Caithness included the island of Stroma in the Pentland Firth and contained Dunnet Head, the most northerly point of the British mainland. Farming, fishing and stone quarrying were its staples. Wick, on the east coast, was a royal burgh and Thurso, on the north, was the only other considerable town. The principal villages were Berriedale, Castletown, Dunbeath, Halkirk, Keiss, Lybster and Sarclet.
The county, under the aegis of the lord lieutenant, Sir James Sinclair of Mey, near Thurso, 12th earl of Caithness since 1793, who was married to Ulbster’s niece, sent a loyal address to the regent in the aftermath of Peterloo in November 1819.
At a meeting adjourned from the 1823 Michaelmas head court, 1 Oct. 1823, Captain John Gordon of Swiney moved and old William Sinclair of Freswick seconded resolutions approving Lord Archibald Hamilton’s recent motion for reform of the Scottish county representation. They were endorsed by the other freeholders present, who included George Sinclair and Freswick’s brother-in-law, John Sinclair of Barrock. On 12 Oct. 1823 John Hope, solicitor-general for Scotland, informed Lord Melville, the government’s Scottish manager, that George Sinclair was behind this ‘bold attempt’ to promote reform:
In consequence of a very full and accurate explanation of the state of the roll ... having been made to me ... I requested ... [William Dundas*] to lay it before ... [you] as I know that a very strong and general feeling prevailed to oppose George Sinclair and there was a strong wish that some person would get on the roll who would undertake the representation. Indeed so anxious are the gentlemen for some person to offer himself ... which hardly any of themselves wish to do, attendance being so inconvenient, that I was myself requested to take a vote for that purpose ... which of course I at once declined; but I am persuaded that in the state of the county I might beat Sinclair by three to one if I had been insane enough to embark in the scheme.
Next day Lord Caithness’s brother Captain James Sinclair, an army officer, who was not yet on the roll, solicited and received Melville’s support for a challenge to George Sinclair at the next general election.
Three weeks before the general election in July 1826 Dunbar boasted to Melville that as each party had 20 committed votes his six held the balance: he accused James Sinclair of being ‘neglectful of this weight of interest’ and deplored the conduct of Horne, ‘an Edinburgh writer, pretending to give away the county’. Two days later William Horne informed Melville that ‘the return seems to depend upon a single vote’, with James Sinclair having 19 to George’s 18, and urged him to expedite the passage by sea from Deal to Wick of one of James Sinclair’s voters, Macleay of Newmore, who was too poorly to go by road; otherwise, George Sinclair’s casting vote as parliamentary praeses would give him the edge and enable him to keep his opponent’s new claimants off the roll. James Sinclair’s mother pressed Melville to secure leave of absence for John Finlaison, a former admiralty clerk now employed in the national debt office.
James Sinclair was largely a cypher in the House, where he supported Catholic emancipation in 1829. There was hostile petitioning from the presbytery of Caithness and the inhabitants of Halkirk.
Henry Cockburn, the Scottish solicitor-general, wanted Caithness to be united with Sutherland or Orkney by the Scottish reform bill, but it was left alone and the alternating return ended.
Alternated with Buteshire
Enrolled freeholders: 31 in 1820; 41 in 1826; 46 in 1830
