A ‘gentleman of independent fortune’ and former sailor, Fordyce was a Liberal Free Churchman who supported free trade and religious liberty in his brief spell in Parliament.
Fordyce was descended from the Dingwalls of Brucklay Castle and the Fordyces of Culsh. His father was an advocate and minor gentleman, but as a third son, Fordyce entered the navy ‘under the auspices’ of his relative Sir Arthur Farquhar.
Fordyce had nominated Farquhar as the Conservative candidate for Aberdeen at the 1835 general election.
In 1845 Fordyce broke the stranglehold of the Whig-Conservative coalition that controlled Aberdeen burgh council and had marginalised Free Churchmen. He did so by rallying overwhelming opposition to the council’s proposed improvement plan, forming a diverse coalition, which included some Conservatives and Chartists.
Fordyce was a silent member in the Commons, with a fluctuating attendance record. He voted in 53.4%, 23.5% and 37.7% of the divisions in the 1849, 1851 and 1852 sessions respectively.
Drawing on his naval expertise, Fordyce was a member of the 1849 inquiry that recommended that merchant steam ships could form ‘a most useful auxiliary force for national defence’ if they were designed to be able to accommodate guns used in the royal navy.
Fordyce opposed Palmerston’s amendment to the militia bill that brought down Russell’s government, 20 Feb. 1852, and was among the Liberal MPs who attended the meeting at Russell’s house the following month.
On his death in 1864, Brucklay Castle passed to his eldest son, William Dingwall Fordyce (1836-75), Liberal MP for Aberdeenshire 1866-8, East Aberdeenshire, 1868-75, whose twin brother James, an advocate, succeeded to Culsh. Fordyce’s other sons were soldiers.
