Thomas Hutchison (politician)

Sir Thomas Hutchison (1866 – 1925) was a Scottish landowner and politician. He served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh from 1921 to 1923.

Philpot, Glyn Warren; Sir Thomas Hutchison, Lord Provost of Edinburgh (1921–1923)
Carlowrie Castle, built by the Hutchison family in the mid 19th century.
The Hardiston Hutchison baronets grave, Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh

Life

He was born at Carlowrie House on 16 December 1866, the son of Robert Hutchison of Carlowrie and his wife, Mary Jemima Tait. His younger brother was the eminent physician Sir Robert Hutchison, independently knighted for his medical contributions.[1]

He succeeded John William Chesser as Lord Provost in 1921 and was succeeded in turn by William Lowrie Sleigh in 1923.

His Edinburgh address was 28 Royal Terrace on Calton Hill but he also inherited the family home of Carlowrie Castle near Kirkliston.[2]

He died on 12 April 1925. He is buried with his wife in Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. The grave lies on the south path close to the main (east) entrance.

Family

He was married to Jane Moir Ogilvy Spence (1873–1935).

Recognition

The Hutchison area of Edinburgh was named after Hutchison during his term as Lord Provost.[3]

gollark: I could buy ten osmarks.tk™ server nodes™ with that!
gollark: Even my dirt-cheap phone has an octacore SoC, and while it has half the clockrate of my laptop's CPU and uses some old ARM cores, newer phone CPUs go up to *ten* cores for some reason, can (very briefly, I assume) reach 3GHz, and have better IPC.
gollark: Unless you really like gaming on your phone for some reason, but stop doing that. Or unless you need really good cameras, but there are comparatively cheap ones with good-enough ones.
gollark: yes.
gollark: I mean, in multicore performance, anyway.

See also

References

  1. "Munks Roll Details for Robert (Sir) Hutchison". munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk. Retrieved 2017-09-10.
  2. Edinburgh Post Office Directory 1910–11
  3. "Local history Hutchison Chesser Community Council". thehccc.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-09-10.


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