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Hugh Macmillan, Baron Macmillan

Hugh Pattison Macmillan, Baron Macmillan, GCVO, PC (20 February 1873 – 5 September 1952) was a Scottish advocate, judge, parliamentarian and civil servant.[1]

The Lord Macmillan
Macmillan in 1924
Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
Minister of Information
In office
1939–1940
Lord Advocate
In office
1924–1924

Life edit

He was born in Glasgow, the son of the Rev Hugh Macmillan DD FRSE (1833-1903) and Jane Patison (1833-1922). His father was minister of St Peter's Free Church in Glasgow. The family moved to 70 Union Street in Greenock in 1878.[2]

Hugh was educated at Collegiate School, Greenock from 1878, then studied at the University of Edinburgh (M.A. 1st class honours in philosophy, 1893 Bruce of Grangehill and Falkland Scholarship[3]) and the University of Glasgow (LLB).[1] He was indentured for three years to the firm Cowan, Fraser and Clapperton while he studied the Law,[4] in which he distinguished himself by winning the Cunningham Scholarship for Conveyancing in the year 1896.[5] He was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1897 with a public defence of an assigned Thesis De diversis regulis juris antiqui,[6] and later became King's Counsel in 1912.[1][7] For a time he wrote articles on conveyancing for Green's Encyclopedia of Scots Law,[5] and was Editor of the quarterly Juridical Review between 1900 and 1907.[8]

During the First World War Macmillan served as assistant director of Intelligence for the Ministry of Information.[9]

Macmillan suffered an illness, and surgery thereon, in 1917, at which time he decided to cease his nascent political career (then in abeyance for the duration of the Great War). In October 1922, he was asked by Bonar Law to become the Solicitor-General for Scotland, which he declined because of his political stripe.[10]

In 1923 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Edward Theodore Salvesen (Lord Salvesen), William Archer Tait, Robert Blyth Greig and Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker. He resigned from the Society in 1931.[11]

When the Labour government of Ramsay MacDonald was elected in 1924 – the first time the Labour Party had taken power – it had no KCs in Scotland amongst its parliamentary representation. Macdonald therefore turned to Macmillan, whose reputation at the Bar was considerable, to take the job of Lord Advocate, even though he was a Conservative. He served as Lord Advocate from February[12] to November 1924,[13] and was sworn of the Privy Council on 16 April that year.[14]

Macmillan was standing counsel for a vast array of clients, that included the Dominion of Canada from 1928, and for the Commonwealth of Australia from 1929.[15] He chaired in 1924 the Royal Commission on Lunacy and Mental Health,[16] in 1929 the Committee on Finance and Industry, and in 1932 the Committee on Income Tax Codification.[17]

On 3 February 1930, he was appointed to replace Lord Sumner as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary,[18] and was simultaneously created a life peer as Baron Macmillan of Aberfeldy in the County of Perth,[19] one of few men to have been appointed a judge in the House of Lords straight from the Bar.[13] Macmillan sat as a Law Lord until 1947 except for a brief period at the outbreak of Second World War when he was Minister of Information.[20] However he came in for much criticism in this role and was soon replaced. The Ministry of Information was located in the Senate House, University of London, and the Macmillan Hall there is named after him.

 
Senate House, home to the University of London's administration offices and library, is the result of a commission to Charles Holden by the Court chaired by Macmillan.

Macmillan produced some 152 judgments in the House of Lords, and some 77 in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.[20]

He held a number of chairmanships, including the Committee on Finance and Industry in 1929–31, the Canadian Royal Commission on Banking and Currency in 1933, the Pilgrim Trust from 1935 to 1952, the Political Honours Committee from 1935 to 1952, the Court of the University of London from 1929 to 1943, and the BBC Advisory Council from 1936 to 1946. He was a member of the Wytham Abbey Trust, founded by Colonel Raymond ffennell.[21] He was elected Trustee of the British Museum,[22] and was in 1934 principal proponent and founder of the Stair Society, which was designed "to encourage the study and advance the knowledge of the history of Scots Law by the publication of original documents and by the reprinting and editing of works of sufficient rarity or importance."[23]

