece of Burdett's campaign, which proceeded under the slogan of “No Bastille.”Footnote 90 At the hustings, Burdett's seconder, William Breton, who in 1792 was a committee member of the Society of the Friends of the People, used his speech to attack the plotting “against the liberties, and for the oppression of the subject” by the “wicked and accursed parliament” elected in 1796.Footnote 91 Burdett's speeches similarly utilized the Coldbath issue as the anchor point for a wider critique of the repression of the previous decade and the war's justification and economic legacy; the Annual Register for 1803 described his language as being “of the constitutional and corresponding associations, and of the Tookes, the Hardys, the Thelwalls.”Footnote 92 In Norwich, Smith's campaign attacked the war and heavy taxation as the cause of the “decay” of the city's “manufactures almost to annihilation,” to the point that the poor were near starvation.Footnote 93 Although Smith affirmed his attachment to “the Constitution of this Country,” like Breton and Burdett, he described himself “an enemy of those abuses and that corruption by which it has been deformed and endangered.”Footnote 94 In Nottingham, Birch's campaign also appealed to “the lower orders of the people, who had suffered very severely during the war” and so “were naturally led to attribute their privations to the measures of the late Parliament, and particularly to Mr. Coke.”Footnote 95 The rioting that occurred on the final day of polling, in which many of Birch's supporters intimidated Coke's voters and attacked his committee rooms, was seen as revenge for the anti-Jacobin violence of 1794.Footnote 96
In many respects, however, there were important divergences between the 1802 elections and those in 1796. The repression of 1799 had denied these reformers the ability to electioneer with the same level of ambition. Outside of Middlesex, Norwich, and Nottingham, the members of the defunct corresponding societies were unable to bring contests. After the revival in 1796, the Maidstone and Rochester corresponding societies had terminated by 1798, and made no showing in the 1802 elections. Southwark's reformers struggled to mount an opposition after George Tierney refused to secede with the Foxites and instead joined Addington. According to Lord Holland, Tierney consequently “lost the support of the violent party to whom he owed his seat.”Footnote 97 Those Tierney dubbed “the remnant of the Jacobin Party” turned to supporting a third candidate, who quickly withdrew.Footnote 98 In the City, the Foxite Combe was again returned but the candidates supported by the former members of the London Corresponding Society around Hardy fared poorly.Footnote 99 There was clear potential for a challenge in Westminster, where an auctioneer, John Graham, stood as an independent and explicitly appealed to “the middle rank of society.”Footnote 100 However, he received no support, and no other prospective candidate was discussed, likely because Tooke now thought highly of Fox, who was supporting Burdett.Footnote 101 As this rapprochement indicates, the coalescing of the Jacobin or “Democratical” parties and the Foxites was now much firmer and more formal than in 1796. While Smith was an acknowledged Foxite, and Birch was the candidate of the Whig Corporation, Burdett was nominated by H. C. Combe and openly supported by the Duchess of Devonshire, Fox, and Lord Holland, who canvassed in the colors of both Burdett and George Byng, the Whig MP for Middlesex's other seat.Footnote 102
