Dornoch, the county town of Sutherland, situated on the south-east coast near the Dornoch Firth, was ‘extremely insignificant in every particular’, being ‘literally a village, consisting of a church, a gaol and a very few houses, without trade or manufactures of any kind’. There was no harbour, as the estuary was too shallow. Its population declined from 630 in 1821 to 504 in 1831, and its council numbered 15, of whom eight had no property in the burgh.
Elizabeth, countess of Sutherland exercised political control over Dornoch, where her husband, George Leveson Gower†, 2nd marquess of Stafford, was provost. Since 1794 she had controlled the parliamentary representation through a pact with Francis Mackenzie†, 1st Baron Seaforth (d. 1815), who had built a dominant interest in Dingwall. This arrangement was renewed in 1818 with the Whig James Stewart Mackenzie* of Brahan Castle (who had acquired the Seaforth estates through marriage the previous year), despite his political differences with the Grenvillite Staffords. Samuel Laing of Papdale, the leading figure in Kirkwall politics (he served as provost, 1820-34), was another Whig ally of the Staffords. Their combined influence outweighed that of the Tory Sir John Sinclair† of Ulbster, who controlled Wick but was in financial difficulties, and of Sir Charles Lockhart Ross of Balnagown, a minor, whose interest in Tain appears to have been handled by his great-uncle William Dundas, Tory Member for Edinburgh and cousin of the 2nd Viscount Melville, the Liverpool ministry’s Scottish manager. Sir Hugh Innes of Lochalsh had sat for the burghs since 1812, originally as the Seaforth nominee, and gave independent support to the government; he was returned unopposed in 1818.
In June 1820 Sinclair entered into an agreement with George Macpherson Grant, Member for Sutherland and a client of the Staffords, to sell the superiority of Wick, which ‘confers on the possessor an absolute control over the council of the burgh’, for £3,500. As part of the deal, Sinclair undertook to remodel the council at the Michaelmas election in accordance with a list to be provided. Macpherson Grant was advised that it would be necessary ‘one way or another to keep attached to us four or five residents capable of being bailies’, in which case ‘a little flummery may be useful with the rest but no great exertion beyond this is required’. John Maclay of Keiss, a banker, was identified as the key individual with whom ‘no doubt we shall be able to establish a useful connection’, whereas it was desirable to ensure that the new council was ‘so organized as not to depend on [the] opinion’ of one Horne, despite his professions of friendship. At the Michaelmas meeting Macpherson Grant was duly elected as provost, with Maclay as one of the bailies. The superiority was subsequently transferred to Stafford’s eldest son, Lord Gower†, which caused Sinclair some disquiet. Nevertheless, in the autumn of 1821, Sinclair informed Macpherson Grant that the council elections had ‘passed off uncommonly well ... without the least symptom of opposition’, explaining that ‘you were unanimously elected provost and the bailies and council are all trusty men’.
The Protestant Dissenters of Wick petitioned the Commons for repeal of the Test Acts, 25 May 1827.
Anti-slavery petitions were sent up to both Houses from Kirkwall’s inhabitants and the United Associate Congregation, 26 Nov., 6, 16, 18 Dec. 1830, and to the Commons from Tain presbytery, 18 Feb. 1831.
According to a newspaper list in June 1831, there were 131 £10 householders in Wick, 38 in Kirkwall, 35 in Dingwall, 27 in Tain and four in Dornoch.
Dornoch, Sutherland (1820); Wick, Caithness (1826); Kirkwall, Orkney (1830); Tain (1831), Dingwall, Ross-shire (not the returning burgh in this period)
