Economic and social profile:
Elgin District (or Burghs) contained the county towns of Elgin and Banff, both situated south of the Moray Firth; Peterhead, further south and east on the Aberdeenshire coast; and Kintore and Inverury, which were inland burghs. It also included Cullen, in Elginshire, which consisted of ‘little more than a street’ and was ‘so unimportant’ that the earls of Seafield relocated the whole burgh in 1820 it when it encroached on their residence.
While Banff, Elgin and Cullen were clustered together, they were separated by a relatively large distance from Kintore, Inverury and Peterhead, which were all in Aberdeenshire. Peterhead was 58 miles from Elgin. At the start of the period, the main transport link was provided by the Aberdeen to Inverness road; this was supplemented by a railway between the same two cities as part of the Great North of Scotland Railway network in the 1850s. However, as the line followed the coast it meant that the distance between Elgin and Peterhead by rail was 103 miles.
According to the 1851 religious census Banff, Elgin and Peterhead possessed 10, 13 and 9 places of religious worship respectively. In Banff the established Church of Scotland accounted for 38.3% of the attendees at religious services on the census day, the Free Church 37.1% and the United Presbyterians 7.9%. Support for the Presbyterian denominations was spread more evenly in Elgin, with the established Church, the Free Church and the United Presbyterians accounting for 29%, 29.7% and 28.1% of attendees on the census day. Peterhead differed significantly: there was a higher proportion of worshippers attending the established Church (45%), a significant segment of the population were Episcopalian (13%), while the Free Church was relatively weak (21.6%).
Electoral history:
The Elgin Burghs comprised, in descending order of electoral importance, the burghs of Elgin, Banff, Peterhead, Kintore, Inverury and Cullen. The district remained in Liberal hands throughout this period, but this was far from assured, especially in the 1830s and 1840s. The Conservatives posed a serious challenge for a time and came within 14 votes of victory at the 1841 general election. Internal divisions threatened to undermine Liberal control in 1847. Unlike in the larger Scottish towns, however, these disputes revolved around the nature of representation and influence in the burghs, rather than religious divisions over patronage in the Church of Scotland. The sitting Whig MP Sir Andrew Leith Hay was accused, with some justice, of wishing to drop and resume the representation of the burghs when it suited him. Hay retorted that his critics merely wanted to reduce the district to the pocket burgh of the Whig Duff family, earls of Fife in the Irish peerage. The Duffs possessed ‘vast estates’ in the district and the extraordinary popularity of James Duff (1776-1857), 4th earl of Fife, locally known as ‘the good earl’, was exhibited in the extensive celebrations that annually marked his birthday across large swathes of Elginshire and Banffshire.
After 1790 the representation of Elgin Burghs had been arranged so that the earls of Kintore and the Findlater-Grant families took turns to nominate the MP. This compact was disrupted and ultimately broken by the earl of Fife, whose brother General Alexander Duff, was MP 1826-31.
In 1843 Elgin, Peterhead and Banff had 217, 213 and 223 electors respectively and together accounted for 78.7% of the district’s electorate.
There were three candidates at the 1832 general election. Alexander Morison, of Auchintoul, was a Reformer, whose canvass quickly drove the anti-reformer incumbent Sir William Cumming from the field.
Hay won the show of hands and the subsequent poll, finishing 125 votes ahead of Mackenzie, with Morison a further 100 votes behind. Although Mackenzie polled slightly more votes in Elgin, Hay’s large majorities in Banff, Peterhead and Inverury proved to be decisive.
Despite Hay’s victory, by November 1834 the duke of Buccleuch’s election agent Donald Horne noted in his survey of Scottish constituencies that the sitting member ‘could ill afford a contest’ and that ‘there is an influential conservative party, and a contest might be tried’.
Horne thought that Brodie might stand against Hay at the by-election in May 1835, caused by his re-appointment as clerk of the ordnance in Melbourne’s second ministry.
Hay’s appointment as governor of Bermuda in January 1838 created a vacancy, for which Fox Maule, one of the leading Scottish Whigs and a former minister who had lost his seat at the previous general election, quickly came forward.
Maule regarded Elgin Burghs as a temporary berth. With no Liberal successor in place, the Conservatives began to plan for the next dissolution. Although Horne complained in November 1838 that the Conservatives had neglected the registration, a year later he wrote that ‘the registrations have been attended to and Mr [Thomas Abercromby] Duff of Haddo the Conservative Candidate thinks he has a fair chance’.