As part of this convergence, Jacobin politics and organization was subsumed into Whiggism. Distancing from Jacobism by candidates became especially visible in the by-elections in Nottingham in 1803, called because in 1802 the Whig sheriffs had illegally reopened the poll to allow Birch to stand, and in Middlesex in 1804, because a select committee found that both Burdett and Mainwaring had committed illegal acts. Both men lost, although Burdett would successfully petition the result in 1805.Footnote 103 Birch's processions carried Crompton's flag from 1796 amid a sea of solid Whig-orange flags and banners that paid tribute to Birch and Fox, and to Byng, who had arrived in the town to support Birch. Birch may have still been supported by insurrectionaries and clandestine activists, with one spy report describing travels around London with a “very violent Jacobin” from Nottingham connected to secret societies in the metropolis who “lamented Birch's being thrown out,” and claiming that Birch's election headquarters were also the lodgings of a United Irishman.Footnote 104 Birch nevertheless expressed surprise in one of his speeches that “this jargon about Loyalty and Jacobinism should be still be kept up and attended to.”Footnote 105 He now reformulated his appeals to a broad lower-class constituency by describing the election as “nothing more than a contest between the rich and the poor” and by explicitly presenting himself as the candidate of the “working class.”Footnote 106 This attempt was likely intended to appeal to a new constituency that had formed in the town since the food riots of September 1800, when lower-class rioters were reportedly a “Union of parties their being no Scrats [loyalists] nor painites nor Such Song as God save the King to be heard.”Footnote 107 Similarly, in the 1802 election, many of Coke's “former supporters were now highly exasperated against him, and throughout his canvass, on his way to and from the polling-booth, he was several times unjustly and grossly insulted.”Footnote 108 Birch did achieve a strong majority among lower-class voters, securing 615 votes from the framework knitters, compared to 454 for Coke.Footnote 109
In his first speech at the 1804 by-election, Burdett refused to “disclaim the friends who upon the last election honoured me with their support”—most likely a reference to his formal agents Bonney and Frost.Footnote 110 Like Birch, he was careful to allude to support for reform, arguing that his mission was “vindicating the oppressed” by “using every endeavour in my power to restore the rights and liberties of my country.”Footnote 111 His campaign, now against Mainwaring's son, opposed the family's corruption of the constituency, which was considered part of the broader corruption of the constitution by a clique of financiers and politicians who supported Pitt, whose second administration had been formed in May. Nevertheless, and again like Birch, he was keen to distinguish himself from the charge that he or his supporters were Jacobins. At the hustings he avowed “Whig principles” and his long-term support for the “Whig Interest,” which caused Windham to incorrectly suppose a break between Burdett and the former members of the London Corresponding Society.Footnote 112 The Whigs cultivated this notion: Burdett was nominated by Peter Moore, the Whig MP for Coventry, while prominent Whigs again openly canvassed for him. In his speeches, Burdett explicitly rejected the charge of Jacobinism.Footnote 113 The previously anti-Jacobin William Cobbett now supported Burdett, having come to view the Pittite clique of financiers such as the Mainwarings as grave a threat to the constitution as Bonaparte, and the former Jacobin “Burdettites” as newfound moderates—the evidence their flags, “on which ‘No Bastille’ was exchanged for ‘Burdett and Independence.’”Footnote 114 Burdett was keen to obscure the participation of many more former members of the Society of Constitutional Information and the London Corresponding Society than Bonney and Frost alone: according to the spy John Moody, a former member of the London Corresponding Society who was the secretary of Tooke's 1796 election committee and worked for Burdett in 1802 and 1804, these “Correspondists” were kept “in the background” when the Whigs visited Burdett's home in 1804.Footnote 115 This circumspection was far removed from the period when these same “Correspondists” had pursued an independent program and confidently held to a policy of only cooperating with the Foxites in order to draw them closer to this program.
