Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency)

Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1801–1885

Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency)

Summary

Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1801–1885

FieldValue
nameMiddlesex
typeCounty
parliamentuk
year1265
abolished1885
elects_howmanytwo
next5City of London (1298)
nextBrentford, Ealing, Enfield, Hampstead, Harrow, Hornsey, Tottenham and Uxbridge

Westminster (1545)

Finsbury, Marylebone and Tower Hamlets (1832)

Hackney (from the Tower Hamlets constituency) (1867) Chelsea (1867) (directly) |}}

Middlesex was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of England, then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800, then of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 until abolished in 1885. It returned two members per election by various voting systems including hustings.

Boundaries and boundary changes

''Soliciting Votes'' by [[William Hogarth]], of Chiswick, Middlesex, 1754.
Map of Middlesex, drawn by Thomas Kitchin, geographer 1769 (with some towns not in the county i.e. south of the river or outside of the dashed line). It has a heading of Remarks that mentions 2 seats of Westminster and 4 of the City of London
Map of the seven single-MP county constituencies created by subdivision of the final version of the seat which existed between 1867 and 1885 and returned two MPs. [[Brentford]] division is highlighted which was named after the town where the hustings took place after 1700.

This county constituency until 1832 covered all the historic county of Middlesex, in south-eastern England, comprising Spelthorne, Poyle, South Mimms and Potters Bar in other modern counties, together with the north, west, and north-west sectors of the present-day Greater London. Apart from the ability of some voters to participate in the borough franchises of the cities of London and Westminster (after dates of their inception, see top right or below), it gave rise to three more urban offshoot divisions in 1832, one of which was split in two at the next national review or reform, in 1868. Its southern boundary was the River Thames.

The county seat returned two Members of Parliament (sometimes referred to by the medieval term of knights of the shire). The place of election for the county was until 1700 at Hampstead Heath, thereafter at The Butts in the town centre of Brentford.

Until 1832 the county franchise was limited to forty shilling freeholders. The decrease in the value of money due to inflation and the expansion of the wealth and population as the urbanised area in the east around London and Westminster grew contributed to gradually expanding the electorate. The county was estimated by Henning to have about 1,660 voters in 1681. Sedgwick estimated about 3,000 in the 1715–54 period. Namier and Brook suggested there were about 3,500 in 1754–90. The number had reached about 6,000 by 1790–1820, according to Thorne. Close elections between popular candidates would therefore be expensive - the worth of being a local magistrate, major landowner or other dignitary carrying little weight among such a generally urban and numerous upper-middle class forming the bulk of the electorate.

For subsequent changes in the franchise see Reform Act 1832 and Reform Act 1867. From 1832 voters were registered; the size of the electorate is shown below.

The geographic county until 1885 also contained the borough constituencies of City of London (first recorded as having its extraordinary four members from 1298) and Westminster (enfranchised with two members from 1545). In 1832 three two-seat Boroughs were added (or enfranchised): Finsbury, Marylebone, and Tower Hamlets. In 1867 two new parliamentary boroughs each returning two MPs were constituted: 'Hackney' (St. Leonard's, Shoreditch, St Matthew's Bethnal Green and St John's Hackney) formerly represented in borough elections via Tower Hamlets and 'Chelsea' (parishes of Chelsea, Kensington, Hammersmith and Fulham). The single-member non-territorial University constituency of London University (1868–1950) was somewhat connected to the county by having most of its graduates eligible to vote.

Possession of a county electoral qualification, deriving from owning various types of property or having ecclesiastical 'offices' (controversially and sporadically defined) in an area not otherwise represented, conferred the right to vote in the county elections.

An 1885 redistribution of seats saw Middlesex and its early breakaway seats in and around the City reformed under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 reflecting the wider electorate of the Reform Act 1884 and need to 'liberate' boroughs, i.e. urban areas without properly apportioned representation:

  • Constituencies in the urban south-east part that returned 18 MPs were replaced by 38 single-member seats.
  • the City of London constituency (loosely considered with the county) was reduced from 4 to 2 members.
  • the Middlesex constituency latterly covering the north, west and south-west of the county returning 2 MPs was replaced by 7 single-member seats.

