Eighteenth-Century Political Participation and Electoral Culture
Lead Research Organisation:
Newcastle University
Department Name: Sch of English Lit, Lang & Linguistics
Abstract
Eighteenth-century elections are largely synonymous with corruption and debauchery, epitomised by the infamous 'rotten' and 'pocket' boroughs, and memorably represented by William Hogarth's 'Humours of an Election' series (1755). Certainly only a small proportion of the population could vote. Even fewer could exercise their vote freely. Although general elections were supposed to be held every three, then seven, years, the huge expense of campaigning ensured only a small proportion of constituencies were contested. This was no modern democracy.
Yet parliamentary elections were fundamentally important to all, not only for the selection of MPs, but also in bestowing a sense of power and belonging (even if only temporarily), in helping to form the nation's self-image, and in helping to forge a new constitutionalist tradition. Moreover, we want to show, elections not only affected, but also engaged, a wide section of the population - both those enfranchised and those not. Elections were often accompanied by an explosion of print, sermons, and song; countless ceremonies, assemblies, and entertainments; new modes of dress, decoration, and behaviour. Men and women, adults and children, rich and poor, franchised and unenfranchised, all participated - as consumers, but also as active makers of this unique cultural and political experience.
Our project's fundamental aims are to shine an intense light on these extraordinary moments of participation, ritual, and sometimes carnival, and to consider their consequences and legacies. To do this we will collect new polling data from constituencies across England 1696-1831, working in partnership with local historian groups; subject this data to new kinds of scrutiny using innovative digital tools; and gather the cultural artefacts and practices which constituted people's lived experiences of elections. We will gain new insight into electoral demography, voter behaviour, and how voting patterns changed over time, across regions, and in different types of constituency. And from a combination of archival and creative practice research (the latter designed to reimagine and re-enact important elements of elections now lost) we will gain new understanding of the extent, pervasiveness, and inclusiveness of electoral culture. By placing polling data in its cultural contexts, we will come to understand whether the elements of campaigning - print and processions, banquets and ballads, sashes and sermons - made a difference to political outcomes, or left any significant legacy beyond election time.
So this project is about two things: how people participate in politics, both with and without the vote; and how interventions across a proliferating range of media affect polling behaviour and outcomes. Both remain highly relevant in our own time. Today, many choose not to vote. This is very different from being excluded from the franchise, as was the great majority in the 18th century. But our research will challenge us to think differently about how non-voters may engage with democratic processes - through music, literature, fashion and art, for example, or via broadcast journalism and social media when once it was handbills and the hustings. We will want to ask whether contemporary phenomena such as data analytics and targeted digital communication strategies have counterparts, even origins, in pre-Reform Britain, and what effects, if any, these kinds of interventions have on people's relationship to the demos. Working with our partners, History of Parliament and the IHR, we aim to communicate our findings to audiences well beyond academia, particularly to schools and at a series of events timed (if possible) to accompany the next UK General Election. As well as reshaping our understanding of how elections functioned before parliamentary reform, we intend that this project should usefully inform pressing debates about political communication and political participation today.
Yet parliamentary elections were fundamentally important to all, not only for the selection of MPs, but also in bestowing a sense of power and belonging (even if only temporarily), in helping to form the nation's self-image, and in helping to forge a new constitutionalist tradition. Moreover, we want to show, elections not only affected, but also engaged, a wide section of the population - both those enfranchised and those not. Elections were often accompanied by an explosion of print, sermons, and song; countless ceremonies, assemblies, and entertainments; new modes of dress, decoration, and behaviour. Men and women, adults and children, rich and poor, franchised and unenfranchised, all participated - as consumers, but also as active makers of this unique cultural and political experience.
Our project's fundamental aims are to shine an intense light on these extraordinary moments of participation, ritual, and sometimes carnival, and to consider their consequences and legacies. To do this we will collect new polling data from constituencies across England 1696-1831, working in partnership with local historian groups; subject this data to new kinds of scrutiny using innovative digital tools; and gather the cultural artefacts and practices which constituted people's lived experiences of elections. We will gain new insight into electoral demography, voter behaviour, and how voting patterns changed over time, across regions, and in different types of constituency. And from a combination of archival and creative practice research (the latter designed to reimagine and re-enact important elements of elections now lost) we will gain new understanding of the extent, pervasiveness, and inclusiveness of electoral culture. By placing polling data in its cultural contexts, we will come to understand whether the elements of campaigning - print and processions, banquets and ballads, sashes and sermons - made a difference to political outcomes, or left any significant legacy beyond election time.
