Craik baronets
The Craik Baronetcy, of Kennoway in the County of Fife, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 27 January 1926 for the politician Sir Henry Craik, KCB, PC.[1] The title became extinct in 1955 on the death of his younger son, the 3rd Baronet.
Incumbents
- Sir Henry Craik, 1st Baronet (1846–1927)
- Sir George Lillie Craik, MC, 2nd Baronet (1874–1929)
- Sir Henry Duffield Craik, KCSI 3rd Baronet (1876–1955), Governor of the Punjab 1938–41
Arms
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gollark: Mosquitoes are some of the biggest killers on the planet. In aggregate. Not individually.
gollark: ++delete mosquitoes
gollark: It's annoying how *hard* it is to get people to actually release vulnerabilities they find in potatOS.
gollark: Like when I happily spend hours reverse-engineering an obfuscated potatOS exploit and patching it ,for instance.
gollark: Also, I can randomly be extremely productive on entirely worthless projects nobody ever needs.
References
- "No. 33131". The London Gazette. 9 February 1926. p. 982.
- Burke's Peerage. 1949.
Sources
- Leigh Rayment's Baronetage page
- "thePeerage.com: Sir Henry Craik, 1st Baronet". Retrieved 2007-08-10.
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