The property of the earls of Sutherland in this county was so extensive that the right of voting extended not only to the vassals of the Crown, as it did in all other Scottish counties, but to the vassals of the Earl as well.
In 1768 when it was the turn of the Sutherlands to nominate, James Wemyss, guardian to the infant Countess, was returned unopposed. He was unanimously re-elected in 1774 and 1780, and in 1784 retired in favour of his son. When William Wemyss vacated his seat in 1787 to contest Fifeshire, the Sutherland interest went to a friend of the family, General James Grant. In 1788 William Adam’s survey put the number of voters at 34, of whom the Sutherlands commanded at least 20: their influence, he concluded, was ‘almost unsurmountable’.
Number of voters: about 10 in 1754, 34 in 1788
