Go To Section
Bletchingley
Borough
Available from Boydell and Brewer
Background Information
Right of Election:
in burgage holders
Number of voters:
about 60 in 1724
Elections
Date | Candidate | Votes |
---|---|---|
24 Jan. 1715 | THOMAS ONSLOW | |
GEORGE EVELYN | ||
7 Dec. 1715 | WILLIAM CLAYTON vice Onslow, appointed to office | |
26 Mar. 1722 | WILLIAM CLAYTON | |
GEORGE EVELYN | ||
19 Nov. 1724 | HENRY ARTHUR HERBERT vice Evelyn, deceased | 35 |
William Evelyn Glanville | 28 | |
17 Aug. 1727 | SIR ORLANDO BRIDGEMAN | |
WILLIAM CLAYTON | ||
26 Apr. 1734 | SIR WILLIAM CLAYTON | |
KENRICK CLAYTON | ||
5 May 1741 | SIR WILLIAM CLAYTON | |
KENRICK CLAYTON | ||
15 Jan. 1745 | WILLIAM CLAYTON vice Sir William Clayton, deceased | |
27 June 1747 | SIR KENRICK CLAYTON | |
WILLIAM CLAYTON |
Main Article
In 1715 the chief interests in Bletchingley were those of William Clayton, the lord of the manor, and George Evelyn, who owned the adjacent manor of Godstone. After Evelyn’s death, leaving no issue male, in 1724 his brother was defeated by a government candidate, H. A. Herbert, who was succeeded in 1727 by another, Sir Orlando Bridgeman, both presumably brought in on the Clayton interest. In 1734 Clayton’s son, Kenrick, hitherto under age, was returned with his father, on whose death in 1744 the vacancy was filled by Kenrick’s younger brother. In 1751 Kenrick consolidated his family’s hold on the borough by purchasing the Godstone estate.1 About this time the 2nd Lord Egmont in his electoral survey describes Bletchingley as ‘in the Claytons entirely’.
Author: Romney R. Sedgwick
Notes
- 1. Manning & Bray, Surr. ii. 328.