Walter Frederick Campbell of Shawfield (sometimes given "of Islay")[1]FRSE (1798–1855), was a Scottish politician. He served as the MP for Argyllshire, 1822–1832 and 1835–1841.
Campbell took over the Argyllshire parliamentary seat of his uncle Lord John Campbell in 1822, based on his Whig sympathies. Initially his attendance in the House of Commons was sporadic. He did not contest his seat in 1832, shortly after his first wife's death; he was returned unopposed in 1835, and remained in parliament to 1841.[2]
As the Laird of Islay Campbell contended from 1816 with the agricultural face of the post-Napoleonic depression. He intended to retain the island's population, to avoid mass eviction and to counter voluntary emigration. To that end, he built new villages and improved infrastructure, worked to diversify agriculture and also dictated its reform.[4] Local features were the relative absence, compared with most of the western Scottish Highlands, of tenants with larger sheep farms, and the incidence of land subdivision associated with kelp production.[5]
Campbell spent heavily, and a debt of £815,000 lay on the estate.[6] During the 1840s Islay was hit by the agricultural depression and the potato blight associated with the Highland Potato Famine. Campbell suffered bankruptcy in 1847.[7]
Campbell in April 1847 was assuring officials that he would create employment so that men would not be idle: but in writing to Edward Pine Coffin, commissary-general, the Deputy-Commissary-General John Saumarez Dobree voiced a worry that Campbell was weakening his own finances.[8]Joseph Mitchell was a guest of the Campbells at the time, and witnessed Campbell's predicament: a greater concern than the blight was that tenants were not paying rents. Banks ceased to lend.[9] Official policy was to use a Drainage Act for job creation, and for many landlords there was considerable benefit: but in the Islay case a successful application for support by Campbell led to his trustees running the employment schemes that kept tenants solvent.[10]
Creditors moved in at the end of 1847, and the family left Islay.[6] The estate was put into the hands of trustees, from 1848 to 1853 when it was sold to James Morrison. The debt burden stood at £185,000.[9]
Last years
Campbell spent some time with his ailing sister Harriet Bury, Countess of Charleville, in Italy. He then settled in Avranches, Normandy, in reduced circumstances.[2] He died on 8 February 1855 in Avranches, and was buried in the cemetery there.
^Devine, Thomas Martin; Orr, Willie (1996). The Great Highland Famine: Hunger, Emigration, and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century. J. Donald. pp. 4 and 26. ISBN978-0-85976-201-4.
^ abCampbell, John Francis; Scotland, National Library of (1985). Lamplighter and Story-teller: John Francis Campbell of Islay, 1821-1885. National Library of Scotland. p. 22. ISBN978-0-902220-65-2.
^Devine, Thomas Martin; Orr, Willie (1996). The Great Highland Famine: Hunger, Emigration, and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century. J. Donald. pp. 90 and 107 note 56. ISBN978-0-85976-201-4.
^ abDevine, Thomas Martin; Orr, Willie (1996). The Great Highland Famine: Hunger, Emigration, and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century. J. Donald. p. 86. ISBN978-0-85976-201-4.
^Devine, Thomas Martin; Orr, Willie (1996). The Great Highland Famine: Hunger, Emigration, and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century. J. Donald. pp. 100–101 and 274. ISBN978-0-85976-201-4.