;Local government bodies In 1889 the 40 urban constituencies that comprised the south-eastern part fell into (for local government) a County of London save for the much smaller City of London which remained a separate quasi-county and legal jurisdiction. The seven county divisions (constituencies) in the north and west of the historic county came under a new local government body, the administrative county of Middlesex. Both counties were also known by their governing bodies' name, County Councils (abbreviated to LCC and MCC). The seven successor seats were Brentford, Ealing, Enfield, Harrow, Hornsey, Tottenham and Uxbridge. These (and numerous later successor seats) had MCC local governance until its abolition in 1965.

Members of Parliament

Preliminary note: The English civil year started on Lady Day, 25 March, until 1752 (Scotland having changed to 1 January in 1600). The year used in the lists of Parliaments in this article have been converted to the new style where necessary. Old style dates for days between 1 January and 24 March actually referred to days after 31 December. No attempt has been made to compensate for the eleven days which did not occur in September 1752 in both England and Scotland as well as other British controlled territories (when the day after 2 September was 14 September), so as to bring the British Empire fully in line with the Gregorian calendar.

Constituency created (1265): See Montfort's Parliament for further details. Knights of the shire are known to have been summoned to most Parliaments from 1290 (19th Parliament of King Edward I of England) and to every one from 1320 (19th Parliament of King Edward II of England).

Knights of the shire 1265–1660

Some of the members elected during this period have been identified, but this list does not include parliaments where no member has been identified before the reign of King Henry VIII. In the list (as opposed to the table below) the year given is for the first meeting of the parliament, with the month added where there was more than one parliament in the year. If a second year is given this is a date of dissolution. Early parliaments usually only existed for a few days or weeks, so dissolutions in the same year as the first meeting are not recorded in this list If a specific date of election is known this is recorded in italic brackets. The Roman numerals in brackets, following some names, are those used to distinguish different politicians of the same name in 'The House of Commons' 1509-1558 and 1558–1603.

In this period, Parliament was not an institution with a regular pattern of elections and sittings. Therefore, a separate entry is made for each parliament, even if the same Knight of the Shire served in successive parliaments.

List of known Knights of the Shire before 1509

ParliamentFirst memberSecond member
1295 (Nov)William de BrookStephen de Gravesend
1296Richard de WyndesorRichard le Rous
1297 (Oct)Richard le Rous?
1298 (Mar)Richard le Rous?
1298 (May)Richard le Rous?
1300Richard le Rous?
1301Richard le Rous?
1302 (Oct)Richard le Rous?
1305 (Feb)Richard le Rous?
1306Richard le Rous?
1386Sir Adam Francisurl = http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/constituencies/middlesextitle = History of Parliamentaccess-date= 2011-09-17}}
1388 (Feb)Sir Adam FrancisWilliam Swanland
1388 (Sep)William BarnvilleGodfrey Atte Perry
1390 (Jan)John Shorditch IThomas Coningsby
1390 (Nov)John Shorditch ISir Adam Francis
1391Thomas BrayWilliam Norton
1393William TamworthThomas Maidstone
1394John Shorditch IIJames Ormesby
1395John Shorditch IIThomas Coningsby
1397 (Jan)Thomas GoodlakeThomas Maidstone
1397 (Sep)Sir Adam FrancisSir John Wroth
1399John DurhamThomas Maidstone
1401William LoveneySir John Wroth
1402James NorthamptonThomas Coningsby
1404 (Jan)William WrothSir John Wroth
1404 (Oct)Sir Roger StrangeWilliam Powe
1406Henry SomerSir John Wroth
1407Henry SomerWilliam Loveney
1410
1411Sir Adam FrancisSir Roger Strange
1413 (Feb)
1413 (May)William LoveneyRichard Wyot
1414 (Apr)Simon CampWalter Green
1414 (Nov)Thomas CharltonJohn Walden
1415Simon CampThomas Coningsby
1416 (Mar)
1416 (Oct)Henry SomerWalter Gawtron
1419Thomas FrowykThomas Coningsby
1420Sir John BoysWalter Green
1421 (May)Henry SomerSir Thomas Charlton
1421 (Dec)Richard MaidstoneEdmund Bibbesworth
1429Henry Somer
1442Thomas CharltonJohn Somerset
1447Thomas Charlton
1449Thomas Charlton
1453Thomas Charlton
1459Sir Thomas Charlton
1460Sir Thomas Charlton
1491Sir Thomas Lovell

