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Stafford (UK Parliament constituency)
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1983 onwards
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1983 onwards
| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| name | Stafford | ||
| parliament | uk | ||
| image | |||
| caption | Boundaries since 2024 | ||
| image2 | [[File:West Midlands - Stafford constituency.svg | 215px | alt=Map of constituency]] |
| caption2 | Boundary of Stafford in West Midlands region | ||
| year | 1983 | ||
| type | County | ||
| elects_howmany | One | ||
| previous | Stafford & Stone and Newcastle-under-Lyme | ||
| year2 | 1918 | ||
| abolished2 | 1950 | ||
| type2 | County | ||
| elects_howmany2 | One | ||
| next2 | Stafford & Stone | ||
| year3 | 1295 | ||
| abolished3 | 1918 | ||
| type3 | Borough | ||
| elects_howmany3 | 1290–1885: Two | ||
| 1885–1918: One | |||
| electorate | 69,832 (December 2010) | ||
| region | England | ||
| county | Staffordshire | ||
| towns | Stafford, Eccleshall | ||
| mp | Leigh Ingham | ||
| party | Labour |
1885–1918: One
Stafford is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Leigh Ingham from the Labour Party.
The seat since its resurrection in 1983 has been of a bellwether being held always by the incumbent government.
Boundaries
1885–1918: The existing parliamentary borough, and so much of the municipal borough of Stafford as was not already included in the parliamentary borough.
1918–1950: The Municipal Borough of Stafford, the Rural District of Gnosall, the Rural District consisting of the civil parishes of Blymhill and Weston-under-Lizard, the Rural District of Stafford except the detached part of the civil parish of Colwich, and part of the Rural District of Cannock.
1983–1997: The Borough of Stafford wards of Baswich, Beaconside, Castletown, Church Eaton, Common, Coton, Doxey, Eccleshall, Forebridge, Gnosall, Highfields, Holmcroft, Littleworth, Manor, Milford, Parkside, Rowley, Seighford, Swynnerton, Tillington, Weeping Cross, and Woodseaves, and the Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme wards of Loggerheads, Madeley, and Whitmore.
1997–2010: The Borough of Stafford wards of Baswich, Beaconside, Castletown, Common, Coton, Doxey, Forebridge, Haywood, Highfields, Holmcroft, Littleworth, Manor, Milford, Parkside, Rowley, Seighford, Tillington, and Weeping Cross, and the District of South Staffordshire wards of Acton Trussell, Bishopswood and Lapley, Penkridge North East, Penkridge South East, and Penkridge West.
2010–2024: The Borough of Stafford wards of Baswich, Castletown, Common, Coton, Doxey, Haywood and Hixon, Highfields and Western Downs, Holmcroft, Littleworth, Manor, Milford, Parkside, Rowley, Seighford, Tillington, and Weeping Cross, and the District of South Staffordshire wards of Penkridge North East and Acton Trussell, Penkridge South East, Penkridge West, and Wheaton Aston, Bishopswood and Lapley.
From 1997 to 2024, the constituency formed the southerly part of the Borough of Stafford, including the eponymous town itself plus the Penkridge area. in the District of South Staffordshire. 2024–present: Further to the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies which came into effect for the 2024 general election, the constituency is composed of the following (as they existed on 1 December 2020):
- The Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme wards of: Loggerheads; Maer & Whitmore.
- The Borough of Stafford wards of: Baswich; Common; Coton; Doxey & Castletown; Eccleshall; Forebridge; Gnosall & Woodseaves; Highfields & Western Downs; Holmcroft; Littleworth; Manor; Penkside; Rowley; Seighford & Church Eaton; Weeping Cross & Wildwood.
The constituency was subject to significant changes due to the re-organisation of seats within Staffordshire. The parts in the South Staffordshire District, including Penkridge, together with areas to the east of Stafford, were included in the newly created constituency of Stone, Great Wyrley and Penkridge. To compensate, the boundaries were extended to the north and west, to include Eccleshall, Gnosall and the two Newcastle-under-Lyme wards, previously part of the abolished Stone constituency. The boundaries now resemble those in place from 1983 to 1997.
Constituency profile
The town has historical significance, featuring the Elizabethan Ancient High House, a museum with changing exhibitions and Stafford Castle. In terms of industry and commerce, the physics and engineering niche of large power station transformers are produced in the seat whereas the area to the north is famous for fine china, the Staffordshire Potteries from the companies Aynsley, Burleigh, Doulton, Dudson, Heron Cross, Minton, Moorcroft, Twyford, and Wedgwood. The area is also well known for the Staffordshire Hoard, Alton Towers and has a Building Society based in the town.