Macmillan led, over the course of a decade to 7 August 1925, the effort to create the National Library of Scotland; the Committee which he chaired was noticed by Alexander Grant, head of McVitie and Price biscuit makers, who donated the bulk of the endowment [24] This happy event culminated with the passage at Westminster of the National Library of Scotland Act 1925.[25]

He provided the 1934 Rede Lecture at Cambridge, the 1934 Maudsley Lecture, the 1935 Henry Sidgwick Memorial Lecture, and in 1936 a Broadcast National Lecture. These were bound as Law and Other Things. He was appointed in 1941 to the Professorship of Law at the Royal Academy of Arts, and was chosen an Honorary Member by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1948 he became an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects. He delivered the Andrew Lang Memorial Lecture, and the Commemorative Oration at the University of Glasgow's 500th anniversary in 1951.[26]

He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1924 and was awarded the GCVO in 1937.[13] He would earn the distinction of LLD from his two alma matres,[27] Edinburgh on 17 July 1924.,[28] again in 1931 at the University of London,[29] and again in 1932 at the University of St. Andrews.[30] In North America, he was awarded LLDs from McGill University, Queen's University at Kingston, Dalhousie University and Columbia University, and a DCL from Case Western Reserve University, as well as being inducted into the Order of the Coif.

He was unanimously elected 13 May 1924 the first Honorary Bencher of Inner Temple.[31] He was elected honorary member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers, and of the Institution of Municipal and County Engineers.[32]

Family edit

He married his childhood sweetheart, Elizabeth Katherine Grace Marshall,[33] on 27 July 1901.[34]

Publications edit

His autobiography, A Man of Law's Tale, was published in 1952.

Cases and Bills noted edit

A Man of Law's Tale edit

  • Corporation of the City of Glasgow v Stirling County Council et al. (1914): G desired to impound river waters in Loch Voil
  • Williamson(?) et al. v Corporation of Aberdeen (1910): A desired to divert the River Avon for public use
  • City of Glasgow v County Council of Lanark et al. (May–July 1912): G desired to extinguish L
  • Falkirk v County Council of Stirling (1911): F desired to encroach on S
  • Falkirk v County Council of Stirling (1912): F desired to encroach on S
  • Corporation of Dundee v Burgh of Broughty Ferry (1913): D desired to encroach on B
  • Corporation of Edinburgh v burgh of Leith (1920): E desired to encroach on L
  • Corporation of Greenock v Ports of Glasgow and Gourock (1927): G desired to incorporate GG
  • Sandwich Port and Haven Bill (1925)
  • River Ouse Drainage Bill (1927)
  • Bill for the reconstitution of Albert Hall
  • Lochaber Water Power Bill (1921)
  • Road Transport Act 1928
  • Mortensen v Peters, 1906, 8F(JC)93; 5Adam121: international and territorial waters
  • R v Brown, 1907SC(J)67, 5Adam312: B contested lunacy
  • Coats v Brown, 1909 SC(J)29, 6Adam19
  • Parker v Lord Advocate [1904] AC364, 6F(HL)37
  • Colquhoun v FPW 1908 SC(HL)10
  • Boyd&Forrest v GSWRC 1912 SC(HL)93, 1915 SC(H)20, 1918 SC(HL)14
  • Lord Advocate v Zetland 1920 SC(HL)1
  • Young v Kinloch 1911 SC(HL)1
  • Wishart v Gibson 1914 SC(HL)53
  • Canada v Newfoundland 1927
  • 1930 AC 537
  • Donoghue v Stevenson 1932 AC 562
  • Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd 1942 AC 32
  • Bank of Portugal v Waterlow & Sons 1932 AC452
  • Joyce v DPP 1946 AC347

