‘A remarkable man, possibly a man of genius’, Urquhart was a prolific and indefatigable Turkophile writer and campaigner.
As to Urquhart, I have no doubt whatever that he is hired by the Russian government to abuse and calumniate me … He is more than half mad, and wholly bad.
Lord Palmerston to John MacGregor, 29 Oct. 1855, Add. 48579, qu. by J. Ridley, Lord Palmerston (1970), 571.
Although few other than Urquhart’s closest supporters believed that Palmerston was a traitor, Urquhart did occasionally secure a broader audience for his views, as many, particularly radicals, shared his hostility towards Russia and criticism of ‘secret diplomacy’.
The clan Urquhart hailed from a remote part of Scotland. After the death of his father in 1811, Urquhart was taken abroad by his mother and educated in France and Switzerland, an upbringing which perhaps contributed to his later ‘quirkiness’.
Palmerston appointed Urquhart as secretary to the embassy at Constantinople, which prompted Lord Melbourne to warn him, 27 Mar. 1836:
You cannot conceive of the alarm which exists in the Cabinet about Urquhart. This arises from his random way of talking and from his publications. They think Ponsonby sufficiently dangerous and adding Urquhart to him makes some great and fatal indiscretion … quite certain. … If he gets us into any scrape I do not know how we shall defend his appointment.
Lord Melbourne to Lord Palmerston, 5 Mar. 1836, Broadlands papers, qu. by Webster, ‘Urquhart, Ponsonby and Palmerston’, 337.
Palmerston’s motives were complex. It had suited Palmerston to publicise Russia’s private aims and fan Russophobia in Britain, to secure the backing of public opinion for his eastern policy, but he had no intention of going to war. In spring 1836, he called time on the propaganda campaign, which had served its purpose as far as he was concerned.
However, Urquhart’s appointment would come back to haunt him. Once in Constantinople, Urquhart ignored Palmerston’s instructions and sought to undermine his chief Ponsonby, negotiating with the Turks on the commercial treaty behind his back and feeding negative stories about the ambassador to the press back home.
After his recall, Urquhart wrote and published the two-volume The spirit of the East (1838) and embarked on a public speaking tour of Scotland and northern England, where he secured some support from working men and Chartists.
At the 1841 general election Urquhart contested Sheffield to publicise his views. At the nomination he declared, to much laughter, ‘if you vote for me tomorrow, you vote for impeaching the ministry’.
Urquhart’s parliamentary attendance and activity peaked in 1847-48, his first session, during which he repeatedly attacked Palmerston, and sought to rake over the events that had led to his recall in 1837. In his first major speech, 2 Dec. 1847, on commercial distress, he described the Bank Acts as ‘terrible’, and criticised Peel’s 1845 reform of the Scottish banking system.
Although his campaign against Palmerston was Urquhart’s priority he contributed on a range of other issues in the 1848 session. He supported Jewish relief, but did not think that Jewish, Catholic or Dissenting MPs should be able to legislate for the Anglican church, 3 Apr. 1848.
Urquhart supported Disraeli’s amendment to the address, 2 Feb. 1849, again condemning Whig foreign policy.
Urquhart was abroad in the Near and Middle East for all of the 1850 session, but returned the following year.
Urquhart was absent throughout the 1852 session and retired at the general election that year. The outbreak of the Crimean War in 1854 against Russia was a mixed blessing for Urquhart. On the one hand, it seemed to vindicate his views and Russophobia now had much greater currency among the press, public and politicians. However, he opposed the war and had no sympathy with radicals who portrayed it as an ideological war against Russian tyranny.
Although Urquhart’s views and critique of secret diplomacy had some appeal for radicals in the mid-1850s, he was unable to gain sustained influence or support for a variety of reasons. Radicals who shared his Russophobia looked to Palmerston to promote a strong foreign policy which promoted liberal, constitutional values abroad, and were further alienated by Urquhart’s hostility to political reform and indifference to the nationalist movements in Poland and elsewhere.
Urquhart died in 1877, and as a number of historians have concluded, it was a pity that he wasted his talents, energies and expertise on a fruitless and wrong-headed campaign.
