Cambridge University (UK Parliament constituency) (original) (raw)

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Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1801–1950

Cambridge University
Former university constituencyfor the House of Commons
1603–1950
Seats 2
Replaced by Cambridge

Cambridge University was a university constituency electing two members to the British House of Commons, from 1603 to 1950.

Franchise and method of election

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This university constituency was created by a Royal Charter of 1603. It was abolished in 1950 by the Representation of the People Act 1948.

The constituency was not a geographical area. Its electorate consisted of the graduates of the University of Cambridge. Before 1918 the franchise was restricted to male graduates with a Doctorate or Master of Arts degree. Sedgwick records that there were 377 electors in 1727. For the 1754–1790 period, Namier and Brooke estimated the electorate at about 500.

The constituency returned two Members of Parliament. Before 1918 they were elected by plurality-at-large voting, but from 1918 onwards the two members were elected by the Single Transferable Vote method.

In the early 18th century, the electors of both English universities were mostly Tories, but the Whig ministers of King George I were able to persuade him to use his royal prerogative to confer Cambridge doctorates on a large number of Whigs, so that from 1727 the university largely returned Whig representatives. At Oxford, the King did not enjoy the same prerogative power, so that the University of Oxford constituency remained Tory, and indeed often Jacobite, in its preferences.

The leading 18th-century Whig politician Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, was Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1748 to 1768 and recommended to the electors suitable candidates to represent them in Parliament. This practice continued under his successor, another Whig Duke and Prime Minister, Augustus FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton, Chancellor of the university from 1768 to 1811. However, Grafton was less influential as a politician than Newcastle had been and also less attentive towards the university, and as a result some of his nominations came in for criticism, notably that of his friend Richard Croftes.

Croftes was far from typical of a university member of parliament: he was neither the son of a peer, like the Hon. John Townshend, the Marquess of Granby, and Grafton's own son the Earl of Euston, nor a distinguished lawyer-politician, such as William de Grey, James Mansfield, and Sir Vicary Gibbs, nor a prominent political figure like William Pitt the Younger and Lord Henry Petty. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Pittite and Tory candidates began to be elected. At the appearance of this political development, some of the Pittite members, including the younger William Pitt himself, one of the members for the university from 1784 to 1806, described themselves as Whigs. As time passed, the division between the 19th century Tory and Whig parties became clearer.

The future Prime Minister, Viscount Palmerston, retained his university seat as a Whig after he left the Tory ranks, but in 1831 he was defeated. After Palmerston ceased to represent the university he was elected by a territorial constituency. From then until the 1920s, all of the university's members were Tories and/or Conservatives.

Even after the introduction of the single transferable vote in 1918, most of the members continued to be elected as Conservatives.

Members of Parliament

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This is a list of people who have been elected to represent this university in the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

Year First member Second member
1604 Nicholas Steward Henry Mountlow
1614 Sir Miles Sandys Sir Francis Bacon
1621 Robert Naunton Barnaby Gough
1624 Sir Robert Naunton Barnaby Gough
1625 Sir Robert Naunton Sir Albert Morton
1626 Thomas Eden Sir John Coke
1628–1629 Thomas Eden Sir John Coke
1629–1640 No Parliaments summoned
Apr 1640 Thomas Eden Henry Lucas
Nov 1640 Thomas Eden Henry Lucas
Eden died 1644 replaced by Nathaniel Bacon
1648 Lucas secluded in Pride's Purge
1654 Henry Cromwell (one seat only)
1656 Richard Cromwell (one seat only)
1659 John Thurloe Thomas Sclater
Year Member Party Member Party
1660 Apr George Monck Thomas Crouch
1660 Jun William Montagu
1661 Sir Richard Fanshawe
1667 Sir Charles Wheler, 2nd Baronet
1679 Sir Thomas Exton James Vernon
1681 Robert Brady
1689 Sir Robert Sawyer Isaac Newton Whig
1690 Edward Finch
1692 Henry Boyle Whig
1695 George Oxenden
1698 Anthony Hammond
1701 Isaac Newton Court Whig
1702 Arthur Annesley Tory
1705 Dixie Windsor Tory
1710 Thomas Paske Tory
1720 Thomas Willoughby Tory
1727 Edward Finch Whig Thomas Townshend Whig
1768 Charles Yorke Rockingham Whig
1770 William de Grey
1771 Richard Croftes
1774 Charles Manners, Marquess of Granby
1779 James Mansfield
1780 Lord John Townshend Whig
Year Member Party Member Party
1784 William Pitt the Younger Tory1[1] Earl of Euston Whig[1]
1806 Lord Henry Petty Whig[1]
1807 Sir Vicary Gibbs Tory[1]
1811 Viscount Palmerston Tory[1]
1812 John Henry Smyth Whig[1]
1822 William John Bankes Tory[1]
1826 Sir John Copley Tory[1]
1827 Sir Nicholas Conyngham Tindal Tory[1]
1829 William Cavendish Whig[1]
1830 Whig[1]
1831 Henry Goulburn Tory[1] William Yates Peel Tory[1]
1832 Charles Manners-Sutton Tory[1]
1834 Conservative[1] Conservative[1]
1835 Hon. Charles Law Conservative[1]
1850 Loftus Wigram Conservative
1856 Spencer Horatio Walpole Conservative
1859 Charles Jasper Selwyn Conservative
1868 Alexander Beresford Hope Conservative
1882 Henry Cecil Raikes Conservative
1887 Sir George Stokes, Bt Conservative
1891 Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb 2 Conservative
1892 Sir John Eldon Gorst Conservative
1906 Samuel Butcher Conservative John Rawlinson Conservative
1911 Sir Joseph Larmor Conservative
1918 Co. Conservative 3 Co. Conservative3
1922 J. R. M. Butler Ind. Liberal4 Conservative
1923 Sir Geoffrey G. Butler 5 Conservative
1926 Sir John Withers Conservative
1929 Godfrey Wilson Conservative
1935 Sir Kenneth Pickthorn Conservative
1940 Dr. Archibald Hill Ind. Conservative4
1945 Wilson Harris Independent

