Walter Francis John Montagu Douglas Scott, 9th Duke of
Buccleuch and 11th Duke of Queensberry, KT, VRD, JP, DL (28 September
1923 � 4 September 2007) was a Scottish Peer, politician and landowner.
He served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War,
and represented Edinburgh North in the House of Commons for 13 years.
He owned the largest private landed estate in the United Kingdom,
covering some 280,000 acres (1,100 km2). The estate includes Drumlanrig
Castle in Dumfries and Galloway, Bowhill House in Selkirkshire, and
Boughton House in Northamptonshire. A fourth house, Dalkeith Palace,
near Edinburgh, is let to the West Central Wisconsin Consortium, which
uses the palace as a base for its study abroad program.
Walter
Francis John Montagu Douglas Scott was best known by his middle name
John, and he was the only son of Walter Montagu Douglas Scott, 8th Duke
of Buccleuch & 10th Duke of Queensberry, and the former Mary Lascelles.
His paternal aunt was Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester. His sister
Elizabeth married the 10th Duke of Northumberland, and Caroline wed
politician Ian Gilmour. Known as Johnny Dalkeith, from his courtesy
title of Earl of Dalkeith, he was educated at Eton.
In 1942, he
joined the Royal Navy as an ordinary seaman, and was commissioned as an
officer the following year, serving on destroyers. He continued as a
Lieutenant-Commander in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and the Royal
Naval Reserve after the war until 1971. He was awarded the Volunteer
Reserve Decoration in 1959. He was appointed Honorary Captain in the
Royal Naval Reserve in 1988. He was a Captain of the Royal Company of
Archers, Lord President of the Council and Silver Stick for Scotland. He
was a member of the Roxburghe Club.
After the war, he studied at
Christ Church, Oxford, where he joined the Bullingdon Club. He briefly
worked as a merchant banker in the City of London, and then as a
director of an insurance company.
As Earl of Dalkeith, he was a
Roxburghshire County Councillor from 1958. He contested Edinburgh East
in the 1959 general election, losing to the incumbent Labour MP George
Willis, but was elected as a Unionist (and latterly Conservative) Member
of Parliament for Edinburgh North from a by-election in 1960. He served
as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Lord Advocate, William Rankine
Milligan, in 1961 to 1962, then briefly as PPS to the Secretary of State
for Scotland Jack Maclay from January 1962 to July that year. After
Maclay was sacked in Harold Macmillan's Night of the Long Knives, he was
PPS to Maclay's successor, Michael Noble, from 1962 to 1964. He defeated
a young Robin Cook in the 1970 general election.
He and his wife
sustained minor injuries in a car accident at Clumber Park,
Nottinghamshire, on 16 August 1961, but made a full recovery. However,
in an hunting accident near Hawick on 20 March 1971, his horse threw him
off as it failed to take a drystone dyke, and then fell on him. Dalkeith
was left paralysed from the chest down with a fractured spine. He left
hospital in early September 1971, and spent the rest of his life in a
wheelchair, and became a notable spokesman for disability organisations.
He was the first MP after the Second World War to enter the House of
Commons chamber in a wheelchair, where he was greeted by Harold Wilson,
who crossed the floor of the chamber to shake his hand, in October 1971.
Dalkeith left the House of Commons in October 1973, as he succeeded
to the Dukedom upon his father's death. As a result, he stood down as an
MP. However, he remained a member of the House of Lords for the next 25
years, where he spoke particularly on rural, disability and
constitutional issues, until the removal of the hereditary peers in the
reforms of 1999.
The Duke was in the headlines in October 2003
when the Madonna with the Yarnwinder by Leonardo da Vinci was stolen
from Drumlanrig Castle. It was found in October 2007, one month after
the Duke's death.
On 10 January 1953 he married Jane McNeill, a
leading fashion model for Norman Hartnell, at a ceremony at St Giles
Cathedral in Edinburgh attended by the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, and
most of the royal family.[2] She was the only child of John McNeill, QC,
and Amy Yvonne Maynard.
They had 4 children: Richard Scott,
10th Duke of Buccleuch, married Lady Elizabeth Kerr and had issue
Lord John (born 9 August 1957) married Berrin Torrinson Lady
Charlotte-Anne (born 9 January 1956), married Count Bernard de
Castellane, and had issue Lord Damian Torquil Francis Charles (born 8
October 1970), married Elizabeth Powis, and had issue
The Duke
died after a short illness at one of his three homes, Bowhill House, in
Selkirkshire, Scottish Borders, in the early hours of 4 September 2007.
He was survived by his wife, daughter and three sons. The Duke was
buried on 11 September 2007 among the ruins of Melrose Abbey, next to
his parents. HRH The Duke of Gloucester, his cousin, was among the 2500
guests who attended the burial ceremony. |