John Alexander Inglis

John Alexander Inglis of Auchendinny and Redhall FRSE KC LLB (1873 1941) was a Scottish landowner, advocate and historian. He specialised in family histories of Scotland’s gentry.

Life

He was born at Montpelier Lawn in Cheltenham in England on 3 February 1873 into a Scottish family. He was the eldest son of Alexander Inglis of Auchendinny and Redhall: two large estates on the south-west of Edinburgh. His mother was Florence Feeney, daughter of the newspaper proprietor, John Frederick Feeney. His younger brother was Charles Edward Inglis FRS the noted civil engineer.[1] He was educated at Cheltenham College and won a scholarship to study Law at Christ’s College in Oxford University graduating MA.

He qualified as an advocate in Edinburgh in 1898 and was raised to Kings Counsel in 1926. In 1927 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Scotland. His proposers were James Haig Ferguson, Ralph Allan Sampson, Edward Theodore Salvesen (Lord Salvesen), and Andrew Constable, Lord Constable. He served as the Society’s Vice President 1939 to 1942. [2]

He was a Brigadier in the Royal Company of Archers (the King’s Bodyguard). In the First World War he was Assistant Food Commissioner for Midlothian in charge of food control. He was also a Trustee of the National Library of Scotland and was involved in its relocation to George IV Bridge.

He died in Edinburgh on 13 August 1941.[3] He is buried with his wife in Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh.[4]

Family

In 1903 he was married to Margaret Isabella Fraser (1877 1932).

Publications

See[5]

References

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