Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
Hugh Rose 15th Baron of Kilravock | |
Office1: | Lord Lieutenant of Ross-shire |
Term Start1: | 1729 |
Term End1: | 1732 |
Predecessor1: | New office |
Successor1: | James Brodie |
Office2: | Sheriff of Ross |
Term Start2: | 1706 |
Term End2: | 1722 |
Predecessor2: | Sir Robert Munro |
Successor2: | The Master of Kilravock |
Office3: | Shire Commissioner for Nairnshire |
Term Start3: | 1707 |
Term End3: | 1700 |
Alongside3: | George Brodie (until 1702) Duncan Forbes (1702–03) and John Forbes (since 1704) |
Predecessor3: | John Hay |
Successor3: | Nairnshire (UK Parliament constituency) |
Office4: | Member of Parliament for Nairnshire |
Term Start4: | 1707 |
Term End4: | 1708 |
Predecessor4: | Nairnshire (Parliament of Scotland constituency) |
Successor4: | Vacant |
Birth Date: | 1663 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | Kilravock Castle, Nairnshire, Scotland |
Death Place: | Kilravock Castle, Nairnshire, Scotland |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 9 |
Father: | Hugh Rose, 14th Baron of Kilravock |
Mother: | Margaret Innes |
Hugh Rose, 15th Baron of Kilravock and Chief of Clan Rose, (1663–1732) was one of the Scottish representatives to the first Parliament of Great Britain as MP for Nairnshire.[1]
Rose was born at Kilravock Castle the son of Hugh Rose, 14th of Kilravock, a member of the Parliament of Scotland for Nairnshire and his wife, Margaret Innes, daughter of Sir Robert Innes of Innes, 2nd Baronet.[2] [3] He inherited Kilravock on his father's death in 1687 along with the Barony of Kilravock and the Chiefdom of the Name and Arms of Clan Rose. On his father's death, the Rose estates were heavily encumbered, it was only by successive marriages to heiresses that the estates were saved and brought out of debt.[1]
Early in his career Rose began as a commissioner for Justice in the Highlands in 1693 and 1701. He was then returned as an MP for Nairnshire from 1700 until 1707.[4] During his time in office, he remained in opposition, particularly to the Darien scheme.[1] Rose served until 1707 at which point he became one of the Scottish representatives to the first Parliament of Great Britain.[1] While one of the representatives, Rose refused to travel to London to represent his constituency and did not stand foe re-election.[1] He was also appointed Sheriff of Ross from 1706 to 1722 and also 1729–32.[1] While Sheriff, although he himself had resigned from Parliament, he used his position to appoint his son, Hugh MP for Ross-shire.[1] Due to his abuse of power, the other major powers in Ross-shire, the Clans Ross and Munro petitioned to have him removed from office as Sheriff, for being a Jacobite Whig and ally of George Mackenzie, 1st Earl of Cromartie. However, Roses allies all supported him as the most loyal of Presbyterians.[1] However, the following General election his son, Hugh was removed from office and both removed from public life for a while. Following the 1715 Uprising, Rose and his son moved more into the support of Argyll through their connection through the Campbells of Cawdor, at which point he lost the position of Sheriff of Ross.[1] However, he later regained both the Sheriffdom and also the position of Lord Lieutenant of Ross-shire for his support.[1]
During the Jacobite rising of 1715, Rose fought for the Government and successfully besieged and took Inverness.[1] As well as that, he kept the Kilravock garrison strong and held it against the rebels.[1]
Rose married, firstly, Margaret Campbell, daughter of Sir Hugh Campbell, 5th of Cawdor and Lady Henrietta Stuart, daughter of James Stuart, 4th Earl of Moray, on 19 October 1683, they had three children.[2]
He married, secondly, Jean Fraser, daughter of James Fraser of Brea, in 1692, they had one child.[2]
He married by contract, thirdly, Beatrix Cuthbert, daughter of George Cuthbert of Castlehill, on 19 June 1701, they had two children.[2]
He married, fourthly, Elizabeth Calder, daughter of Sir James Calder, 1st Baronet and Grizel Innes, in 1704, they had one child.[2]
He married, fifthly, Katherine Porteous, daughter of James Porteous, in 1730, they had two children.[2]
Rose died of a fever of cold at Kilravock, on 23 January 1732, and was buried with his forebears in the chapel of Geddes. An 18th-century panegyric conceals the quick temper and shiftiness of its subject in a portrait which would have done more credit to his mother's devout Presbyterianism than to the family's recurring talent for compromise:[1] [1]