Workless claimants, registered jobseekers, were in November 2012 significantly lower than the national average of 3.8%, at 2.7% of the population based on a statistical compilation by The Guardian.
History
Stafford, as a parliamentary borough, first existed between the Model Parliament in 1295 and 1950.
The current constituency was recreated for the 1983 general election.
;Prominent members The town was represented in Parliament by leading playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan at the end of the 18th century.
;Political history Taken together with the Stafford and Stone seat which existed during the 33-year gap mentioned above, since 1910 when the last Liberal served the seat, the Conservative party has had five members and the Labour party three (this total includes the present member). In summary:
- Labour saw a bellwether result in their 1945 landslide victory, but Conservative Hugh Fraser regained the seat at the next election in 1950 in the successor seat which he held until his death in 1984.
- Effects from the creation of the Stone constituency in 1997 made Stafford somewhat more marginal: sitting Stafford MP Bill Cash followed some of his electors into the Stone constituency, which he won, and after a 47-year lack of a member, Labour's David Kidney gained the constituency in his party's landslide victory in 1997. The defeated Conservative candidate in 1997 was David Cameron, who in the next election was elected as the MP for the safe seat of Witney, and became the Conservative Party leader in 2005, and Prime Minister in 2010.
Members of Parliament
Stafford parliamentary borough
MPs 1295–1640
- Constituency created (1295)
| Parliament | First member | Second member | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1295 | William Reynor | John Beyton | |||||
| 1337 | title=Parliamentary History of Staffordshire, Volume I | last=Wedgwood | first=Josiah C. | year=1917 | publisher=William Salt Archaeological Society | page=74}} | |
| 1353 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1360 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1362 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1363 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1365 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1366 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1368 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1369 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1371 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1373 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1376 | Hugh Snel | ||||||
| 1377 | Hugh Snel (murdered 1380) | ||||||
| 1386 | Thomas Jockery | Richard Stanford | |||||
| 1388 (Feb) | John Newton | Nicholas Snell | |||||
| 1388 (Sep) | John Newton | Richard Stanford | |||||
| 1390 (Jan) | John Newton | John Snell | |||||
| 1390 (Nov) | |||||||
| 1391 | John Newton | Richard Stanford | |||||
| 1393 | Henry Warrilewe | John Baxter | |||||
| 1394 | |||||||
| 1395 | John Wylaston | John Baxter | |||||
| 1397 (Jan) | John Wylaston | John Clifton | |||||
| 1397 (Sep) | |||||||
| 1399 | John Wylaston | Richard Stanford | |||||
| 1401 | |||||||
| 1402 | Richard Stanford | Thomas Barber | |||||
| 1404 (Jan) | Roger Coton | Adam Hewster | |||||
| 1404 (Oct) | |||||||
| 1406 | Thomas Jockery | John Huntingdon | |||||
| 1407 | Thomas Jockery | John Huntingdon | |||||
| 1410 | |||||||
| 1411 | Thomas Barber | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1413 (Feb) | |||||||
| 1413 (May) | Thomas Barber | Adam Edgeley | |||||
| 1414 (Apr) | |||||||
| 1414 (Nov) | Sampson Erdeswyk | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1415 | |||||||
| 1416 (Mar) | Henry Fenton | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1416 (Oct) | |||||||
| 1417 | |||||||
| 1419 | John Harper | John Parker | |||||
| 1420 | John Harper | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1421 (May) | John Harper | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1421 (Dec) | Adam Edgeley | Robert Whitgreve | |||||
| 1495 | Humphrey Barber | ||||||
| 1510–1523 | No names known | ||||||
| 1529 | Thomas Stanford, *died | ||||||
| and replaced by 1553 by* Sampson Erdeswick | John Bickley | ||||||
| 1536 | ? | ||||||
| 1539 | ? | ||||||
| 1542 | Walter Blount | William Stamford | |||||
| 1545 | Henry Stafford | William Stamford | |||||
| 1547 | Henry Stafford | Richard Forsett | |||||
| 1553 (Mar) | Edward Colbarne | Francis Smith | |||||
| 1553 (Oct) | Henry Stafford | ?Sir Anthony Browne/Simon Lowe alias Fyfield | |||||
| 1554 (Apr) | John Giffard | Humphrey Swynnerton | |||||
| 1554 (Nov) | James Fowler | Matthew Cradock | |||||
| 1555 | Henry Stafford | Thomas Harcourt | |||||
| 1558 | Edward Stafford | James Fowler | |||||
| 1559 (Jan) | Edward Stafford | William Bowyer | |||||
