Liskeard (UK Parliament constituency)
Liskeard was a parliamentary borough in Cornwall, which elected two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons from 1295 until 1832, and then one member from 1832 until 1885. The constituency was abolished by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885.
History
The parliamentary borough was based upon the community of Liskeard in the south-eastern part of Cornwall.Sedgwick estimated the electorate at 30 in 1740. Namier and Brooke considered it was about 50 in the 1754–1790 period. The right of election before 1832 was in the freemen of the borough. This constituency was under the patronage of the Eliot family, which acquired the predominant interest by 1722.
There were no contested elections between at least 1715 and 1802. In the early 19th century the Whigs attempted to expand the electorate to include householders. During the 1802 general election, 48 householders claimed the right to vote but their ballots were rejected by the Mayor. The Eliot family continued to control the borough in the Tory interest, for another thirty years.
The Reform Act 1832 augmented the freemen voters, with the beneficiaries of a new householder franchise. The number of voters registered in 1832 was 218. The political effect of the change was that a Whig was elected unopposed to the one remaining seat in 1832, whereas the two Tory candidates had been elected unopposed at the previous seven general elections. Only Whig or Liberal candidates were returned from 1832 until the constituency was abolished.
The Reform Act 1867 preserved the borough constituency but slightly expanded the electorate. Liskeard was one of the smallest boroughs to retain individual representation in the 1868–1885 period. However the constituency was finally abolished by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, when the borough became part of the Bodmin or South East division of Cornwall.
Members of Parliament
1295–1629
- Constituency created
1640–1832
1832–1885
Election results
Note on sources: The information for the election results given below is taken from Sedgwick 1715–1754, Namier and Brooke 1754–1790 and Stooks Smith 1790–1832. From 1832 the principal source was Craig, with additional or different information from Stooks Smith included. Candidates classified by Craig as Liberal before 1859, are labeled as Whig or Radical or Liberal if their exact allegiance is uncertain. Similarly candidates classified by Craig as Conservative but by Stooks Smith as Tory are listed below as Tory.Note on percentage change calculations: Where there was only one candidate of a party in successive elections, for the same number of seats, change is calculated on the party percentage vote. Where there was more than one candidate for a party, in one or both successive contested elections for the same number of seats, then change is calculated on the individual candidates percentage vote.
Note on party allegiance of candidates: A party label is only used when the source used quotes one. Other candidates are labelled Non Partisan, but may have associated themselves with a tendency or faction in Parliament.
Elections before 1715
Dates of Parliaments 1660–1715Summoned | Elected | Opened | Dismissed |
16 March 1660 | 1660 | 25 April 1660 | 29 December 1660 |
18 February 1661 | 1661 | 8 May 1661 | 24 January 1679 |
25 January 1679 | 1679 | 6 March 1679 | 12 July 1679 |
24 July 1679 | 1679–1680 | 21 October 1680 | 18 January 1681 |
20 January 1681 | 1681 | 21 March 1681 | 28 March 1681 |
14 February 1685 | 1685 | 19 May 1685 | 2 July 1687 |
29 December 1688 | 1688–1689 | 22 January 1689 | 6 February 1690 |
6 February 1690 | 1690 | 20 March 1690 | 11 October 1695 |
12 October 1695 | 1695 | 22 November 1695 | 6 July 1698 |
13 July 1698 | 1698 | 24 August 1698 | 19 December 1700 |
26 December 1700 | 1700–1701 | 6 February 1701 | 11 November 1701 |
3 November 1701 | 1701 | 30 December 1701 | 2 July 1702 |
2 July 1702 | 1702 | 20 August 1702 | 5 April 1705 |
1705 | 7 May – 6 June 1705 | 14 June 1705 | see Note |
1707 | see Note | 23 October 1707 | 3 April 1708 |
1708 | 30 April – 7 July 1708 | 8 July 1708 | 21 September 1710 |
1710 | 2 October – 16 November 1710 | 25 November 1710 | 8 August 1713 |
1713 | 22 August – 12 November 1713 | 12 November 1713 | 15 January 1715 |
Note:-
- The MPs of the Parliament of England and 45 members co-opted from the former Parliament of Scotland, became the House of Commons of the 1st Parliament of Great Britain in 1707.
Index to Election results 1715–1799
[|1710s] – [|1720s] – [|1730s] – [|1740s] – [|1750s] – [|1760s] – [|1770s] – [|1780s] – [|1790s] |
Index to Election results 1800–1885
[|1800s] – [|1810s] – [|1820s] – [|1830s] – [|1840s] – [|1850s] – [|1860s] – [|1870s] – [|1880s] |
Elections in the 1710s
Elections in the 1720s
- Trelawny became a Baronet in 1721
- Death of Eliot
Elections in the 1730s
- Seat vacated on Clutterbuck being appointed a Lord of the Admiralty
- Death of Dennis
Elections in the 1740s
Elections in the 1750s
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Trelawny as Assay-Master of Tin for the Duchy of Cornwall
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Nugent to an office
Elections in the 1760s
Elections in the 1770s
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Gibbon to an office
Elections in the 1780s
- Seat vacated on the appointment of E.J. Eliot as Remembrancer of the Court of Exchequer
Elections in the 1790s
- Seat vacated on the appointment of E.J. Eliot as a Commissioner for India
- Death of E.J. Eliot
- Inchiquin was a peer of Ireland
Elections in the 1800s
- Resignation of Inchiquin
- Note : Stooks Smith recorded that William Huskisson was returned unopposed at this by-election, but this appears to be an error.
- Note : 48 householders claimed the right to vote. The ballots they tendered were rejected by the Mayor. 44 wanted to vote for Sheridan and Ogilvie, 3 for the Eliots and 1 for John Eliot and Sheridan.
- Succession of John Eliot as the 2nd Lord Eliot
- Note : Stooks Smith does not give the votes for the elected candidates.
Elections in the 1810s
Elections in the 1820s
Elections in the 1830s
- Electorate expanded and constituency reduced to one seat, by the Reform Act 1832
- Note : Stooks Smith recorded 211 registered electors, but the turnout is calculated on Craig's figure above
- Note : Stooks Smith recorded 250 registered electors, but the turnout is calculated on Craig's figure above
Elections in the 1840s
- Note : Stooks Smith recorded 285 registered electors, but the turnout is calculated on Craig's figure above
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Buller as Judge-Advocate General
- Note : Stooks Smith recorded 333 registered electors, but the turnout is calculated on Craig's figure above
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Buller as President of the Poor Law Board
- Death of Buller
Elections in the 1850s
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Crowder as a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas
- The Whig Party is regarded as having merged into a new Liberal Party, which was formed at a meeting of the supporters of Lord Palmerston on 6 July 1859; although Whigs and Radicals had been informally referred to collectively as Liberals for decades.
- Seat vacated on the appointment of Grey as a Collector of Customs
Elections in the 1860s
- Resignation of Osborne
- Electorate expanded by the Reform Act 1867
- Death of Buller
Elections in the 1870s
- Death of Horsman
Elections in the 1880s
- Electorate expanded by the Representation of the People Act 1884, but the constituency was abolished by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 with effect from the 1885 United Kingdom general election.