Table of Knights of the Shire 1509-1660

SummonedElectedAssembledDissolvedFirst MemberSecond Member
17 October 15091509–1021 January 151023 February 1510Sir Thomas Lovell (I)unknown
28 November 15111511–124 February 15124 March 1514unknownunknown
23 November 15141514–155 February 151522 December 1515unknownunknown
unknown152315 April 152313 August 1523Sir Thomas More (I) aunknown
9 August 152915293 November 152914 April 1536Robert Wroth bRichard Hawkes c
27 April 153615368 June 153618 July 1536unknownunknown
1 March 1539153928 April 153924 July 1540Sir Ralph SadlerRobert Cheeseman
23 November 15411541–4216 January 154228 March 1544Robert CheesemanJohn Hughes d
1 December 15441544–4523 November 154531 January 1547Sir William PagetThomas Wroth
2 August 154715474 November 154715 April 1552Sir Thomas WrothJohn Newdigate
5 January 155315531 March 155331 March 1553Sir Robert BowesSir Thomas Wroth
14 August 155315535 October 15535 December 1553Sir Edward HastingsJohn Newdigate
17 February 155415542 April 15543 May 1554Sir Edward HastingsJohn Newdigate
3 October 1554155412 November 155416 January 1555Sir Edward HastingsSir Roger Cholmley
3 September 1555155521 October 15559 December 1555Sir Edward HastingsSir Roger Cholmley
6 December 15571557–5820 January 155817 November 1558Sir Roger CholmleyJohn Newdigate
5 December 155829 December 155823 January 15598 May 1559Sir Roger CholmleySir Thomas Wroth
10 November 15621562–6311 January 15632 January 1567Sir William CordellSir Thomas Wroth
unknown15712 April 157129 May 1571Francis NewdigateJohn Newdigate
28 March 157215728 May 157219 April 1583Robert Wroth (I)Sir Owen Hopton
12 October 1584158423 November 158414 September 1585Robert Wroth (I)Sir Owen Hopton
15 September 1586158615 October 158623 March 1587Robert Wroth (I)William Fleetwood (III)
18 September 158819 December 15884 February 158929 March 1589Robert Wroth (I)William Fleetwood (III)
4 January 1593159318 February 159310 April 1593Robert Wroth (I)Francis Bacon
23 August 159715 September 159724 October 15979 February 1598Sir Robert Wroth (I)Sir John Peyton (I)
11 September 16018 October 160127 October 160119 December 1601Sir John Fortescue (I)Sir Robert Wroth (I)
31 January 1604160419 March 16049 February 1611Sir William FleetwoodSir Robert Wroth
unknown16145 April 16147 June 1614Sir Julius CaesarSir Thomas Lake
13 November 16201620–2116 January 16218 February 1622Sir Francis DarcySir Gilbert Gerard, Bt
20 December 16231623–2412 February 162427 March 1625Sir Gilbert Gerard, BtSir John Suckling
2 April 1625162517 May 162512 August 1625Sir John FrancklynSir Gilbert Gerard, Bt
20 December 162516266 February 162615 June 1626Sir Gilbert Gerard, BtSir Edward Spencer
31 January 1628162817 March 162810 March 1629Sir Francis DarcySir Henry Spiller
1629–1640No Parliaments summoned
20 February 1640164013 April 16405 May 1640Sir John FrancklynSir Gilbert Gerard, Bt
24 September 164016403 November 164016 March 1660 eSir John Francklyn fSir Gilbert Gerard, Bt g
18 May 1648Sir Edward Spencer h

Notes:-

  • a Speaker of the House of Commons.
  • b Wroth ceased to be an MP after 11 May 1535. It is unknown if there was a by-election.
  • c Hawkes ceased to be MP by May/June 1532. It is unknown if there was a by-election.
  • d Hughes ceased to be an MP after January/April 1543. It is unknown if there was a by-election.
  • e In theory the Long Parliament existed throughout the 1640–1660 term, as it could not be lawfully dissolved without its own consent which was not given until 1660. In practice all or part of the membership of the House of Commons were not permitted to sit for lengthy periods. Other bodies considered to be Parliaments existed within parts of the term of the Long Parliament.
  • f Francklyn died and a by-election was held.
  • g In December 1648, Gilbert was excluded from Parliament in Pride's Purge and the seat was left vacant.
  • h Spencer is not recorded as having sat after Pride's Purge in December 1648.

