Aberdeenshire

County

Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1715-1754, ed. R. Sedgwick, 1970
Available from Boydell and Brewer

Background Information

Number of voters:

55 in 17271

Elections

DateCandidateVotes
11 Feb. 1715SIR ALEXANDER CUMMING 
6 Apr. 1722ARCHIBALD GRANT 
7 Sept. 1727SIR ARCHIBALD GRANT19
 George Skene10
 Alexander Fraser9
13 July 1732SIR ARTHUR FORBES vice Grant, expelled the House 
30 May 1734SIR ARTHUR FORBES 
 Alexander Udny 
28 May 1741SIR ARTHUR FORBES 
28 July 1747ANDREW MITCHELL 

Main Article

Under George I Aberdeenshire was represented successively by two local landowners, Sir Alexander Cumming, a Tory, and Sir Archibald Grant, a Whig, who went into opposition. Before the general election of 1727 Walpole was informed that ‘the bulk of the Whig interest there’ was in the various branches of the Forbes family, of whom ‘the most considerable for his estate’ was Sir Arthur Forbes, then a minor.2 Grant was re-elected after a contest, defeating Alexander Fraser, the brother-in-law of Lord Ilay, Walpole’s election manager for Scotland. On Grant’s expulsion from the House of Commons for fraud in 1732, he was succeeded by Forbes, now of age, who supported the Government till 1739, when he followed the Duke of Argyll into opposition. In 1747 he stood down in favour of his kinsman, Andrew Mitchell, who was returned unopposed on the recommendation of Henry Pelham, backed by Lord Ilay, now Duke of Argyll.3

Author: J. M. Simpson

Notes

  • 1. Add. 39855, ff. 18-22.
  • 2. Cholmondeley (Houghton) mss 68.
  • 3. Argyll to Pelham, 12 Aug. 1747, Newcastle (Clumber) mss.