Colonel Grant, a strait-laced, congenitally shy man, had been acting head of his Strathspey clan since 1811, when his imbecile bachelor elder brother Lewis had succeeded their father in the baronetcy and their cousin James Ogilvy (7th earl of Findlater) as 5th earl of Seafield.
Colonel Grant is virtually the representative of two very old families and at the head of perhaps the first property in the north of Scotland ... which after the expiring of the existing leases will not be worth less than £50,000 a year. He is therefore galled exceedingly at finding men of his own clan passing over his head in the army, whilst he can neither get forward nor be allowed to quit the profession ... He is met in every corner of the society in which he moves by superior officers and new made knights who of course take precedence of him.
Nicoll suggested that if the promotion could not be awarded, Grant would be more than satisfied with the rank of the younger children of an earl, which would have been his by right had his father outlived and succeeded Findlater, being conferred on himself and his sisters. He remained a colonel for the rest of his life, but was given the precedence he coveted in 1822.
Grant continued to support the ministry, but he was an indifferent attender.
In February 1828 Grant, who was largely a cipher in the 1826 Parliament, applied to the new premier, the duke of Wellington, for a United Kingdom peerage, to be annexed to the Scottish earldom of Seafield to which he was heir presumptive. Melville, a member of the cabinet, endorsed his claim, but the duke was unwilling to add to the large number of creations since 1826.
The duke is not a person to forget a friend or leave him in the lurch when it may be in his power to serve that friend. As for myself, I have no motive to disguise ... the opinion which I have already expressed to yourself, that with reference partly to the Scottish earldom to which you or your children will succeed, and partly to your own situation in the country and to your steady support for so many years, you have ... a preferable claim ... to any other person in Scotland, and as far as I may have an opportunity of advising or influencing, I shall act upon that opinion.
Wellington mss WP1/1121/39; NLS mss 2, f. 173.
Grant refused to support Charles Grant* in Inverness-shire, as ‘from the line of politics opposite to mine which he and his brother have adopted it is quite impossible that I can [do so] consistently with the terms upon which I am with the present government [and] my approbation of their measures’, and worked to secure clan support for the unsuccessful ministerial candidate.
After the elections ministers of course listed him among their ‘friends’, and he was in their minority in the crucial division on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830. The following day he renewed his peerage application, but three weeks later Melville told him that it had been ‘quite impossible’ to act on it as Wellington had already resigned.
Grant, still professing support for moderate reform, was returned unopposed as a Conservative for Elgin and Nairnshire at the 1832 general election.
