Background Information

Number of voters: 39 in 1727

Constituency business
Date Candidate Votes
10 Feb. 1715 LORD JAMES MURRAY
Sir Henry Stirling
6 Apr. 1722 LORD JAMES MURRAY
31 Dec. 1724 DAVID GRAEME vice Murray, called to the Upper House
28 Apr. 1726 MUNGO HALDANE vice Graeme, deceased
19
John Erskine
4
12 Oct. 1727 JOHN DRUMMOND
25
Mungo Haldane
14
9 May 1734 LORD JOHN MURRAY
21 May 1741 LORD JOHN MURRAY
10 July 1747 LORD JOHN MURRAY
Main Article

Though Perthshire was a centre of Jacobitism, the predominating interest belonged to the dukes of Atholl, its hereditary sheriffs, who supported the Whig Government. In 1715 the 1st Duke’s son, Lord James Murray, was returned against Sir Henry Stirling, later a Jacobite agent in Russia.1See HMC Stuart, passim. Re-elected unopposed in 1722, he succeeded to the dukedom in 1724, thereby vacating the seat, which was filled for the rest of that Parliament successively by two local Whig landowners, David Graeme and Mungo Haldane of Gleneagles. In 1727 Haldane was defeated by John Drummond, an Atholl candidate,2Ramsay of Ochtertyre, Scotland and Scotsmen in 18th Cent. i. 119 n. 2. whose daughter subsequently married the 2nd Duke. From 1734 the 2nd Duke’s half-brother, Lord John Murray, who had recently come of age, was returned unopposed with the support of Lord Ilay, Walpole’s election manager in Scotland.

Author
Notes
  • 1. See HMC Stuart, passim.
  • 2. Ramsay of Ochtertyre, Scotland and Scotsmen in 18th Cent. i. 119 n. 2.