Lord Elibank, of Ettrick Forest in the County of Selkirk, is a title in the Peerage of Scotland.
He sat as Member of Parliament for Glasgow St Rollox and served as Lord Lieutenant of Peeblesshire.
However, on his death in 1962 the viscountcy became extinct while he was succeeded in the baronetcy and lordship by his third cousin, the thirteenth Lord.
He afterwards retired to France, where for some years he was, as "Count Murray", the representative of the Jacobite claimant "James III and VIII", known as the "Old Pretender", who created him Earl of Westminster (Letters Patent, August 12, 1759) in the Jacobite Peerage, with remainder to heirs male of the body of his father, the fourth Lord Elibank.
The family seat was Elibank Castle on the River Tweed just east of Walkerburn in the Scottish Borders but is now The Coach House, near Sunningdale, Berkshire.