Inverness, the chief town of the Highlands, situated near the mouth of the River Ness, had a population (burgh and parish) of 12,264 in 1821 and 14,304 in 1831. A ‘very thriving place’, it had woollen, hemp and leather manufactures and a commodious harbour. The completion of the Caledonian Canal in October 1822 brought considerable commercial benefits to the town, which was provided with gas and water in this period.
Forres council sent a loyal address to the regent in the aftermath of Peterloo, 30 Nov. 1819.
probable that we can have nothing to say in the first election ... [and] we can have no voice ... If it were otherwise I have no doubt that you would be the most agreeable person to us ... and I think it likely that ...[Robert] would be too. Mr. Cumming has not I am persuaded any expectations from us, and I am pleased that he has not.
In the event Colonel Grant’s representatives on the spot decided to keep things peaceful and retain Cumming, who was returned unopposed.
Inverness linen and hemp manufacturers petitioned the Commons for continuance of the bounty on linen exports, 29 June 1820.
would materially alter the governing party in the burgh ... [and] introduce into power men whose politics are not to be trusted, and ... the issue might very probably be to establish the place as one of the strongholds of opposition if not of radicalism.
By early April 1821 Robert Grant was increasingly confident that Rae, who he thought had so expertly managed the select committee on the royal burghs as to frustrate the reformers, would come down on the right side.
As early as November 1822 Robert Grant told a friend that he was ‘almost certain’ of his return for Inverness Burghs at the next general election, when Fortrose had the casting vote
supposing no change of leading men to take place in the burghs ... and no such change is at all probable; and supposing that the present burgh system ... continues ... The leading men of [Inverness and Fortrose] are at present warmly with us, but we have no property in either, nor any such hold over them as the proprietor of an English close borough possesses over the corporation ... When I come in, I command the seat but for two Parliaments at the utmost; after that, the casting vote goes to two other burghs over which we have no influence.
Hants RO, Calthorpe mss 26M62/F/C 545.
In April 1824 Charles Grant junior, who had succeeded his father as owner of the Waternish estate on Skye a few months earlier, told Bught of news that ‘in the eastern burghs or at least in Nairn there is an attempt making to tamper with Fortrose’, but he hoped that he could ‘give such an account of our Inverness friends as may put a stop to further attempts’. Bught and the provost of Inverness, James Robertson of Aultnacaillich, assured Robert Grant of their support the following month, but in September 1824 Charles was ‘informed ... that a keen canvass is going on for the burghs’. However, he believed Fortrose to be ‘so firmly for us that I have not any fears on that score, except for the chance of events’.
Forres parish farmers petitioned Parliament against interference with the corn laws in February 1827, and the magistrates and inhabitants of the burgh petitioned the Commons for repeal of the stamp duty on receipts, 18 Apr. 1828.
By then Robert Grant was in open opposition. In mid-June 1830, anticipating the king’s death and a dissolution, when Inverness would become the returning burgh, Duncan Grant wrote to his father:
I should not regret that R. Grant found that you had at least a choice of candidates. His claim on Provost Robertson and yourself is I believe very slender. In fact we have had reason to suspect that he has rather hindered than abetted his brother’s friendly dispositions towards either. What indefeasible claims then he may conceive himself to have upon you I know not. He probably conceives that his brother’s influence should not only carry the county but also command the town, which, taking into account the arrogance of his whole bearing, is a little too much.
Robert Grant, having ‘strong assurances of support from Fortrose, but hearing sinister reports about the eastern burghs and about my chance of being returned again’, appealed to Bught for continued backing, but he was told that Inverness council had decided to vote for John Baillie of nearby Leys Castle, a former officer in the East India Company’s Bengal army, related to the locally influential Baillies of Dunain and Dochfour, and pro-Catholic Tory Member for Hedon since 1820. He had already secured the support of Forres and Nairn. Duncan Grant, in Edinburgh, was taken ‘somewhat by surprise’ to learn that ‘things were so matured’ and, though glad to be rid of the unpopular Robert Grant, had ‘no great liking’ for Baillie, who was supposed to have carried the burghs ‘through the means of East Indian patronage’.
Anti-slavery petitions were sent to the 1830 Parliament from Forres, Inverness and Nairn.
The same four burghs made up the reformed constituency, which had a registered electorate of 715 at the 1832 general election. Baillie, standing as a Conservative, defeated a Liberal by seven votes in a poll of 689, with Cumming Bruce in third place.
Forres, Elginshire (1820); Fortrose, Ross-shire (1826); Inverness (1830); Nairn (1831)