Notes:-

Elections before 1715

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Election by block vote 1715–1918

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1710s1720s1730s1740s1750s1760s1770s1780s1790s1800s1810s1820s1830s1840s1850s1860s1870s1880s1890s1900s1910s

Elections in the 1710s

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Elections in the 1720s

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Elections in the 1730s

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Elections in the 1740s

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Elections in the 1750s

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Elections in the 1760s

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Elections in the 1770s

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Elections in the 1780s

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Elections in the 1790s

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Elections in the 1800s

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Elections in the 1810s

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Elections in the 1820s

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Elections in the 1830s

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Elections in the 1840s

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Elections in the 1850s

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Elections in the 1860s

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Elections in the 1870s

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Elections in the 1880s

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Walpole's resignation caused a by-election.

Hope

Raikes was appointed Postmaster General, requiring a by-election.

Stokes

Beresford-Hope's death caused a by-election.

Elections in the 1890s

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Jebb

Elections in the 1900s

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Elections in the 1910s

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Cox

Elections 1918–1950

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General elections from 1918, when most constituencies polled on the same day, were on different polling days than for territorial constituencies. The polls for university constituencies were open for five days. The elections were conducted by Single Transferable Vote.

Elections in the 1910s

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General election 1918: Cambridge University (2 seats)

Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2
C Coalition Unionist John Rawlinson 35.16 2,034
C Coalition Unionist Joseph Larmor 32.69 1,891 1,986
Independent William Cecil Dampier 21.09 1,220 1,229
Labour J. C. Squire 11.06 640 641
Electorate: 9,282 Valid: 5,785 Quota: 1,929 Turnout: 62.32% C indicates candidate endorsed by the coalition government.

Elections in the 1920s

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General election 1923: Cambridge University (2 seats)

Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2
Unionist John Rawlinson 40.85 4,207
Unionist Geoffrey G. Butler 27.61 2,844
Independent Liberal J. R. M. Butler 31.54 3,248
Electorate: 14,974 Valid: 10,229 Quota: 3,434 Turnout: 68.78%

General election 1929: Cambridge University (2 seats)

Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2
Unionist John Withers 39.76 6,356
Unionist Godfrey Wilson 31.71 5,069
Liberal Hubert Henderson 19.38 3,099
Labour Alexander Wood 9.15 1,463
Electorate: 23,978 Valid: 15,987 Quota: 5,330 Turnout: 66.67

Elections in the 1930s

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Elections in the 1940s

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General election 1945: Cambridge University (2 seats)

Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4
Conservative Kenneth Pickthorn 46.18 10,202
Independent Wilson Harris 16.18 3,574 4,709 5,185
Independent Progressive J. B. Priestley 22.82 5,041 5,128 5,238
Independent Charles Hill 10.13 2,238 3,092 3,595
National Ernest Leslie Howard-Williams 4.69 1,036 1,798 eliminated
Electorate: 42,012 Valid: 22,091 Quota: 7,364 Turnout: 52.58

Specific

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Stooks Smith, Henry. (1973) [1844-1850]. Craig, F. W. S. (ed.). The Parliaments of England (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. pp. 28–31. ISBN 0-900178-13-2.
  2. ^ a b c Fisher, David R. "Cambridge University". The History of Parliament. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Craig, F. W. S., ed. (1977). British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885 (e-book) (1st ed.). London: Macmillan Press. ISBN 978-1-349-02349-3.
  4. ^ "Cambridge University Election". Yorkshire Gazette. 9 February 1856. p. 3. Retrieved 14 September 2018 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ "Cambridge University Election". Cambridge Independent Press. 29 February 1868. p. 5. Retrieved 1 February 2018 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Craig, FWS, ed. (1974). British Parliamentary Election Results: 1885-1918. London: Macmillan Press. ISBN 9781349022984.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
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Preceded byDevizes Constituency represented by the prime minister 1804–1806 Vacantuntil 1809Title next held by**Northampton**
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