Table of Members of the Commonwealth Parliaments 1653-1659

The county had three nominated members in the Barebones Parliament, four representatives in the First and Second and the usual two in the Third of the Protectorate Parliaments

SummonedElectedAssembledDissolvedFirst memberSecond memberThird memberFourth member
4 July 165312 December 1653Sir William RobertsAugustine WingfieldArthur Squib
1 June 165416543 September 165422 January 1655Sir James Harrington, BtSir William RobertsJosiah BernersEdmund Harvey
10 July 1656165617 September 16564 February 1658Sir John BarksteadSir William RobertsChaloner ChuteWilliam Kiffen
9 December 16581658–5927 January 165922 April 1659Francis GerardChaloner Chute

Knights of the shire 1660–1885

Year1st Member1st Party2nd Member2nd Party
1660Independent (politician)}}"Sir Lancelot LakeNon PartisanIndependent (politician)}}"
1661Independent (politician)}}"Sir Thomas AllenNon Partisan
1679Independent (politician)}}"Sir Robert PeytonNon PartisanIndependent (politician)}}"
1681Independent (politician)}}"Robert AtkynsNon Partisan
1681Independent (politician)}}"Nicholas RayntonNon Partisan
1685Independent (politician)}}"Sir Charles Gerard, BtNon PartisanIndependent (politician)}}"
1695Independent (politician)}}"Edward RussellNon PartisanIndependent (politician)}}"
1696Independent (politician)}}"Sir John BucknallNon Partisan
1698Independent (politician)}}"Warwick LakeNon Partisan
1701Tories (British political party)}}"Hugh SmithsonTory
1701Whigs (British political party)}}"John AustenWhig
1702Tories (British political party)}}"Hugh SmithsonTory
1705Independent (politician)}}"Scorie BarkerNon PartisanIndependent (politician)}}"
1709Whigs (British political party)}}"John AustenWhig
1710Tories (British political party)}}"Hon. James BertieToryTories (British political party)}}"
1722Whigs (British political party)}}"Sir John Austen, Bt.Whig
1727Tories (British political party)}}"Sir Francis ChildTory
1734Whigs (British political party)}}"William PulteneyWhig
1740Tories (British political party)}}"Sir Hugh Smithson, Bt
(later Sir Hugh Percy, Bt) aTory
1742Tories (British political party)}}"Sir Roger Newdigate, BtTory
1747Whigs (British political party)}}"Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor, BtWhigWhigs (British political party)}}"
1750Tories (British political party)}}"George CookeTory
1768Radicals (UK)}}"John WilkesRadical
1768Whigs (British political party)}}"John GlynnWhig{{cite booklast=Stooks Smith
1769 (Feb)
1769 (Mar)
1769 (Apr)Tories (British political party)}}"Henry LuttrellTory
1774Radicals (UK)}}"John WilkesRadical
1779Whigs (British political party)}}"Thomas WoodWhig
1780Whigs (British political party)}}"George ByngWhig
1784Tories (British political party)}}"William MainwaringTory
1790Whigs (British political party)}}"George ByngWhig
1802Whigs (British political party)}}"Sir Francis Burdett, BtWhig
1804Tories (British political party)}}"George Boulton MainwaringTory
1805Whigs (British political party)}}"Sir Francis Burdett, BtWhig
1806Tories (British political party)}}"George Boulton MainwaringTory
1806Tories (British political party)}}"William MellishTory
1820Whigs (British political party)}}"Samuel Charles WhitbreadWhig
1830Radicals (UK)}}"Joseph HumeRadical
1837Conservative Party (UK)}}"Thomas WoodConservative
1847Whigs (British political party)}}"Lord Robert GrosvenorWhig
1847Radicals (UK)}}"Ralph Bernal OsborneRadical
1857Whigs (British political party)}}"Robert Culling HanburyWhig
1857Whigs (British political party)}}"Hon. George Byng
(later Viscount Enfield) bWhig
1859Liberal Party (UK)}}"LiberalLiberal Party (UK)}}"Liberal
1867Liberal Party (UK)}}"Henry LabouchèreLiberal
1868Conservative Party (UK)}}"Lord George HamiltonConservative
1874Conservative Party (UK)}}"Octavius CoopeConservative
1885constituency divided and abolished

Notes:-

  • a Smithson, not the same man as the former member of the same name, changed his surname to Percy before the 1741 general election.
  • b Byng received the courtesy title of Viscount Enfield in 1860.

