The sailor brother of George Hamilton Gordon, 4th earl of Aberdeen, Gordon was ‘a specimen of the staunch old Tory school’. He was ‘one of the last of the old school of [Scottish] county Tory members who steadily adhered to the government of the day, so long as their party was in power’.
First elected for Aberdeenshire in 1820, Gordon was narrowly re-elected in 1832 after warning electors that Reformers would ‘pull down our Church establishment’ and ‘destroy … your corn laws’.
Unsympathetic to the demands of Scottish Evangelical Churchmen for the abolition of lay patronage, Gordon spoke against George Sinclair’s motion for a select committee on the issue, 27 Feb. 1834, arguing that any legislation would require the consent of the General Assembly of the Kirk. He complained that Althorp’s budget reduced the duty on Irish whisky, but not Scottish spirits, 25 July 1834. His amendment to equalise the duties was defeated 9-36, 29 July 1834, a vote which Gordon said would be ‘ruinous to the distilleries of Scotland’, 30 July 1834.
Gordon opposed political reforms as a matter of course, even regarding the Reform Act as a ‘most delusive and mischievous measure’ that had produced no real benefit.
Gordon was unchallenged after his easy victory at the 1837 general election and in the ensuing parliament welcomed a number of the Scottish measures proposed by the Whig government, including the promise of extra funding to extend parochial schools in the Highlands, 6 Feb. 1838. Although he approved of Fox Maule’s scheme to improve prison discipline and the establishment of a central board, similar to the English poor law commission, to ensure uniformity, he feared that the proposed authority would be unaccountable, 4 Apr. 1838. He later called for the system of county and district police constabularies recently established in England to be adopted in Scotland, where magistrates currently lacked civil forces to restore public order, 24 July 1839. He again complained about the level of duty on Scottish spirits, especially given the reductions to the duty on French brandy. This policy would lead to ‘deficient revenue’ and the ‘demoralising system of illicit distillation’, Gordon predicted, 22 May 1840.
Despite his favourable response to the Whig ministry’s Scottish measures, Gordon continued to oppose them in all the other key party divisions, including Peel’s motion of no confidence, 4 June 1841. At the ensuing general election, Gordon argued that the Whigs’ proposed fixed duty on corn ‘would afford no protection to the agricultural interest’.
Before 1846 Gordon was a loyal member of the Conservative government, supporting the revision of the corn laws and reintroduction of income tax in 1842, opposing a ten hour factory day and the reduction of duties on colonial sugar in 1844, and backing the Maynooth college bill at every stage in 1845. Given this record it was perhaps surprising that Gordon resigned from the government over the repeal of the corn laws in 1846, the same year he was promoted to admiral.
After 1847 Gordon’s parliamentary activity followed a protectionist or Derbyite trajectory. He opposed Roman Catholic and Jewish relief, 8 Dec. 1847, 11 Feb. 1848, and the repeal of the navigation laws in 1849. He backed Disraeli’s motions for agricultural relief in 1849, 1850 and 1851. His protectionism was strengthened by the slump in agricultural prices, as Lord John Manners noted after visiting the Aberdeen family in autumn 1850: ‘The Admiral & Haddo [Gordon’s nephew, are] both Protectionists; the former said all his farmer constituents are strong in that sense, & complain bitterly of the low price of cattle & oats on which they depend: the yield of the crop this year will be very light’.
In the late 1840s and early 1850s Gordon typically voted in 10-25% of divisions each session, but in 1854 the Liberal Caledonian Mercury complained that he was not present for a single vote and ‘appears to have virtually resigned his office’.
A lifelong bachelor, Gordon died in 1858. An obituary noted that he was a diligent representative of local interests and ‘there was a straightforward honesty of purpose in all he said and did’.
