Berwickshire, on the English border, was nominally divided into three districts: Lauderdale, Lammermuir and the Merse. Its principal town, Berwick-upon-Tweed, had been given to England in 1482 and returned two Members as a freeman borough. Elections there were habitually influenced, as sponsors, candidates and out-voters, by the gentry and freeholders of Berwickshire and neighbouring Northumberland and north Durham.
At the last poll in 1796 dynastic rivalries fostered during the minority of the 10th earl of Home (the lord lieutenant and a representative peer) had enabled Henry Dundas† (1st Viscount Melville) to secure the county for the government interest through George Baillie of Jerviswoode, a nephew of the 8th earl of Haddington and grandson of the 3rd earl of Marchmont, who had denounced his candidature. Another Melvillite Tory, the Edinburgh banker Sir John Marjoribanks of Lees, had replaced Baillie at the 1818 general election, but not without resentment, and Sir Walter Scott’s kinsman Hugh Scott† of Harden, the Member for Roxburghshire Sir Alexander Don* of Newton Don (the defeated Whig in 1796), George Buchan of Kello and the convener of the county, William Hay of Drumelzier, were all expected to offer at the next opportunity. A committee was also formed after the 1818 election to ensure that the county was ‘not again taken by surprise’.
Villages in the Merse were illuminated to mark the abandonment of the bill of pains and penalties in November 1820 and it was generally supposed that Lauderdale was sympathetic to Queen Caroline’s cause. However, he endorsed the Liverpool ministry’s decision to prosecute her in a major speech in the Lords, 2 Nov. 1820, and backed the unsuccessful government candidate, his son-in-law James Balfour* at the Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election the following month, when the queen’s treatment was the major issue.
With regard to the competing claims of the candidates ... they are somewhat on the same footing. Only Mr. Hunter has property in the county and Captain Maitland has I believe none. The former wholly unencumbered by engagements, and the latter under an influence of I should think no desirable kind. A suitable candidate, having the advantage of local residence, would unquestionably have been very desirable; but from various circumstances ... none such seemed likely to offer; and when Mr. H. offered himself those who decided to give him their support did so under the impression that they were supporting one favourable to the existing government, in opposition to one of a different description. The circumstances of now finding your lordship’s good wishes ranged on the side of Captain Maitland is what I confess I for one did not anticipate.
Ibid. f. 59.
Lauderdale’s opinions on corn law reform were debated in the local press in 1825, when a county meeting was apparently refused and the landowners and occupiers petitioned the Commons for protection, 28 Apr.
At Marjoribanks and Buchan’s instigation, the freeholders, landowners and farmers assembled at Greenlaw, 17 Feb., and joined the county’s commissioners of supply residing in Edinburgh in petitioning both Houses against interference with the corn laws and for higher import tariffs on lesser grains and pulses, 26 Feb. 1827.
Maitland aligned with the anti-reformers in opposition following the ministry’s defeat in November 1830 and took up the cause of the Berwick-upon-Tweed out-voters threatened with disfranchisement by the Grey ministry’s English reform bill, which he naturally voted against. The Scottish measure left Berwickshire’s representation unchanged, but the gentry were appalled by the drop to £10 in the qualification for a county vote and the projected increase and urbanization of the electorate. This was stressed in speeches by the anti-reformers Milne, his son David and the younger Baillie when their anti-reform petition was adopted at a much-publicized county meeting chaired by Lord Home at Greenlaw, 18 Mar. A declaration of support for the anti-reformers from Sir William Purves Hume Campbell of Marchmont was also read, but the reformers’ spokesmen Anthony Dudgeon of Leith and the attorney Charles Baillie, who pressed the tenant farmers’ case for enfranchisement, were refused permission to read or cite from the Scottish reform bill. According to the pro-reform Berwick Advertiser, only 33 of the 150 freeholders attended.
Dune and Coldstream petitioned the Lords urging the bill’s passage, 3 Oct. 1831.
Lord Dunglass resisted pressure to start and at the general election of 1832, when the county had a registered electorate of 1,060, and polled at Ayton, Duns, Lauder, and the election town of Greenlaw, Charles Marjoribanks, standing as a Liberal, defeated the Conservative Maitland by 447-362.
Enrolled freeholders: 124 in 1820; 133 in 1826; 149 in 1830
