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table of contents
Series page
Title page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
Part I: Envisioning England’s reformed electoral map
1. A balancing Act? Interests and parliamentary reform, 1780–1832
The conservative defence of the unreformed electoral system
The shifting parliamentary language of interests, 1774–1832
Minor reform, interests and the moderate Whig case for reform
The East Retford saga: turning the Canningites
Conclusion: the ‘three years job settled’?
Notes
2. ‘The most unpopular part of the bill throughout the country’: Reintegrating boundaries into the story of reform
Developing the reform bill’s boundary clauses
Anti-reform opposition to boundary reform
The Times and the ‘county-mongering clause’
Conclusion
Notes
3. Towards a science of government: The ‘spirit of inquiry’ and the establishment of the 1831–2 boundary commission
Commissions of inquiry and Russell’s initial cross-party proposals
The march of Brougham, Drummond and the SDUK
Science, statistics and cartography: Drummond’s inductive method for boundary reform
‘What in the world has science to do here?’
Conclusion
Notes
4. Whipped by the beadles? Data-gathering for the boundary commission
The boundary commission and local opinion
Collecting boundary data
Collecting £10 householder data
The £10 householder in the new boroughs
Drummond’s list
The response to Drummond’s list
Conclusion
Notes
Part II: Redrawing England’s electoral map
Chronology and voting data
Notes
5. ‘The work we are engaged in is intended to last for a century’: Redrawing England’s ancient electoral map
Defining a borough’s modern town
Proposing boundaries to last for a century?
Rebellion and standardisation
Parliamentary approval and political impact
Notes
6. The Droitwich dilemma: Interests, grouping and the multiple parish borough
Finding 300 £10 householders
Droitwich, grouping and the subtleties of interest representation
The sitting committee, the cabinet and the Waverers
The cabinet agrees a way forward
‘Deference communities’ and political impact
Notes
7. ‘All the kindred interests of the town and neighbourhood’: New borough limits
The identification of preliminary boundaries
Proposing boundaries for the new boroughs
Political interference on the sitting committee
The new boroughs and the boundary bill
Electoral and political legacy
Notes
8. Under the knife: Reconstructing the county map
Establishing the county commission
Equality in population, area and voters?
County divisions and political influence
Places of election and polling places
Parliamentary, electoral and political outcomes
Notes
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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