Today I am closing in on The End of the WIP, but am definitely going to take a break and get out to vite (as I hope everyone is!!) In the meantime, I am re-running a personal favorite post of mine from the last election in 2008 about the role of women in 18th century politics...
For the last couple of weeks, I've been doing some volunteer
work at a political campaign office, getting ready for the Super
Tuesday primary on February 5. It's mostly answering phones, stuffing
envelopes, handing out bumper stickers and yard signs--not hugely
glamorous. But it's made me think about Georgiana, Duchess of
Devonshire, and her Whig friends in the 18th century. And about how
political campaigns have--and haven't--changed in 200+ years.
"Ladies
who interest themselves so much in the case of elections, are perhaps
too ignorant to know that they meddle with what does not concern them"
--The Morning Post, March 1784.
Georgiana
first met Charles James Fox in 1777, when he visited Chatsworth. At
28, he was already marked out as the future leader of the Whigs. Until
then his political career had veered between success and failure, and
Georgiana spent her time flitting around, partying and racking up debts.
But they both wanted, and were capable, of much more. They spent
that visit discussing ideas. Fox instilled in Georgiana a devotion to
the Whigs, who by the 1770s stood for opposition to the King, mistrust
of powers of the crown, and vigilance over civil liberties.
"One
day last week, her Grace the Duchess of Devonshire appeared on the
hustings at Covent Garden. She immediately saluted her favorite
candidate, the Hon. Charles James Fox" --The Morning Post, September 25,
1780
Georgiana began following the debates in Parliament
and perfecting her skills as a political hostess. She became the leader
of an elite group of political females that included her sister Harriet
Ponsonby, the Duchess of Portland, Lady Jersey, Lady Carlisle, Mrs.
Bouverie, and the Waldegraves, yet none ever outshown her, or came in
for the extent of criticism she did.
In
1780, Richard Brinsley Sheridan (playwright, politician, and lover of
Georgiana's sister Harriet) asked for Georgiana's help. She arranged
for him to stand in the Spencer-dominated borough of Stafford (he was
elected, natch). A week later, on Sept. 25, Fox asked her to accompany
him as he contested the borough of Westminster. In this case, she only
stood on the platform for a few minutes, but the press was Shocked.
"The
Duchess of Devonshire's attendance at Covent Garden, perhaps, will not
secure Mr. Fox's election; but it will at least establish her
pre-eminence above all other beauties of that place, and make her a
standing toast in all the ale-houses and gin-shops of Westminster"
--Morning Post, April 8, 1784
In 1782, the Whigs
came to power with Fox as Foreign Secretary. Under Parliamentary rules,
MPs selected for office had to re-offer themselves to their
constituents, and Fox again asked Georgiana to help him out. He wanted
her to lead a women's delegation, and on April 3 she performed her first
official duty for the party. She and the other ladies, wearing Whig
colors of buff and blue, spoke under large banners reading 'Freedom and
Independence' and 'The Man of the People.' She was a sensation. Fans
bearing her portrait sold in the hundreds.
Her
involvement in politics only grew after the birth of her first child
(Little G) in 1784. The Duc de Chartres and his French delegation
treated her as their official hostess; her influence with the Prince of
Wales was well-known. But also in 1784, the Whigs were low in public
opinion as they formed a Coalition against Prime Minister Pitt and the
King. In March, Pitt called a general election, setting off a storm of
campaigning.
On March 17, Georgiana appeared at the opera, to
much cheering--and booing and hissing. The Duchess of Rutland, a Tory
hostess, stood up in her box and shouted, "Damn Fox!" In reply, Lady
Maria Waldegrave leaped up and retorted, "Damn Pitt!" This must have
been highly entertaining! The most noise I've ever heard at the opera
was once when the guy sitting behind me fell asleep and started snoring.
"The
Duchess made no scruple of visiting some of the humblest of electors,
dazzling and enchanting them by the fascination of her manner, the power
of her beauty, and the influence of her high rank" --Horace Walpole
But
Georgiana also suffered threats and abuse as she went about her
campaigning. By the end of her first week, she was exhausted and
hoarse, with blistered feet. Fox was still behind in the polls.
Georgiana wrote to her mother Lady Spencer, "I gave the Election quite
up, and must lament all that has happened." The Pittite papers, like
the Morning Herald, reported
that she exchanged kisses for votes, and scurrilous cartoons appeared.
(She sent deputies out to buy up the most offensive of them as soon as
they appeared!). Fox did eventually score a victory, and Carlton House
saw nights of celebratory balls and dinners.
Until the next election...
Have
you ever done any work in politics? And where can I get one of those
blue suits Keira Knightley has on in the film still? I LOVE that
costume!
Amanda, somehow I knew the Duchess was going to make an appearance at the Riskies this week. :)
ReplyDeleteI've been involved in social action of various sorts but never directly in support of a particular party.
Like you I covet that blue suit, Amanda! I wonder if I could get my seamstress friend to make one for me.
ReplyDeleteLike Elena I have been involved in a number of social action movements, but never really in direct support of a particular candidate or party. I was recently involved in a successful effort to thwart the state veterinary board's effort to close down the low cost spay/neuter clinics in our state. Those clinics are saving hundreds of animal lives.