Legacy edit

The Lord Macmillan Papers are housed at the British Library. The papers can be accessed through the British Library catalogue.[35]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Pine, p.187
  2. ^ Greenock Post Office Directories 1878-9
  3. ^ Macmillan, p.18
  4. ^ Macmillan, p.22
  5. ^ a b Macmillan, p.23
  6. ^ Macmillan, p.30
  7. ^ "No. 28605". The London Gazette. 7 May 1912. p. 3280.
  8. ^ Macmillan, p.42
  9. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  10. ^ Macmillan, p.80
  11. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  12. ^ "No. 13996". The Edinburgh Gazette. 12 February 1924. p. 225.
  13. ^ a b c Pine, p.188
  14. ^ Macmillan, p.84
  15. ^ Macmillan, p.140
  16. ^ Macmillan, p.184
  17. ^ Macmillan, p.100
  18. ^ Macmillan, p.141
  19. ^ "No. 33576". The London Gazette. 4 February 1930. p. 719.
  20. ^ a b Macmillan, p.147
  21. ^ Macmillan, p.296
  22. ^ Macmillan, p.156
  23. ^ Macmillan, p.214
  24. ^ Macmillan, p.238-45
  25. ^ legislation.gov.uk: "National Library of Scotland Act 1925"
  26. ^ Macmillan, p.160-2
  27. ^ Macmillan, p.24
  28. ^ Macmillan, p.94
  29. ^ Macmillan, p.278
  30. ^ Macmillan, p.286
  31. ^ Macmillan, p.96
  32. ^ Macmillan, p.65-6
  33. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  34. ^ Macmillan, p. 43
  35. ^ Lord Macmillan Papers, archives and manuscripts catalogue, the British Library. Retrieved 2 June 2020

References and Bibliography edit

  • A.H.B. Constable and H.P. Macmillan, A Treatise on Provisional Orders applicable to Scotland, Edinburgh, 1900
  • H.P. Macmillan, A Man of Law's Tale, London: MacMillan and Co., 1952
  • H.P. Macmillan, Law and other things
  • L. G. Pine, The New Extinct Peerage 1884-1971: Containing Extinct, Abeyant, Dormant and Suspended Peerages With Genealogies and Arms (London, U.K.: Heraldry Today, 1972).
Legal offices
Preceded by Lord Advocate
1924
Succeeded by
Political offices
New office Minister of Information
1939–1940
Succeeded by

