Robert Kirk Inches | |
Birth Date: | c. 1845 |
Death Date: | 2 August 1918 |
Nationality: | Scottish |
Occupation: | goldsmith and silversmith |
founder of Hamilton & Inches | |
Children: | Robert Kirk Inches Edward James Inches |
Father: | Robert Inches |
Sir Robert Kirk Inches (c. 1845 – 2 August 1918) was a Scottish goldsmith and silversmith. He co-founded the jewellers Hamilton & Inches and served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh from 1912 to 1916.
He was born around 1845. He was the son of Robert Inches, a printer with John Stark & Co at Old Assembly Close on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh.[1]
In 1866 he founded the jewellery firm Hamilton & Inches with his uncle, James Hamilton, at 90 Princes Street in Edinburgh.[2] James retired in 1883. In 1888 Robert Inches bought the property of the watchmaker Robert Bryson & Son at 66 Princes Street and combined it into a new facility at 88/90 Princes Street.
The firm was "by appointment" jewellers to Queen Victoria.[3] At the time, Inches lived at 2 Strathearn Road in the Grange.[4]
In 1903 he co-founded the Edinburgh Association of Goldsmiths, Silversmiths and Watchmakers, formally constituted on 5 February 1906.[5]
He died on 2 August 1918. He is buried in Warriston Cemetery in north Edinburgh. The grave lies in the overgrown southern section south of the old railway line, to the south-east of the tunnel access.
He was knighted by King George V during his period as Lord Provost. His full-length portrait by George Fiddes Watt is held by the City of Edinburgh Council.
He married Mary Gray Morison 8 June 1868 in Edinburgh and they had seven children. Isabella Morison Inches (1869-1959), Robert Inches (1871 -1900), John Morison Inches (1873-1914), Charles Moore Inches (1875-1946), Edward James Inches (1877-1934), George Hamilton Inches (1880-1881) and Mary Augusta Raeburn Inches (1883-1945). Robert and Edward both of served in the First World War. Edward took over the company upon his father's death.
Edward's son (Robert) Campbell Inches took the firm over in 1934, and in 1950 the company came under the control of Ian Hamilton Inches.
In 1952 the company moved to 87 George Street. In 1992 it was bought by Asprey of London but retained its historic name for trading.[6]