Anthony Keith-Falconer, 7th Earl of Kintore
Anthony Keith-Falconer, 7th Earl of Kintore, 9th Lord Falconer of Halkerton, 7th Lord Keith of Inverurie and Keith Hall, Chief of Clan Keith (20 April 1794 – 11 July 1844), was a Scottish aristocrat. Early lifeKeith-Falconer was born on 20 April 1794.[1] He was the son of William Keith-Falconer, 6th Earl of Kintore and the former Maria Bannerman. His elder sister was Lady Maria Keith-Falconer and his younger brother was Capt. Hon. William Keith-Falconer of the Royal Navy (who married Louisa Grant, a daughter of William Grant of Congalton).[2] His paternal grandparents were Anthony Keith-Falconer, 5th Earl of Kintore and the former Christina Elizabeth Sichterman (daughter of Jan Albert Sichterman of Groningen, the Netherlands, Intendant General of the Dutch Settlements in the East Indies and Director and Fiscal of Bengal). His maternal grandparents were Sir Alexander Bannerman, 6th Baronet and the former Mary Gordon (a daughter of Sir James Gordon of Banchory).[2] After being a pupil at Sparsholt in Berkshire, Lord Kintore attended St Mary Hall, Oxford.[3] CareerUpon the death of his father on 6 October 1812, he succeeded as the 7th Earl of Kintore and 7th Lord Keith of Inverurie and Keith Hall.[2] On 5 July 1838, he was created Baron Kintore, of Kintore in the County of Aberdeen in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.[4] After inheriting Keith Hall, the family seat in Aberdeenshire, he began keeping hounds there. Lord Kintore was master of the Old Berkshire Hunt from 1826 to 1830 and was known as "a rider bold to rashness, greedy for fences; and he was celebrated as a boon table companion."[3] He was succeeded as master of the Hunt by Henry Reynolds-Moreton, later the 2nd Earl of Dulcie (who established the Vale of White Horse Hunt). After he "gave up the country," he returned to Keith Hall where he took to farming "on a large scale."[3] Personal lifeOn 14 June 1817, he was married to Juliet Renny, the fourth daughter of Robert Renny. Esq. of Barrowfield. She died two years later on 9 July 1819; they had no children.[2] On 27 August 1821, Lord Kintore was married to Louisa Hawkins, a daughter of Helen Dempster Burrington and Francis Hawkins, Esq. of Bareilly, Bengal, India.[2] Before she obtained a divorce from him on 3 March 1840, they were the parents of four children:[4]
A month after their divorce in 1840, the Countess of Kintore married Dr. B. North Arnold, a son of Rev. C. Arnold, on 2 April 1840, but died a year and a half later on 1 November 1841.[2] Lord Kintore also fathered several illegitimate children with his mistress, Isabella Smith:[5]
Lord Kintore, who did not remarry, died on 11 July 1844.[2] References
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