Sir Charles Erskine, 1st Baronet of Alva
Sir Charles Erskine, 1st Baronet (4 July 1643– 1690), of Alva, Fife, was a Scottish politician who sat in the Scottish Conventions in 1665 and 1667 and in the Parliament of Scotland from 1689 to 1690.
Life
[edit]He was born in Alva House which had been built by his father in 1636.[2]
Erskine was the third, but eldest surviving son of Sir Charles Erskine of Alva and Cambuskenneth, and his wife Mary Hope, daughter of Sir Thomas Hope, 1st Baronet of Craighall. He succeeded his father as laird of Alva House on 8 July 1663 and purchased a baronetcy in Nova Scotia on 30 April 1666.[3] Very few of the Nova Scotia baronets visited their lands, and the exercise was largely a money-raising exercise on the part of the Scottish Parliament, creating a new wave of baronets in the New World.[4]
Erskine was returned as Shire Commissioner for Clackmannanshire to the Conventions in 1665 and in 1667. In 1689 he was elected MP for Stirlingshire in the Scottish Parliament.[5]
He was returned as Shire Commissioner for Stirlingshire in 1689.[3]
Erskine died on 4 June 1690 aged 46.
Family
[edit]In about 1670 he married Christian Dundas, daughter of Sir James Dundas of Arniston (just south of Edinburgh).
They had at least four sons.[3]
- Sir James Erskine, 2nd Baronet (c.1672-1693). He was killed at the Battle of Landen.
- Sir John Erskine, 3rd Baronet (1672-1739) Scottish Shire Commissioner and British Member of Parliament
- Robert Erskine (1677-1718) archiater (physician) to Peter the Great in Russia
- Charles Erskine, Lord Tinwald (1680-1763) Judge and Member of Parliament
His daughter Catherine married Patrick Campbell, Lord Monzie, one of the legal colleagues of her brother Lord Tinwald. His daughter Helen Erskine (-1724) married John Haldane (1660-1721), 14th baronet of Gleneagles[6] His grandchildren included James Erskine, Lord Alva.
References
[edit]- ^ Paul, James Balfour (1903). An Ordinary of Arms Contained in the Public Register of all Arms and Bearings in Scotland. Edinburgh: W. Green & sons. pp. 19, 304.
- ^ Clackmannanshire and the Ochils by Adam Swan ISBN 07073 0513 6
- ^ a b c Cokayne, George Edward, ed. (1904), Complete Baronetage volume 4 (1665-1707), vol. 4, Exeter: William Pollard and Co, p. 269, retrieved 5 March 2019
- ^ "Baronets of Nova Scotia".
- ^ The Irish-Scottish by Charles a Hanna
- ^ https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/haldane-john-1660-1721