hugh, macmillan, baron, macmillan, scottish, minister, hugh, macmillan, minister, those, similar, name, hugh, mcmillan, disambiguation, hugh, pattison, macmillan, baron, macmillan, gcvo, february, 1873, september, 1952, scottish, advocate, judge, parliamentari. For the Scottish minister see Hugh Macmillan minister For those of a similar name see Hugh McMillan disambiguation Hugh Pattison Macmillan Baron Macmillan GCVO PC 20 February 1873 5 September 1952 was a Scottish advocate judge parliamentarian and civil servant 1 The Right HonourableThe Lord MacmillanGCVO PCMacmillan in 1924Lord of Appeal in OrdinaryMinister of InformationIn office 1939 1940Lord AdvocateIn office 1924 1924 Contents 1 Life 2 Family 3 Publications 4 Cases and Bills noted 4 1 A Man of Law s Tale 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References and BibliographyLife editHe was born in Glasgow the son of the Rev Hugh Macmillan DD FRSE 1833 1903 and Jane Patison 1833 1922 His father was minister of St Peter s Free Church in Glasgow The family moved to 70 Union Street in Greenock in 1878 2 Hugh was educated at Collegiate School Greenock from 1878 then studied at the University of Edinburgh M A 1st class honours in philosophy 1893 Bruce of Grangehill and Falkland Scholarship 3 and the University of Glasgow LLB 1 He was indentured for three years to the firm Cowan Fraser and Clapperton while he studied the Law 4 in which he distinguished himself by winning the Cunningham Scholarship for Conveyancing in the year 1896 5 He was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1897 with a public defence of an assigned Thesis De diversis regulis juris antiqui 6 and later became King s Counsel in 1912 1 7 For a time he wrote articles on conveyancing for Green s Encyclopedia of Scots Law 5 and was Editor of the quarterly Juridical Review between 1900 and 1907 8 During the First World War Macmillan served as assistant director of Intelligence for the Ministry of Information 9 Macmillan suffered an illness and surgery thereon in 1917 at which time he decided to cease his nascent political career then in abeyance for the duration of the Great War In October 1922 he was asked by Bonar Law to become the Solicitor General for Scotland which he declined because of his political stripe 10 In 1923 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh His proposers were Edward Theodore Salvesen Lord Salvesen William Archer Tait Robert Blyth Greig and Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker He resigned from the Society in 1931 11 When the Labour government of Ramsay MacDonald was elected in 1924 the first time the Labour Party had taken power it had no KCs in Scotland amongst its parliamentary representation Macdonald therefore turned to Macmillan whose reputation at the Bar was considerable to take the job of Lord Advocate even though he was a Conservative He served as Lord Advocate from February 12 to November 1924 13 and was sworn of the Privy Council on 16 April that year 14 Macmillan was standing counsel for a vast array of clients that included the Dominion of Canada from 1928 and for the Commonwealth of Australia from 1929 15 He chaired in 1924 the Royal Commission on Lunacy and Mental Health 16 in 1929 the Committee on Finance and Industry and in 1932 the Committee on Income Tax Codification 17 On 3 February 1930 he was appointed to replace Lord Sumner as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary 18 and was simultaneously created a life peer as Baron Macmillan of Aberfeldy in the County of Perth 19 one of few men to have been appointed a judge in the House of Lords straight from the Bar 13 Macmillan sat as a Law Lord until 1947 except for a brief period at the outbreak of Second World War when he was Minister of Information 20 However he came in for much criticism in this role and was soon replaced The Ministry of Information was located in the Senate House University of London and the Macmillan Hall there is named after him nbsp Senate House home to the University of London s administration offices and library is the result of a commission to Charles Holden by the Court chaired by Macmillan Macmillan produced some 152 judgments in the House of Lords and some 77 in the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council 20 He held a number of chairmanships including the Committee on Finance and Industry in 1929 31 the Canadian Royal Commission on Banking and Currency in 1933 the Pilgrim Trust from 1935 to 1952 the Political Honours Committee from 1935 to 1952 the Court of the University of London from 1929 to 1943 and the BBC Advisory Council from 1936 to 1946 He was a member of the Wytham Abbey Trust founded by Colonel Raymond ffennell 21 He was elected Trustee of the British Museum 22 and was in 1934 principal proponent and founder of the Stair Society which was designed to encourage the study and advance the knowledge of the history of Scots Law by the publication of original documents and by the reprinting and editing of works of sufficient rarity or importance 23 Macmillan led over the course of a decade to 7 August 1925 the effort to create the National Library of Scotland the