Unlike in 1796, former members of the London Corresponding Society during and after 1802 were largely instrumentalized as a means of appealing to lower-class electors, often in illegal and expensive means funded by Burdett's immense wealth. It appears that a feeling of defeat drove these veterans to this course, as Moody claimed that the rise of Napoleon had disillusioned them and made their politics more pragmatic. As Cobbett's case suggests, the replacement of anti-Jacobinism with opposition to Napoleon's tyranny allowed them to reengage with politics, albeit on clearly delineated terms.Footnote 116 The shift in their status from independent activists in 1796 to employees within a professionalized electoral machinery funded by Burdett is illustrated by John Frost's itemized claim for £2,958 of wages and expenses for his election work, most of which Burdett refused to pay.Footnote 117 While Frost gave speeches alongside legal work, Moody was tasked with distributing tracts, many of them inflammatory, attacking the Mainwaring family, while in 1802 Thomas Evans, the insurrectionary former member of the London Corresponding Society, was paid to draw information from the prisoners in Coldbath and probably also to heckle Mainwaring.Footnote 118 These tactics evolved into performing explicitly illegal acts that needed to be distanced from Burdett. When a victory seemed possible late in the 1802 election, these men arranged the purchase and selling of shares in a mill in order to fabricate hundreds of voters alongside the direct payment of several perjured voters, who lied about their identities or eligibility in order to vote for Burdett. One of the attempted perjuries was by Richard Tidd, who may have been radicalized by living in Nottingham in the 1790s; in 1820, he would be executed for his part in the Cato Street Conspiracy.Footnote 119 Burdett's electoral corruption was reprised on a substantially larger scale from the outset of the by-election in 1804, when Moody was tasked with running a network of former members of the London Corresponding Society, “some to Bribe & Treat,” while “our Hero & his avowed Agent are to be as pure and unspotted as Caesar's wife.”Footnote 120 Hundreds of perjured votes were manufactured in Burdett's committee rooms; it was estimated that Burdett had spent £94,000 “out of his own pocket” during the two elections.Footnote 121 This situation was not unique to Middlesex. Windham publicly complained of “those Arts” of bribery utilized by Smith.Footnote 122 He also told Granville the 1802 election was “a mixed triumph of Jacobinism & money, neither being sufficient alone, nor both together.”Footnote 123 Windham claimed that Smith's expenditure was so heavy he was forced to spend £8,000, “double or triple” his expectation from previous contests.Footnote 124 Smith himself spent illegally until 1826, when he publicly renounced corruption. By his own admission, in 1806 he struggled with electoral expenditure, since he “should not know where or how to stop.”Footnote 125
The use of patrician wealth for illegal acts was a distinction between the 1802 and 1796 general elections. Burdett was likely influenced by his mentor, Tooke. In 1790, Tooke stood in explicit opposition to Fox and Pitt's use of corruption, but despite this, he admitted many years later to spending “between three and four thousand pounds” after the election, personally rewarding those who voted for him.Footnote 126 This practice was considered by the courts as late as 1785 as essentially bribery and so was not publicized at the time.Footnote 127 Before this, Tooke had been an agent first for Fox and then the Pittite candidates in the excessively corrupt and violent Westminster elections of the 1780s.Footnote 128 In 1769, he was one of hundreds controversially made honorary freemen of Bedford by the Wilkeite Sir Robert Bernard (between 1770 and 1774 the MP for Westminster) so that he could control the constituency, and as Bernard's estate and election agent, he controlled these electors.Footnote 129 In 1776, his friend Thomas Brand Hollis, who later became a founding member of the Society of Constitutional Information, was convicted of bribery and imprisoned for attempting to spend £1,000 purchasing a rotten borough.Footnote 130 In Parliament, Sir William Wake, Bernard's MP for Bedford between 1774 and 1784, defended these measures by arguing that they were necessities required to combat the oligarchic and aristocratic usurpation of the constitution. The insight was a revealing one into how the emphasis in reformist and Whig constitutionalist thought on the necessity of the balancing of the constitution between commons, aristocracy, and the monarch justified illegal actions at elections for these reformers.Footnote 131 Burdett was similarly pragmatic, first entering Parliament by buying a rotten borough in 1796, and Tooke himself later accepted a rotten borough in 1802.Footnote 132
