Background Information

Number of voters: 103 in 1741

Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
22 Feb. 1715 JOHN MONTGOMERIE
7 Oct. 1715 MONTGOMERIE re-elected after appointment to office
24 Apr. 1722 JOHN MONTGOMERIE
7 Sept. 1727 JAMES CAMPBELL
23 May 1734 JAMES CAMPBELL
Charles Cochrane
29 May 1741 PATRICK CRAUFURD
65
James Campbell
38
10 July 1747 PATRICK CRAUFURD
Main Article

The chief interests in Ayrshire were in the Campbells, earls of Loudoun, its hereditary sheriffs, and the Montgomeries, earls of Eglintoun. From 1710 to 1727 the seat was held by John Montgomerie, first cousin of the 9th Earl of Eglintoun, and from 1727 to 1741 by James Campbell, whose father was the 2nd Earl of Loudoun and whose mother was the daughter of the 7th Earl of Eglintoun. In 1741 Campbell, representing the two Earls, who supported the Government, was defeated by an anti-Walpole Whig, Patrick Craufurd, backed by the leaders of the Opposition in Scotland, the 2nd Duke of Argyll and the 2nd Earl of Stair. Craufurd was re-elected unopposed in 1747, though Pelham and Lord Ilay, now Duke of Argyll, considered the names of possible candidates, including Campbell’s son, to put up against him.1‘Present and proposed Members for Scotland’, Newcastle (Clumber) mss.

Author
Notes
  • 1. ‘Present and proposed Members for Scotland’, Newcastle (Clumber) mss.