
'Earl of Minto'
'Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmond, 1st Earl of Minto' (born
Edinburgh,
Scotland,
23 April 1751 - died
Stevenage,
England,
June 21,
1814) was a
Scottish politician and
diplomat.
His great-grandfather the 1st Baronet Minto was also the ancestor of
Robert Louis Stevenson.{An indirect relation of the Earl of Mintos {by Marriage} was General
Arthur St. Clair}.
His uncle was
John Elliott, Governor of
Newfoundland.
About
1763 'Gilbert Elliot' and his brother Hugh were sent to
Paris, where their studies were supervised by the renowned Scottish philosopher
David Hume, and where they became intimate with
Honoré Mirabeau. Having passed the winters of
1766 and
1767 at the
University of Edinburgh, Gilbert entered
Christ Church, Oxford, and on quitting the university he was called to the bar. In
1776 he entered parliament as an independent
Whig MP for
Morpeth. He became very friendly with
Edmund Burke, whom he helped in the attack on
Warren Hastings and
Sir Elijah Impey, and on two occasions was an unsuccessful candidate for the office of
Speaker.
In
1794 Elliot was appointed to govern
Corsica, and in
1797 he assumed the additional names of 'Murray-Kynynmond' and was created 'Baron Minto'. From
1799 to
1801 he was envoy-extraordinary to
Vienna, and having been for a few months president of the board of control he was appointed governor-general of
India at the end of
1806. He governed with great success until
1813, during which he expanded the British presence in the area to the
Moluccas,
Java, and other
Dutch possessions in the East Indies during the Napoleonic Wars. He was then created 'Viscount Melgund' and 'Earl of Minto'. He died at Stevenage on 21 June 1814 and was buried in
Westminster Abbey. His sister was the wife of
William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland. His daughter Elinor married John Rutherfurd {1712-1758} of Edgerston. Elinor and John's son John {1748-1837} was married to Mary Anne Leslie-Melville daughter of Major General
Alexander Leslie-Melville. A brother of John Rutherfurd of Edgarston was Walter Rutherfurd {1723-1804} who married Mary sister of
Lord Stirling and who were the parents of Senator
John Rutherfurd{1760-1840}. A nephew of Walter and John was John Rutherfurd of
Mossburnford {b.1746-d.1830} who was captured during
Pontiac's Rebellion of 1763; escaped and became a Captain in the
Black Watch.
The Earl's second son was
Admiral Sir George Elliot (1784-1863), who as a youth was present at the
Battle of Cape St Vincent and the
Battle of the Nile, and who was
Secretary to the Admiralty from
1830 to
1834. A nephew of the Earl was
Sir Charles Elliot (1801-1875), also an admiral, who took a prominent part in the war with
China in
1840. Afterwards he was governor of
Bermuda, of
Trinidad and of
St Helena.
Reference
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