Ramsay was descended from a junior branch of an old Kincardineshire family, the Burnetts of Leys. In 1806, his grandfather, Alexander Burnett, took the name of Ramsay on succeeding to the Fasque and Balmain estates of his cousin, Sir Alexander Ramsay Irvine, 6th bt., and was created 1st baronet.
Described as ‘a young man of good and respectable Scotch connection; in person pleasing, of good address, and an excellent speaker, providing he had a good subject’, Ramsay first contested Rochdale in the Conservative interest at the 1837 general election, providing a late challenge to John Fenton, the Whig returned at the April 1837 by-election following Entwisle’s death.
He was finally returned for Rochdale at his third attempt in 1857. Shortly before the election, the Conservatives’ Central Committee had decided, following analysis of the register, not to contest the seat. However, a group of Conservative activists led by Hamlet Nicholson, a former shoemaker and organiser of the Conservative Sick and Burial Society, believed that this decision stemmed less from the state of the register and more ‘on account of Sir A. Ramsay’s Evangelical views’, which set some of the Puseyite members of the Central Committee against him.
Although Ramsay did speak at Conservative gatherings, there was criticism of his failure to address the wider constituency.
Dod incorrectly describes Ramsay as a Liberal, but is correct in noting his support for Palmerston’s foreign policy.
On religious questions, Ramsay sympathised with the admission of Jews to Parliament, supported the divorce bill, 31 July 1857, and divided for the Maynooth grant, 21 May 1857, 29 Apr. 1858.