So this project is about two things: how people participate in politics, both with and without the vote; and how interventions across a proliferating range of media affect polling behaviour and outcomes. Both remain highly relevant in our own time. Today, many choose not to vote. This is very different from being excluded from the franchise, as was the great majority in the 18th century. But our research will challenge us to think differently about how non-voters may engage with democratic processes - through music, literature, fashion and art, for example, or via broadcast journalism and social media when once it was handbills and the hustings. We will want to ask whether contemporary phenomena such as data analytics and targeted digital communication strategies have counterparts, even origins, in pre-Reform Britain, and what effects, if any, these kinds of interventions have on people's relationship to the demos. Working with our partners, History of Parliament and the IHR, we aim to communicate our findings to audiences well beyond academia, particularly to schools and at a series of events timed (if possible) to accompany the next UK General Election. As well as reshaping our understanding of how elections functioned before parliamentary reform, we intend that this project should usefully inform pressing debates about political communication and political participation today.
Planned Impact
A central aim of this project is to increase public knowledge of electoral processes in 18th-century England. In particular, we intend that the project will inform a range of audiences about (a) different ways in which people have been able to engage in elections whether or not they had the vote; and (b) the ways in which elections were (we will argue) composed of numerous small interventions taking many different forms, aimed at engaging public opinion and securing or altering the poll's result. Disseminating the new knowledge the project generates about pre-1832 voter behaviour and electoral culture may not change the way people regard democracy today, still less how (or if) they vote. But our intention is that, working with influential non-HEI organisations (History of Parliament, Institute of Historical Research, and Hansard Trust), our historical research should inform debate about issues that remain current: (a) Does political participation inhere purely in the act of voting or might other forms of engagement be just as significant? And (b) what is the history, and what effects should we anticipate, of sophisticated multi-channel campaigns to draw people into elections, from the handbills and hustings of the 18th century to the broadcast and social media of today?
Collaboration with non-academic partners forms a key element of our methodology. Our aim is not simply to 'employ' volunteer citizen historians to help collect and process data; rather local history groups have been (during the pilot phase), and will continue to be, instrumental in setting the project's agenda and providing guidance on the most useful forms for its outputs. The chief vehicle for this co-production will be the Constituency Panels we will establish for each of our case studies, each including volunteers collaborating with the project and, where possible, representatives from local archives. The support of our partners the Institute for Historical Research will be invaluable here, since they have huge experience in recruiting and working with community historians, for instance through networks associated with the Victoria County History, as well as a substantial reach through their social media channels.
We see local historians also as key (non-HEI) beneficiaries of the research. By the end of the project, many local historians will have received specialised training, and will be empowered to continue and expand the project after its funding comes to an end. Other channels through which we will transmit our research, and debate its implications, to non-academic audiences are set out in our full Pathways to Impact document. They include a substantial and imaginative programme of public engagement events, based in each of our twelve case study constituencies, and provisionally timed to coincide with the next UK General Election (although we appreciate that the present political situation may lead to an election much sooner); a major public lecture; high-profile public launch event, potentially at the Speaker's House (facilitated by History of Parliament); and posts on the Hansard Society's respected and widely-read 'Despatch Box' blog. The element of our project with the widest potential impact is our work aimed at schools. Drawing on successful models already developed and deployed by the project team, we will develop a Learning Framework for use with Key Stage 3 pupils that fits with the requirements of the National Curriculum, supporting teachers in their delivery of mandated/recommended elements of the Citizenship and History programmes. This has the potential to reach very many young people. It will also bring significant benefits to History of Parliament, through whose website the packages will be made available. Their remit is to engage new audiences, ideally including children, with the history of democratic process, and, to an extent, the continuation of their public funding is dependent on fulfilling this objective.