| 1562–3 | William Twyneho | Henry Goodere | |||||
| 1571 | Walter Stafford | William Knollys | |||||
| 1572 (Apr) | Richard Broughton | Thomas Purslow | |||||
| 1584 (Nov) | John Stafford | Francis Cradock | |||||
| 1586 | John Stafford | Francis Cradock | |||||
| 1588 (Oct) | Francis Cradock | Henry Bourchier | |||||
| 1593 | Henry Bourchier | Francis Cradock | |||||
| 1597 (Oct) | Sir Edward Stafford | Henry Bourchier | |||||
| 1601 (Oct) | Sir Edward Stafford | William Essex | |||||
| 1604–1611 | Hugh Beeston | ||||||
| replaced 1609 by Arthur Ingram | George CradockCobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London | ||||||
| 1614 | Sir Walter DevereuxMaija Jansson (ed.), Proceedings in Parliament, 1614 (House of Commons) (Philadelphia | American Philosophical Society, 1988) | |||||
| 1621 | Matthew Cradock | Richard Dyott | |||||
| 1624 | Matthew Cradock | Richard Dyott | |||||
| 1625 | Matthew Cradock | Sir Robert Hatton *Sat for Sandwich | |||||
| replaced by* Sir John Offley | |||||||
| 1626 | Sir John Offley | Bulstrode Whitlock | |||||
| 1628 | Matthew Cradock | William Wingfield | |||||
| 1629–1640 | No Parliaments convened |
MPs 1640–1885
| Election | s | 4 | date=March 2012}} | First party | Second member | Second party |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 1640 | Ralph Sneyd | |||||
| November 1640 | Cavalier}}" | Ralph Sneyd | Royalist | Cavalier}}" | ||
| October 1642 | Weston disabled from sitting – seat vacant | |||||
| May 1643 | Sneyd disabled from sitting – seat vacant | |||||
| 1645 | John Swinfen | |||||
| December 1648 | Swinfen and Leigh excluded in Pride's Purge – both seats vacant | |||||
| 1653 | Stafford was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament | |||||
| 1654 | John Bradshaw | *Stafford had only one seat in the First and | ||||
| Second Parliaments of the Protectorate* | ||||||
| 1656 | Martin Noel | |||||
| January 1659 | William Jessop | |||||
| May 1659 | Not represented in the restored Rump | |||||
| April 1660 | John Swinfen | |||||
| 1661 | Robert Milward | |||||
| 1674 | Walter Chetwynd | |||||
| February 1679 | Sir Thomas Armstrong | |||||
| August 1679 | Sir Thomas Wilbraham | |||||
| 1681 | Edwin Skrymsher | |||||
| 1685 | Walter Chetwynd | |||||
| 1689 | Philip Foley | |||||
| 1690 | Jonathan Cope | |||||
| 1694 | Thomas Foley | |||||
| 1695 | Philip Foley | |||||
| January 1701 | John Chetwynd | |||||
| November 1701 | John Pershall | |||||
| July 1702 | John Chetwynd | |||||
| December 1702 | Walter Chetwynd | |||||
| 1711 | Henry Vernon | |||||
| 1712 | 1st Viscount Chetwynd | |||||
| 1715 | William Chetwynd | |||||
| 1722 | Thomas Foley | |||||
| 1724 by-election | petition]]ed against the 1724 result. Elde was "unanimously expelled the House for having offered to compromise the petition against his return", and Chetwynd was seated in his place. (Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847, Volume 2 (London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1845), p 45) | |||||
| 1725 | 1st Viscount Chetwynd | |||||
| 1727 | Joseph Gascoigne Nightingale | |||||
| 1734 | Hon. William Chetwynd | |||||
| 3rd Viscount Chetwynd | ||||||
| from 1767 | ||||||
| 1738 by-election | 2nd Viscount Chetwynd | |||||
| 1747 | John Robins | |||||
| 1754 | William Richard Chetwynd | |||||
| 1765 by-election | Whigs (British political party)}}" | John Crewe | Whig | |||
| 1768 | Richard Whitworth | |||||
| 1770 by-election | William Neville Hart | |||||
| 1774 | Hugo Meynell | |||||
| 1780 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Edward Monckton | Tory | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1806 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Richard Mansel-Philipps | Tory | |||
| 1812 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Ralph Benson | Tory | |||
| 1818 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Benjamin Benyon | Whig | |||
| 1820 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Sir George Chetwynd | Whig | |||
| June 1826 | Richard Ironmonger | Tories (British political party)}}" | ||||
| December 1826 by-election | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Thomas Beaumont | Whig | |||
| 1830 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | John Campbell | Whig | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1832 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | William Fawkener Chetwynd | Whig | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| January 1835 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Sir Francis Holyoake Goodricke | Conservative | |||
| May 1835 | Writ suspended – seat left vacant | |||||
| 1837 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Robert Farrand | Conservative | |||
