Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Earl of Haddington | |
Birth Date: | 26 July 1827 |
Occupation: | Landowner, peer |
Children: | George Baillie-Hamilton, Lord Binning |
George Baillie-Hamilton-Arden, 11th Earl of Haddington, (26 July 1827 – 11 June 1917), was a Scottish landowner and Scottish representative peer.
Lord Haddington was the son of George Baillie-Hamilton, 10th Earl of Haddington, and Georgina Markham.
Lord Haddington was elected a Scottish representative peer from 1874 until his death. He was High Sheriff of Cheshire in 1871. He was created Lord Lieutenant of Haddingtonshire in 1874. He was honorary Colonel of the Lothians and Border Horse and an officer in the Royal Company of Archers.
In 1886, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Thomas Grainger Stewart, Robert Grey, Sir William Turner, and Peter Guthrie Tait. He resigned from the Society in 1892.[1]
Lord Haddington was appointed a Knight of the Order of the Thistle (KT) in the 1902 Coronation Honours list published on 26 June 1902,[2] and was invested by King Edward VII at Buckingham Palace on 8 August 1902.[3]
He lived at Tyninghame House near Prestonkirk in East Lothian.[4]
Lord Haddington was a leading Scottish Freemason. He was the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Scotland from 1892 to 1894 and the Grand Master of the Royal Order of Scotland from 1891 to 1917.[5] [6]
On 17 October 1854, he married Helen Katharine Warrender (1834–1889). The marriage produced seven children:[4]
His eldest son George predeceased him by a few months, dying in January 1917, and so the title passed to his grandson George Baillie-Hamilton, 12th Earl of Haddington.