Elections

General notes

In multi-member elections the bloc voting system was used. Voters could cast a vote for two candidates or "plump" for one, as they chose. The leading candidates with the largest number of votes were elected.

In by-elections, to fill a single seat, the first past the post system applied.

:;Table terms

For candidates across elections, Change is shown for each, otherwise it is that of the party vote.

Men for whom no party has been identified are marked Non Partisan. He might have been associated with a party or faction in Parliament or consider himself to belong to a particular political tradition. Political parties before the nineteenth century were not as cohesive or organised as they later became. Contemporary commentators (even the reputed leaders of parties or factions) in the eighteenth century did not necessarily agree who the party supporters were. The traditional parties, which had arisen in the late seventeenth century, became less relevant to politics in the eighteenth century (particularly after 1760) but for some contests in some constituencies party labels were still used. Towards 1800 party labels began, gradually, to regain strength.}}

:;Sources

:Results of 1660-1790 are by History of Parliament Trust publications. The results from 1790–1832 are by Stooks Smith, thereafter his work becoming the footnotes for results by Craig.

Results 1660–1885

Parliament of England

  • Note (1660) vote totals unavailable

  • Note (1661) vote totals unavailable

  • Note (1679): Roberts was not the same man as the 1660 candidate of the same name.

  • Note (1679): Smyth is referred to as Smith in House of Commons 1660-1690, but Smyth seems to be correct from Leigh Rayment's list of baronets.

  • Expulsion from the House of Peyton http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=27841

  • Note (1685) vote totals unavailable. Smyth is referred to as Smith in House of Commons 1660-1690, but Smyth seems to be correct from Leigh Rayment's list of baronets.

  • Note (1689) vote totals unavailable

  • Choice of Russell to sit for Cambridgeshire

Parliament of Great Britain

  • Death of Wolstenholme

  • Death of Child

  • Smithson (not the same person as the former MP of the same name) subsequently changed his surname to Percy

  • Creation of Pulteney as 1st Earl of Bath

  • Succession of Percy as 2nd Earl of Northumberland

  • Appointment of Cooke as Joint Paymaster of the Forces

  • Note (1768): Stooks Smith attributes 1,292 votes to Wilkes. Stooks Smith does not give candidates party labels in Middlesex until after this election.

  • Death of Cooke

  • Note (1768): Poll 6 days (Source: Stooks Smith)

  • Expulsion from the House of Wilkes, declared incapable of being elected 3 February 1769

  • Expulsion from the House of Wilkes, election declared void

  • Expulsion from the House of Wilkes, election declared void 17 March 1769

  • Election return of Wilkes amended to Luttrell by Parliament on 14 April 1769 and Luttrell seated as the MP 15 April 1769

  • Death of Glynn

  • Note (1790): The George Byng who contested Middlesex elections from this year is a different person from the one who stood previously

Parliament of the United Kingdom

  • Note (1802): Poll 15 days (Source: Stooks Smith)

  • Election of Burdett declared void 9 July 1804

  • Note (1804): Poll 15 days (Source: Stooks Smith)

  • Election of Mainwaring challenged by a petition of Burdett. Mainwaring unseated and Francis Burdett seated on 5 March 1805. (Source: The Times (of London), edition of 6 March 1805)

  • Election of Burdett challenged by a petition of Mainwaring. Burdett unseated and George Boulton Mainwaring seated with effect from 10 February 1806. (Source: The Times (of London), edition of 10 February 1806)

  • Note (1806): Poll 15 days (Source: Stooks Smith)

  • Note (1820): Poll 12 days (Source: Stooks Smith)

|reg. electors = 6,939

|reg. electors = 8,005

  • Note (1835): The Thomas Wood who contested Middlesex elections from this year is a different person from the one who was elected in 1779

|reg. electors = 12,817

|reg. electors = 13,915

Byng's death caused a by-election.

