Economic and social profile:
Also known as The Mearns, Kincardineshire was a maritime county containing the eastern extreme of the Grampians, ‘forming the end of the great valley of Strathmore’. Comprising almost a quarter of a million acres, half of which were uncultivated, the county was mostly agricultural, but fishing was important for its coastal communities.
Electoral history:
After a decisive victory at the 1832 general election, the Conservatives held Kincardineshire unchallenged for over thirty years. Given their slim prospects, local Liberals kept their powder dry until the long-serving MP Hugh Arbuthnott finally retired at the 1865 general election. In only the second contest of the period, the Liberals defeated the greatest landowner in the county by an unexpectedly large margin after exploiting the dissatisfaction of local farmers with the game laws and the law of hypothec. The result was part of a trend towards Liberalism in many Scottish counties that had hitherto been controlled by the Conservatives. The Liberal triumph in 1865 presaged their domination of the constituency in the later Victorian and Edwardian period.
In the decade before the 1832 Scottish Reform Act, Kincardineshire had had a tiny electorate of between 70 and 80. In 1820 a dispute between John Arbuthnott, 8th Viscount Arbuthnott, of Arbuthnott House, and the Tory ministry’s candidate, allowed the Whig Sir Alexander Ramsay, 2nd baronet, of Balmain, to be returned. In 1826 a rapprochement between Lord Arbuthnott and James Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville, the Tory ministry’s Scottish manager, secured the unopposed return of the peer’s brother Hugh Arbuthnott. He was re-elected without opposition at the 1830 and 1831 general elections.
If Kincardineshire had generally been a safe Tory seat in the unreformed period, the Scottish Reform Act’s expansion of the electorate to 800 voters seemed to offer encouragement to local Reformers. Offering for the county at the 1832 general election, Thomas Burnett, of Leys, declared that he would end the reign of ‘Toryism in the county’. For good measure, he alleged that many voters suffered ‘under the influence of terror’.
Burnett was accompanied to the nomination by ‘various flags and music, attended by countless bands of non-electors’. His supporters monopolised the space within hearing distance of the hustings, much to the annoyance of Conservative electors. None of the special constables who had been sworn in to deal with potential disturbances ‘were to be seen or heard’. Arbuthnott promised to support the agricultural interest and ‘the old institutions of the county’. Burnett professed reform principles and pointed to the endorsement of Mr. Anderson, of Pitcarrie, a farmer, as proof that he was not hostile to the agricultural interest. He admitted that the landed interest was against him, ‘but the new constituency were nine times as numerous’ as before 1832.
In November 1834 the Conservative agent Donald Horne wrote to inform the duke of Buccleuch that Kincardineshire was one of the counties that was ‘secure’ for the party.
Burnett opted to contest Aberdeenshire at the 1837 general election, leaving Arbuthnott to be re-elected without opposition.
After becoming ‘insolvent for a considerable amount’, Lord Arbuthnott was forced to resign the lord lieutenancy in April 1847 and live abroad.
Accordingly, Arbuthnott was unchallenged at the 1852, 1857 and 1859 general elections. In 1854 the Caledonian Mercury wrote that both Arbuthnott and William Gordon, MP for Aberdeenshire, the neighbouring county, were ‘the last of the old school of county Tory members who steadily adhered to the government of the day, so long as their party was in power’.
In July 1864 rumours that the octogenarian Arbuthnott was intending to retire at the next general election sparked political activity. Ramsay declined to offer.
Although he was the Liberal candidate, Nicol had been a member of the Conservative Club in London and was accused of being ‘all things to all men’, a ‘turncoat’ and a ‘trimmer’ by his opponents.
The key issues at the election were the game laws and the law of hypothec. Farmers complained that the excessive preservation of game by landowners came at their expense, due to the damage caused by rabbits and hares. Hypothec, which was peculiar to Scotland, gave landowners a preferential right in their tenants’ property, including livestock. In the event of non-payment of rent or debts, landlords could exercise their rights by selling the property and using the proceeds. Nicol emphasised his opposition to hypothec, which he believed had ‘a tendency to unduly raise the rent of farms’.
The nomination was a lively affair, attended by 1,500 people, including ‘a large number of ladies’.
Gladstone’s speech was notable for describing Palmerston’s government, which included his brother William, as ‘a sham from the beginning … It came into power by a false pretence, it has been maintained in power by a breach of its promises, and it continues in power only by a dread of letting in the Conservatives’. He complained that Nicol did not have ‘a residence of any description’ in the county and rebuked McInroy for saying that he was ‘an excessive preserver of game’. He warned of the unintended consequences of abolishing the game laws and approved of the recommendations of the commission on hypothec to modify, rather than abolish, the law.
Aside from twenty to thirty hands, the ‘great majority’ of the crowd supported Nicol, and unlike in 1832, the show of hands proved to be an accurate barometer of the poll.
After their drubbing, the Conservatives shunned the declaration at Stonehaven.
The 1868 Representation of the People (Scotland) Act expanded Kincardineshire’s electorate to 1,731. Nicol was re-elected without opposition at the 1868 general election and sat until his death in 1872. The Liberals retained control of the constituency until 1918, when it was amalgamated with Aberdeenshire West.
County of Kincardineshire.
£10 owners and life-renters; £50 tenants and occupiers; £10 long leaseholders and life tenants.
Registered electors: 800 in 1832 896 in 1842 951 in 1851 1019 in 1861
Estimated voters: 778 (78.8%) of 987 electors (1865).
Population: 1832 31400 1851 34598 1861 34466