This pragmatic attitude illustrates how matters of political organization can have intellectual implications. It also disrupts too neat a categorization of radical continuity during this period. The London Corresponding Society did not share this tolerance of the use of corruption at elections as a means of balancing the constitution but openly rejected it.Footnote 133 Tooke's attack on electoral corruption at the 1790 election had a formative influence on many, with Thelwall spontaneously deciding to canvass for him without any compensation.Footnote 134 In 1796, Tooke's committee of mainly London Corresponding Society members spent £660 on purely legal costs while emphasizing his opposition to illegal acts.Footnote 135 The Jacobins of 1796 resolved only to support candidates unwilling to spend illegally, and the contests in the City, Derby, Nottingham, Kent, and Norwich were all singled out in the Monthly Magazine as being “without the usual and sordid accompaniment of bribes, treats, or promises.”Footnote 136 Crompton stood under a purple flag with the mottos “Honest and unbought votes” and “The Freeman's Standard.”Footnote 137 In Norwich, Gurney was pledged as a candidate free of “dishonourable expence,” whose votes would be “unbought and unsolicited.”Footnote 138 In Southwark, Tierney “and the Friends of Freedom [stood] without a shilling of expence, without shew, without cockades, flages, or open houses, without spreading the disorders of drunkeness, or bribing the Electors.”Footnote 139 A decade later, this contest was still remembered, as Tierney predicted it would be, as an inspiration.Footnote 140 The lack of expense was not out of parsimony. For Paine, the unencumbered use of reason at elections guaranteed virtuous government and was therefore so damaging to the interests of the aristocracy that it was “necessary to buy the reason up,” unlike the exemplary free and fair French elections of 1789.Footnote 141 In a pamphlet written just before the general election, Thelwall described how questions of government must be decided by “Sovereign Reason, the collective reason of the SOVEREIGN PEOPLE . . . the concentrated opinion of mankind.”Footnote 142 Since the “multitude have no interest in reasoning wrong,” only external inducement and restraint could undermine such universal will.Footnote 143 Similarly, in August 1797 the Norwich Patriotic Society published a Painite pamphlet arguing that for Parliament to be “the expression of the general will,” the franchise “ought to reside in the public at large” without any hindrance whatsoever.Footnote 144 Along these lines, the London Corresponding Society called for “unbiased and unbought elections” as one of its core demands from its earliest days; the resulting “Honest Parliament” would serve the public good by being indivisible from this collective and unencumbered use of reason.Footnote 145
The 1796 general election therefore provided proof that such conduct could be expected of electors, including the poor. Afterward, Thelwall described a manufacturer in Nottingham who, despite opposing the war and the government, voted against Crompton to appease his creditors. He compared this with the “sans-cullotism” of a poor man who voted “from [his] heart” for Crompton against his employer's wishes.Footnote 146 Thelwall argued that the action proved that virtuous conduct was not dependent upon wealth, and that it would be commonplace if Britons were able to exercise agency at elections. For Dinmore, the poor Norwich electors sought such agency, as even “the men who were forced, BY OPPRESSIVE MASTERS, to vote for Windham, with tears wished us success.”Footnote 147 The 1796 contests were therefore significant because the oppositions at these elections demonstrated genuine popular sentiment in the face of inducement and coercion.Footnote 148 By resisting these measures, these contests combatted one of the most lasting effects of corruption, a demoralization that undermined the use of reason and with it public virtue. As Thelwall argued in the Tribune, “the system of open prostitution and corruption” at elections “produces in the hearts and characters of the people . . . the degeneracy of morals and manners.”Footnote 149 It was no coincidence that the vice and misfortune in his mentor William Godwin's novel Caleb Williams was ultimately derived from a corrupt and coercive election, and this formed part of a broader belief of Jacobin reformers that the prerequisite of a stable constitution was a morally and politically improved people, a legacy of which was Place's lifelong contempt for electoral corruption and his intense dislike of Tooke.Footnote 150
III
The coalitions between radical reformers and Whigs in the elections between 1802 and 1804 therefore illustrate a commitment to the electioneering begun in 1796 and the development of a constitutionalist language linking economic distress to political corruption that left open the possibility of reform. There are also clear and important discontinuities within this electoral culture. This final section outlines how the period of the 1806 and 1807 general elections saw a break between the Whigs and the veterans of the London Corresponding Society, who now reverted to the Jacobin culture and methods of 1796 to return an independent reforming candidate in the breakthrough 1807 election.
