Cumming Gordon’s father, a soldier, was shipwrecked off Penzance when returning from foreign service, married a local heiress and settled in Cornwall. Cumming Gordon served for six years in the army and was at Leghorn in 1771. In 1775 he succeeded to the family’s estates in Scotland and took up residence there. He became one of the leading spirits of the Moray Association of resident proprietors formed to resist Lord Fife’s hegemony in Elginshire, and he unsuccessfully contested the county in 1784. In 1790, the seat went to his nephew Lewis Alexander Grant, as part of the north-eastern electoral settlement negotiated by Henry Dundas. Grant suffered a mental breakdown in 1792 and on 12 Feb. Cumming Gordon told James Grant that he would be interested in the seat in the event of a vacancy, in order to improve the chances of procuring a passage to India for his son. In 1794, with the approval of his brother-in-law Sir James Grant, he made his bid, as a supporter of government; but Dundas, annoyed by his precipitancy and fearing disruptive consequences throughout the area, refused his support and backed another candidate. Cumming Gordon gave way shortly before the election of 1796, expressing a hope that Dundas would regard his pretensions more favourably on a future occasion.
In 1795 he was served heir to his kinsman Sir William Gordon of Gordonstown. His right to the property was challenged in the courts, but it was confirmed in 1798. He again contemplated standing for Elginshire in 1802, but left the sitting Member unmolested at the request of Robert Dundas of Arniston. Having ‘taken the crotchet of being in at this time’,
Immediately after his return he corresponded with Robert and Henry Dundas about a scheme to transfer him eventually to the county and he placed himself entirely at their disposal in the matter.
Cumming Gordon, who received a baronetcy from Pitt in 1804, died 10 Feb. 1806.
