Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Strathclyde | |
Honorific-Suffix: | PC |
Office2: | Minister of State for Scotland |
Primeminister2: | Anthony Eden Harold Macmillan |
Term Start2: | 7 April 1955 |
Term End2: | 23 October 1958 |
Predecessor2: | The Earl of Home |
Successor2: | The Lord Forbes |
Order1: | Chairman of the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board |
Term Start1: | Late 1950s |
Term End1: | May 1967 |
Predecessor1: | Lord Cooper |
Successor1: | Tom Fraser |
Primeminister4: | Winston Churchill |
Term Start4: | 4 November 1951 |
Term End4: | 5 April 1955 |
Predecessor4: | John Robertson |
Successor4: | Jack Browne |
Primeminister5: | Winston Churchill |
Term Start5: | 26 May 1945 |
Term End5: | 26 July 1945 |
Predecessor5: | Allan Chapman |
Successor5: | George Buchanan |
Office7: | Member of Parliament for Glasgow Pollok |
Term Start7: | 30 April 1940 |
Term End7: | 4 May 1955 |
Predecessor7: | Sir John Gilmour |
Successor7: | John George |
Office6: | Member of the House of Lords Lord Temporal |
Term Start6: | 5 May 1955 |
Term End6: | 12 July 1985 Hereditary peerage |
Predecessor6: | Peerage created |
Successor6: | The 2nd Baron Strathclyde |
Birth Date: | 20 March 1891 |
Birth Place: | Partick, Lanarkshire, Scotland |
Death Place: | Mauchline, Ayrshire |
Thomas Dunlop Galbraith, 1st Baron Strathclyde, PC (20 March 1891 – 12 July 1985), was a Scottish Unionist Party politician.[1]
After serving in the Royal Navy, he became a chartered accountant and practised, 1925–70. He was elevated to the peerage in 1955 as Lord Strathclyde (of Barskimming in the County of Ayr), and died three decades later. As his eldest son, Sir Tam Galbraith, died in 1982, the barony was inherited by his grandson Thomas Galbraith, 2nd Baron Strathclyde.
Galbraith was born into Clan Galbraith, which traces its roots to 12th-century laird Gilchrist Bretnach, the 15x great-grandfather of King George I. He was one of eight children born to surgeon William Brodie Galbraith (1855–1942) and Annie Jack Dunlop (sister of Sir Thomas Dunlop, 1st Baronet). He had an older brother, Walter, and younger brothers William, David, Norman, Robert, and Alexander, and a younger sister, Annie.[2]
Galbraith was educated at Glasgow Academy; Eastman's, Southsea; Royal Naval College, Osborne and Royal Naval College, Dartmouth.[2]
Galbraith joined the Royal Navy in 1903. He was promoted to Lieutenant in 1913 and served aboard the battleships and during the First World War. Three of his younger brothers were killed in the war while serving in the Highland Light Infantry: Capt. William Brodie Galbraith (1892–1915), David Boyd Galbraith (1894–1915) and Norman Dunlop Galbraith (1896–1918). He left the Royal Navy in 1922 and formally retired in 1925.[1] [2]
When the Second World War began, Galbraith joined the Scottish Naval Command. He was later sent to Washington, D.C. to represent the Admiralty, which was negotiating supplies prior to the enactment of Lend-Lease in 1941.[1]
Galbraith's political career began in local government where he served as a councillor on Glasgow Corporation from 1933 until 1940.[2] For part of that time he was vice-chair of the Progressive Party.[3] He served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Glasgow Pollok from 1940 to 1955, being originally elected at a by-election and then at the 1945, 1950 and 1951 general elections. He served as Under-Secretary of State for Scotland in Winston Churchill's caretaker government from May to July 1945.
He was made a peer on 4 May 1955, shortly before the 1955 general election, and took his seat in the House of Lords the following day. He served as a Minister of State at the Scottish Office until 1958. By 1964, Strathclyde was serving as chairman of the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board.[4]
He was awarded the Freedom of Dingwall in 1965 and the Freedom of the City of Aberdeen in 1966.[1]
On 2 December 1915, Strathclyde married Ida Jane Galloway, daughter of Thomas Galloway of Auchendrane House, Ayrshire. They had seven children, five of whom served in the Royal Navy. Their second son was killed during the Second World War in the English Channel while captaining the French submarine chaser Chasseur 6 that was hit by a German torpedo boat.[5] [1] [2]
Baroness Ida Strathclyde died in June 1985. A month later, Strathclyde died at his estate at Barskimming, in Mauchline, Ayrshire, in 1985, and the barony passed to his grandson.[1]
Crest: | A Bear's Head erased Gules muzzled Argent |
Escutcheon: | Gules three Bears' Heads erased Argent muzzled Azure within a Bordure indented Or charged with three Mullets of the Third a Crescent of the Second for difference. |
Supporters: | Two Bears Gules muzzled Argent |
Motto: | Ab obice suavior ('Gentler because of the obstruction', alluding to the muzzled bear's head of the Clan Galbraith crest) |