In Nottingham in 1806, Birch returned as a candidate and extolled the “spirit of enlightened and pure Whiggism” while presenting himself as protecting the independence of the freemen against the grasping local oligarchs.Footnote 151 He once again sought reformist and working-class voters by attacking the morality of the war against the French Republic and criticizing the national debt and high taxation as ruinous to the “industrious poor.”Footnote 152 Although he lost, he received 1,190 plumpers. He also vocally committed himself to electoral purity, which convinced Crompton to stand down as a prospective candidate, although it was claimed he spent heavily regardless.Footnote 153 Birch remained the candidate of the Whig Corporation, which was improperly asserting itself over Parliamentary elections.Footnote 154 In contrast, Crompton stood in the town in the 1807 general election as an independent reformer, complaining in his opening address about the corruption utilized by the Tories in 1806 and proposing annual elections as the solution. In the event, the hostile Nottingham Review described his contest as “feeble and pitiful,” and he apparently struggled to find electors, which was later attributed to his refusal to bribe or treat voters.Footnote 155 His polling of 635 votes, 302 behind the winner of the second seat, is nevertheless indicative of a cohesive reforming body separate from the Whigs, albeit not strong enough to win without them. These reformers celebrated the news of Burdett's victory in Westminster a month later with public dinners, processions, music, and fireworks.Footnote 156 Meanwhile in Norwich, prior to the 1806 general election, Smith noted that “the vindication of our principles” and “temper of the times” that had animated the 1802 contest had dissipated, and he ultimately lost his seat due to an unexpected contest over the Norwich Paving Bill.Footnote 157 He remained a reformer on the radical wing of the Whig party, and after his return for Norwich in 1807 cooperated with Burdett and the Westminster radicals, although he came under vocal criticism in the city for his support of the war in Spain and the attack on Copenhagen.Footnote 158
The legacies of the 1796 general election in Norwich and Nottingham were effective coalitions of reformers and Whigs. In London, the inverse occurred. By March 1804, Burdett had run out of funds and refused to consider selling any more land, as he knew he would spend all his ready money.Footnote 159 When his victory in the 1804 by-election was overturned for its corruption, a subscription was organized to pay for a petition to Parliament, which led to the creation of the Middlesex Freeholders’ Club.Footnote 160 As the club's stated aims were to coordinate the fighting of Burdett's elections through subscriptions and without illegal acts, it represented the first effort to return to the methods of 1796, and it included a number of former members of the London Corresponding Society and Society of Constitutional Information who had been active in that general election.Footnote 161 After Burdett was reinstated in 1805, Mainwaring's supporters again petitioned Parliament detailing his corruption, which the Burdettites decided they could not afford to contest.Footnote 162 All of this activity was compounded by Burdett's break with the Whigs after Fox's entry into coalition with Grenville in 1805, and this reneging of the electoral coalitions active since 1796 disgusted not just reformers but also some Whig electors.Footnote 163 By the time of the general election in October 1806, Burdett decided to contest Middlesex and denounced the Grenville coalition, but coming so soon after Fox's death in September, his attack on Grenville offended many Whig leaders, leading to Byng opposing Burdett rather than staying neutral.Footnote 164 Opposed by two candidates and restricted by his lack of money and the commitment of the Middlesex Freeholders’ Club to electoral purity, Burdett decided to publicly oppose the use of corruption, to the amusement of the Morning Chronicle.Footnote 165 He came last in the poll with a vote substantially lower than in the previous elections.
