Addressing the Haddingtonshire meeting called to vote a loyal address to the regent and condemn sedition, 26 Oct. 1819, Grant Suttie, the Tory Member since 1816, gave an assurance that ‘he should consider it his duty ... to attend in his place on the first day ... [of the emergency session] to support such measures as [ministers] might think most expedient in the present crisis’.
On 4 June 1830 Charles Stuart Cochrane, a long-term visitor to Grant Suttie’s neighbourhood who was peeved not to have been invited to Balgone, denounced him to Sir Edward Troubridge* as ‘stupid and stingy’, and added that his unmarried daughter ‘is turned Methodist’ and was ‘ugly enough to take the veil’.
