John Cheyne (advocate): Difference between revisions
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From 1891 he was also Procurator for the [[Church of Scotland]] and Vice Dean of the [[Faculty of Advocates]]. |
From 1891 he was also Procurator for the [[Church of Scotland]] and Vice Dean of the [[Faculty of Advocates]]. |
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He became [[Sheriff of Renfrew and Bute]] in 1889, serving until his death. |
He became [[Sheriff of Renfrew and Bute]] in 1889, serving until his death.<ref">{{London Gazette | issue = 11904 | date = 1 February 1907 |page=113 | city = e }}</ref> |
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He was knighted by [[Queen Victoria]] at [[Balmoral Castle]] in 1897. |
He was knighted by [[Queen Victoria]] at [[Balmoral Castle]] in 1897. |
Revision as of 20:07, 23 June 2020
Sir John Cheyne of Tangwick KC LLD (1841–1907) was a 19th/20th century Scottish judge.
Life
He was born on 15 February 1841 at 5 Walker Street in Edinburgh's West End the son of Henry Walker WS.[1] He was christened at Northmavine parish church in Shetland near his father's home estate of Tangwick Haa which was built by his family around 1690.[2]
By 1851 the family was living at 6 Royal Terrace on Calton Hill.[3]
He was sent to Trinity College, Oxford to study Law, graduating MA. He passed the Scottish bar as an Advocate in May 1865. He mainly practiced in Dundee. In the 1880s he was living at 7 Airlie Place in Dundee.[4] Airlie Place is a handsome mid-19th century townhouse forming part of a terrace stepping down towards the River Tay. He was at this stage also Sheriff Substitute for Forfarshire.[5]
From 1891 he was also Procurator for the Church of Scotland and Vice Dean of the Faculty of Advocates.
He became Sheriff of Renfrew and Bute in 1889, serving until his death.<ref">"No. 11904". The Edinburgh Gazette. 1 February 1907. p. 113.</ref>
He was knighted by Queen Victoria at Balmoral Castle in 1897.
He lived his final years at 13 Chester Street in Edinburgh's West End.[6] He was a member of the Kirk Session under Rev Archibald Scott at St George's Church on Charlotte Square.[7]
He died on 15 January 1907.[8] He is buried in Warriston Cemetery. His simple marble cross stands on the north side of the main central east-west path. The Tangwick estate in Shetland (in which he showed little interest) passed to his younger brother Harry Cheyne.[9]
Family
Cheyne married twice: firstly in 1871 to Margaret Simson (1846-1872) who died soon after childbirth, who lived initially with the whole Cheyne family at 12 Albany Street;[10] secondly in 1875 at Inchture to Mary Isabella Edward (b.1847 in Dundee -1931).[11]
He had one daughter by the first marriage and two by the second.
References
- ^ Edinburgh Post Office Directory 1841
- ^ https://www.shetlandheritageassociation.com/members/north-mainland-and-isles/taingwick-haa-museum
- ^ 1851 Census Edinburgh
- ^ 1881 Census Dundee
- ^ Zetland Family Histories: John Cheyne
- ^ Edinburgh Post Office Directory 1906
- ^ https://archive.org/stream/drarchibaldscott00sanduoft/drarchibaldscott00sanduoft_djvu.txt
- ^ Grave of John Cheyne, Warriston Cemetery
- ^ https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/shetland/tangwickhaa/index.html
- ^ 1871 Census Edinburgh
- ^ The Cheyne Family of Scotland, A Y Cheyne