Title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom
Blythswood House, the seat of the Campbell family.
Baron Blythswood
, of
Blythswood
in the
County of Renfrew
, was a title in the
Peerage of the United Kingdom
.
[1]
It was created on 24 August 1892 for
Sir Archibald Campbell, 1st Baronet
, the former Member of Parliament for
Renfrew
, with remainder failing heirs male of his own to five of his younger brothers and the heirs male of their bodies (one brother, Robert Douglas-Campbell, was excluded from inheriting the title).
Sir Archibald had already gained that style by being created a
baronet
(formally of
Blythswood
in the
County of Renfrew
, in the
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
) on 4 May 1880.
[2]
Ancestry
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Born Archibald Douglas, the first holder was the son of Archibald Douglas, 17th feudal Scots baron of
Mains
and 12th feudal baron of Blythswood, a patrilineal descendant of James Douglas (who had assumed by Royal licence the surname of Douglas in lieu of Campbell), son of John Campbell and Mary, daughter and heiress of John Douglas of Mains. However John himself was also landed as the son of Colin Campbell, 1st feudal Scots Baron of Blythswood and that estate passed to another branch of the family.
The British 1st Baron Blythswood's father was born Archibald Douglas but assumed his new patronymic on 1838 on inheriting the Blythswood estate on the death of his cousin, Archibald Campbell.
Succession
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Lord Blythswood was childless and on his death in 1908 the baronetcy became extinct. He was succeeded in the barony according to the special remainder by his younger brother Reverend Sholto Douglas. On becoming the next Lord Blythswood he too assumed by Royal licence the surname of Campbell in lieu of his patronymic. He was also childless and was succeeded by his younger brother Barrington Douglas-Campbell, the third Baron. He was a
major-general
in the
British Army
. He and his son had assumed the additional surname of Campbell by Royal licence in 1908 but on his succession to the barony in 1916 he assumed the surname of Campbell only by Royal licence. On his death the title passed to his eldest son, the fourth Baron. He was a
brigade major
in the British Army. As follows, on succeeding in the barony on the death of his father in 1918 he assumed by Royal licence the surname of Campbell only. He had no sons and was succeeded by his younger brother, the fifth Baron. He died unmarried and was succeeded by his younger brother, the sixth Baron. He assumed by Royal licence the surname of Douglas-Campbell in 1929 but on succeeding in the barony in 1937 he assumed the surname of Campbell only by Royal licence. The title became extinct on the early death of his son, the seventh Baron, in 1940 due to a car accident.
Estates
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The principal country mansionhouse was
Blythswood House
, near Inchinnan, built in 1821 to the palatial designs of
James Gillespie Graham
, replacing the older small mansion of Ranfield, or Renfield. The new house name reflected the vast Lands of Blythswood acquired from Glasgow Town Council in the 18th century on the north side of the Clyde, starting west of Buchanan Street, Glasgow, and reaching the River Kelvin. The Lands of Blythswood started to be feued by an ancestor in the late 1790s/early 1800s as the city's New Town of Blythswood including
Blythswood Hill
and
Blythswood Square
to
William Harley
and other developers.
[3]
Blythswood House
was demolished in 1935 and its lands became Renfrew Golf Club.
[4]
Northbar house in
Inchinnan
was one of a number of family seats for three hundred years from the 1690s to the 1990s.
[5]
Another family estate, Rosehall, Lanarkshire (later renamed Douglas Support by
Margaret, Duchess of Douglas
), was inherited by the 2nd Lord Blythswood in the 1860s, and saved by the local community in 2020.
[6]
The first baron, who served in Westminster's
Houses of Parliament
in the Commons as an MP and later as with subsequent generations in the
Lords
acquired the old manor house of Halliford in
Shepperton
which is where in the year of his death he has a large tablet monument in the church
chancel
by the
Thames
.
[7]
Campbell baronets, of Blythswood (1880)
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Barons Blythswood (1892)
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- Archibald Campbell, 1st Baron Blythswood (1835?1908)
- Sholto Campbell, 2nd Baron Blythswood (1839?1916), brother of the above
- Maj Gen
Barrington Bulkeley Campbell, 3rd Baron Blythswood
(1845?1918), brother of the above
- Major
Archibald Campbell, 4th Baron Blythswood
(1870?1929) son of the above
- Barrington Sholto Douglas Campbell/Campbell, 5th Baron Blythswood (1877?1937) brother of the above
- Leopold Colin Henry Douglas Campbell/Campbell, 6th Baron Blythswood (1881?1940) brother of the above
- Philip Archibald Douglas Campbell/Campbell, 7th Baron Blythswood (1919?1940)
[8]
Recognition
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- The Campbell and Douglas families adopted the title "of Blythswood" after buying the vast historic Lands of Blythswood from earlier owners including the distinguished Elphinstone family, and Glasgow Town Council. The city central area of Blythswood,
Blythswood Hill
and
Blythswood Square
share the same origins. (This includes a former 1960s British Rail office block close to the square, remodelled as Blythswood House student accommodation for
Glasgow School of Art
.
- St Conan's Kirk
designed by the 1st Lord Blythswood's young brother Walter Douglas Campbell continues in its original site at Loch Awe.
- Blythswood Shipbuilding Company Ltd, Scotstoun, Glasgow, operated from 1919 to 1964, when the yard was acquired by Yarrow & Co Ltd.
- The merchant convoy ship SS
Baron Blythswood
under chief officer William Simpson Ure was sunk by U-99 in 1940.
References
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External links
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