Robert Ferguson was elected to the Whig parliament of 1806 for Fifeshire, but was not afterwards elected until the time of the Reform Bill, upon which he represented the Kirkcaldy district of Burghs from 1831 to 1835, and in the latter year was returned for Haddingtonshire, defeating Mr Hope, the Tory candidate, by 268 to 231 votes. At the general election of 1837 he was in turn defeated by Lord Ramsay, who polled 299 votes to 205. He then returned to the representation of the Kirkcaldy division of Burghs. He was a cordial supporter of the measures of the Whig government, and opposed to the ballot.[4]
He died at a house in Portman Square in London on 3 December 1840.
Memorials
A major monument to Ferguson stands near the northern approach to Haddington designed by Robert Forrest in 1843.[5]
A memorial also exists to him in Abbotshall Church in Fife.[6]
Family
Ferguson infamously had an affair with Mary Nisbet, Countess of Elgin, only daughter of William Hamilton Nisbet, esq. of Dirleton, near Haddington. She was the wife of Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, with whom she had one son, later Lord Bruce (1800–1840) and three daughters. The Earl sued Ferguson in both England and Scotland and won £10,000 (the current, 2016, equivalent of around £5 million). Following the Countess's inevitable divorce, Ferguson then married her on 20 April 1808.[2]
The couple had no children together.[7] His nephew Robert Munro Ferguson (1802-1868) inherited his estates on his death.
Recognition
Sir Henry Raeburn painted Ferguson in his youth (with his brother Ronald behind) in the picture "The Archers".[2]
There are two Raith Monuments erected in his memory, one in Fife and the other[8] in Haddington. They were both designed by Robert Forrest.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Urban, Sylvanus, ed. (1841). "Obituary Robert Furguson". The Gentleman's magazine. Vol. 169. Printed by F. Jefferies. pp. 225, 315, 316.