|reg. electors = 12,577

|reg. electors = 13,781

|reg. electors = 14,610

|reg. electors = 14,977

  • Creation of Grosvenor as 1st Baron Ebury

|reg. electors = 15,171

  • Byng became known by the courtesy title of Viscount Enfield when his father became 2nd Earl of Strafford in 1860

|reg. electors = 14,847

  • Death of Hanbury

|reg. electors = 25,196

|reg. electors = 25,071

  • Appointment of Hamilton as Vice-President of the Privy Council Committee on Education

|reg. electors = 30,707

  • Appointment of Hamilton as First Lord of the Admiralty

  • Constituency divided in the 1885 redistribution

References

Citations

Sources

  • British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885, compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (The Macmillan Press 1977)
  • The House of Commons 1509-1558, by S.T. Bindoff (Secker & Warburg 1982)
  • The House of Commons 1558-1603, by P.W. Hasler (HMSO 1981)
  • The House of Commons 1660-1690, by Basil Duke Henning (Secker & Warburg 1983)
  • The House of Commons 1715-1754, by Romney Sedgwick (HMSO 1970)
  • The House of Commons 1754-1790, by Sir Lewis Namier and John Brooke (HMSO 1964)
  • The House of Commons 1790-1820, by R.G. Thorne (Secker & Warburg 1986)
  • The Parliaments of England by Henry Stooks Smith (1st edition published in three volumes 1844–50), second edition edited (in one volume) by F.W.S. Craig (Political Reference Publications 1973)
  • Who's Who of British Members of Parliament: Volume I 1832-1885, edited by M. Stenton (The Harvester Press 1976)
  • D Brunton & D H Pennington, Members of the Long Parliament (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954)
  • Cobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808) https://web.archive.org/web/20150904125310/http://www2.odl.ox.ac.uk/gsdl/cgi-bin/library?e=p-000-00---0modhis06--00-0-0-0prompt-10---4------0-1l--1-en-50---20-about---00001-001-1-1isoZz-8859Zz-1-0&a=d&cl=CL1
  • List of members nominated for Parliament of 1653 at British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=36965

References

  1. [[Husting]]s were typically over a period of a fortnight when candidates set out their stall, and visible bribery had become not uncommon in closer contests around the country in such larger seats at the time, inspiring [[William Hogarth]]’s series of four pictures titled ‘Four Prints of An Election’ (when printed).[http://www.brentfordtw8.com/default.asp?section=info&page=localhistory011.htm "Brentford Elections In The Past: scenes of riot, disorder and tumult"] Brentford TW8: Brentford's local website Accessed 2017-60-03
  2. [http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1867/102/pdfs/ukpga_18670102_en.pdf?view=extent Reform Act 1867, Sch. B & Sch. C] Legislation.gov.uk Publisher: UK Government. Accessed 2017-08-19
  3. "History of Parliament".
  4. (2004). "Charlton, Sir Thomas".
  5. Cavill. "The English Parliaments of Henry VII 1485-1504".
  6. (17 January 1835). "Middlesex Election". Leeds Times.
  7. (1838). "The Parliamentary Guide: a concise history of the Members of both Houses, etc".
  8. (31 July 1847). "Forthcoming Elections". London Daily News.
  9. {{cite DNB. Pollard. Alfred Frederick
  10. (1847). "Dod's Parliamentary Companion, Volume 15". [[Dod's Parliamentary Companion]].
  11. "Ralph Bernal". University College London.
  12. (2006). "The Pursuit of the Heiress: Aristocratic Marriage in Ireland 1740-1840". Ulster Historical Foundation.
  13. (18 February 1865). "The Brazil Controversy". The Spectator.
  14. (2011). "The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History". Palgrave Macmillan.
  15. (2015). "Victorian Political Culture: 'Habits of Heart & Mind'". Oxford University Press.
  16. (12 August 1847). "Members Returned, with Their Political Predilections". Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette.
  17. (10 April 1857). "Middlesex". Coventry Standard.
  18. (18 April 1857). "Portsmouth Times and Naval Gazette".
  19. (5 September 1857). "Latest News". York Herald.
  20. (1 September 1857). "Representation of Middlesex". Leeds Mercury.
  21. (2 September 1857). "Representation of Middlesex". London Daily News.
  22. "Middlesex".
  23. (7 May 1859). "Middlesex Election". Marylebone Mercury.
  24. (1977). "British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885 (e-book)". Macmillan Press.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Middlesex (UK Parliament constituency) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report