Fifeshire was noted for its agriculture, fisheries, coal deposits, hemp and linen trades. Census enumerators attributed its increase in population from 114,556 in 1821 to 128,859 in 1831, when 48 per cent of the 28,864 families were employed in trade and manufacture and 16 per cent in agriculture, to the jute and linen mills of Kirkcaldy and damask weaving in Dunfermline.
Wemyss sat ailing and undisturbed for the next three Parliaments, while the Fergusons and Whig earls of Rosslyn (Barons Loughborough), Sir John Oswald of Dunnikier and the Tory Lindsays of Balcarres, who had new East Indian wealth, manoeuvred to become his successor.
I did not anticipate that either Lord Kellie or through him Lord Hopetoun would have given in to such a project, or that upon any sound principle they should have been led to consider the interests of government in this country as properly placed in the hands of the Wemyss family. For many years past the General was rather suffered than approved of as a representative of the county, and the bringing forward [of] the son, who possesses no personal claims, under the very peculiar situation of his family, was a measure that I did not conceive any judicious person would have promoted. This appears to me the more extraordinary upon the part of the Hope family, who never had any intimacy with that of Wemyss and who upon public grounds were supported in opposition to them by my father and many respectable gentlemen of the county only a few years ago ... Upon this occasion Wemyss has taken the county by surprise, but upon my canvass I have found a general sentiment prevailing as to his unfitness for the situation and of the disrespect with which the county has been treated. So far does this extend that several of the very respectable freeholders who support me would though differing in politics have gone to Mr. Ferguson rather than join with Wemyss. Ferguson has come most reluctantly forward. Nor do I believe that so long as things above continue as they are, he will ever again be put in motion. Many of his moderate private friends upon a future occasion, will I know be with me ... Meanwhile I shall now proceed in concert with many of the most respectable of the county, to establish an interest warmly attached to government, but opposed to the pretensions of the Wemyss.
NAS GD51/1/198/10/86.
Melville, who delayed replying until 6 Mar., warned that Wemyss?s support would not evaporate quickly.
Petitions were received from the noblemen, freeholders and commissioners of supply for repeal of the 1819 Act encouraging Irish fisheries and for bounties on linen, 6, 30 June, and from the Kirkcaldy district against relaxation of the timber duties, 3 July 1820.
The county was convened in January 1827 after interference by certain corporations and the bankruptcy of the entrepreneur Andrew Greenhill put the Forth ferry and attendant road schemes in jeopardy.
I cannot but view with the deepest regret the crisis to which the county has been brought by the folly and ignorance of a set of thoughtless gentlemen arising in the first instance out of pique and jealousy in some, supported by avaricious principles in others, and last, though not the least by self-interested motives of an individual. When I look back to the time and attention which a set of most liberal and intelligent gentlemen have for so many years donated to bring the system of the ferries to as great perfection as was possible, and see that when they were on the point of arriving at this, their truly valuable services are overlooked and their plan thwarted and disappointed by such a group as I have described them, I cannot but feel the highest regret and indignation. I trust their conduct will yet be properly characterized and made public.
NAS GD164/1303/15, 16.
The cotton manufacturer James Aytoun secured a resolution at the meeting demanding detailed accounts of the administration of the ferries, with which the corporation of Kirkcaldy, as managers of the eastern ferries, repeatedly refused to comply.
Towns, villages, congregations and branches of the Political Union petitioned Parliament against slavery in the winter of 1830-1, and Campbell took pains to have any from the Cupar district forwarded for presentation by his brother, who had come in for Stafford.
I believe, neither by law nor the practice of the county of Fife, am I vested with the power to convene a meeting of the freeholders and heritors. My power as convener only extends over the commissioners of supply and that legally only for purposes connected with taxation; though it has been extended and exercised upon other occasions, when the commissioners of supply were required to assemble. As to the requisition itself, I am advised that signing by mandate is unusual if not irregular, and I cannot find that any former requisition was so signed.
Ibid. 6, 20 Jan. 1831.
On 20 Jan. 1831 the requisitionists met at Cupar with Major J.F. Briggs of the 28th Foot as praeses and resolved to publish the entire correspondence in the ?North British Advertiser, the Edinburgh Courant, the Caledonian Mercury, the Scotsman [and] the Fife Herald?.
Lindsay voted against the reintroduced and revised reform bills and, taking up the cause of the Fife boroughs, presented hostile petitions from East Fife and Anstruther, 23 Sept. 1831.
At the general election of 1832, when Fifeshire had a registered electorate of 2,186, Wemyss, standing as a Liberal, was returned unopposed after Lindsay retired to avoid defeat.
Enrolled freeholders: 240 in 1820; 255 in 1826; 239 in 1830
