The Sheriff of Inverness was historically the office responsible for enforcing law and order and bringing criminals to justice in Inverness, Scotland. Prior to 1748 most sheriffdoms were held on a hereditary basis. From that date, following the Jacobite uprising of 1745, the hereditary sheriffs were replaced by salaried sheriff-deputes, qualified advocates who were members of the Scottish Bar.
Following mergers the office became the Sheriff of Inverness, Elgin & Nairn in 1882 and the Sheriff of Inverness, Moray, Nairn & Ross & Cromarty in 1946. That sheriffdom was dissolved in turn in 1975 and replaced by that of the Sheriff Principal of Grampian, Highland and Islands.
Sheriffs of Inverness
High-Sheriffs
Sheriffs-Depute
Sheriffs of Inverness, Elgin & Nairn (1882)
- William Ivory, 1882âÂÂ1900
- Christopher Nicholson Johnston, 1900âÂÂ1905
- James Ferguson, 1905âÂÂ1905
- John Wilson, Lord Ashmore, 1905âÂÂ1912 (Sheriff of Renfrew and Bute, 1912)
- Alastair Oswald Morison Mackenzie, 1912âÂÂ1917 (Sheriff of Renfrew and Bute, 1917)
- George Watt KC, 1917â 1934
- Robert Henry Maconochie KC, 1934âÂÂ1942 (Sheriff of Stirling, Dumbarton and Clackmannan, 1942âÂÂ1961)
- Charles Mackintosh KC, 1942âÂÂ1944 (Senator of the College of Justice from 1944)
- Ronald Peter Morison KC, 1944-1945
- John Cameron, 1945âÂÂ1946
Sheriffs of Inverness, Moray, Nairn & Ross & Cromarty (1946)
See also
References