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The Social Composition of the County Magistracy in England and Wales, 1831–1887

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2014

Extract

“The revolution is made,” the Duke of Wellington declared in 1833, “that is to say power is transferred from one class in society, the gentlemen of England professing the faith of the Church of England, to another class of society, the shopkeepers being dissenters from the Church, many of them being Socinians, others atheists.” Wellington's political postmortem was, to say the least, premature. The gentlemen of England and Wales continued to prosper, especially in the counties. In fact, most local government historians have argued that the landed classes virtually monopolized the administration of county affairs before 1888 when county government was institutionally restructured by the County Councils Act. The instrument of their control was the county magistracy acting in Quarter and Petty Sessions. K. B. Smellie, expressing a widely-held viewpoint, describes the county magistracy in the nineteenth century as the “rear guard of an agrarian oligarchy,” the “most aristocratic feature of English government.” Yet no one has furnished statistical evidence for this contention on a countrywide basis or for an extended time span. Is the notion of an aristocratic stranglehold over the counties really more impressionistic than substantive? By examining the “Returns of Justices of the Peace” between 1831 and 1887 in the British Parliamentary Papers, a nearly untapped statistical storehouse, it is possible to determine the degree of continuity in the social composition of the county magistracy.

Before doing so, it might be helpful to sketch the changing character of the Quarter Sessions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1971

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References

1. Quoted in McDowell, R. B., British Conservatism, 1832–1914 (London, 1959), p. 18Google Scholar. Professor Walter Arnstein read the manuscript and made many valuable suggestions for its improvement.

2. Smellie, K. B., A History of Local Government (London, 1968), p. 36Google Scholar. The term “landed classes” encompasses the aristocracy, the gentry, and allied groups. F. M. L. Thompson sets the yearly landed income of the aristocracy at over £10,000, and the income of the gentry at £1,000 to £10,000. See Thompson, F. M. L., English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century (London and Toronto, 1963), pp. 25-27, 109111Google Scholar.

In this article, the terms “magistrate” and “Justice of the Peace” are used interchangeably, as are the phrases “county magistracy,” “Commission of the Peace,” “county bench,” and “Quarter Sessions.”

3. Since the Clerks of the Peace did not always follow uniform guidelines in drawing up lists of magistrates, the Returns must be used with care. It should also be pointed out that only those appointees who took the oath of qualification could act in a magisterial capacity. In 1853, only 7,694 of 17,014 J.P.s were qualified to act. See Return of the Number of Justices in the Commission of the Peace for each County in England and Wales, in Parliamentary Papers, 1852-53 (Cmd. 558), LXXVIII, 329Google Scholar. Except where noted, the tabulations used in this paper are based on appointees regardless of whether they had taken the oath of qualification.

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14. Ibid., p. 288.

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19. Quoted in Webb, , English Local Government, I, Book 2, 385Google Scholar. See observations of Lord Cottenham, 3 Hansard, 31: 181 (9 February 1836).

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27. Times, February 9, 1878. For other reports of Chamber of Agriculture sentiment in the Times, see February 27, 1878; March 5, 1878; March 8, 1878; March 25, 1878; May 6, 1878. Magisterial opinion seemed to be divided. See Times, March 25, 1878; April 11, 1878; April 15, 1878. The texts of the 1878 and 1879 bills may be found in County Government Bill, in Parliamentary Papers, 1878 (Cmd. 93), I, 543Google Scholar and County Boards Bill, in Parliamentary Papers, 18781879 (Cmd. 105), II, 129Google Scholar.

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29. 3 Hansard 237: 601-02 (28 January 1878).

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