The Liberal candidate was the former MP Sir Andrew Leith Hay, who was criticised by his opponents for the ‘shameful way’ he handed over the burghs ‘like a drove of cattle, from the grazings of Leith Hall to the pastures of Brechin Castle’ (the seat of the Maule family).
In April 1845 rumours circulated that Hay had agreed to retire in favour of Granville Loch, the son of James Loch, Liberal MP for Wick Burghs. This resembled Hay’s earlier arrangement with Maule, and Loch visited Leith Hall.
In the intervening period before the 1847 general election, Hay’s opponents developed a critique of his parliamentary conduct. The Elgin Courier sniped that Hay had ‘given them [the burghs] up when it suited himself, and returned to represent them when the course of events made it convenient for him to do so’. His electoral support had declined to such an extent that he had only scraped home by 14 votes in 1841, having been rescued by the ‘strenuous efforts of the family and friends’ of the Duffs. Hay should therefore retire to avoid splitting the Liberal vote and letting in a Conservative, the newspaper concluded.
Deserted by many of his former supporters, Hay looked to Conservative support and launched increasingly bitter attacks on the Duffs during the election campaign, describing them as ‘a family who wanted to have the domination of these burghs’.
At the nomination, Duff’s proposer pointedly remarked that ‘the electors of Elgin had to consider that the Duff family had been very kind and liberal to Elgin’ before listing various acts of beneficence by the earl of Fife. Hay bitterly complained that ‘every trickery – every meanness … had been used to injure him’ by the Duffs and their allies. He defended the 1845 Maynooth College Act, a brave move, given its widespread unpopularity in Scotland, and also backed non-sectarian education.
Hay once again won the show of hands but finished third in the poll, behind Bannerman in second place, and Duff who was elected in first place. Hay performed well in Elgin and Inverury and Bannerman in Peterhead, but Duff’s votes in the two largest burghs, Elgin and Banff, where his family’s influence was greatest, proved to be decisive.
After the Derby ministry took office in February 1852, W.J. Whyte, a protectionist physician, of Towiebeg, published an address in anticipation of an imminent dissolution. He styled himself as a champion of local independence who would ‘wipe off the stain, which at present attaches to them, of being the pocket burghs of a wealthy family’. His eclectic address declared support for a low fixed duty on corn, the reinstatement of the navigation laws, the ballot and public health measures.
The 1857 general election followed shortly after the death of the ‘good earl of Fife’, who was succeeded by Duff’s elder brother James Duff, 5th earl of Fife, Liberal MP for Banffshire since 1837.
When Duff resigned citing ill health in December that year. Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff, of Eden, near Banff, a distant kinsman of the earls of Fife, and a cosmopolitan intellectual and writer, offered almost immediately. This led one elector to comment that ‘something very like a compact has been entered into by the Messrs. Duff’.
The Elgin Courier commented that Hogg was ‘unquestionably a dextrous platform speaker, and his address is peculiar for that sort of by-play which elicits applause, without committing the speaker to anything’. Styling himself a Liberal Conservative, Hogg played up his past support for free trade and emphasised that he had backed Russell and Palmerston on occasion.
Grant Duff was returned unopposed at the 1859 and 1865 general elections. On the former occasion the rumoured candidacy of Thomas Bruce, the agent of the earl of Seafield, came to nothing.
The 1868 Representation of the People (Scotland) Act increased the electorate to 3,080. Grant Duff was unchallenged at the 1868 and 1874 general elections. He was victorious in 1880, the only time he faced a contest, and vacated the constituency on his appointment as governor of Madras in 1881.
royal burghs of Banff and Cullen (Banffshire), Kintore and Inverury (Aberdeenshire), Elgin (Elginshire); and the non-royal burgh of Peterhead. (Aberdeenshire)
£10 householders
Before 1833 Scottish town or burgh councils were largely self-selecting as they appointed their successors. The corporations of Elgin, Cullen, Banff, Inverury and Kintore had 19, 26, 27, 15 and 9 members respectively. The 1833 Burgh Reform Act replaced these with elected burgh councils with the same franchise as for parliamentary elections. As a non-royal burgh, Peterhead was granted an elected town council by the 1833 Parliamentary Burghs Act, comprising 15 councillors, 3 baillies and a provost.
Registered electors: 777 in 1832 829 in 1842 988 in 1851 1026 in 1861
Estimated voters: 698 (89.8%) out of 777 electors (1832)
Population: 1832 20732 1851 24072 1861 26771
