BEDFORD (UK PARLIAMENT CONSTITUENCY)


'Bedford' is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election. It is a marginal seat between the Labour Party and the Conservatives.

Contents
Boundaries
Boundary review
History
Members of Parliament
1295-1660
1660-1885
1885-1983
1997-present
Notes
Election results
See also
References

Boundaries


The constituency covers the town of Bedford in Bedfordshire.
Boundary review

Following their review of parliamentary representation in Bedfordshire, the Boundary Commission for England made only minor changes to each of the existing constituencies.
The new Bedford seat will be formed from electoral wards entirely within the borough of Bedford:

★ Brickhill, Castle, Cauldwell, De Parys, Goldington, Harpur, Kempston East, Kempston North, Kempston South, Kingsbrook, Newnham, Putnoe, Queen’s Park.

History


Bedford was first represented in the Model Parliament of 1295. The constituency was originally a parliamentary borough electing two Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons, and consisted of the five parishes making up the town of Bedford.
Before the Reform Act of 1832, the right to vote was exercised by all freemen and burgesses of the town (whether or not they lived within the borough boundaries) and by all householders who were not receiving alms. This was a fairly wide franchise for the period, but potentially subject to abuse since the Corporation of the borough had unlimited power to create freemen. The Corporation was usually under the influence of the Dukes of Bedford, but their influence usually fell well short of making Bedford a pocket borough.
In 1768 a majority of the corporation apparently fell out with the then Duke, and decided to free the borough from his influence. They elected a Huntingdonshire squire, Sir Robert Bernard, as Recorder of the borough, and made 500 new freemen, mostly Bernard's Huntingdonshire neighbours or tenants. As there were only 540 householders, this gave him the effective power to choose Bedford's MPs; at the next election the defeated candidates petitioned against the result, attempting to establish that so many non-residents should not be allowed to vote, but the Commons dismissed the petition and confirmed the right of all the freemen, however created, to vote.
Bernard cemented his control with the creation of hundreds of further freemen in the next few years; at around the same period he lent the Corporation £950, and it is not unreasonable to assume this was payment for services rendered. However, in 1789, the young Duke of Bedford managed to regain the Corporation's loyalty, and had 350 of his own retainers made freeman.
Even at other periods, the influence of the Dukes of Bedford seems sometimes to have been more nominal than real. In the 1750s and 1760s, before Bernard's intervention, there was generally an amicable agreement that the Duke should nominate one MP and the Corporation (representing the interests of the town) the other; but it seems that on occasion the Duke had to be flexible to retain the semblance of local deference towards him, and that his "nominee" had in reality been imposed upon him. Nor was the outcome invariably successfully predetermined: at the 1830 election the result was decided by a single vote - the defeated candidate being Lord John Russell, who was not only one of the Whig leaders but The Duke of Bedford's son.
In 1831, the population of the borough was 6,959, and contained 1,491 houses. This was sufficient for Bedford to retain both its MPs under the Great Reform Act, with its boundaries unaltered. The reformed franchise introduced in 1832 gave the borough 1,572 inhabitants qualified to vote. The town was growing, and Bedford retained its borough status until the 1918 election, although from 1885 its representation was reduced to a single member. On the eve of the First World War its population was just under 40,000, of whom 6,500 could vote.
In 1918 the borough was abolished, but town's name was applied to the county constituency into which it was placed. The new constituency (strictly speaking 'The Bedford division of Bedfordshire') covered the northern end of the county and included Kempston and Eaton Socon together with the surrounding rural area. A boundary change which came into effect at the 1950 election reduced its size somewhat, part of the Bedford Rural District including Eaton Socon being transferred to the Mid Bedfordshire constituency.
In 1983, further boundary changes took Kempston out of the constituency, and its name was changed to Bedfordshire North, although it was recognisably still the same constituency and Bedford itself was still much its largest component. The following boundary review, effective from the 1997 general election, restored the Bedford name.

