Lord Strathnaver was the grandson and heir of the 16th Earl of Sutherland, who advised him, while he was on the Grand Tour in 1727, to go to Hanover to pay his court to Frederick, the new Prince of Wales, in the hope of becoming a gentleman of his bedchamber.
I had the honour of your Grace’s letter acquainting me that his Majesty thought it for his service to give the police to the Earl of Marchmont [under Hugh Hume Campbell, Lord Polwarth] ... At the same time, I must beg leave to acquaint your Grace that it surprised me, as I cannot charge my conscience with anything I ever did contrary to the King’s interest or that of his royal House ... The last time I had the honour to see your Grace you was so good as promise to speak to Mr. Pelham concerning the money I expended during the late wicked rebellion. As the reference was made to His Royal Highness the Duke, I was at the expense of sending my principal servant to Flanders to have the Duke’s determination. His Royal Highness has been pleased to return me a very favourable answer and will interest himself to get me freed of an expense incurred with cheerfulness to serve my King and country.
HMC Fortescue, i. 117-18; Add. 32712, f. 278.
He left the management of his estates in Scotland to his mother, preferring to live ‘near the Court, upon which I have still some pretensions’. Two years later, he reported to his uncle, James St. Clair:
I have no great hopes of getting justice since his Majesty and ministry are displeased at me ... I design to go to Tonbridge next month, for [to] Scotland I will not return on any account. I hope ... to satisfy the world of my behaviour for his Majesty’s service, though perhaps to the ruin of my family, and then shall go to foreign parts, where I hope to be better used.
He died at Montauban in France, 7 Dec. 1750, leaving debts amounting to £15,797.
