Constituency | Dates |
---|---|
Ross-shire | 25 Oct. 1814 – 1818 |
Ensign, 78 Ft. 1806; lt. 52 Ft. 1808; lt. and capt. 2 Ft. Gds. 1810, ret. 1814.
Col. Ross militia 1815.
Mackenzie Fraser entered the army as an ensign in his father’s regiment and subsequently transferred to the 52nd, with which he served in the Peninsula. In 1811, his uncle Lord Seaforth encouraged him to investigate the possibilities of an attempt on Inverness Burghs, but he made no headway. His rejection the same year of an offer from the Gordon family to back him in Aberdeenshire if a vacancy occurred was seen by one observer as evidence of his ‘good sense’.2SRO GD23/6/745, C. to J. Grant, 16 Sept.; Blair Adam mss, Elphinstone to Adam, 3 Dec. 1811. On inheriting the Castle Fraser property in 1814 he resigned his commission and in October he was returned on a vacancy for Ross-shire by Seaforth, like his father before him. He voted with government on the Spanish Liberals, 1 Mar., the Regent’s expenditure, 31 May, the Duke of Cumberland’s establishment, 3 July 1815, the property tax, 18 Mar., the public revenues bill, 14 and 20 June 1816, Admiralty economies, 25 Feb. 1817, the censure of the Scottish law officers, 10 Feb., and the Duke of Clarence’s allowance, 15 Apr. 1818. Mackenzie Fraser, who voted against Catholic relief, 21 May 1816, is not known to have spoken in the House, from which he retired in 1818. He died 7 Mar. 1871.