This defeat and the collapse of Burdett's finances opened the door for his supporters to revert to methods more similar to the 1796 contest. The origins of the 1807 Westminster contest are well known, but neglect of the 1796 general election has led to its novelty being seriously overstated.Footnote 166 During the 1806 general election, several former members of the London Corresponding Society began organizing a committee to support the nabob and moderate radical James Paull's candidacy in Westminster. This group included William Adams, a figure in the Middlesex Freeholders’ Club, and two veterans of Tooke's 1796 contest, Paul LeMaitre and George Puller. The Whig candidate, Richard Sheridan, ultimately won, but his conduct alienated lower-class electors already angry about the coalition, including his own supporters.Footnote 167 In the aftermath, and after an acrimonious dispute and duel with Burdett, Paull was abandoned by the committee. Place and Adams then visited Burdett at Tooke's home to discuss his standing for Westminster, with Burdett, injured in the duel and still struggling financially, refusing unless he spent no money and performed no electioneering.Footnote 168 His terms were accepted, and Paull's “Westminster Committee” was reassembled behind Burdett for the 1807 general election, with the addition of two more veterans of Tooke's 1796 committee, Samuel Brooks and William Frend, and two more former members of the London Corresponding Society, James Powell and John Ridley.Footnote 169 For the committee, Burdett's refusal to actively participate was fortuitous, as it facilitated the desire first evident in the Middlesex Freeholders’ Club to break with the compromise of 1802 and Burdett's expensive electioneering. The return to the language and principles of virtue, reason, and electoral purity was given further momentum by the 1806 by-election, when Place reported that along with his friends he felt “indignation” at the “disgraceful scene” of food being thrown to the crowd and beer flowing into the gutter after the Whig Lord Percy's victory.Footnote 170 In the 1806 general election a month later, these men found Paull distasteful, not only because he was controlling and erratic but also because he insisted on utilizing corrupt practices and spent £6,000, an assessment his own brother agreed with.Footnote 171 With Burdett's non-interference in 1807, they could now operate independently and with initiative, taking no instruction or money from their candidate and organizing along the principles and political culture of 1796: cheap and legal electioneering, secured by popular participation.Footnote 172
Unlike in Middlesex, this committee started the election by pooling £50 of their money.Footnote 173 In the following days, a canvass put together by volunteers attracted subscriptions and pledges by electors. Place claimed this as his idea and even went so far as suggest that Paull's committee was defeated because it possessed no men “experienced in Westminster elections.”Footnote 174 In fact, Place knew that Puller and LeMaitre were veterans of 1796, experienced in precisely such a system.Footnote 175 Similarly, in 1807 two of the four men who organized the subscription, Puller and Brooks, had been involved in the 1796 contest, while another, Adams, did the same for the Middlesex Freeholders’ Club.Footnote 176 In a letter to William Cobbett in the election's opening stages, LeMaitre outlined how his experience of 1796 fed into the contest, and a year later, John Bone, a former member of the London Corresponding Society, described how the 1796 Southwark election “laid the basis” for Burdett's victory.Footnote 177 The complete abandonment of the methods of 1802–1804 is strikingly illustrated by the fact that the 1796 Westminster election cost £660, a similar amount to the £780 spent in 1807, whereas in the profligate 1804 Middlesex by-election, Burdett spent £630 on furniture for Frost's office alone.Footnote 178 The election of 1807 owed to 1796 not only the initial creation of the core constituency of “Radical Westminster” by the splitting of Fox's electoral base but also the blueprint of how to organize and conduct the contest. This direction was not just a rejection of aristocratic influence but also an assertion of the ideal of elections as the public and collective use of reason that had animated these reformers in 1796, and remained with the Godwinite Place for the rest of his life.Footnote 179 It did not, however, signal the defeat of the style of patricianly radicalism that Burdett utilized between 1802 and 1804 but instead inaugurated a period of conflict between what was developing as two distinct political traditions within nineteenth-century radicalism. After encouragement from Tooke, Burdett immediately sought to establish independence from his committee, many of whom expected control over their MP.Footnote 180 In the following years, conflicts grew, and by 1810, during a particularly acrimonious dispute, Burdett told William Smith, “I have no Committee,” before replacing them altogether in 1812 with what became known among critics as a “cabal” of middle-class Whigs.Footnote 181
