Misplaced Pages

Steadfast society

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
#865134

9-550: The Steadfast society was an eighteenth century political club in Bristol that organised political support for Tory candidates. It was opposed to the Whig supporting Union Club . This article related to the history of the United Kingdom or its predecessor states is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bristol (UK Parliament constituency) Bristol was

18-566: A two-member constituency, used to elect members to the House of Commons in the Parliaments of England (to 1707), Great Britain (1707–1800), and the United Kingdom (from 1801). The constituency existed until Bristol was divided into single member constituencies in 1885. The historic port city of Bristol is located in what is now the South West Region of England . It straddles the border between

27-562: The Kingdom and had the third largest electorate for an urban seat. From the 1885 United Kingdom general election the city was divided into four single member seats. These were Bristol East , Bristol North , Bristol South and Bristol West . The use of Roman numerals in the list below denotes different politicians of the same name, not that the individuals concerned would have used the Roman numerals as part of their name. Non Partisan denotes that

36-686: The ancient right franchises, applicable to Bristol, preserved by the Reform Act 1832 , which also introduced a broader occupation franchise for all borough constituencies. Bristol was a fairly partisan constituency in the eighteenth century with two rival clubs - the Union Club for the Whigs and the Steadfast Society for the Tories. The bloc vote electoral system was used in two seat elections and first past

45-457: The city had 10,315 names on the electoral register. 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, in one or both successive elections for the same number of seats, then change is calculated on the individual percentage vote. Note on sources: The information for

54-460: The historic geographical counties of Gloucestershire and Somerset. It was usually accounted as a Gloucestershire borough in the later part of the 19th and the 20th centuries. The parliamentary borough of Bristol was represented in Parliament from the 13th century, as one of the most important population centres in the Kingdom. Namier and Brooke comment that in 1754 the city was the second largest in

63-505: The politician concerned is not known to have been associated with a party (not necessarily that he was not). Whilst Whig and Tory societies in the city continued to nominate candidates in the last half of the 18th century, the electoral labels used in Bristol had very little to do with what the MPs did in national politics. Notes:- During the existence of this constituency, Bristol was a city with

72-457: The post for single member by-elections. Each voter had up to as many votes as there were seats to be filled. Votes had to be cast by a spoken declaration, in public, at the hustings (until the secret ballot was introduced in 1872). Namier and Brooke, in The House of Commons 1754-1790 , estimated the electorate of Bristol to number about 5,000. When registration of electors was introduced in 1832

81-416: The status of being a county of itself. That meant that the city was not subject to the administration of the officials of the geographic counties in which it was situated. In electoral terms it meant that the voters for the parliamentary borough included those qualified on the same 40 shilling freeholder franchise as that for a county constituency. Other electors qualified as freemen of the borough. These were

#865134