Background Information

Number of voters: 40-50

Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
18 Feb. 1715 ALEXANDER GRANT
5 Jan. 1720 JAMES BRODIE vice Grant, deceased
29 Dec. 1720 ALEXANDER BRODIE vice James Brodie, deceased
27 Apr. 1722 ALEXANDER BRODIE
22 June 1727 BRODIE re-elected after appointment to office
7 Sept. 1727 ALEXANDER BRODIE
30 May 1734 ALEXANDER BRODIE
25 May 1741 LUDOVICK GRANT
John Stewart
28 July 1747 LUDOVICK GRANT
Main Article

The hereditary sheriff of Elginshire was the 7th Earl of Moray, who had been implicated in the Fifteen and thereafter took little part in politics. The chief interest was that of the Grants of Grant. After Alexander Grant’s death in 1719, the head of the Grant family, Sir James Grant, who was sitting for Inverness-shire, supported another local family, the Brodies, for the seat. In 1735 he made over the Grant estates to his son Ludovick, who was put up as the government candidate for the county in 1741. When William Duff of Braco threatened to intervene against Ludovick’s candidature, Sir James Grant pointed out to him that Elginshire was in the Grant sphere of influence just as Banffshire was in that of the Duffs:

I am perfectly sure that had you yourself stood for the shire of Banff, nothing would have hindered him [Ludovick] from standing by you against any person [who] could have pretended to oppose you.1Sir W. Fraser, Chiefs of Grant, i. 383-4.

Defeating an opposition candidate, John Stewart, brother of the 8th Earl of Moray, Ludovick Grant held the seat without a further contest till the accession of George III.

Author
Notes
  • 1. Sir W. Fraser, Chiefs of Grant, i. 383-4.