The chief interests in Elgin Burghs were those of the Earl of Kintore, who controlled Kintore and Inverurie, and the Earl of Findlater, who controlled Banff and Cullen. In 1715 the rival candidates were James Murray, later secretary of state to the Pretender, supported by Lord Kintore, and Col. John Campbell, first cousin to the Duke of Argyll, supported by Lord Findlater.
A similar situation arose in 1722, when Campbell was defeated by another Jacobite, William Fraser. This time the question turned on which of two rival delegates was entitled to represent Banff at the election meeting.
In 1727 Lord Kintore, actuated by the hope of recovering the family office of knight marshal, worth £400 a year, which his father had lost by taking part in the 1715 rebellion, desisted from further opposition to Argyll and ministerial candidates,
Kintore (1715, ’47), Inverurie (1722), Aberdeenshire; Elgin (1727); Banff (1734), Cullen (1741), Banffshire
Number of voters: 96