| 1841 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Hon. Swynfen Carnegie | Conservative | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1847 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | David Urquhart | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1852 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | John Ayshford Wise | Whig | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1857 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Viscount Ingestre | Conservative | |||
| 1859 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Liberal | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Thomas Salt | ||
| 1860 by-election | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Thomas Sidney | Liberal | |||
| 1865 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Michael Bass | Liberal | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1868 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Henry Pochin | Liberal | |||
| 1869 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Thomas Salt | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1874 | Lib-Lab}}" | Alexander Macdonald | Liberal-Labour | |||
| 1880 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Charles McLaren | Liberal | |||
| 1881 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Thomas Salt | Conservative | |||
| 1885 | Representation reduced to one member |
MPs 1885–1918
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal Party (UK)}}" | 1885 | Charles McLaren | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}" | 1886 | Thomas Salt | |
| Liberal Party (UK)}}" | 1892 | Charles Shaw | |
| Liberal Party (UK)}}" | 1910 | Sir Walter Essex | |
| 1918 | Parliamentary borough abolished. Name transferred to a county division |
Stafford division of Staffordshire
MPs 1918–1950
| Year | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unionist Party (UK)}}" | 1918 | Hon. William Ormsby-Gore | |
| Conservative Party (UK)}}" | 1938 | Peter Thorneycroft | |
| Labour Party (UK)}}" | 1945 | Stephen Swingler |
Stafford county constituency
MPs since 1983
Elections
Elections in the 2020s
Elections in the 2010s
Elections in the 2000s
Elections in the 1990s
:
url=http://www.politicsresources.net/area/uk/ge92/i18.htm|title=UK General Election results April 1992|date=9 April 1992|work=Richard Kimber's Political Science Resources|publisher=Politics Resources|access-date=6 December 2010}}}}
Elections in the 1980s
|reg. electors = 70,635
- Death of Sir Hugh Fraser 6 March 1984
Election in the 1940s
Elections in the 1930s
Elections in the 1920s
|reg. electors = 33,420
|reg. electors = 25,260
|reg. electors = 25,024
|reg. electors = 24,317
Elections in the 1910s
|reg. electors = 23,140
Elections in the 1900s
|reg. electors = 3,885

|reg. electors = 3,534
Elections in the 1890s
|reg. electors = 3,361
|reg. electors = 3,409
Elections in the 1880s
|reg. electors = 3,264
|reg. electors = 3,264
|reg. electors = 3,344
- Caused by Macdonald's death.
|reg. electors = 3,699
Elections in the 1870s
|reg. electors = 3,699
Elections in the 1860s
|reg. electors = 3,152
- The 1868 election was declared void on petition "on account of corrupt practices", causing a by-election.
|reg. electors = 3,152
|reg. electors = 1,540
|reg. electors = 1,390
- Caused by Wise's resignation.
Elections in the 1850s
|reg. electors = 1,364
|reg. electors = 1,252
|reg. electors = 1,246
Elections in the 1840s
|reg. electors = 1,272
|reg. electors = 1,257
- Caused by Carnegie's appointment as a Lord Commissioner of the Treasury
|reg. electors = 1,154
Elections in the 1830s
|reg. electors = 1,246
- Caused by Goodricke's resignation, in 1835, to contest a by-election at Staffordshire. A writ for a by-election was denied for nearly two years.
|reg. electors = 1,117
|reg. electors = 1,176
- Farrand retired before the poll. The election was later declared void and no writ was issued before the 1835 general election.
|reg. electors =
|reg. electors =
Notes
References
Sources
- Britain Votes/Europe Votes By-Election Supplement 1983–, compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Parliamentary Research Services 1985)
- Robert Beatson, A Chronological Register of Both Houses of Parliament (London: Longman, Hurst, Res & Orme, 1807) https://books.google.com/books?id=Gh2wKY2rkDUC&q=Return+of+Members+of+Parliament
- 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) 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
- Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847, Volume 2 (London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1845) The Parliaments of England: From 1st George I., to the Present Time
- The History of Parliament: the House of Commons – Stafford, Borough, 1386 to 1832
References
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- (4 March 2011). "Electorate Figures – Boundary Commission for England". Boundary Commission for England.
