Haddingtonshire (or East Lothian) formed a lozenge of land to the east of Edinburgh, bordered to the north by the Firth of Forth and to the south by the shire of Edinburgh (or Midlothian) and Berwickshire. The majority of Haddingtonshire was coastal plain, rising into the Lammermuir Hills to the south, and it was bisected by the River Tyne, which flowed east-west, linking the towns of Haddington, East Linton and Dunbar. The fishing port of Dunbar was of particular strategic importance, as it guarded a narrow pass on the coast road between Edinburgh and Berwick-upon-Tweed. Other settlements of note included the fishing town of North Berwick, and, to the east of the shire, the industrial region around Prestonpans, with its coal mines and salt-boiling works.
The defeat of the Scottish army by Oliver Cromwell* at the battle of Dunbar on 3 September 1650 marked the beginning of the English conquest of Scotland, completed at Worcester a year later. The landed elite in Haddingtonshire greeted defeat (even when encountered on its doorstep) with apparent equanimity. When union proposals were ‘tendered’ in February 1652, Haddingtonshire gave its assent (through its deputies Sir John Sinclair of Herdmanston and Sir George Seaton of Hailles) in positive terms, even asking that ‘the people of England and Scotland may be represented in one Parliament and governed by their representatives therein as the supreme authority of the whole island’. A further assent was also sent to the English governors, signed ‘at Haddington in a full and frequent meeting of the shire’ by 59 men of influence, including Lord Elphinstone.
Local involvement in the administration continued in the later 1650s. The justices of the peace appointed in the new year of 1656 included the earl of Tweeddale, Lords Cranston and Kingston, and a dozen or more lairds.
The active participation of the Haddingtonshire élite in the Cromwellian regime is also demonstrated by the parliamentary elections of 1654, 1656 and 1659. Under the rules laid down in June 1654, the shire returned one MP, with the election taking place within the shire.
Right of election: qualified landholders
Number of voters: at least 15 in 1656
