Kenneth James William Mackay, 3rd Earl of Inchcape
Kenneth James William Mackay, 3rd Earl of Inchcape (27 December 1917 – 17 March 1994), was a businessman and an earl in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. He became Earl of Inchcape on 21 June 1939 after the death of his father, Kenneth Mackay, 2nd Earl of Inchcape. During the Second World War, he gained the rank of Lieutenant with the 12th Royal Lancers and Major with the 27th Lancers.
Education
[edit]Inchcape attended Eton, and Trinity College, Cambridge.
Appointments
[edit]- Director (1957-1983), Chairman (1973-1983), and Chief Executive (1978-1981) of P&O
- Chairman and Chief Executive of Inchcape & Company Limited (1958-1982)
- Chairman of the Committee for Middle East Trade [COMET] (1963-1965)
- President of the Royal Society for India, Pakistan and Ceylon (1970-1976)
- President of the General Council of British Shipping (1976-1977)
- Director of Burmah Oil
- Director of Standard and Chartered Banking Group Limited
- Director of The Chartered Bank
- Director of British Petroleum
- Director of Guardian Royal Exchange
Family
[edit]Inchcape was the son of Kenneth Mackay, 2nd Earl of Inchcape, and his first wife Joan Moriarty, daughter of John Francis Moriarty, Lord Justice of the Irish Court of Appeal. His half-brother on his father's side was the life peer Simon Mackay, Baron Tanlaw.
Between 12 February 1941 and their divorce in 1954, Lord Inchcape was married to Aline Thorn Pease, widow of an R.A.F. officer,[1] and daughter of Sir Richard Pease, 2nd Baronet and Jeanette Thorn Kissel. They had three children –
- Lucinda Louise Mackay, born 13 December 1941
- Peter Mackay, 4th Earl of Inchcape, born 23 January 1943
- James Jonathan Thorn Mackay, born 28 May 1947.
On 3 February 1965 he married Caroline Harrison, daughter of Cholmeley Dering Cholmeley-Harrison and Barbara Mary Corisande Bellew, with whom he had three sons (two by birth and one by adoption)
- Anthony Mackay (b.1967)
- Shane Mackay (b.1973)
- Ivan Mackay (b.1976), owner of the Brux estate, Aberdeenshire.
In 1969, Countess Inchcape became Lloyd's of London's first female Name.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Lord Inchcape to Wed Yorks Widow of R.A.F. pilot". Yorkshire Evening Post. British Newspaper Archive. 7 February 1941. p. 6. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ^ "Woman Becomes Lloyds Underwriter" (Video). British Pathé. 1969. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
- 3rd Earl of Inchcape at thepeerage.com
- Inchcape, Earl of (UK, 1929) at cracroftspeerage.co.uk
- Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage (107th edition, 2003) volume 2, page 2031
- Obituary The Independent
- Obituary NYT
External links
[edit]- Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by the Earl of Inchcape
- http://www.jta.org/1964/07/31/archive/british-trade-council-for-middle-east-says-it-accedes-to-arab-boycott
- Britain and the Middle East: Economic History, 1945-87 p187 by Frank Brenchley
- The Comet Trade Mission to Syria and Iran by Sir Edwin Chapman Andrews
- 1917 births
- 1994 deaths
- Nobility from South Ayrshire
- People educated at Eton College
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- British Army personnel of World War II
- Clan Mackay
- Earls of Inchcape
- BP people
- 27th Lancers officers
- Scottish chairpersons of corporations
- 20th-century Scottish businesspeople
- 12th Royal Lancers officers
- Peerage of the United Kingdom earl stubs