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- "The Parliamentary Constituencies Order 2023".
- [https://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2010/nov/17/unemployment-and-employment-statistics-economics Unemployment claimants by constituency] ''[[The Guardian]]''
- "Tamworth Parliamentary Borough 1275–1832". The Staffordshire Encyclopaedia.
- Wedgwood, Josiah C.. (1917). "Parliamentary History of Staffordshire, Volume I". William Salt Archaeological Society.
- "History of Parliament".
- Cavill. "The English Parliaments of Henry VII 1485–1504".
- "History of Parliament".
- [http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/stafford-henry-1520-55-or-later STAFFORD, Henry (by 1520–55 or later), of Pickering, Yorks], ''The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509–1558'', ed. S.T. Bindoff, 1982
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- Maija Jansson (ed.), ''Proceedings in Parliament, 1614 (House of Commons)'' (Philadelphia. American Philosophical Society, 1988)
- {{Rayment-hc. s. 4. (March 2012)
- Chetwynd was initially declared re-elected in 1710, but on petition (in a dispute over the franchise), he was adjudged not have been duly elected and his opponent, Vernon, was seated in his place. (Robert Beatson, ''A Chronological Register of Both Houses of Parliament'' (1807), Volume 1, p 177)
- Elde's opponent, Chetwynd, [[election petition. petition]]ed against the 1724 result. Elde was "unanimously expelled the House for having offered to compromise the petition against his return", and Chetwynd was seated in his place. (Henry Stooks Smith, ''The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847'', Volume 2 (London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co, 1845), p 45)
- (1845). "The Parliaments of England, from 1st George I., to the Present Time. Vol II: Oxfordshire to Wales Inclusive". Simpkin, Marshall, & Co..
- After Goodricke resigned to contest another constituency in May 1835, the House of Commons refused to issue a writ for a new election until February 1837, when the motion to issue a writ was passed by a single vote. (F W S Craig, ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1832–1885'', 2nd edition, Aldershot: Parliamentary Research Services, 1989, p 283)
- (1838). "The Assembled Commons or Parliamentary Biographer: 1838".
- (1838). "The Parliamentary Guide: a concise history of the Members of both Houses, etc".
- (24 July 1852). "Staffordshire Advertiser".
- (3 July 1852). "Preparations for the General Election". [[The Spectator]].
- (2 July 1852). "Evening Mail".
- The 1868 election was declared void on petition and a new election was held – F W S Craig, ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1832–1885''. (F W S Craig, ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1832–1885'', 2nd edition, Aldershot: Parliamentary Research Services, 1989, p 283)
- "Stafford". BBC News.
- "Stafford Parliamentary constituency". BBC.
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- "Election Data 2010". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "BBC News | Election 2010 | Constituency | Stafford".
- "Election Data 2005". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "BBC NEWS | Election 2005 | Results | Stafford".
- "Election Data 2001". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "BBC NEWS | VOTE 2001 | RESULTS & CONSTITUENCIES | Stafford".
- "Election Data 1997". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "BBC 1997 general election Site".
- "Election Data 1992". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 1987". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 1983". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- British Parliamentary Election Results 1918–1949, FWS Craig
- British parliamentary election results, 1885–1918 (Craig)
- BOSANQUET, His Honour Sir Samuel Ronald Courthope', Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014; online edn, April 2014 [http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/article/oupww/whowaswho/U234913, accessed 20 Sept 2017]
- (4 July 1892). "The General Election". [[London Evening Standard]].
- (1977). "British Parliamentary Election Results 1832–1885". Macmillan Press.
- (3 April 1880). "The Representation of Stafford". Staffordshire Sentinel and Commercial & General Advertiser.
- (17 May 1869). "Election News". [[Dundee Courier]].
- (22 May 1869). "The Representation of Stafford". Staffordshire Advertiser.
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- (14 November 1868). "East Staffordshire Election". [[Birmingham Journal (nineteenth century).
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- (3 July 1852). "Borough of Stafford". Staffordshire Advertiser.
- (17 July 1852). "Public Dinner to John Bourne, Esq., One of the Candidates at the Late Election for the Borough of Stafford". Staffordshire Advertiser.
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- (4 August 1847). "Wolverhampton Chronicle and Staffordshire Advertiser".
- (14 March 1846). "Oxford Chronicle and Reading Gazette".
- "Stafford".
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