Committee which he chaired was noticed by Alexander Grant head of McVitie and Price biscuit makers who donated the bulk of the endowment 24 This happy event culminated with the passage at Westminster of the National Library of Scotland Act 1925 25 He provided the 1934 Rede Lecture at Cambridge the 1934 Maudsley Lecture the 1935 Henry Sidgwick Memorial Lecture and in 1936 a Broadcast National Lecture These were bound as Law and Other Things He was appointed in 1941 to the Professorship of Law at the Royal Academy of Arts and was chosen an Honorary Member by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences In 1948 he became an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects He delivered the Andrew Lang Memorial Lecture and the Commemorative Oration at the University of Glasgow s 500th anniversary in 1951 26 He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1924 and was awarded the GCVO in 1937 13 He would earn the distinction of LLD from his two alma matres 27 Edinburgh on 17 July 1924 28 again in 1931 at the University of London 29 and again in 1932 at the University of St Andrews 30 In North America he was awarded LLDs from McGill University Queen s University at Kingston Dalhousie University and Columbia University and a DCL from Case Western Reserve University as well as being inducted into the Order of the Coif He was unanimously elected 13 May 1924 the first Honorary Bencher of Inner Temple 31 He was elected honorary member of the Institution of Civil Engineers of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers and of the Institution of Municipal and County Engineers 32 Family editHe married his childhood sweetheart Elizabeth Katherine Grace Marshall 33 on 27 July 1901 34 Publications editHis autobiography A Man of Law s Tale was published in 1952 Cases and Bills noted editA Man of Law s Tale edit Corporation of the City of Glasgow v Stirling County Council et al 1914 G desired to impound river waters in Loch Voil Williamson et al v Corporation of Aberdeen 1910 A desired to divert the River Avon for public use City of Glasgow v County Council of Lanark et al May July 1912 G desired to extinguish L Falkirk v County Council of Stirling 1911 F desired to encroach on S Falkirk v County Council of Stirling 1912 F desired to encroach on S Corporation of Dundee v Burgh of Broughty Ferry 1913 D desired to encroach on B Corporation of Edinburgh v burgh of Leith 1920 E desired to encroach on L Corporation of Greenock v Ports of Glasgow and Gourock 1927 G desired to incorporate GG Sandwich Port and Haven Bill 1925 River Ouse Drainage Bill 1927 Bill for the reconstitution of Albert Hall Lochaber Water Power Bill 1921 Road Transport Act 1928 Mortensen v Peters 1906 8F JC 93 5Adam121 international and territorial waters R v Brown 1907SC J 67 5Adam312 B contested lunacy Coats v Brown 1909 SC J 29 6Adam19 Parker v Lord Advocate 1904 AC364 6F HL 37 Colquhoun v FPW 1908 SC HL 10 Boyd amp Forrest v GSWRC 1912 SC HL 93 1915 SC H 20 1918 SC HL 14 Lord Advocate v Zetland 1920 SC HL 1 Young v Kinloch 1911 SC HL 1 Wishart v Gibson 1914 SC HL 53 Canada v Newfoundland 1927 1930 AC 537 Donoghue v Stevenson 1932 AC 562 Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd 1942 AC 32 Bank of Portugal v Waterlow amp Sons 1932 AC452 Joyce v DPP 1946 AC347Legacy editThe Lord Macmillan Papers are housed at the British Library The papers can be accessed through the British Library catalogue 35 Notes edit a b c Pine p 187 Greenock Post Office Directories 1878 9 Macmillan p 18 Macmillan p 22 a b Macmillan p 23 Macmillan p 30 No 28605 The London Gazette 7 May 1912 p 3280 Macmillan p 42 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 July 2017 Macmillan p 80 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 July 2017 No 13996 The Edinburgh Gazette 12 February 1924 p 225 a b c Pine p 188 Macmillan p 84 Macmillan p 140 Macmillan p 184 Macmillan p 100 Macmillan p 141 No 33576 The London Gazette 4 February 1930 p 719 a b Macmillan p 147 Macmillan p 296 Macmillan p 156 Macmillan p 214 Macmillan p 238 45 legislation gov uk National Library of Scotland Act 1925 Macmillan p 160 2 Macmillan p 24 Macmillan p 94 Macmillan p 278 Macmillan p 286 Macmillan p 96 Macmillan p 65 6 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 July 2017 Macmillan p 43 Lord Macmillan Papers archives and manuscripts catalogue the British Library Retrieved 2 June 2020References and Bibliography editA H B Constable and H P Macmillan A Treatise on Provisional Orders applicable to Scotland Edinburgh 1900 H P Macmillan A Man of Law s Tale London MacMillan and Co 1952 H P Macmillan Law and other things L G Pine The New Extinct Peerage 1884 1971 Containing Extinct Abeyant Dormant and Suspended Peerages With Genealogies and Arms London U K Heraldry Today 1972 Legal officesPreceded byWilliam Watson Lord Advocate1924 Succeeded byWilliam WatsonPolitical officesNew office Minister of Information1939 1940 Succeeded bySir John Reith Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh Macmillan Baron Macmillan amp oldid 1198346554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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