The Border county of Dumfriesshire was mostly given over to arable agriculture, but it had significant coal and mineral deposits and there was extensive and varied textile manufacturing. In addition to the royal burghs of Dumfries, Annan, Lochmaben and Sanquhar, the principal settlements were Ecclefechan, Langholm, Lockerbie, Moffat, Moniave and Thornhill.
There was no opposition to the return of Johnstone Hope, who had just been made a lord of the admiralty in Lord Liverpool’s ministry, in 1820, when he had the election delayed to suit his convenience.
Two weeks after the death of George IV in the summer of 1830 Johnstone Hope informed his son, Hope Johnstone, that he intended to retire at the impending dissolution and that the new king had expressed a wish that he should come in. It was at first reported that Hope Johnstone had ‘declined, though the general will of the county strongly urges him to undertake the duty’, and it seemed that Sir William might have to ‘continue for a time’. In the event the ‘very reluctant’ Hope Johnstone was persuaded to stand at the 1830 general election, when he came in unopposed, proposed by Sir Thomas Kirkpatrick and seconded by Sir William Jardine of Applegarth.
At the general election of 1832, when Dumfriesshire had a registered electorate of 1,170, Hope Johnstone was returned unopposed, but as a Conservative. He sat until 1847, when he was replaced by Queensberry’s heir, and came in again in 1857. The first contest since 1806 did not occur until 1868, when a Liberal ended the long Conservative hegemony, only to be unseated on petition.
Enrolled freeholders: 77 in 1820; 84 in 1826 and 1830;
