Kincardineshire (sometimes known as ‘The Mearns’) contained the eastern extremity of the Grampians and much fertile agricultural land, whose cultivation had benefited greatly from the improving Norfolk-model techniques pioneered by Robert Barclay Allardice of Urie (1732-97), Member for the county, 1788-97, and made rapid strides in the early nineteenth century. There was no significant industry, but fishing sustained the coastal communities. The only royal burgh was Inverbervie, on the coast. The other significant settlements were the port of Stonehaven (founded by Barclay Allardice), nine miles north of Inverbervie and the venue for county elections, and the inland villages of Banchory, Fettercairn, Gourdon and Laurencekirk.
On 18 Nov. 1819 Arbuthnott chaired a requisitioned county meeting which unanimously voted a loyal address to the regent in the aftermath of Peterloo. Its proposers were Robert William Duff of Fetteresso, the veteran convener, and John Shand of The Burn.
will be most respectably supported and ... would succeed in opposition to ... Ramsay, though he will be strong, which I am convinced ... Farquhar cannot do; he is so much disliked by the landed interest in the county. Three-fourths of the votes which are secured for my brother would go ... for Ramsay in the event of my brother not having been a candidate, or in the event of his withdrawing, which he cannot do from the circumstances in which he is placed. For however different our politics are from those of ... Ramsay, from our general friendly intercourse with him and our mutual friends, and our conviction we should feel ourselves compelled to support him in preference to ... Farquhar, as well as our feeling it due to the respectability of our county ... It will also be most advantageous for your ... future interest in Kincardineshire, for supposing ... Farquhar should succeed in the present contest, he could not keep the county, which my brother from that feeling of respect for family which still subsists among us, and from personal feelings of friends, would do.
NLS mss 11, f. 11.
Ramsay and Farquhar canvassed, while Arbuthnott remained in France; and on 24 Feb. Lord Arbuthnott complained to Lushington, the financial secretary to the treasury, that Farquhar had done ‘much mischief’ by falsely claiming to have the support of government, which, given his unpopularity, would force many of their friends to vote for ‘the enemy’ Ramsay.
behaved most absurdly. Lord Arbuthnott has been canvassing for his brother ... but never in a way to get him the seat; he never sent a letter to any person, nor an address of any kind, nor can the colonel leave France ... This canvass, however, has procured 10 or 12 votes, which ruins ... Farquhar, who if [he] had these would have beat Sir Alexander even with the assistance of ... Crombie. The report of Crombie going with Sir Alexander may be premature, but it is essentially necessary that you should declare decisively that ... Farquhar has your countenance and that the friends of government who may have promised to the Arbuthnott interest should transfer their support to ... Farquhar ... who considers the county to be lost to government if not supported by an avowal. He does not think that Crombie has actually declared.
NLS mss 11, f. 28.
The following day, however, Charles Hope† of Granton, lord president of the court of session, told Melville that the county was ‘lost, owing entirely to Farquhar’s interference’:
Ramsay has secured 23 votes unconditionally, and it is now ascertained that Crombie ... and four more join him on condition that Sir Alex shall support Captain [William] Gordon* [Lord Aberdeen’s brother] in Aberdeenshire ... Farquhar has about 17 and Arbuthnott the same. But then nine of Arbuthnott’s will on no account transfer to Farquhar, but have promised their second votes to Sir Alexander ... Nearly as many of Farquhar’s have promised their second votes also to Sir Alexander, so that even if Farquhar were now to give in to Arbuthnott, and still more if Arbuthnott were to give in to Farquhar, the county cannot be carried ... Under these circumstances, Lord Arbuthnott, after a full consultation with the principal gentlemen who have declared for his brother, came yesterday [6 Mar.] to the resolution of withdrawing him, especially as Sir Alexander Ramsay had from the first behaved very handsomely to him and had pledged himself that if he could not show positive strength to beat Farquhar at all events, then he and all his friends would join Arbuthnott, rather than let in Farquhar.
He went on to report that ‘it is lucky it is no worse’, for the previous day Ramsay (whom he did not know) had sought him out to ‘assure’ him that despite a misguided youthful flirtation with Foxite Whiggism, he was disposed to support government against ‘the seditious and disaffected’. Ramsay sent the same message to Rae, who, before receiving it, had informed Melville of Arbuthnott’s decision to retire his brother and complained that ‘without my knowledge’ Arbuthnott had ‘entered into an agreement with ... Ramsay by which one or other ... was to withdraw according as Mr. Crombie and his supporters should decide in favour of the one or the other’. Rae condemned Arbuthnott, who ‘must have seen that he was truly giving away the county, as Crombie had been Sir Alexander’s adviser in standing at first’. Believing that Farquhar’s only chance now rested on ‘his having the countenance of government’, Rae had on his own initiative given him ‘a letter to that effect’.
Seven of Arbuthnott’s friends have actually promised Ramsay, so that if the remaining five join Farquhar ... Crombie and his friends will carry the election. The best thing for Farquhar is that Colonel Arbuthnott should persevere. There is no doubt that Crombie objected less to ... Ramsay from the expectation of obtaining his support for my brother in Aberdeenshire.
NLS mss 11, f. 37.
Rae was increasingly
convinced that Lord Arbuthnott has either played a double game with us, or allowed himself to be gulled by [George] Robertson Scott [of Benholm] ... It is quite plain to me that from the beginning his plan has been to bring in ... Ramsay.
NLS mss 11, f. 55.
Presenting on 15 Mar. an analysis of the freeholders which gave Farquhar 26 votes and Ramsay 20, with 12 assigned to the ‘Arbuthnott party’ and six aligned with Crombie, Farquhar urged ministers to try to persuade Lord Arbuthnott to transfer their votes to him or at least stay out of it.
On 18 Feb. 1822 Ramsay chaired a meeting of the county’s landholders which carried a petition for relief from agricultural distress, proposed by Barclay Allardice and George Silver of Balnagubs.
My brother ... did not lose a moment in offering himself ... and is now busily engaged in a most successful canvass, supported by the great landed interests of the county of all parties, which must ever prevail in it and most certainly will secure his success. This most desirable union of parties in favour of an individual entertaining Colonel Arbuthnott’s political sentiments is mainly to be attributed to his having the good fortune of being generally acceptable to the great body of the freeholders, and though ... [you] ultimately determined that you would not give Colonel Arbuthnott the decided support of government ... yet the fortunate result ... has been promoted ... by the pledge which you judged it proper and just to all parties to give, that the government shall not interfere in any contest ... between Colonel Arbuthnott and any other individual whatever of similar political principles.
NAS GD51/1/198/12/38.
At the general election of 1826 Arbuthnott was returned unopposed, after being proposed by Barclay Allardice and Sir Robert Burnett of Leys as a supporter of the agricultural interest. Ramsay received a vote of thanks for his services.
In 1827 and 1828 the farmers and occupiers of Dee district and the landholders, commissioners and justices of the county petitioned both Houses in support of the existing corn laws.
Farmers of the county petitioned the Commons for alteration of the law of hypothec, 14 Mar. 1831, when a petition was also presented from procurators and notaries of the sheriff’s court for repeal of the duty on their certificates.
At the general election of 1832, when the county had a registered electorate of 890, the Conservative Arbuthnott beat the Liberal Thomas Burnett by 54 votes in a poll of 692.
Enrolled freeholders: 70 in 1820; 83 in 1826; 82 in 1830
