Forfarshire, which had last polled in 1782, was noted for its agriculture, fisheries and textiles, and its resistance to returning government candidates.
Petitions against the withdrawal of bounties on linen exports, which stressed the interdependence of Forfarshire’s agricultural and manufacturing interests, were adopted by the Dundee-based Forfarshire Chamber of Commerce, 6 Apr., Kirriemuir and the freeholders, the heritors and the commissioners of supply at the annual general county meeting, 29 Apr., and were presented to the Commons, 25, 30 May, 1 July 1820.
A replacement for the Scottish Parliament’s 1425 Act regulating salmon fisheries was universally sought, but the different practices and preferences of the county’s sea and freshwater fishermen, especially over the timing of the close season, were evident in their petitions for and against the abortive 1823, 1824, 1825 and 1827 bills and testimony to the 1824 and 1827 select committees.
The campaign against corn law revision gathered momentum in the autumn of 1826, and petitions presented in 1827 from Barrie, Monyfieth and Panbride, where the weavers clamoured for repeal, were countered by protectionist ones from the landowners and tenants of the Forfar district and farmers attending markets in the county.
At a well-attended general county meeting, chaired by L’Amy, 30 Apr. 1830, the noblemen, justices, freeholders and commissioners of supply adopted petitions for the repeal of inventory duty on Scottish wills and for a duty on West Indian rum equivalent to that on Scottish spirits. They also petitioned against the Scottish judicature bill, but according to an editorial in the Dundee, Perth and Cupar Advertiser, their opposition was confined to its provisions for maritime cases.
The voiding of the Perth Burghs election (in which Donald Ogilvy had been defeated) and unrest during the ensuing contest between the Grey ministry’s lord advocate Francis Jeffrey* and Airlie’s brother William Ogilvy* prompted Airlie to summon the militia in January 1831 and seek support for raising a yeomanry regiment. Maule, who notwithstanding his failure to divide on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830, had immediately applied to the new Grey ministry for a peerage, cautioned him against doing so
the farmers neither having the same capital, nor being able to spare the requisite time from their farms, in consequence of having fewer servants ... Another thing is that Forfarshire is in so quiet a state, that many men who might be persuaded to come forward upon an emergency would hang back when a case of necessity could not be made out.
Add. 51835, Maule to Holland, 4 Dec. 1830; Dundee, Perth and Cupar Advertiser, 6 Jan. 1831; NAS GD16/34/387/8/1, 2.
Proposals to give separate Members to Aberdeen and Dundee under the Scottish reform bill proved popular, and an unspecified number of Forfarshire petitions supporting the English and Scottish measures were forwarded to the 10th earl of Kinoull and presented to the Lords, 21 Mar. 1831.
Airlie ensured that a scurrilous anti-Ogilvy handbill issued during the peerage elections in Edinburgh, where he was unsuccessful, was mentioned in the Lords by the duke of Buccleuch as presenter of the Forfarshire anti-reform petition, 28 June 1831. The lack of support for his proposal to raise the matter directly in Parliament dismayed him, and after taking counsel’s opinion he referred the slander against him to the courts.
We won by a majority of two, and one of the voters, who came from Ireland, did not arrive till six o’clock in the evening. The cause, when we went into court, was considered hopeless. We were outvoted in the choice of a praeses, but, notwithstanding, we got all our voters put on the roll, amounting to four, two being admitted on the opposite side. Your friend Sir Francis Drummond was here, very keen you may believe. We had a voter from Germany direct, two from Ireland, and General Sir John Hope from Bute, a long journey for an old infirm man. All the professional men agree they never knew a cause so absolutely lost ever gained before.
Glasgow City Archives TD219/11/61.
A published letter of 7 Oct. 1831 from Carnegie of Boysack to Ogilvy, for whom he had voted, disputed the Member’s claim that he owed his return to his political principles:
My own opinion in favour of the reform bill has never changed; and my vote was given to you, because I held myself pledged by a promise made long before the question of reform was agitated to support you, whenever you should become a candidate, in consequence of Mr. Maule retiring.
Dundee, Perth and Cupar Advertiser, 13 Oct. 1831.
Hallyburton addressed reform meetings in Perthshire and the burgh that autumn and, after prevaricating, proceeded with a petition against Ogilvy’s return, alleging improper interference by Airlie and ‘gross partiality’ in the management of the roll to procure a majority for Ogilvy, 7 Dec. 1831.
The decision to grant Perth separate representation and transfer Forfar to the new Montrose group of burghs, which included Arbroath and Brechin, was generally welcomed.
As agreed at the annual general meeting, 30 Apr., Forfarshire paid to publish lists of qualified electors in the Edinburgh and local papers for the first time in May and June 1832 and advertised for appeals and additions.
Enrolled freeholders: 122 in 1820; 124 in 1826; 124 in 1830