IV
As the first general election in which plebeian reformers intervened as part of a well-defined national political network that sought to link local grievances to a coherent political program and strategy, 1796 was a major departure from older and more parochial forms of popular engagement that have been emphasized as the primary characteristic of elections in the unreformed Parliament.Footnote 182 This argument supports accounts that see this Jacobin reform movement as a significant, and novel, political moment: as Mark Philp has argued, the dissemination of Painite and democratic literature convinced some of the class of what Hardy called “tradesmen, shopkeepers and mechanics”Footnote 183 that they possessed the right to engage in politics, and as I have demonstrated, this conviction was extended, with lasting significance, to electoral politics as well.Footnote 184 This view underlines the extent of the ambition of many of the reforming groups affiliated with the London Corresponding Society even in the difficult political atmosphere of 1796, when there were challenges by reformers in far more constituencies than in the 1802, 1806, or 1807 general elections. The Jacobin organizations had clearly not begun their decline by this point and were still capable of a major agitation that in many locations revived their fortunes. Because of these contests, the decline, when it did come between 1797 and 1799, was not totally destructive, since these reformers were now well versed in a legal form of political agitation that facilitated continued political action and in many locations had created distinct constituencies of popular reformers. The 1796 general election thereby provided a reservoir of experience that cushioned the damage caused by the dissolution of the Jacobin societies. The birth of the national popular radical movement in the decade after 1807 was only possible because of 1796.
These interventions also contributed lasting innovations to the electoral culture of this coalescing movement, with the rejection of high expenditure and the formation of popular election committees funded by subscription and supported by voluntary canvassers and agitators. This was an important break within the tradition of popular constitutionalism, and with that a challenge to electoral histories that downplay the critique of corruption in the unreformed Parliament as an exaggeration by radicals in the nineteenth century.Footnote 185 The critique advanced in the 1790s was not merely of direct bribery but also all forms of influence and coercion, legal or not, that prevented elections from returning a Parliament genuinely representative of popular will as discerned through the free use of reason. This critique is therefore of major significance to our understanding of popular political thought and illustrates a direct application of the broader social and moral concerns of Jacobinism during this period to agitation more broadly.Footnote 186 After the revival of this style of electioneering in 1807, it became an integral but overlooked aspect of the popular radicalism that developed nationwide thereafter. Immediately after the Westminster victory, a group of Bristol reformers, among them Henry Hunt, adopted “purity of election,” with Hunt standing for the city on these principles in 1812. Electoral purity and the London Corresponding Society's program of universal suffrage and annual elections became a core part of Hunt's contest against Burdett in the Westminster election in 1818, following the final schism between Burdett and his most radical supporters. In this, Hunt was backed not only by a new generation of Painites and Spencian Jacobins but also prominently by Gale Jones and Lemaitre.Footnote 187 In the same year, Peter Crompton stood for election in Preston, a borough with a franchise close to universal male suffrage, resolving to “render the town of Preston as remarkable in the annals of Electioneering Independence, as the city of Westminster.’”Footnote 188 Hunt first stood in Preston in 1820 on these same principles and would be returned in 1831, and it was through him and William Cobbett's victory in Oldham that “purity of election” was bequeathed to the Chartist era.Footnote 189 There is therefore a major strand of continuity leading from the corresponding societies of the 1790s to the radicals of later generations that complicates the notion of discontinuity between these two periods of reform agitation.Footnote 190 The 1802 general election was therefore not a uniquely Jacobin one, and neither were the contests in Middlesex or the 1807 victory in Westminster significant in isolation. They were instead part of a broader, longer, and evidently complex engagement by plebeian reformers in electioneering that began in 1796 and took a significantly different and more established form between 1802 and 1804, before being reasserted in 1807 as one of the lasting and most important legacies of Jacobinism.