Collaboration with non-academic partners forms a key element of our methodology. Our aim is not simply to 'employ' volunteer citizen historians to help collect and process data; rather local history groups have been (during the pilot phase), and will continue to be, instrumental in setting the project's agenda and providing guidance on the most useful forms for its outputs. The chief vehicle for this co-production will be the Constituency Panels we will establish for each of our case studies, each including volunteers collaborating with the project and, where possible, representatives from local archives. The support of our partners the Institute for Historical Research will be invaluable here, since they have huge experience in recruiting and working with community historians, for instance through networks associated with the Victoria County History, as well as a substantial reach through their social media channels.
We see local historians also as key (non-HEI) beneficiaries of the research. By the end of the project, many local historians will have received specialised training, and will be empowered to continue and expand the project after its funding comes to an end. Other channels through which we will transmit our research, and debate its implications, to non-academic audiences are set out in our full Pathways to Impact document. They include a substantial and imaginative programme of public engagement events, based in each of our twelve case study constituencies, and provisionally timed to coincide with the next UK General Election (although we appreciate that the present political situation may lead to an election much sooner); a major public lecture; high-profile public launch event, potentially at the Speaker's House (facilitated by History of Parliament); and posts on the Hansard Society's respected and widely-read 'Despatch Box' blog. The element of our project with the widest potential impact is our work aimed at schools. Drawing on successful models already developed and deployed by the project team, we will develop a Learning Framework for use with Key Stage 3 pupils that fits with the requirements of the National Curriculum, supporting teachers in their delivery of mandated/recommended elements of the Citizenship and History programmes. This has the potential to reach very many young people. It will also bring significant benefits to History of Parliament, through whose website the packages will be made available. Their remit is to engage new audiences, ideally including children, with the history of democratic process, and, to an extent, the continuation of their public funding is dependent on fulfilling this objective.
Publications
Aston N
(2024)
Tory Travails and Collegiate Confusion: The Oxford University Election of 1722*
in Parliamentary History
Cowan D
(2024)
Pittite Triumph and Whig Failure in the Cambridge University Constituency, 1780-96*
in Parliamentary History
Dudley C
(2024)
Voting and Not Voting in Early 18th-Century English Parliamentary Elections
in Parliamentary History
Gilding B
(2024)
'No distinction exists as to religion, profession, or sex': Imperial Reform and the Electoral Culture of the East India Company's Court of Proprietors, 1760-84
in Parliamentary History
Grenby M
(2024)
Elections in 18th-Century England: Polling, Politics and Participation
in Parliamentary History
Grenby, M.O.
(2022)
Human-Animal Interactions in the Eighteenth Century
Harris J
(2022)
Language, historical culture and the gentry of later Stuart Cornwall and south-west Wales
in Historical Research
Packham K
(2021)
Literature and the Culture of Elections and Electioneering in Eighteenth-Century England
in The Review of English Studies
Packham K
(2024)
The Drama of Elections: Election Plays in the Long Eighteenth Century
in Review of English Studies
| Title | Recordings of 18thC election ballads |
| Description | New recordings of 18thC election ballads, variously recorded by: NANCY KERR (VOICE, VIOLIN); ENGINEERED AND MIXED BY TOM A WRIGHT, POWERED FLIGHT MUSIC, SHEFFIELD (2022) MATT QUINN (VOICE); ENGINEERED AND MIXED BY TOM A WRIGHT, POWERED FLIGHT MUSIC, SHEFFIELD (2022) |
| Type Of Art | Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Impact | Performed at conference, and published and publicly available on ECPPEC website. |
| URL | https://ecppec.ncl.ac.uk/cultural-artifact-explorer/ |
| Description | New insights into elections in England in the long eighteenth century. This includes new quantitative data, e.g. number of parliamentary elections and by-elections, survival and location of poll books, and searchable database of these, and of the electors and their votes in 20 constituencies (as recorded in the poll books). It also includes collection and curation of many electoral artefacts, with digital images available on our website, along with recordings of electoral songs, etc. Also qualitative analysis of elections, electioneering and popular participation in elections. |
| Exploitation Route | Basis for further work on 18thC history, politics and culture. Use in schools. |
| Sectors | Education Culture Heritage Museums and Collections |
| URL | https://ecppec.ncl.ac.uk/ |
| Description | We have been awarded AHRC Follow-On for Impact funding (2025), which has enabled us to build a partnership with the Sir John Soane Museum, using their 18thC election paintings by Hogarth as a means of engaging children in schools with the history of elections. |
| First Year Of Impact | 2025 |
| Sector | Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections |
| Impact Types | Cultural Societal |
| Description | Humours of an Election: Annotation, Animation, Education |
| Amount | £93,195 (GBP) |
| Funding ID | AH/Z507556/1 |
| Organisation | Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC) |
| Sector | Public |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start | 03/2025 |
| End | 07/2025 |
| Title | Eighteenth-Century Political Participation and Electoral Culture |
| Description | The ECPPEC website provides a set of large databases and much associated material. This includes a database of elections in England, 1693-1832, and another of surviving poll books. These are searchable and filterable in many ways, with many data visualisations. Associated material includes 'Feature' essays explaining aspects of 18th-century electoral practice and culture, and a collection of examples of 18th-century electoral culture, ie. photographs of artefacts (IIIF), recordings of songs, etc. These are viewable through an Artefact Explorer, and in several curated online exhibitions. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Users have volunteered additional information which can be added to the database. |
| URL | https://ecppec.ncl.ac.uk/ |
| Title | Eighteenth-Century Political Participation and Electoral Culture (ECPPEC): full database of voters |
| Description | The Eighteenth-Century Political Participation & Electoral Culture (ECPPEC) project ran from 2020-2023 to explore how people participated in parliamentary elections in England in the period from 1695 to the Reform Act of 1832.Part of the project collected, transcribed and digitised polling records from 20 case study constituencies. This database contains those voting records (as at 07/11/24) in a single file that contains:Voter_id (an ID for each record, for internal use)Election_id (again, our internal ID)Election YearElection MonthConstituencyType of Constituency (Borough, County, University)Election Type (by-election or general)All candidates running in that electionCandidate(s) seated as result of electionVoter surnameVoter forenameOccupation (if available)Candidates voter voted for |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2024 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| URL | https://data.ncl.ac.uk/articles/dataset/Eighteenth-Century_Political_Participation_and_Electoral_Cul... |
| Title | Eighteenth-Century Pollbook database |
| Description | A database of existing general election pollbooks from 1693 to 1832 |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2020 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Will be incorporated into final digital resource developed by the project. |
| URL | https://digitalcultures.ncl.ac.uk/projects/protodemocracy/elections/ |
| Description | 'Do you know where this miserable wretch lives?': Challenging votes in Eighteenth-Century England |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Blog for History of Parliament |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| URL | https://thehistoryofparliament.wordpress.com/2022/02/03/do-you-know-where-this-miserable-wretch-live... |
| Description | 'Do you know where this miserable wretch lives?': Challenging votes in Eighteenth-Century England |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Blog posting on History of Parliament website |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| URL | https://thehistoryofparliament.wordpress.com/2022/02/03/do-you-know-where-this-miserable-wretch-live... |
| Description | Dispatch Box Blog |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Blog post on 'Dispatch Box' blog of the Hansard Society. Title was 'Controverted elections: how disputed results used to be part and parcel of English political and parliamentary life'. Disputed parliamentary election results - often taking months to resolve - were a frequent feature of English political culture before the reforms of the 19th century. But how could defeated candidates protest the result of an election, and how were such disputes resolved? Written by James Harris. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
| URL | https://www.hansardsociety.org.uk/blog/controverted-elections-how-disputed-results-used-to-be-part-a... |
| Description | Elections: Eighteenth-Century Narratives, an exhibition by Senate House Library, University of London. Curated by Kendra Packham. |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Physical exhibition at Senate House Library, University of London, 15 October-30 November 2024. Also online. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://ies.sas.ac.uk/blog/humours-and-narratives-elections-eighteenth-century |
| Description | Keynote presentation in public-facing session at British Society for 18th-Century Studies Conference, January 2025 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
| Results and Impact | Keynote was in special section on 'The 18th Century in the 21st', and put the project in dialogue with political scientists studying modern and contemporary elections (e.g. Prof. Sir John Curtice) |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |
| Description | Lecture |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Invited talk to Double Crown Club. 60 attendees, from printing and publishing backgrounds. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Presentation to Society for Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | 25 from Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne attended presentation on ECPPEC project |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |