A young country gentleman and lawyer, Fordyce won a famous victory for the Liberals in Aberdeenshire, a county long dominated by the Conservatives, in 1866. In his first parliament, Fordyce focused on redressing the grievances of Scottish farmers, which had been the main theme of his campaign. However, an obituary noted that ‘as a legislator Mr Fordyce was of rather a reserved and cautious type, and if his constituents did not obtain from him all that they desired, it was not because he attempted too much’.
Fordyce’s father, Alexander Dingwall Fordyce (1800-64), was a naval officer who inherited the family estates of Culsh and Brucklay Castle from his brother in 1843. One of the leaders of Aberdeen’s Free Church party, Fordyce senior was Liberal MP for the city, 1847-52. Educated at Edinburgh university, William Dingwall Fordyce was admitted to the faculty of advocates in 1861, but did not practice.
In May 1866 Fordyce successfully contested the Aberdeenshire by-election, and like his father twenty years previously was accused of having a secret Free Church agenda.
Fordyce was mainly concerned with agricultural questions, particularly those relating to Scotland. In his maiden speech, 20 July 1866, he welcomed a bill to exempt hares and rabbits from the game laws. Although the bill did not apply to deer, which Fordyce thought were equally as destructive as hares and rabbits, he declared that the measure would give ‘great satisfaction to farmers’.
In the same session, Fordyce repeatedly pressed for government compensation for farmers affected by the cattle plague in Aberdeenshire.
During the debates on the 1868 representation of the people (Scotland) bill, Fordyce seconded Duncan McLaren’s abortive motion for a redistribution scheme that dealt with England, Scotland and Ireland together. On the basis of its population and contribution to the public revenue, Scotland merited at least 15 extra MPs, Fordyce argued, 18 May 1868. He backed the Conservative government’s proposal to split Aberdeenshire into two single-member divisions.
Fordyce was returned for Aberdeenshire East as a Liberal at the 1868 general election and re-elected in 1874. He died aged 39 in November 1875 after suffering a ‘bad bilious attack’ after getting wet during a shooting trip. A ‘keen sportsman’, Fordyce was an ‘excellent golf player’ and a marksman of some repute. He had regularly participated in the annual rifle competition between the Houses of Lords and Commons held at Wimbledon, ‘and more than once made the highest score of either side’.
