Charles Augustus Carlow

Charles Augustus Carlow FRSE DLitt LLD (30 November 1878 – 13 August 1954) was a leading Scottish mining engineer and owner and managing director of the Fife Coal Company Ltd., that was based in Leven, Fife.

Charles Augustus Carlow

Born(1878-11-30)30 November 1878
Died13 August 1954(1954-08-13) (aged 75)
Alma materHeriot-Watt College
University of Edinburgh
OccupationMining engineer, businessman, philanthropist
Known forOwner of Fife Coal Company
Parent(s)Charles Carlow
Mary Weatherstone Lindsay
RelativesWilliam Lindsay (maternal grandfather)
Sir William Reid (cousin)

Life

Carlow was born at 2 Links Place in Leven, Fife on 30 November 1878 to Mary Weatherstone (née Lindsay; 1851-1929), daughter of William Lindsay, a shipowner, and Charles Carlow (1849-1923) a mining engineer. He studied mining technology at Heriot-Watt College and the University of Edinburgh.

The bulk of his life seems to have been spent living in Leven, Fife.

In 1952 he was awarded an honorary doctorate (LLD) from the University of St Andrews. He died in St Andrews in Fife on 13 August 1954.[1]

Family

He was the maternal grandson of William Lindsay FRSE (1819-1884).

He was first cousin to Sir Charles Carlow Reid co-author with his son, Sir William Reid of the "Reid Report" on the state of British coal-mining.[2]

Benefactions

In 1927 he gave Blair House and 27 acres of ground near Culross in Fife to serve as a convalescent home for elderly and injured miners. The home is named for him as Charles Carlow Miners Convalescent Home.[3]

Positions held

See[4]

  • Deputy Lieutenant of Fife.
  • Managing Director of the Fife Coal Company Ltd
  • Chairman of Shotts Iron Company
  • Chairman of Fife and Clackmannan Coal Owners Association
  • President of the Institute of Mining Engineers
  • President of the Mining Institute of Scotland
  • Fellow of the Institute of Fuel
  • Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
  • President of the Association of Mining Electrical Engineers
  • Chairman of the Transport Committee of Scottish Coal Owners[5]

References


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