Members of Parliament


1295-1660


★ ''Constituency created'' (1295)

★ 1295: John Cullebere, Simon de Holand
1660-1885

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
1660Sir Samuel Luke Humphrey Winch
1661Richard Taylor John Kelyng
1663Paulet St John
1667Sir William Beecher
1679Sir William Francklyn
1685Sir Anthony Chester, Bt Thomas Christie
1689Thomas Hillersden
1695William Farrer
March 1698William Spencer
July 1698Sir Thomas Alston, Bt
January 1701Samuel Rolt
November 1701William Farrer
1702Edward Carteret
1705William Farrer Sir Philip Monoux, Bt
1707William Hillersden
1710John Cater
1713Samuel Rolt
1715William Farrer John Thurlow Brace
1722George Huxley
1725John Thurlow Brace
1727John Orlebar
1728James Metcalfe
1731Sir Jeremy Vanacker Sambrooke, Bt
1734Samuel Ongley
1740Sir Boteler Chernock, Bt
1747Thomas Gore John Offley
1754Francis Herne Robert Henley-Ongley
1761Richard Vernon Whig
1768Samuel Whitbread Tory
1774Sir William Wake, Bt ToryRobert Sparrow[1] Tory
1775Samuel Whitbread Whig
1784William MacDowall Colhoun Tory
1790Samuel Whitbread Whig
1802William Lee-Antonie Whig
1812Lord George Russell Whig
1815Hon. William Waldegrave Whig
1818William Henry Whitbread Whig
1830Frederick Polhill Tory
1832Samuel Crawley Whig
1835Frederick Polhill Conservative
1837Henry Stuart [2]Conservative
1838Samuel Crawley Whig
1841Henry Stuart Conservative
1847Sir Harry Verney, Bt Whig
1852Samuel Whitbread Liberal
1854William Stuart Conservative
1857Thomas Barnard Liberal
1859William Stuart Conservative
1868James Howard Liberal
1874Frederick Charles Polhill-Turner Conservative
1880Charles Magniac Liberal


★ ''Reduced to one member'' (1885)
1885-1983

YearMemberParty
1885Samuel Whitbread Liberal
1895Charles Guy Pym Conservative
1906Percy Barlow Liberal
January 1910Walter Annis Attenborough Conservative
December 1910Frederick George Kellaway Liberal
1922Sir Sydney Richard Wells, Bt Conservative
1945Thomas Skeffington-Lodge Labour
1950Christopher Soames Conservative
1966Brian Parkyn Labour
1970Trevor Skeet Conservative


★ ''Constituency abolished'' (1983)
1997-present


★ ''Constituency recreated'' (1997)
YearMemberParty
1997Patrick Hall Labour

Notes

1. Unseated on petition; Whitbread declared elected
2. At the election of 1837, Stuart was initially declared elected, but on petition his election was declared void and after scrutiny of the votes his opponent Crawley was declared elected instead

Election results


See also



List of Parliamentary constituencies in Bedfordshire

References



A chronological register of both houses of the British Parliament, Volume II, , Robert, Beatson, , 1807,

★ F W S Craig, "British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885" (2nd edition, Aldershot: Parliamentary Research Services, 1989)

★ F W S Craig, "British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949" (Glasgow: Political Reference Publications, 1969)

★ Lewis Namier, ''The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III'' (2nd edition - London: St Martin's Press, 1961)

★ T H B Oldfield, ''The Representative History of Great Britain and Ireland'' (London: Baldwin, Cradock & Joy, 1816)

★ J Holladay Philbin, ''Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales'' (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)

★ Edward Porritt and Annie G Porritt, ''The Unreformed House of Commons'' (Cambridge University Press, 1903)

★ Henry Stooks Smith, "The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847" (2nd edition, edited by FWS Craig - Chichester: Parliamentary Reference Publications, 1973)

★ Frederic A Youngs, jr, ''Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, Vol I'' (London: Royal Historical Society, 1979)

★ ''The Constitutional Year Book for 1913'' (London: National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, 1913)



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