George Hamilton-Gordon, 5th Earl of Aberdeen

The Earl of Aberdeen
George Hamilton-Gordon, 5th Earl of Aberdeen
Member of Parliament
for Aberdeenshire
In office
1854–1860
Preceded byWilliam Gordon
Succeeded byWilliam Leslie
Personal details
BornGeorge John James Hamilton-Gordon
28 September 1816
Died22 March 1864(1864-03-22) (aged 47)
Resting placeMethlick, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
PartyLiberal Party
SpouseMary Baillie
ChildrenGeorge Hamilton-Gordon, 6th Earl of Aberdeen
James Hamilton-Gordon
John Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair
Mary Hepburne-Scott, Lady Polwarth
Harriet Lindsay
Katherine Bruce, Lady Balfour of Burleigh
Parent(s)George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen
Harriet Hamilton, Dowager Viscountess Hamilton
Alma materHarrow School
Trinity College, Cambridge

George John James Hamilton-Gordon, 5th Earl of Aberdeen MP (28 September 1816 – 22 March 1864), styled Lord Haddo before 1860, was a British peer and Liberal Party politician.

Early life

Lord Haddo was born at Bentley Priory in Hertfordshire, the eldest son of the 4th Earl of Aberdeen and Harriet Hamilton, Dowager Viscountess Hamilton (née Harriet Douglas), widow of James Hamilton, Viscount Hamilton and granddaughter of James Douglas, 14th Earl of Morton. He was educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1]

Career

His uncle, William Gordon, had retired as Member of Parliament for Aberdeenshire in 1854 and Haddo put himself forward as his successor. However, Haddo had contracted what was probably tuberculosis, and he went to Egypt to spend a few months in a warm climate. Despite being absent from Scotland and not having canvassed the constituency, Haddo won the election and returned to take his seat in the House of Commons, in good health, a year later. He left the Commons after inheriting his father's title in 1860 and made a second trip to Egypt. Aberdeen had previously converted to Evangelicalism and it was in Egypt that he campaigned for the Coptics to convert to his own faith.

For part of his time in Egypt, he distributed Bibles with the American missionary Gulian Lansing, who later wrote a memoir about their journey.[2]

Aberdeen later returned to Scotland and died at his home, Haddo House, in 1864. He was buried at Methlick and was succeeded by his eldest son, George. His last words were (when asked how he felt) "Perfectly comfortable". Hamilton-Gordon donated a large collection of antiquities that his father had collected to the British Museum in 1861.[3]

Marriage

Lord Haddo married at Taymouth Castle on 5 November 1840 Mary Baillie (a sister of the future 10th Earl of Haddington). They had six children:

The Dowager Countess of Aberdeen survived her husband by 36 years, and died aged 85 at Kennet, the residence of her son-in-law Lord Balfour, on 3 April 1900.[5]

Arms

Coat of arms of George Hamilton-Gordon, 5th Earl of Aberdeen
Notes
These supporters were granted to the 4th earl (as Viscount Gordon) and his successors in 1818 in place of the ancient supporters Dexter: A senator of the College of Justice and Sinister: A minister of state, each in his robes of office.[6]
Crest
Dexter, Two arms, from the shoulder, naked, holding a bow proper, to let an arrow fly (Gordon); Sinister, Out of a ducal coronet or, an oak tree, the stem cut transversely by a frame saw, the blade inscribed with the word "through", all proper (Hamilton).
Escutcheon
Quarterly, 1st and 4th, Azure, three boars' heads couped within a double tressure flowered and counter-flowered with roses, thistles and fleurs-de-lys or (Gordon); 2nd & 3rd, Quarterly, first and fourth, gules, three cinquefoils pierced ermine, second and third, Argent, an ancient ship with sails furled sable the whole within a bordure of the last (Hamilton).
Supporters
Two antelopes argent, armed and unguled or, each gorged with a collar flory counterflory azure, charged with three roses or, and line reflexed over the back azure.
Motto
Fortuna sequatur (Let fortune follow). Alternatively: Ne Ninium (Not too much)[7][6]

References

  1. ^ "Gordon, George John James (Lord Haddo) (GRDN834GJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ Lansing, Gulian (1864). Egypt's Princes: A Narrative of Missionary Labor in the Valley of the Nile (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: William S. Rentoul.
  3. ^ "Collection". The British Museum. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  4. ^ John Doran "Haddo: The House with Outstretched Arms" Archived 15 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Leopard magazine, July 2002
  5. ^ "Obituary - The Countess Dowager of Aberdeen". The Times. No. 36107. London. 4 April 1900. p. 11.
  6. ^ a b Debrett's Illustrated Peerage of the United Kingdom. 1865. p. 26.
  7. ^ Burke's Peerage and Baronetage. 1846. pp. 4–5.

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