Alexander Kinnear, 1st Baron Kinnear
Alexander Smith Kinnear, 1st Baron Kinnear PC FRSE (3 November 1833, Edinburgh – 20 December 1917, Edinburgh) was a Scottish advocate and judge. He served as Lord of Council and Session (1882–1913), and was appointed to the Privy Council in 1911.[1]
Biography
He was educated at Glasgow and Edinburgh universities, and was called to the Scottish bar in 1856. For some years he acted as a law reporter, but in 1878 he was chosen leading counsel in the Court of Session for the liquidators in the case arising out of the failure of the City of Glasgow Bank, and henceforward his rise was rapid. In 1881 he became a Q.C., and the same year was chosen dean of the Faculty of Advocates. In 1882 he was made a judge, with the courtesy title of Lord Kinnear, and in 1890 an appellate judge, retiring from the Court of Session in 1913, although he continued to sit in the House of Lords as a lord of appeal. He was a member of the commission of 1904 for settling the question of the division of Scottish church property.[2]
He lived at 2 Moray Place, a huge townhouse on the exclusive Moray Estate on the western fringe of Edinburgh's New Town.[3]
Baron Kinnear
Baron Kinnear, of Spurness in the County of Orkney, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.[4] It was created on 5 February 1897 for Alexander Kinnear, Lord Kinnear in recognition of his services as chairman of the Scottish Universities Commission of 1889.[2] He never married and the title became extinct on his death on 20 December 1917.
He is buried with other family members in a relatively commonplace grave in Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh on the central path within the north section of the original cemetery.
References
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 28511. p. 5025. 7 July 1911.
- 1 2 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Kinnear, Alexander Smith Kinnear, 1st Baron". Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York.
- ↑ Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1889-90
- ↑ The London Gazette: no. 26821. p. 758. 9 February 1897.