Unable as hereditary sheriff to stand for the county, John Murray, whose family acquired their Philiphaugh estates in the fifteenth century, entered Parliament for Linlithgow Burghs, which included the burgh of Selkirk, at a contested by-election in 1725. Re-elected unopposed in 1727, he voted with the Administration till 1734, when he went into opposition, voting against Walpole on the repeal of the Septennial Act. Resigning the sheriffdom in favour of one of his sons, he was returned in 1734 for the county, where he was unopposed till his death. Continuing to vote with the Opposition, he received a circular letter in September 1737 from Lord Marchmont, urging the attendance of opposition Members at the opening of the new session.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
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