Cullen was a small fishing port on the southern shore of the Moray Firth. In the early 1820s most of the decayed old town, which lay inland, was demolished to make way for improvements to Cullen House, the residence of the lunatic 5th earl of Seafield, who owned most of the local property. A more salubrious burgh was built on the coast, east of the ancient settlement of Fishertown. Its population (burgh and parish) was 1,452 in 1821 and 1,593 in 1831, and its council numbered 19.
Since 1790 the district’s representation had been determined by a system of alternating nomination between the earls of Kintore, who dominated Kintore and Inverurie, and, nominally, the 7th earl of Findlater, whose influence was primarily in Cullen and Banff. From 1811 management of the former Findlater interest was in the hands of Colonel Francis William Grant, Tory Member for Elginshire, the acting head of his clan and curator of his imbecile elder brother Lewis, who inherited his cousin Findlater’s earldom of Seafield that year. Colonel Grant had the controlling interest in Elgin. Between 1806 and 1809 James Duff, 2nd Earl Fife, of Duff House, Banffshire, who had some influence in Elgin, had created trouble, but his nominee and nephew, James Duff * (who became 4th Earl Fife in 1811), had been defeated by Grant’s candidate in 1807. At the general election of 1818 Grant brought in his distant kinsman Robert Grant*, a barrister in England and brother of the Irish secretary Charles Grant*. The quixotic Fife, who was returned for Banffshire at that election, was keen to restore his family’s electoral interest and tried to ‘create disturbance’ at Elgin, but made no headway.
At the time of George III’s death a year later, Colonel Grant was in Italy for the sake of his health. His Elgin supporter Patrick Duff, the town clerk, told his local agent James Fraser, 3 Feb., that he had taken ‘occasion to guard our friends here from any kind of engagement for a Member’ and warned him that Fife would probably ‘kick up a dust among the trades’, though to little avail. He was anxious to receive ‘as early notice as possible of the person to whom the council’s views are to be directed’.
Unrest continued in Elgin during the summer of 1820, and Patrick Duff reported on 22 June that ‘a kind of determined conduct of hostility against Colonel Grant is still in action’. A lawsuit was soon afterwards brought against him (and his son), accusing him of ‘acting as kind of political agent for Colonel Grant at the same time that he was town clerk’; it evidently had no significant outcome.
The magistrates of Banff banned an illumination to mark the abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties against Queen Caroline in November 1820, but there were celebrations in Inverurie and Kintore. The council of Cullen voted a loyal address to the king.
From late 1824 Patrick Duff, Fraser and their associates at Elgin mulled over the possibility of attempting a coup on behalf of Colonel Grant before the next general election. Duff initially reckoned that there were only five ‘staunch Fifes’ on the council, with the rest open ‘to be acted upon’. He told Fraser that
the important question is who ought to be the candidate ... One will not do who is so nearly connected with Colonel Grant by interest or relationship as to be looked upon as a party man in the late struggle, because he will have to combat at his outset the prejudice and animosities then created ... If one can be found who possesses talent and above all wealth and interest, a liberal Tory and a good speaker and not prominently a Grant, he is the person to succeed. I should think such a person could be found who on being offered the certainty of Cullen and Kintore would take his chance at Elgin on getting from Colonel Grant such quiet but sincere support as should be found prudent to exercise.
Duff believed that Provost Innes, a ‘designing, avaricious, intriguing, ambitious [man] with a spice of smothered vanity’, could easily be seduced from Fife ‘in the plea of independence in order to gain for himself profit or advantage, or what is his grand aim, some great improvement to the city during his provostship’. Yet he considered the situation overall to be ‘extremely difficult’ and was ‘not surprised that Colonel Grant is at a loss how to act’.
The incorporated trades and inhabitants of Elgin and the trades of Banff petitioned both Houses for repeal of the corn laws in February 1827.
Abolitionist petitions were sent to the 1830 Parliament from Banff and Elgin.
The Scottish Reform Act added the ‘flourishing’ seaport of Peterhead (the most easterly point of land in Scotland) to the five existing burghs to create a constituency with 777 registered electors at the general election of 1832.
Cullen (1820), Banffshire; Kintore (1826), Inverurie (1830), Aberdeenshire; Elgin (1831); Banff (not a returning burgh in this period)
